Weed Prices In Your Area

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After 911 the border town of Blane Wa. was asking the feds for help because of the cost of all the drug traficing they were nailing at the border cloging up thier system.

Moved here from Ca. and the quality is better and it;s $20 cheaper per 1/8.

Although I do not partake as I drive for a living and must take a u.a. if I were to get it an accident and it's not worth the stress.
 

''AKA'' MONGO SLADE FROM BROOKLAND, NY
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if ya have to "ask" you cant aaaa-ford.... this stuff !!!:thumbsup:
 
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I edited that part in after, thats why u missed it.

This is probably a bit of an exaggeration, but I knew I had read stuff like that:

[FONT=arial,helvetica,sans-serif] B.C. Bud sells wholesale in the province for about $1,800 a pound, or about half a kilogram, but by the time it is brought across the border that value jumps to $4,500. When it reaches Portland, two hours down the highway from the border, its value is $6,000. In California it climbs to $10,000 and has been traded, pound for pound, with cocaine.[/FONT]
 

hangin' about
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Ive never smoked the stuff, but a friend told me it is 200$ Canadian an oz. (about 180$ USD)

A+ quality Hydro

I have a friend, too, who's currently hooked up at $160/oz. Canadian funds, even. Great country, this is. :thumbsup:
 

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best thread on the Rx I've seen in 6 months

$40 oz mexican "campatcto" - decent smoke actually sometimes alot of seeds

$200-$250 oz local suff - high quality, few seeds if any

$300-$375 oz coastal shit mostly humbolt county - best in the world...sampling as I type this
 

Rx God
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so if a backpacker made it from Vancouver to California with their pack of 100 pounds, they would make about 200,000k (about 2000$ profit for each pound)

Not worth getting raped in jail if you ask me, but I can certainly understand the lure

........................................................................................................

It's the lure of easy money, it has a very strong appeal.... some ex-Eagle wrote a song about that.... Don Henley, I believe ?

I probably smoked 10 joints in the last 10 years, but I'm considering going back to being a hippee pothead again !

The really funny crap is you get busted in California, do your community service with Cal-Trans, and the Cal-trans employees become your best source, those guys have trashcans full of weed in their garage ! :missingte

They are set to go, work with guys getting minor drug busts and such,recruit the guys doing the Community Service.... Pretty soon Cal-trans Norm is your friend and you visit his home regularly, getting you higher up the chain,dead serious that how it work ! :thumbsup:
 

Rx. Junior
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........................................................................................................

It's the lure of easy money, it has a very strong appeal.... some ex-Eagle wrote a song about that.... Don Henley, I believe ?

I probably smoked 10 joints in the last 10 years, but I'm considering going back to being a hippee pothead again !

The really funny crap is you get busted in California, do your community service with Cal-Trans, and the Cal-trans employees become your best source, those guys have trashcans full of weed in their garage ! :missingte

They are set to go, work with guys getting minor drug busts and such,recruit the guys doing the Community Service.... Pretty soon Cal-trans Norm is your friend and you visit his home regularly, getting you higher up the chain,dead serious that how it work ! :thumbsup:


haha are you serious? i hear cali is the place to be for hippies.. they dont even care at all do they? they have legal shops where you can purchase bud am i right? illinois acts like its murder.. unless you have a very small amount on you
 

Rx God
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Back in my day we didn't use Schwagg (sp ?) and chronic...more like Mexican commercial/ Primo or Humboldt....maybe brown or green...or some other terms.
 

sarah palin enthusiast
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In British Columbia, a once-quiet province in a country that has long enjoyed a low crime rate, the murder rate has soared in the past two years, Canadian officials say, because of killings linked to warring drug

What a ridiculous argument. If you outlawed wheat people would be killing police who tried to bust you for that. Underground economy breeds crime. "Canadian Officials" is a dipshit.

WASHINGTON, March 4 (AP) - The admission rate for those who seek treatment for marijuana use nearly tripled between 1992 and 2002, according to the latest data compiled by the federal government.

Yeah, but most of those admissions are results of plea bargains so you wouldn't get a criminal record.

:thumbsup2: liberal media

$180/oz

Back in BC I would get it at $140, or $200 for the really really good stuff. It was worth it tho.
 

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Description/History:
The Truth About Marijuana:

The debate over the legalization of Cannabis Sativa, more commonly known as marijuana, has been one of the most heated controversies ever to occur in the Inited States. Its use as a medicine has existed for thousands of years in many countries world wide and “can be documented as far back as 2700 BC in ancient Chinese writings.” When someone says bhanga, ganja, kinnub, cannabis, bung, chu ts-ao, asa, dope, grass, rasta, or weed, they are talking about the same subject: marijuana.

Marijuana should be legalized because the government could earn money from taxes on its sale, its value to the medical world outweighs its abuse potential, and because of its importance to the paper and clothing industries. This action should be taken despite efforts made by groups which say marijuana is a harmful drug which will increase crime rates and lead users to other more dangerous substances.

The actual story behind the legislature passed against marijuana is quite surprising. According to Jack Herer, author of The Emperor Wears No Clothes and an expert on the “hemp conspiracy,” the acts bringing about the demise of hemp were part of a large conspiracy
involving DuPont, Harry J. Anslinger, commissioner of the Federal Bureau
of Narcotics, and many other influential industrial leaders such as William Randolph Hearst and Andrew Mellon. Herer notes that the Marijuana Tax Act, which passed in 1937, coincidentally occurred just as the decoricator machine was invented. With this invention, hemp would have been able to take over competing industries almost instantaneously.

According to Popular Mechanics, “10,000 acres devoted to hemp will produce as much paper as 40,000 acres of average [forest] pulp land.” William Hearst owned enormous timber acreage, land best suited for conventional pulp, so his interest in preventing the growth of hemp can be easily explained. Competition from hemp would have easily driven the Hearst paper-manufacturing company out of business and significantly lowered the value of his land. Herer even suggests popularizing the term “marijuana” was a strategy Hearst used in order to create fear in the American public. “The first step in creating hysteria was to introduce the element of fear of the unknown by using a word that no one had ever heard of before... ‘marijuana’” (ibid).
DuPont’s involvment in the anti-hemp campaign can also be explained with great ease. At this time, DuPont was patenting a new sulfuric acid process for producing wood-pulp paper. “According to the company’s own records, wood-pulp products ultimately accounted for more than 80% of all DuPont’s railroad car loadings for the next 50 years”
(ibid). Indeed it should be noted that “two years before the prohibitive hemp tax in 1937, DuPont developed a new synthetic fiber, nylon, which was an ideal substitute for hemp rope” (Hartsell).

The year after the tax was passed DuPont came out with rayon, which would have been unable to compete with the strength of hemp fiber or its economical process of manufacturing. “DuPont’s point man was none other than Harry Anslinger...who was appointed to the FBN by Treasury Secretary Andrew MEllon, who was also chairman of the Mellon Bank, DuPont’s chief financial backer. Anslinger’s relationship to Mellon wasn’t just political, he was also married to Mellon’s niece” (Hartsell). It doesn’t take much to draw a connection between DuPont, Anslinger, and Mellon, and it’s obvious that all of these groups, including Hearst, had strong motivation to prevent the growth of the hemp industry.

The reasoning behind DuPont, Anslinger, and Hearst was not for any moral or health related issues. They fought to prevent the growth of this new industry so they wouldn’t go bankrupt. In fact, the American Medical Association tried to argue for the medical benefits of hemp. Marijuana is actually less dangerous than alcohol, cigarettes, and even most over-the-counter medicines or prescriptions. According to Francis J. Young, the DEA’s administrative judge, “nearly all medicines have toxicm, potentially letal affects, but marijuana is not such a substance...Marijuana, in its natural form, is one of the safest therapeutically active substances known to man. By any measure of rational analysis marijuana can be safely used within a supervised routine of medical care” (DEA Docket No. 86-22, 57). It is illogical then, for marijuana to be illegal in the United States when “alcohol poisoning is a significant cause of death in this country” and “approximately 400,000 premature deaths are attributed to cigarettes annually.” Dr. Roger Pertwee, SEcretary of the International Cannabis Research Society states that as a recreational drug, “Marijuana compares favourably to nicotine, alcohol, and even caffeine.” Under extreme amounts of alcohol a person will experience an “inability to stand or walk without help, stupor and near unconsciousness, lack of comprehension of what is seen or heard, shock, and breathing and heartbeat may stop.” Even though these effects occur only under insane amounts of alcohol consumption, (.2-.5 BAL) the fact is smoking extreme amounts of marijuana will do nothing more than put you to sleep, whereas drinking excessive amounts of alcohol will kill you.

The most profound activist for marijuana’s use as a medicine is Dr. Lester Grinspoon, author of Marihuana: The Forbidden Medicine. According to Grinspoon, “The only well-confirmed negative effect of marijuana is caused by the smoke, which contains three times more tars and five times more carbon monoxide than tobacco. But even the heaviest marijuana smokers rarely use as much as an average tobacco smoker. And, of course, many prefer to eat it.” His book includes personal accounts of how prescribed marijuana alleviated epilepsy, weight loss of aids, nausea of chemotherapy, menstrual pains, and the severe effects of multiple sclerosis. The illness with the most documentation and harmony among doctors which marijuana has successfully treated is MS. Grinspoon believes for MS sufferers, “Cannabis is the drug of necessity.” One patient of his, 51 year old Elizabeth MacRory, says “It has completely changed my life...It has helped with muscle spasms, allowed me to sleep properly, and helped control my bladder.” Marijuana also proved to be effective in the treatment of glaucoma because its use lwoers pressure on the eye.
“In a recent survey at a leading teaching hospital, ‘over 60 per cent of medical students were found to be marijuana users.’ In the same survey, only 30 per cent admitted to smoking cigarettes” (Guardian).
Brian Hilliard, editor of Police Review, says “Legalizing cannabis
wouldn’t do any harm to anybody. We should be concentrating on the
serious business of heroin and amphetamines.” “In the UK in 1991, 42,209 people were convicted of marijuana charges, clogging courts and
overcrowding prisons...and almost 90 per cent of drug offences invlove cannabis...The British government spends 500 million pounds a year on “overall responses to drugs” but receives no tax revenue from the estimated 1.8 billion pound illicit drug market” (Guardian). Figures like this can be seen in the United States as well. The U.S. spends billions of dollars annually in its “war on drugs.”

If the government were to legalize marijuana, it could reasonably place high taxes on it because people are used to buying marijuana at inflated prices created by risks of selling illegally. It could be sold at a convenient store just like a pack of cigarettes for less than someone would pay now, but still yield a high profit because of easy growing requirements.

An entire industry could be created out of hemp based products. The oils extracted from seeds could be used for fuels and the hemp fiber, a fiber so valued for its strength that it is used to judge the quality of other fibers, could be manufactured into ropes, clothing, or paper. Most importantly, the money the government would make from taxes and the money which would be saved by not trying to prevent its use could be used for more important things, such as serious drugs or the national debt.
The recreational use of marijuana would not stimulate crime like some would argue.

The crime rate in Amsterdam is lower than many major U.S. cities. Mario Lap, a key drug policy advisor in the Netherlands national government says “We’ve had a realistic drug policy for 30 years in the Netherlands, and we know what works. We distinguish between soft and hard drugs, between traffickers and users. We try not to make people into criminals” (Houston Chronicle). In 1989 the LAncet report states “The Dutch have shown that there is nothing inevitable about the drugs ladder in which soft drugs lead to heard drugs. The ladder does not exist in Holland because the dealers have been separated.”

We can expect strong opposition from companies like DuPont and
paper manufacturerss but the selfishness of these corporations should not
prevent its use in our society like it did in the 1930’s. Regardless of
what these organizations will say about marijuana, the fact is it has the
potential to become one of the most useful substances in the entire
world. If we took action and our government legalized it today, we would
immediately see benefits from this decision. People suffering from
illnesses ranging from manic depression to multiple sclerosis would be
able to experience relief, the government could make a fortune off of the taxes it could impose on its sale, and its implementation into the
industrial world would create thousands of new jobs for the economy.

Also, because of its role in paper making, the rain forests of South America could be saved from their current fate. No recorded deaths have ever occurred as a result of marijuana use, it is not physically addictive like alcohol or tobacco, and most doctors will agree it is safer to use.
 

EL BANDITO
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Haaaa..People may not die from weed but have come close..Member that Met`s pither who took a couple hits of some killer and had to go to the hospital because he thought he was dying?..The longer you go without smoking the more you get trashed when you do burn again..I bet he was straight and got a hold of some Kryptonite..Once in a while some good shit will give me the heebie jeebies too
 

Rx God
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back way back ,say, when I was at my peak as a small dealer/user. (1985 or so ) Comm. Mexican went for about $25/ 1/4 oz.... $80 an oz...$200 for a 1/4 lb.

16 quarters in a 1/4 pound....I was good ,would eat a .25oz of stem... sell 15 Q's at $25 for $375, cost $200, I coud do that in a day often, keep a Q for myself, and make more $ than I did in the fifteen minutes that I got home from work(when the teens were waiting for me), than I did working 8 hours,it got better after my time and conections thru Cal-Trans !
 

Smells like victory!
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$100 per oz. swag
$320 per oz. of BC bud
$400-$500 per oz. of the kind
 

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