This is the problem I see with most attempts at legalization.
How does one regulate what can be grown nearly anywhere and expect it to have no black market value?
Jury errors cannot be rectified after the death of an innocent man.
I have absolutely no problem with capital punishment from a moral standpoint, but there is certainly too much risk of error involved from a legal one.
Switching to AIWB almost a year ago was definitely the best move to make concerning comfort as well as a few other issues I had with carrying on the hip. I've been running a 'Zack' by Dale Fricke (similar to the Raven Vanguard) and have found it to be an extremely comfortable alternative to...
I had a neighbor rant to me about how my buying a handgun in a FTF sale was illegal and that I had to register it.:rolleyes:
He's the same guy who went on about the superiority of his G23 over my 19 because "9mm won't go through auto glass." :laugh: I need to ask him where he registered his...
I assume that there are just as many gun owners in the high-crime areas as there are in the low-crime ones, they just aren't on paper. I don't think I will ever be convinced that firearm ownership has any correlation (either way) with crime rates.
The cartels generally bring in a vastly inferior product. If Capitalism prevailed and cultivation/distribution of MJ was unregulated, there would be next to no violence related to the sale of MJ.
The MEXICANS want their employers DOLLARS and receive them for performing a service. The service is more valuable to the employer, and the DOLLARS are more valuable to the MEXICAN.
This is Capitalism, and it's not just Obama who's trying to obliterate it.