That's a nice attempt to put the blame on my side for other states short-comings and make me feel guilty for it.
If other states citizens desire a particular law, they should lobby and push authorities to put those laws into practice.
I understand that if California does pass Prop 19, other states may follow, but that does not put the responsibility of paving a the way on California.
Politician from another state, "I was starting to think this legalization thing might not be such a bad idea, but if it can't even pass in California, no way it will fly here."
There's no blame being placed. It's a simple fact that CA leads the way in cannabis law reform. You set an example for the rest of us, and show us what's possible. Much like a famous athlete who becomes a role model, whether they like it or not.
Commercialization will bring down quality, introduce just as many pesticides and take the profits out of mom and pop and place them into larger companies. Its like walmart vs the corner store... get it?
That's one possible scenario. But I think a better comparison would be with beer. Sure, Budweiser has a major market share, but there's plenty of room in the market for a smaller company like Sam Adam's, not to mention the (mom and pop) microbreweries. It's a market that big enough, and diverse enough, to support a product for all tastes and budgets. Why think the cannabis market would be any different?