Legalization advocates argued that making the drug trade legal would end the grip of the cartels.
Violence too was predicted to disappear after legalization.
This from frontpagemag.com.
Instead, the legal market has failed and the cartels are taking over sizable parts of California as well as the rest of the country.
Six years after California legalized marijuana, the bodies keep piling up too.
Earlier this year, six men were murdered in the Mojave desert. Four of the Latino men had been burned after being shot with rifles. In 2020, seven people were killed at an illegal pot operation in Riverside County.
California’s legal drug revenues have fallen consistently as have those in other legal drug states including Colorado whose model helped sell the idea that drug money would fix everything.
Despite falling revenues, Colorado legislators brag about $282 million in drug revenue. That number may sound high, but it’s a drop in the bucket considering the money that the state and cities like Denver are spending on homelessness, drug overdoses and law enforcement.
While the legal drug business is also collapsing in California, the state is spending a fortune fighting marijuana even as it tries to tax it.
Gov. Gavin Newsom paradoxically promised to close the budget deficit with $100 million in drug revenue meant to be used to fund law enforcement and fight substance abuse. The state seized over $300 million in illegal marijuana this year and uses satellite imagery and heavily armed raids to fight untaxed marijuana.
But despite all those efforts, illegal marijuana
has won and legal marijuana has lost.
The Los Angeles Times warned two years ago:
Proposition 64, California’s 2016 landmark cannabis initiative, sold voters on the promise a legal market would cripple the drug’s outlaw trade, with its associated violence and environmental wreckage.
Instead, the law triggered a surge in illegal cannabis on a scale California has never before witnessed.
Some of the growers are private citizens, but they aren’t likely to remain in business for long.
The paper described:
[R]ogue cultivation centers engulf rural communities scattered across the state, as far afield as the Mojave Desert, the steep mountains on the North Coast, and the high desert and timberlands of the Sierra Nevada [where residents describe] living in fear next to heavily armed camps.
Cartels and gang members dominate the business. And open borders allowed them to bring massive numbers of laborers to boost their ranks.
Not only California—but places as far afield as Maine that have large open areas and limited law enforcement resources—have been overrun by drug operations that more closely resemble parts of Latin America and Asia than the USA.
The coasts, from Southern California up to Oregon, are controlled by Mexican cartels which have expanded so much that they’re running short of workers even during [The Regime’s] open borders boom. Some have taken to brazenly advertising for illegal workers in Europe.
A local California DA described:
Mexican cartel groups coming up to grow pot, and people from Bulgaria, France, and Russia.
The vast exodus across the border has made it possible for cartels to freely bring in any workers they want through even as drug legalization and open borders effectively ended any real penalties for either illegal migration or marijuana.
Asian organized crime may be less on the radar, but it is no less ruthless or violent.
A few years ago, four Chinese people were murdered at an Oklahoma illegal pot farm.
The head of the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs revealed:
Chinese organized crime had taken over marijuana in Oklahoma and the United States.
Once again:
[T]he mafias set their sights on Oklahoma when the state’s voters approved a ballot measure that legalized the cultivation and sale of marijuana for medicinal purposes.
Now the Triads run their own compounds ringed by fences, surveillance cameras and guards with guns and machetes with 3,000 illegal grows estimated at as high as $44 billion a year.
The Triads are not just in the illegal marijuana business, they traffic in everything from heroin to fentanyl. Legalizing marijuana however provided them with a profitable and semi-legal market that gives them a base to expand their efforts trafficking in even more lethal drugs.
Drug legalization has failed on every level.
The legal drug business is collapsing. Politicians may be boasting about hundreds of millions in revenue, but the cartels are making tens of billions and they’re taking over entire forests.
The future [is] Mexican and Chinese organized crime
compounds that are spreading across the West
and parts of New England like a plague.
Legalization advocates still argue that if the government lowered the high taxes on legal pot, the business model could turn around again, but even without a single penny in taxes, no amount of legal labor is going to be able to compete with illegal aliens smuggled across the border and forced to work for free by gunmen. Legal businesses can’t compete with organized crime.
Drug legalization:
– is driving the border invasion,
– increased homelessness and drug abuse,
– boosted illegal migration and organized crime, and
– made life worse in every state and city where it’s been tried without delivering tangible benefits to anyone except for a few politicians who temporarily have a few million more to pass around to special interests, donors, and lobbyists.
Final thoughts: In other words, our elected officials sold us a damaged bill of goods, they handed over half the country to organized crime, and they pocketed a ton of money doing it.