I think the point was whether or not they are creating a black market. If there are billions to be made, there will be extensive cheating in order NOT to pay the billions.
Can Coloradans actually grow there own? Or is there regulation on that? Because that would defeat the purpose of legalizing and taxing it.
In practicality though, how many Coloradans will actually grow it? You can grow tobacco more easily than pot, yet how many people do that?
And there is a black market for cigarettes (albeit small) created people trying to beat the excise taxes on tobacco.
Originally Posted by ExNYer
Prohibition created the enormous black market, maybe there will be some in CO, like you said, there is a black market for tobacco and alcohol, but on a percentage basis I suspect it will be extremely low and about the same as tobacco and moonshine is now.
And yes, any CO citizen can grow up to 6 plants at a time, with no tax paid. You have to remember the citizens passed it for a few reasons, yes to ingest, but mainly to stop the imprisonment of it's citizens for a victimless crime, not just to make money and collect taxes from it. And of course, medicine even though it was legal, it was regulated much more than now.
As far as billions to be made, you have to consider the versatility of the plant and it's sister (hemp) which is now legal too, which can be turned into paper and textile products, clothing, rope, food (highest protein of any seed), fuel (yes you can power vehicles from it), building materials (hempcrete and insulation and more), automobile panels and composites, organic weed control products, and the list goes on and on and on. And who knows what the next ingenious idea will be spawned, from it's use, now that scientists and engineers can study it with out fear of going to jail. Wasn't just talking about the recreational strain. But you can imagine all the suppliers needed to grow, cultivate and harvest, manufacture, and sell. It gets pretty staggering, very fast.