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Colo. gov. on legal pot: It can work despite problems

poledriver

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Jul 21, 2005
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Colo. gov. on legal pot: It can work despite problems

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Colorado's governor, once opposed to the legalization of recreational marijuana, now thinks it can work, even though the state is dealing with marijuana related problems. Gov. John Hickenlooper speaks to Bill Whitaker for a 60 Minutes report on the state of Colorado's pot industry a year after retailers began selling the drug for recreational use. Whitaker's story will be broadcast on 60 Minutes Sunday, Jan. 11 at 8:00 p.m. ET and 7 p.m. PT.

Colorado voters approved the legalization of recreational marijuana in the fall of 2012 and in January of 2014, retail shops began selling it. Gov. John Hickenlooper wasn't happy at the time of the vote. "No. I opposed it...and I think even after the election, if I'd had a magic wand and I could wave the wand, I probably would've reversed it and had the initiative fail," he tells Whitaker. "But now I look at it...and I think we've made a lot of progress...still a lot of work to be done. But I think we might actually create a system that can work."

Hickenlooper appointed Andrew Freedman as his marijuana czar, responsible for overseeing the rollout legal recreational pot. Almost immediately, Freedman and state regulators had to tackle problems with edible marijuana products. "One of the things we didn't see coming was that people were going to overdose on edibles... New rules and regulations came out faster than I think you ever see state government do something," Freedman tells Whitaker.

Another big problem is the cash economy surrounding the now billion dollar industry in the state. Because marijuana is still illegal in the eyes of the federal government, only a handful of banks are willing to do business with marijuana companies. The result is nearly all transactions, from customer purchases to routine business expenses, are paid in cash. That, acknowledges Hickenlooper, is a recipe for trouble. "If you want to guarantee a fledgling industry becomes corrupt...make it all cash, right. That's as old as Al Capone, right. Cash creates corruption," says the governor.

Cont -

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/colorado-governor-legal-pot-60-minutes/
 
Federalism in action. Every day it becomes less and less likely that a future president would even have the political and social capital necessary to significantly roll back state-level reform. Not even considering whether (at this point in time), whether someone who openly doubts cannabis reform could even be elected.

IMO, any republican who manages to be elected to national office in the future will be at least as neutral as Hickenlooper (who is pretty fucking anti-pot, despite what this article makes out, he's just learned to live with reality--further showing the political realities of cannabis reform--the anti people are dying, the pro folks are multiplying).
 
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