See, you looked anyway.
My concern at the moment is in forcing some states to keep marijuana illegal as that gave such a tremendous boost to research to increase the quality of it and toward finding better ways to cultivate it indoors. Conceivably, in a legal environment, those skills would be lost and once again good stoners would be at the mercy of a corrupt corporate-owned state.
Perhaps you think that could never happen but no-one ever thought Mitch McConnell would be any more than the crazy fucker who stumbled around in his straw hat and overalls telling everybody, "You know it, I don't hate anything except, you know, those gosh-darn chiggers. I hate chiggers."
Note: a chigger is a creature about which you don't want to know more and it prefers to bite you in parts of your body about which you don't want to hear more.
The above is an important consideration as perhaps the lack of stimulus to further develop genetic and horticultural knowledge about the plant could mean that which is available slips back to the quality of the sixties. That's bad for the US but good for Mexico as suddenly Mexican reefer wouldn't just be the cheap crap you sell to tourists anymore. It would still be cheap crap, just more people would want it.
My concern at the moment is in forcing some states to keep marijuana illegal as that gave such a tremendous boost to research to increase the quality of it and toward finding better ways to cultivate it indoors. Conceivably, in a legal environment, those skills would be lost and once again good stoners would be at the mercy of a corrupt corporate-owned state.
Perhaps you think that could never happen but no-one ever thought Mitch McConnell would be any more than the crazy fucker who stumbled around in his straw hat and overalls telling everybody, "You know it, I don't hate anything except, you know, those gosh-darn chiggers. I hate chiggers."
Note: a chigger is a creature about which you don't want to know more and it prefers to bite you in parts of your body about which you don't want to hear more.
The above is an important consideration as perhaps the lack of stimulus to further develop genetic and horticultural knowledge about the plant could mean that which is available slips back to the quality of the sixties. That's bad for the US but good for Mexico as suddenly Mexican reefer wouldn't just be the cheap crap you sell to tourists anymore. It would still be cheap crap, just more people would want it.
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