Liberals to announce marijuana will be legal by July 1, 2018

White_Unifier

Senate Member
Feb 21, 2017
7,300
2
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What we should do is criminalize marijuana smoke and legalize marijuana brownies and cookies. The stuff's not even legal yet and I already get assaulted by marijuana smoke every few weeks when I go downtown. Seriously, I each time I want to shove that joint down the smoker's throat if he likes it so damn much.

Same with tobacco. I have no qualms with chewing tobacco. Chew and spit it all ou want, but please don't smoke that crap in public.
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,888
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The bikers and MAFIA have made billions on the doobie trade. Now that the feds are taking over you know it'll cost the taxpayers billions to subsidize this endeavour.
 

Decapoda

Council Member
Mar 4, 2016
1,682
801
113
So, in July of 2018 it will be cool. But until then, B!tches, we catch you toking you be charged!

The Liberal government will announce legislation next month that will legalize marijuana in Canada by July 1, 2018.
CBC News has learned that the legislation will be announced during the week of April 10 and will broadly follow the recommendation of a federally appointed task force that was chaired by former liberal Justice Minister Anne McLellan.

Nope!! Junior now concedes he must have been high when he said that.

“The date will not be July 1, I can assure you of that,” Trudeau said. “I don’t know where that date came from.”

https://globalnews.ca/news/3926121/trudeau-pot-legalization-next-summer/
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
What we should do is criminalize marijuana smoke and legalize marijuana brownies and cookies. The stuff's not even legal yet and I already get assaulted by marijuana smoke every few weeks when I go downtown. Seriously, I each time I want to shove that joint down the smoker's throat if he likes it so damn much.

Same with tobacco. I have no qualms with chewing tobacco. Chew and spit it all ou want, but please don't smoke that crap in public.

It's cannabis WU, nobody smokes a US government contrivance.


The bikers and MAFIA have made billions on the doobie trade. Now that the feds are taking over you know it'll cost the taxpayers billions to subsidize this endeavour.

Why have you forgotten the biggest winner in the illegal trade? The US government.
 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
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They need a bribe for the next election
;)
even Chretien played the same game to win elections.
 

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
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Pot consumers paying less than $7 a gram, Statistics Canada survey finds


Cannabis is cheapest in Quebec and most expensive in Northwest Territories

By Kathleen Harris, CBC News Posted: Feb 08, 2018 4:00 AM ET Last Updated: Feb 08, 2018 8:15 AM ET


A crowdsourcing initiative by Statistics Canada on pot pricing drew 15,000 participants. (CBC)



Canadians pay an average of less than $7 a gram for pot, according to Statistics Canada data collected through a crowdsourcing pilot project.
More than 15,000 Canadians have participated in StatsCan's online survey since Jan. 25, exceeding expectations of 1,000 to 2,000 entries.
Broken down by province and territory, the average price for a gram of dried cannabis ranges from a low of $5.89 in Quebec to a high of $11.89 in Northwest Territories, compared to the nationwide average of $6.79, according to the data provided to CBC News.
In the online survey form, StatsCan provides 2017 price estimates averaged from a variety of sources, which are higher than the data collected through this crowdsourcing initiative. StatsCan economist Conrad Barber-Dueck said this sample might report lower prices because it includes a higher rate of daily users who generally buy in bigger, cheaper quantities.

Asked if people might be lowballing the price in order to drive down the retail price when cannabis becomes legal, the agency said it's hard to see collusion.

"We don't know if people are misreporting, although at nearly 16,000 respondents from across the country, it would be difficult for respondents to have a co-ordinated effort to skew the results," said Barber-Dueck.
StatsCan has been quality controlling the responses to make sure robots or "silly answers" aren't included, and so far only two per cent have been discarded.
The average price reported is lower than the $10-a-gram estimate used when the federal government reached a tax revenue-sharing agreement with the provinces and territories in December.
StatsCan is crowdsourcing to gather information about why Canadians use pot — and how much they pay for it.
Cannabis is cheapest to buy in Quebec and most expensive in Northwest Territories. (Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg)

In what is a first for the federal agency, it launched the cannabis crowdsourcing initiative to try to fill in information gaps as Canada gets set to legalize marijuana. The online questionnaire asks consumers what price they paid for what quantity and quality, what city it was purchased in and whether it was used to medicate or use recreationally.
Health and safety

The Liberal government has framed its legalization plan around health and safety, arguing a regulated regime will keep marijuana away from minors and wipe out the illicit black market.
At a recent cabinet retreat in London, Ont., Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said anyone now purchasing pot is funding criminal organizations and gangs.
Many experts have warned that it could take years to make a dent in the black market, as businesses ramp up to meet demand and stabilize pricing.
Competitive pricing is considered a key factor in wiping out the black market. While illegal sellers can undercut the retail market in pricing, some consumers in other jurisdictions such as Alaska have shown a preference for the regulated, tested product purchased in a retail location, even if it is more expensive.
Displacing black market

Thierry Bélair, spokesperson for Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor, said the legislative regime will allow a competitive legal market that aims to displace the illegal market. Provinces and territories will be responsible for regulating, distributing and overseeing the retail sale of cannabis after legalization and can set prices accordingly.
"We are confident legalization and regulation will help dramatically reduce the market share for organized crime," Bélair said in an email.
Under the new system, consumers will access to a product that will be regulated and tested, unlike the illegal cannabis sold now, he added.


Pot consumers paying less than $7 a gram, Statistics Canada survey finds - Politics - CBC News


$10 a gram? Plus Taxes?


These idiots are actually going to take up drug dealing.......and lose money.
 

pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
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B.C.
Pot consumers paying less than $7 a gram, Statistics Canada survey finds


Cannabis is cheapest in Quebec and most expensive in Northwest Territories

By Kathleen Harris, CBC News Posted: Feb 08, 2018 4:00 AM ET Last Updated: Feb 08, 2018 8:15 AM ET


A crowdsourcing initiative by Statistics Canada on pot pricing drew 15,000 participants. (CBC)



Canadians pay an average of less than $7 a gram for pot, according to Statistics Canada data collected through a crowdsourcing pilot project.
More than 15,000 Canadians have participated in StatsCan's online survey since Jan. 25, exceeding expectations of 1,000 to 2,000 entries.
Broken down by province and territory, the average price for a gram of dried cannabis ranges from a low of $5.89 in Quebec to a high of $11.89 in Northwest Territories, compared to the nationwide average of $6.79, according to the data provided to CBC News.
In the online survey form, StatsCan provides 2017 price estimates averaged from a variety of sources, which are higher than the data collected through this crowdsourcing initiative. StatsCan economist Conrad Barber-Dueck said this sample might report lower prices because it includes a higher rate of daily users who generally buy in bigger, cheaper quantities.

Asked if people might be lowballing the price in order to drive down the retail price when cannabis becomes legal, the agency said it's hard to see collusion.

"We don't know if people are misreporting, although at nearly 16,000 respondents from across the country, it would be difficult for respondents to have a co-ordinated effort to skew the results," said Barber-Dueck.
StatsCan has been quality controlling the responses to make sure robots or "silly answers" aren't included, and so far only two per cent have been discarded.
The average price reported is lower than the $10-a-gram estimate used when the federal government reached a tax revenue-sharing agreement with the provinces and territories in December.
StatsCan is crowdsourcing to gather information about why Canadians use pot — and how much they pay for it.
Cannabis is cheapest to buy in Quebec and most expensive in Northwest Territories. (Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg)

In what is a first for the federal agency, it launched the cannabis crowdsourcing initiative to try to fill in information gaps as Canada gets set to legalize marijuana. The online questionnaire asks consumers what price they paid for what quantity and quality, what city it was purchased in and whether it was used to medicate or use recreationally.
Health and safety

The Liberal government has framed its legalization plan around health and safety, arguing a regulated regime will keep marijuana away from minors and wipe out the illicit black market.
At a recent cabinet retreat in London, Ont., Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said anyone now purchasing pot is funding criminal organizations and gangs.
Many experts have warned that it could take years to make a dent in the black market, as businesses ramp up to meet demand and stabilize pricing.
Competitive pricing is considered a key factor in wiping out the black market. While illegal sellers can undercut the retail market in pricing, some consumers in other jurisdictions such as Alaska have shown a preference for the regulated, tested product purchased in a retail location, even if it is more expensive.
Displacing black market

Thierry Bélair, spokesperson for Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor, said the legislative regime will allow a competitive legal market that aims to displace the illegal market. Provinces and territories will be responsible for regulating, distributing and overseeing the retail sale of cannabis after legalization and can set prices accordingly.
"We are confident legalization and regulation will help dramatically reduce the market share for organized crime," Bélair said in an email.
Under the new system, consumers will access to a product that will be regulated and tested, unlike the illegal cannabis sold now, he added.


Pot consumers paying less than $7 a gram, Statistics Canada survey finds - Politics - CBC News


$10 a gram? Plus Taxes?


These idiots are actually going to take up drug dealing.......and lose money.
Well look at how well run the lottery is .
 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
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Today's single gram price around here
Street price for an OZ of street medical is 150. (28 grams)

...and the profits stay local and go back into the local economy.

The government already deals or at least pays for opium pills so anybody mad about weed better deal with that reality first. That's where the real money is. It's how a lot of old folks stretch their pensions out.
 
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Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
24,505
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The bikers and MAFIA have made billions on the doobie trade. Now that the feds are taking over you know it'll cost the taxpayers billions to subsidize this endeavour.

The bikers and mafia HAVE become the government...just google "mena airport" in clinton land with "drugs", or read about any number of CIA dope dealing escapades...like getting all of California hooked on coke "freeway Ricky Ross" or the CIA rendition jet that crashed in mexico with 4 tons of un cut coke on board because they ran out of fuel on the way north, or OLLIE NORTH, and the dope for guns thing, or Eric Holder, obama's AG, and "fast and furious".
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
548
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Vernon, B.C.
1985 prices.

The man is a f**king idiot anyway. He just pulled the July 1, 2018 out of his head w/o checking with anyone involved in it to see if all the necessary preliminary work could be done by then. Now there is some doubt in B.C. if the testing will be in place to charge impaired drivers. That's all we need on our highways added to cell phone users and texters and the drunks and a multitude of other idiots who shouldn't be driving in the first place.
 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
24,505
2,198
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news flash

The road is already full of those drivers ( for the last 50 years now)...
and you didn't notice?
;)
What's that tell you?
 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
24,505
2,198
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I was just suggesting you deal with the actual facts before getting all judgemental

So you are one of those that never drives after, or while, drinking eh?
That's such a rare thing in Canada.

I wish I knew cops that were that sterling in character while off duty.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
548
113
Vernon, B.C.
I was just suggesting you deal with the actual facts before getting all judgemental

So you are one of those that never drives after, or while, drinking eh?
That's such a rare thing in Canada.

I wish I knew cops that were that sterling in character while off duty.

I've probably driven more miles while pissed to the eyeballs than 99% of people. About 30 years ago I made a decision I wasn't going to do that any more, while I was still ahead of the game and hadn't hurt anyone. So I think I'm in a position to make all the judgments I like! :)