Did anyone Watch Marijuana USA Last night?

Search

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,481
Tokens
The growing business of growing marijuana

CNBC reports on the intersection of cannabis and capitalism

By Trish Regan Anchor CNBC CNBC
updated 12/8/2010 5:54:02 PM ET 2010-12-08T22:54:02

The story of marijuana’s growing acceptance in America begins in the Colorado Rockies, where cannabis is meeting capitalism head-on.
Once a month, at his downtown Denver restaurant, chef Scott Durrah teaches a cooking class. It’s well attended, mostly by retired and affluent boomers. It’s exactly the market Durrah and his wife and business partner Wanda James want to reach.
“What we're seeing, which is really interesting, are older people,” said James. “I would say over the age of 30, and definitely women. These women are your mom, your grandmother, women that you see at the post office, at the day care center."
It’s their new twist on classic cuisine that draws this crowd. The ingredients are common, except for one — a Colorado-grown herb. The secret ingredient is marijuana.
Pot has arrived in mainstream America. And entrepreneurs like Durrah and James are leading the way as one of Denver’s power couples, prominent in the local political and business scenes. He’s is a former marine. She’s an ex-naval intelligence officer, a successful public relations executive and a top political fundraiser.
In most places in America, they would be considered dope dealers. In Colorado, they are savvy entrepreneurs in a fast-growing, state-sanctioned industry, branding and marketing medical marijuana under their label, “simply pure.”
It’s a new kind of company in an old industry, one that generates tens of billions of dollars a year in this country. Most of it illegally.
Durrah and James are taking the high road, using their business knowhow to take America’s most popular drug from the back alley to the corporate suite.
“When you look around this industry and the people who have come into the industry, there are people who were laid off from corporate America," James said. "This is America's new hot industry.”
James took CNBC to the heart of the operation: a lush marijuana farm inside a temperature-controlled warehouse. With 1000-watt lights, a sped-up growth cycle produces a new crop every two to three weeks - about twice as fast as Mother Nature. According to James, a typical plant yields 2.5 ounces of marijuana, with high-end varieties selling for $300 to $450 an ounce.

CNBC Special Report:
Marijuana USA

  1. Premieres:
    Wednesday, Dec. 8 at 9 p.m.
    Reairs:
    Wednesday, Dec. 8 at 10 p.m., 12 a.m. and 1 a.m.
    Friday, Dec. 10th at 9pm, 1am
    Sunday, Dec. 12th at 10pm
    Wednesday, Dec. 15th at 8pm
    Sunday, Dec. 19th at 1am
    Tuesday, Dec. 21st at 8pm
    Friday, Dec. 24th at 9am, 5pm, 1am
    Friday, Dec. 31st at 1am
    All times Eastern.

Even at those prices, medical marijuana is flying off the shelves. The choices are exotic, like choosing a bottle of wine. If you need help, just ask the pros, known here as “bud-tenders.”
As long as you have a state medical marijuana license, you can sample all you want. It’s all regulated, taxed and legal as far as the state is concerned.
Federal law, on the other hand, said pot is illegal. But in 2009, President Barack Obama directed the U.S. Department of Justice to defer to state laws regarding medical marijuana. With a single memo, the White House turned 70 years of prohibition on its head by advising U.S. attorneys in medical marijuana states to not go after individuals who are “in compliance with state laws.”
The threat of raids by the Drug Enforcement Administration seemed a thing of the past, and Colorado’s cannabis gold rush took off. People applied for medical marijuana licenses in droves, flooding the health department with more than 500 applications a day. The number of dispensaries jumped from about a dozen to more than a thousand across the state — outnumbering Starbucks almost two to one.
Today, you can buy pot next to a pizzeria, an auto repair shop or inside a medical office building. From downtown to the suburbs, pot dispensaries become neighborhood fixtures.
That’s too close to home for some parents, like Eric and Stacey Howell.
“You don’t want it invading your household, let alone your neighborhood, let alone your state,” said Stacey Howell, an elementary school teacher and mother of three. “As a parent, drugs are always in the back of your mind. From the minute your child is born, that's something you have to teach your child because it's out there.”
James said the marijuana industry is taking a more responsible approach to marketing than some others.
“What kind of signal does it send to your children when you have a fully stocked refrigerator with Coors Light or with Budweiser in it?” James asked. “And then the campaigns that are behind those alcohol products of the half-naked women? What kind of signal is that?”
But with medical marijuana laws already on the books in Washington D.C. and fifteen states, there’s an army of new marijuana entrepreneurs contributing to the supply. Samantha Sandt, 21, is one of them. She jumped at the chance to get in on the ground floor of the pot boom, selling seeds.
“We’re a new enterprise’” she said. “There’s endless opportunities. It’s like the Internet boom.”
With a degree in marketing and business, Sandt’s first job out of college is with Centennial Seed. Their seeds aren’t cheap: they retail for $70-$100 a dozen.
“We have close to 100 retailers in under six months,” she said. “We keep receiving calls day in and day out of more people interested in seed.”
But just as Colorado’s pot business took on an air of legitimacy and began thriving, the federal government fired a warning shot aimed at Chris Bartkowicz, who had been cultivating for years, long before medical marijuana was legal. Bartkowicz said he wanted nothing more than to come aboveground and become licensed and legitimate.
"You don’t see back alley deals with cigarettes," he said. "You don't see back alley deals with alcohol. But you do see it with marijuana. If it was legalized, taxed and government-regulated, we wouldn’t have problems like this. I wouldn’t be facing life in prison."

Bartkowicz was just another pot grower when a local television station asked for an interview. He agreed and proudly showed off the goods in his basement. It was a sensational story with a dramatic ending: the DEA raided Bartkowicz’s home and arrested him.
"If you go on the news and you show this marijuana grow and you tell me what house it's in, what am I left to do?” said DEA Special Agent Jeff Sweetin, who was in charge of the case. "(It’s a) violation of federal law, clear and simple.”
But it was not so clear and simple to Bartkowicz, who’d put his faith in that Justice Department memo, which advised the Feds not to crack down on people complying with state laws on marijuana. He was charged with possession of more than 100 marijuana plants with “intent to manufacture and distribute.”
“I was state compliant,” he said. “I had no fear. I was not worried about the Feds coming. No state charges have been levied against me and no state investigation was conducted. Why would I even have a hint of fear of the federal government?"
With a prior drug conviction, Bartkowicz was looking at a sentence of 40 years to life. He pled guilty and is hoping to get that reduced to five years.


With so many medical marijuana businesses here breaking federal law, Bartkowicz’s story sounded an alarm. But growers like Durrah and James are taking their chances.
“The federal government has been very, very clear in its guidelines that if you are operating under the guise of your state regulations, that it's supposed to be a hands-off scenario,” said James. “Which is why we feel confident to be able to do this industry and not fear, every morning when we wake up, of being arrested for this.”
James may not fear going to jail, but that’s not the case for growers in states without medical marijuana laws, where the crackdown continues.
© 2010 CNBC, Inc. All Rights Reserved
 

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,481
Tokens
I thought it was a great look at the growing biz of marijuana....wish i didnt have a felony
 

Maestro
Joined
Sep 19, 2007
Messages
4,081
Tokens
I watched it. Did you see that dude with the abdomine issue? wow, weird
 
Joined
Dec 21, 2008
Messages
9,460
Tokens
i watched it too... it was awesomeeee... here in CR is not that of a big deal of course... gonna order some of them seeds from holland!
 
Joined
Sep 19, 2009
Messages
1,573
Tokens
“The federal government has been very, very clear in its guidelines that if you are operating under the guise of your state regulations, that it's supposed to be a hands-off scenario,” said James. “Which is why we feel confident to be able to do this industry and not fear, every morning when we wake up, of being arrested for this.”

Anyone seen Super High Me? I dont think this guy did.
Local "rogue" sheriff in LA teamed up with DEA and raided a bunch of dispensaries.
Whatever Mr. James wants to believe, Federal law overrules State law.
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
46,540
Tokens
Fortunately, the faux policemen known as the DEA have neither the manpower or the financial resources to legally arrest at least 99.9% of state-legal medical marijuana providers, cultivators and/or patients.
 

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,481
Tokens
why max? you interested in getting into that business?

I'd like to but having a Felony would not be good....I have a feeling that we will have medical marijuana in 2-4 yrs in Texas.
 

Member
Joined
Nov 7, 2008
Messages
8,145
Tokens
Marijuana being illegal is just wrong. The govt can't find a way to regulate it so it remains illegal. It's the easiest way to control it and make money till they figure out an accurate way to tax it
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
46,540
Tokens
The govt can't find a way to regulate it so it remains illegal. It's the easiest way to control it and make money till they figure out an accurate way to tax it

Actually, the multi-billion dollar per year marijuana industry is absolutely Un-controlled by any level of government when using a system of criminal Prohibition.
 

New member
Joined
Dec 16, 2010
Messages
2
Tokens
Oh really?

=**snip**
Whatever Mr. James wants to believe, Federal law overrules State law.



Evidently, Mr. James and I are among the few remaining americans, who, it appears, have read those 10 pesky little addendums that the founding fathers included in the constitution. What're they called? Oh yeah, the 'Bill of Rights'.
 
Our Hemp growing, cannabis using forefathers wanted to make certain the federal government didn't usurp powers of the states. #10 of those amendments states: The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

For the unschooled, that means STATE trumps FEDERAL. What makes you think differently?
 

Nonsequential
Joined
Nov 1, 2004
Messages
5,179
Tokens
looks like its being re-run at the following times:
12/20 at 12 am
12/21 at 7 pm
12/24 at 8 am
12/24 at 4 pm
12/25 at 12 am

probably a good holiday show to watch with the fam...
 
Joined
Sep 19, 2009
Messages
1,573
Tokens
Evidently, Mr. James and I are among the few remaining americans, who, it appears, have read those 10 pesky little addendums that the founding fathers included in the constitution. What're they called? Oh yeah, the 'Bill of Rights'.
 
Our Hemp growing, cannabis using forefathers wanted to make certain the federal government didn't usurp powers of the states. #10 of those amendments states: The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

For the unschooled, that means STATE trumps FEDERAL. What makes you think differently?

How do you explain the DEA (succesfully) raiding a ton of dispensaries in southern California?

BTW, we are on the same side in this one.
 

New member
Joined
Oct 26, 2006
Messages
7,718
Tokens
I love marijuana. If it was COMPLETELY legal I know for a fact I'd stop drinking completely.
 

New member
Joined
Sep 21, 2000
Messages
9,100
Tokens
You guys need to relax and smoke a joint and stop arguing. I can't believe that pot is illegal in most states. Alcohol and tobacco kill millions of people. Funny I never here of anyone dying from pot. If your concerned about the effects of smoke on the lungs get a vaporizer.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,108,541
Messages
13,452,464
Members
99,422
Latest member
lbplayer
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com