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quaint

(3,549 posts)
Wed May 1, 2024, 10:25 AM May 2024

DEA's big marijuana shift could be a lifeline for California's troubled pot industry

LATimes
If the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration reclassified marijuana as a less dangerous drug, it wouldn’t eliminate the conflicts between the feds and states such as California that have legalized many uses of the substance.

But it would bring one significant shift that could give California’s licensed pot companies a badly needed boost: a lighter tax burden.

But if marijuana is reclassified as a Schedule III drug, “players in that industry for the first time will be able to take standard tax deductions that other businesses take,” said Paul Armentano, deputy director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, also known as NORML, which advocates for cannabis consumer.
"The payments industry only processes legal products, and reclassification does not make cannabis legal,” said Scott Talbot, executive vice president of the Electronic Transactions Assn. “Reclassification moves the needle but doesn’t cross the goal line to making cannabis legal and thus acceptable to banks and the credit and debit card industry.”

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DEA's big marijuana shift could be a lifeline for California's troubled pot industry (Original Post) quaint May 2024 OP
If the weed industry is in any kind of trouble, it sure as shit isn't my fault! LOL I'm doing all I can but brewens May 2024 #1
Me, too, doing all I can. quaint May 2024 #2
we are the real heroes here. Obviously. puff puff pass ZonkerHarris May 2024 #7
'ere quaint May 2024 #8
so the real take away here is - - not really. stopdiggin May 2024 #3
Legalization to allow normal banking is actually needed but this will really lower taxes on dispensaries. quaint May 2024 #4
I'll grant that part of the argument stopdiggin May 2024 #5
This is only my third year of not growing my own quaint May 2024 #6
 

brewens

(15,359 posts)
1. If the weed industry is in any kind of trouble, it sure as shit isn't my fault! LOL I'm doing all I can but
Wed May 1, 2024, 10:30 AM
May 2024

I'm only one stoner dude.

stopdiggin

(12,830 posts)
3. so the real take away here is - - not really.
Wed May 1, 2024, 11:09 AM
May 2024

the legal industry's major problem is, and will continue to be - an enormous illegal culture, burdened by zero oversight, regulation (or taxes). (in fact - a lot of it is grown on land not even owned by the 'grower'

quaint

(3,549 posts)
4. Legalization to allow normal banking is actually needed but this will really lower taxes on dispensaries.
Wed May 1, 2024, 11:13 AM
May 2024

Hopefully, it will make legal cannabis more affordable for consumers.
At my age, I have no contact with blackmarket pot.

stopdiggin

(12,830 posts)
5. I'll grant that part of the argument
Wed May 1, 2024, 11:25 AM
May 2024

and hold back on my commentary on the intersection of 'legal dispensaries' - and blackmarket product.
Peace.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

quaint

(3,549 posts)
6. This is only my third year of not growing my own
Wed May 1, 2024, 11:32 AM
May 2024

Water pricing forced me to the dispensaries. There is no doubt in my mind that a good proportion of legal cannabis has illegal origins. Pot laundering.

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