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Marijuana Evolves Faster Than Human Beings

Explaining the failure of marijuana prohibition is easy. Sociology, economics, history, and psychology can all help to explain why a safe and popular drug cannot be removed from the market by force. Still, there is another important reason why marijuana is here to stay: it evolves at an incredibly rapid pace, becoming stronger and more profitable every day.

The vigorous growth and adaptability of the marijuana plant has long frustrated efforts by law-enforcement to thwart its production. Specific strains are easily cross-bred, producing offspring that emphasize certain qualities, thus growers in Oregon can develop a strain that grows well in Oregon's climate with minimal effort. Hybridization not only improves potency, but can also shorten flowering time and increase yield, thereby enabling growers to produce more in less time.

We're witnessing a situation in which the biological vigor of the plant itself has far outpaced law-enforcement efforts that were never effective to begin with. Indoor-grown strains can advance through 3-4 generations in a year's time, with the best specimens from each batch selected for cloning or crossbreeding. Each successive generation carries on the best traits of the former, which explains why growers can now accomplish in a basement what used to require an acre or more in the woods.

The great irony of all this is that drug warriors still think increased marijuana potency is an argument for their side. In reality, nothing could better illustrate the failure of their efforts to reduce the drug's production. Harsh marijuana laws have incentivized growers to produce a stronger product, which carries the same penalties by weight, while commanding higher prices on the street.

As the bitter debate over marijuana legalization rages on, the plants will grow ever faster, bigger, and stronger. Marijuana is one of nature's most remarkable creations, and it is unbelievable that so many people still haven't figured out that this plant is here to help us. From healthy foods to a promising cancer cure, we should be grateful that cannabis sativa grows and evolves as vigorously as it does.

With every forward step in marijuana's evolution, the war against this resilient plant becomes less and less effective.

Note: Thanks to court-qualified cannabis expert Chris Conrad for answering growing questions, and to pot-paparazzi Steve Bloom for turning me on to the government's awesome 2008 cultivation assessment, which got me thinking about this.

Drug War Issues Marijuana - Marijuana Policy
Consequences of Prohibition Increased Drug Potency

Invincible Marijuana Biology

Human beings are just marijuana's way of producing more marijuana.

The Drug is Safe. The Policy is Not.

Friend,

You are describing the dangers of marijuana policy, not marijuana itself. If anyone is killed in the marijuana trade, all blame rests with the fools who banned this drug and turned its distribution over to criminals.

That is just a fact.

Give me a break

This is absurd. We all know what happened when alcohol prohibition was repealed. Massive black-market violence flat-lined overnight. This is not speculation. This is what happened, and it makes sense that this is what happened.

If, as you say, "the crime will shift from one activity to another," then we're not talking about marijuana, are we? With that line you've accidentally revealed your own desperate attempt to blame marijuana users for criminal activity that is beyond their control; activity that you yourself have described as inevitable.

Beer merchants don't have shoot-outs in the street. In a regulated market, marijuana merchants wouldn't either. This is not complicated.

I just want to point out...

It's not like the plant itself is naturally evolving this fast, this is just how fast people are breeding new varieties. Artificial selection always happens faster than natural selection.

And marijuana isn't exactly nature's creation. What nature originally created is something like ditchweed; it was humans who domesticated it and made it into marijuana as we know it today.

Thanks Julia

Yeah, you're right. I just framed it this way to get people's attention, which worked quite well.

Of course, as I pointed out in the post, marijuana prohibition has played a major role in influencing the behavior of marijuana breeders.

In a regulated market, factors other than potency would get more attention than they do now.

NOBODY?

Put down the THC and get your head together. The statement makes absolutely no sense. Against the DPA and those that blog in support on this site? "Everybody" and "nobody" generalizations make the person, making those comments, the one that, (almost) no one, will want to listen to.

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