Greenmopho
Member
Wow, talk about an attack....do I sense a dispensary owner?!?!?
I agree, it should be run like a business, with all the licenses and protections a business come with. But does Walgreens have to manufacture their own medicine? Offer massages? Limit their sales to 5 patients? C'mon, this is just becoming a bit of a horse and pony show, and they expect all of us growers to just jump through their hoops while they pick up the cash that flies out of our pockets.
As large commercial grows get ramped up, the price will go down, but so will the quality. I have a buddy who is a native american and grows organic tobacco, and I don't smoke tobacco, but I'll smoke that with him. Makes you realize how crappy mass produced tobacco is cigarettes is, its like a whole other world. If we will attain such a mass produced level of cannabis, quality will only go down, don't kid yourself. And the CBD argument is bullshit, Mexican rag weed is full of CBD and barely has any THC, are you telling us that this is what patients want? And yes, we should be helping patients, but IMHO, recretional users are what have brought us to this world, have studied the science and art of growing, and developed almost all the strains we know of today! Don't take that for granted. This is the problem with all you "fresh blooded" medical growers and dispensaries. You are quick to throw us old growers under the bus, label us felons for growing for years illegally, when we are the ones who have established EVERYTHING thus far, strains, knowledge, etc. And if you aren't for the full legalization movement, and are not spiritually connected to this plant, then you are just greedy and trying to take advantage of the current in-limbo laws that allow open trade, but street prices. We're like the soldiers on the front lines who come home and become disabled vets and are ignored by society. I am willing to adapt and deal with the coming changes, but it just seems like with every new change, there is a new department, a new middle man, and it keeps hitting most growers in the wallet while benefiting huge operations that don't focus on quality.
Coffee=Bad
Ganja=Good
Okay, I can't say I know Dank, or did I know of him before coming to CO. But just from trying his strains that are around, and seeing his informed and educated contributions (and funny arguments with warrenedson), he is not your guy to attack, he is defending the cannabis plant itself and the people who have been protecting it thus far, and furthering the diversity and lineage of cannabis strains.
Not really, that is enough for people that want to grow their own medicine to take care of them selves. Once you get larger than that you are a commercial business. You know, like actually paying sales taxes, income taxes and things like that.
I agree, it should be run like a business, with all the licenses and protections a business come with. But does Walgreens have to manufacture their own medicine? Offer massages? Limit their sales to 5 patients? C'mon, this is just becoming a bit of a horse and pony show, and they expect all of us growers to just jump through their hoops while they pick up the cash that flies out of our pockets.
I'm not so sure that you are the only person that does that. In fact I know of a 50kw commercial operation that does exactly that. If you have a waiting line around the block, maybe you might consider helping more people out with your super duper unique sales program. There are lots of patients that would love for you to help them with no cost meds and $200 ounces.
Well now wait a minute. Aren't you saying that the best business model is for dispensary owners to pick up everything that random caregivers drag in the back door? How can a dispensary owner really know what's in those meds. We know you are growing the cleanest meds in the world and nobody else can do that. At least requiring dispensaries to grow their own would lend some accountability for what they are selling. BTW, not every operation smears their meds in pesticides, mildew and fungicides.. but many black market growers and caregivers do. Your horse is not as high as you think.
Yes it is. Your opinion does not grant permission to circumvent the law.
How many lawyers have told you that it's legal as a caregiver to sell to a dispensary? I have had 3 different lawyers tell me that it's not. Caregivers can sell to their designated patients. If you choose to sell to the black market, you risk a serious felony, but I suppose you are no stranger to that risk. And yes, as large commercial grows get ramped up, the prices will go down. Maybe enough so that black market and caregiver overages are not worth messing with.
BEASTERS, Oh Really ? LOL Do the patient really want boutique strains with super high THC% Or is it just the rec users driving that requirement? Think about that one for a second or two. Patients actually need higher CBD levels, want to get less high from the meds so they can function, AND THEY WANT TO PAY LESS.
As large commercial grows get ramped up, the price will go down, but so will the quality. I have a buddy who is a native american and grows organic tobacco, and I don't smoke tobacco, but I'll smoke that with him. Makes you realize how crappy mass produced tobacco is cigarettes is, its like a whole other world. If we will attain such a mass produced level of cannabis, quality will only go down, don't kid yourself. And the CBD argument is bullshit, Mexican rag weed is full of CBD and barely has any THC, are you telling us that this is what patients want? And yes, we should be helping patients, but IMHO, recretional users are what have brought us to this world, have studied the science and art of growing, and developed almost all the strains we know of today! Don't take that for granted. This is the problem with all you "fresh blooded" medical growers and dispensaries. You are quick to throw us old growers under the bus, label us felons for growing for years illegally, when we are the ones who have established EVERYTHING thus far, strains, knowledge, etc. And if you aren't for the full legalization movement, and are not spiritually connected to this plant, then you are just greedy and trying to take advantage of the current in-limbo laws that allow open trade, but street prices. We're like the soldiers on the front lines who come home and become disabled vets and are ignored by society. I am willing to adapt and deal with the coming changes, but it just seems like with every new change, there is a new department, a new middle man, and it keeps hitting most growers in the wallet while benefiting huge operations that don't focus on quality.
[I've got to quit reading this board before I've had my coffee. Must be a little edgy ]
Coffee=Bad
Ganja=Good
EAsy there, what did dank do to you to deserve such a response.. I will vouch for mr dank, his herb is probably in the top 4-5 that I've ever gotten to smoke, so it's no surprise here he's got a waiting list.. As someone in the industry, i agree regulation is needed, but not for small time ops, they're just getting buy as it is.. Let those fat cats who just recently decided they could make a living doing this pay. Not the pioneers who have suffered consequences for this plant ,that we truly believe in it's healing powers. I heartily disagree on most of your points,up until your last post..
Your coffee is making you edgy..
aren't you being a little hard on Mr. Dank, especially for your first post? there are plenty of other icmagers with similar views, such as myself, that you can back reference and slander with your elitist cliches, your pull-yourself-up-by-your-own-bootstraps mentality.
To illustrate the ignorance of your perspective, you suggest that "not the strongest or the best" survive, rather those who "can adapt to a changing environment." If you knew anything about Darwinism, more specifically social Darwinism, you would realize that the very definition of what is "strong" or "the best" is contextual and determined not by the tenacious adaptability that you urge Mr. Dank to adopt but by the random traits that become desirable in new environmental conditions. What Mr. Dank and a lot of others are getting at is that the new socio-legal environment created by hb1284 is one in which having access to obscene amounts of capital becomes the ONE AND ONLY desirable trait necessary for success. From a business perspective, the bill makes the potency of your product, its level of contamination, and the quality of your service irrelevant. That being said, it makes perfect sense for non-millionaires to discuss bringing their products back into the black market, where (unless you're part of a ruthless crime organization) you can't have trichome-less, moldy buds, a fuck-you attitude and still be successful just because you've got the cash...and I've got the feeling that not many Coloradans on these boards (or anywhere else) live in neighborhoods where you buy from the homies or die.
Okay, I can't say I know Dank, or did I know of him before coming to CO. But just from trying his strains that are around, and seeing his informed and educated contributions (and funny arguments with warrenedson), he is not your guy to attack, he is defending the cannabis plant itself and the people who have been protecting it thus far, and furthering the diversity and lineage of cannabis strains.