"Because the Canadian marijuana industry is illegal, it operates almost entirely off
the books, generating virtually no tax revenue and precious few records.
So estimates of what it's worth to the B.C. economy are all over the map. But even
the small numbers are big, with estimates starting at around $3 billion a year and
rising as high as $20 billion, double the legal revenue generated by B.C.'s forest industry.
The Wikipedia puts the number at $6 billion. Britainâs Guardian newspaper puts it at
$20 billion. In 2006, the B.C. forest industry's direct economic activity totalled about
$10 billion, representing 7.4 per cent of the province's GDP."
http://www.rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/djclimenhaga/2010/10/bad-news-bc-decriminalization-coming-usa-0
last weekend:
"The 10 people shot on Vancouver's westside early Sunday morning were attending
a party at Best Neighbours restaurant for gang members, none were innocent bystanders
Vancouver police said Monday."
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/As...lowing+night+terror+mayhem/3965577/story.html
no deaths this time, gang murder totals in the past couple of years are into a couple
of score including 2 innocent victims executed because of being in the wrong place
at the wrong time. shootings have occurred in very public places, parking lots of malls
on the street beside shops, while a car is being driven, but so far no bystander has
been hit
while the action is - or is that was ? - out of character for Vancouver, it doesn't come
close compared to other cities in the US for instance, but nothing comes close to
what's happening in Mexico where drug/gang murders have topped 11,000 this year
and estimated to be around 30,000 for the last 4 years, but concerning is the idea
that Mexico may be becoming a 'failed state'
what's going on with 'drug crime' seems very similar to the US 'Prohibition', between
1919-33 when " . . . the sale, manufacture, and transportation of alcohol were banned
nationally as mandated in the Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution."
and judging by the old movies I've watched ". . . it tended to undermine society by
other means, as it stimulated the proliferation of rampant underground, organized
and widespread criminal activity." see 'Society' in the article
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prohibition_in_the_United_States
it seems then that Prohibition creates a much larger problem rather than preventing
what isn't a problem to begin with