> legalised the growing, selling and export of cannabis.
> But the country still restricts the legalization of cannabis for personal use
So you can grow it and even sell it.. But if you dare consume it you're a criminal ? Or the person you sell it to, if they consume it they're breaking the ?
This sounds very odd!
EDIT: My mistake, its for hemp and oil production. That makes way more sense.
Then there’s Canada, where you can grow it or buy it (from legal distributors), but import/export is verboten without a license that’s impossible to get for personal use.
In Washington you can buy it for personal use, but can't pass a joint to a friend (still a felony) and can't grow a single plant for personal use without a full commercial grower's license.
Where would Canada be exporting it to? Until now, the only other country besides Canada with fully legal cannabis was Uruguay. As I understand it, those clauses were in the Cannabis Act to assuage the concerns of other nations that Canada might get involved in what they would see as international drug trafficking.
Also, many countries (186) are nominally still party to the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, which puts marijuana in "Schedule IV:" "The drug … is particularly liable to abuse and to produce ill effects, and such liability is not offset by substantial therapeutic advantages." So even above-board international trade in cannabis may be problematic.
> The Commentary notes that "Whether the prohibition of drugs in Schedule IV (cannabis and cannabis resin, desomorphine, heroin, ketobemidone) should be mandatory or only recommended was a controversial question at the Plenipotentiary Conference." The provision adopted represents "a compromise which leaves prohibition to the judgement, though theoretically not to the discretion, of each Party." The Parties are required to act in good faith in making this decision, or else they will be in violation of the treaty.
IIRC one of the ex-PM May's husband's firms owned the largest cannabis operation [in Europe ?? used in medicinal sales globally] whilst their partner was responsible for stopping sale and use (including medical) in the UK.
Clever and morally void: what we in the UK call "Tory".
That's kind of ironic, since many conservatives support the legalisation of marijuana use (at least in the US). In my experience, the most zealous partisans against legalisation are nanny-staters.
In some parts of Africa, growing khat is more lucrative than growing food. This causes acute food shortages. I am not sure how this is going to affect growing food, if cannabis is more lucrative than growing food.
Presumably, the way they'd be growing, seeds aren't a desirable byproduct. The yield per acre for hemp seeds is around 700 pounds.[0] In comparison, rice can yield an order of magnitude more at 7471 pounds.[1]
Note that these numbers aren't for Malawi's climate but the difference is definitely still going to be there.
I'm unsure of the long term potential of hemp seeds. I don't think the genetics have been optimized for growing seeds yet. Most people breed for CBD, THC, and specific terpene profiles. The higher volume, lower margin goods like seed and fiber have been relatively unexplored by the market.
Good point - I can only imagine that there is a lot of optimization possible for seeds if cannabis becomes used as a food source.
I'd argue that the genetics of cannabis/hemp for use as fiber have been relatively more explored than seeds by selective breeding of Cannabis Sativa during the milleniums in some cultures when hemp fiber was the fiber of choice.[0]
I believe fiber and seeds were the original uses of the plant. Psychoactive properties weren't discovered until much later.
As for genetics, the tools we have now are so much better for breeding than even 25 years ago. For example, cannabis in the 90s was ~5% THC. Now it's easy to find strains over 30%. Similarly, CBD flower and CBG flower didn't exist even 5 years ago and now we have 20% CBD flower strains.
I'm sure people are working on genetics similarly for seed production and fiber but the money isn't there yet. Entire supply chains have to be built to support the industry. It's not just the farmers and genetics. There's processing equipment on multiple levels required as well as consumer markets that have to be established.
Certain types of large manufacturing equipment must be built in a crop-specific way or at least benefit significantly by being designed for a particular crop.
For example, all cannabis flower (non-extracted) is harvested by hand and then trimmed by hand. Recently machines were made to trim large amounts of cannabis efficiently with high quality. It used to take one person at least an hour to trim a pound of weed. Now a machine can do 10lbs a minute.
Throughout the supply-chain, there are machines that must be built to support the physical scale. This isn't unique to cannabis, vaping had the same problem. The cartridges used to all be filled by hand until someone invested in the machinery. That what causes standards and grades to be created. None of that really exists in cannabis/hemp right now.
These are mostly myths, at best they are ignored, at worst, they perpetuate the assumption half the population in Asia would be nourishing themselves badly (since many thousands of years - seems a bit far-fetched, no?).
Myth or not, ask people which have birds like Budgerigars, or watch it for your self. When you give them mixed food, they always go for the hemp seeds first, even by picking
through maybe an ounce of corns/seeds until they get to the few hemp ones. Why is that?
Kid might go for Sugary drink or cereals or snack over something like broccoli
What does it prove?
People in south Asia atleast don't consume Rice alone, rice has handful of amino acids when it's coupled with lentils (of different kinds) which have other complementary amino acid profile it becomes a complete protein like any other protein from whey
This is often smth which Indian people say, "bro our diet lacks protein". Yea what you consume everyday as "Dal bhaat rotti" if if it's protein then what it is?
Addict might go for heroine? wasn't what i meant to imply, nor does it fit the profile of the hemp seeds in birdseed since they come from the sort hemp which doesn't make you high.
More something like it's healthy and they know it. By whatever
means...
This is a hilariously wrong sentence in multiple ways.
Hemp :is: a strain of cannabis. You may have meant to say 'THC producing plants' which would still be technically wrong.
While sensamilla is probably what most people are used to these days, that is not to say seeds are not involved / don't appear in capital C cannabis.
I would bet $10, based purely on the deadpan authoritative delivery of completely factually wrong information, that you are either American or British. Close?
I'm American, and I agree people everywhere get things wrong without knowing.
But buddy if you think Americans and British people don't do this more than other nations, then you must have missed the whole colonialism thing.
No other nations have the same YouTube compilations where people on the street get asked if made up countries should be bombed - resulting in emphatic and authoritative confirmation that yes they need to be punished.
If we're not even allowed to talk about the particular kind of dumb we have then how can we get better?
Yeah, I agree. The cannabis sativa plant is very versatile and can be grown for multiple purposes. Some in combination with each other. What makes sense depends on the market you're going for.
My background: tryplainjane.com is my company. We farm and manufacture as well.
Well, you are a pedantic, prejudiced kind of person hey? How about this rewording instead...
"Hemp is not the same strain of Cannabis that produce THC in levels found in Marijuana type plants. Also the THC is harvested from the flower and so you don't typically get a meaningful harvest quantity of seeds, because the flowers are taken before seeds develop."
I agree with your point. I am also having a difficult time understanding how a landlocked country expects to grow its exports in this area without some degree of condemnation from surrounding nations. Many nations are eager to have a reason for a conflict, this may be something used to propel the Malawi–Tanzania dispute.
Food is pretty localised for those without good storage means, if the local food supply reduces then prices rise. If there's less food than there was before, and people want the same amount then prices will inflate and overtake the extra income. Those not growing cash crop will fall behind, leading to pressure to stop growing food ... the local community needs food growing but the market won't price it properly. Whilst food is most vital the other crop can be sold in wealthier countries.
People grow coffee and chocolate whilst their countries suffer famines. People sell water rights to multinationals whilst their countries suffer droughts ...
The OPs argument would only make sense if importing of food or the massive global logistical system didn't already exist...
If one country stops producing a certain food type, that just increases the amount of money to be made in another country. It will balance itself out pretty quickly, which is why any shortage is acute and not a long term problem.
It's a net gain for the world, especially as they are already growing cannabis in other countries and you're taking money from cartels and criminals and turning it into a self-sustainable crop for impoverished African countries. Ones that provide a superior return than prior ones.
When I was in Malawi many years ago cannabis was incredibly cheap. It's got a climate where you pretty much just have to drop some seeds by the road and a while later there are plants. I doubt it will cause much food shortages.
If it is more lucrative than growing food, I don't think it matters much if it's legal or not - it'll happen anyway, except that when it's all black market, there's associated violent crime, and the government can't tax any of the profits.
True, the tax collection benefit is often overestimated though as legalization doesn't necessarily cause those who were previously participating in a black market to start paying taxes. Case in point, California.
If it is more lucrative than growing food, does that mean you can buy an equivalent amount of imported food and pocket the profits? If that was the case then it would be an example globalization at work. (note, I don't know if it is)
Similarly, would wealthy khat growers be willing to pay more for food? Since they have more wealth? If so then it would create inflationary pressure on food prices and thus make growing food pay more than it had before.
I can easily imagine that the markets would be imbalanced at first, but it seems the mechanisms would correct that if it is simply more valuable to grow khat.
>If it is more lucrative than growing food, does that mean you can buy an equivalent amount of imported food and pocket the profits? If that was the case then it would be an example globalization at work.
If the infrastructure for transporting that food exists, then yes. The problem with relying on food from other countries is that it undermined your (food) security. It's possible that this can be used as a tool in in relations against your country or in the time of a crisis you're more likely to be left hanging. Eg look at all those companies/countries that depend on some important goods from China. During the current crisis the resources in China will be used in China first. Now imagine that same situation, but with food. I think that's why western countries subsidize agriculture so heavily.
If infra for food transportation does not exist then the point is even more valid.
If I have village where no food can be imported and limited amount of agricultural land. If I grow khat how am I going to feed my family if outside food can not come in ? Will the villagers be willing to pay more khat even when food is scarce ? I think I am missing something.
Dry food is extremely easy to transport. For the farmer, they are only growing cash crops if they can sell it outside of village, but if they sell it that means they can also import food.
At worst it might be raising food prices for non farmers, but farmers are going to be strictly better off.
Western countries subsidize agriculture because there are a lot of farmers and they are a powerful voting block. In the US, they are especially influential in low-population states with high senator-to-citizen ratios.
Are there a lot of farmers in the US? I don't seek it out, but I've read a few times that small family farms are quite rare and most food is produced by huge agribusiness farms
Agriculture is an enormous business in the USA, with 1% of the overall GDP. That may seem small, but consider that all USA industry combined is only 18% of the GDP. Many states in the country depend on agriculture as their #1 product. The USA is an exporter of food, with corn, beans, wheat and beets being the top crops.
The world produces more than enough food to feed everyone so this isn't a simple zero sum game. Individuals deciding to grow khat are, in theory, exchanging their grown goods for food to feed themselves (or else they are quite poor at planning for the future). Let's say the khat grower switched to corn, now the farmer just has a bunch of corn - does this somehow benefit his starving neighbors? If he can afford to share his corn with his neighbors he could afford to share even more food when growing khat.
So the question here isn't whether a farmer should grow khat or corn and how that effects the food supply - it's whether land distribution, the opportunity to chose what to farm, is distributed in a fair enough manner that everyone has the opportunity to avoid starvation.
It is extremely likely that a corrupt country doesn't have a decent allocation of land and has favored designating a lot of land to specific influential people, but whether those people grow khat or corn doesn't matter at all except in terms of further securing their influence.
If it's more lucrative to grow cannabis than growing cannabis means you've produced more food - the only issues arise when the supply of food is artificially limited (for instance due to import sanctions) and the value of that cannabis isn't convertible into food - in this scenario, then, the value of cannabis would tank and it'd become nearly worthless - or we'd have a scenario of uneven enforcement where an external to the country entity (like a drug cartel) is funding the farming and removing the product from the local market for re-sale elsewhere where the value hasn't tanked and, in this scenario, the best response is for the government to legalize the substance so that the market can equalize the value of the cash crop toward an actual value in terms of food.
Honestly, most of these weird market effects is because the US absolutely hates drug production and has a "war on drugs" that they actively export... All while constantly consuming truckloads of the stuff. If things were legalized in the US a lot of these problems would just naturally correct themselves - barring that legalizing them overseas removes a lot of the power that cartels have. This is since, if the product is illegal, only the large criminal organizations can afford the distribution network - if it's legal then a drug cartel can just purchase the drugs on an open market and allow farmers to individually make the choice of which crop to grow without worrying about people with guns.
> If khat pays more wouldn't it mean you can sell khat and buy food with that money ?
Are you implying that you're going to buy khat from a local source. Then sell it to another local source, despite the fact that there's already a cheaper source, and then buy food that is more or less nonexistent locally, and expensive to import by yourself as a person without a warehouse?
> despite the fact that there's already a cheaper source
If there is already a cheaper source than growing Khat isn't more profitable. Khat is only more profitable if it can be sold for... more profit. That large profit should, assuming the market isn't distorted for other reasons[1], allow you to purchase more food than if you grew the food locally - if that isn't the case then growing food becomes more profitable.
1. I touched on this in a longer sibling comment, but a big reason is artificial supply restriction (as in, sanctions) with continued access to external markets for the black market goods.
Khat suppresses hunger, so if you don’t have enough food to eat, you just chew more khat.
Also, stable food production requires multiple growing cycles. It is possible for short-term famines to be created by farmers' choice of more lucrative products. While food production can be restored over subsequent years, that is cold comfort to all the people who had to do without in the interim.
I'm highly skeptical, needs some citations. In Kenya, Meru is one of the most fertile regions and it produces tons of bananas and other produce alongside khat.
In any case, keep in mind that there are other "cash crops" besides khat (such as tea, coffee, pyrethrum, cotton) that have been (historically) more lucrative than growing food for large-scale farmers so this isn't something unique to khat.
But personal consumption isn't allowed. This is a classic example of a government getting in on legalization for the money and not for the betterment of its citizens.
By giving consumers, who are troubled balancing recreation and addiction, the proper treatment?
In my opinion, it's definitely easier to "handle" drugs when we can openly talk about them and their negative effects, without business and government telling us what to think about them.
In USA, eg, the tax revenue is used to fund drug education among other useful things. Recreational usage states in USA have also seen a decline in pot usage by school-age young adults (however, I'm thinking it's been replaced with something else and we dont have data on that yet)
A young citizen not being arrested for consuming weed seems good to me. When you multiply that event over the entire population, you have a huge regressive cost forced on these people. Imagine if they didn't pay that cost and instead lived their otherwise upstanding lives :) that is how you benefit society bottom-up.
> I am not sure how full legalization contributes to the betterment of citizens, especially young citizens.
Your mistake is to assume a simple relationship between legalisation and use, and that there are no benefits to those young people already using or who would use anyway.
Keeping kids out of the criminal justice system is a huge thing.
Criminalization of drugs in the United States is primarily a political concern. Massive numbers of poor people and minorities have been excluded from our political process due to drug use.
In Florida, 1.6M felons were "given" the right vote again (1). Most of the large elections in Florida are decided by less than 100K votes. The governor's race was more like 35K difference. Who do you think these ex-cons will vote for?
When cannabis was legalized in Canada consumption rates did not go up. In fact, they didn't change much at all: they stayed fairly high (no pun, honest). This is evidence that making possession of cannabis illegal has far less to do "think of the children" and more to do with either mindless political dogma or else preservation of personal privilege of some elites somewhere (and those two options are not mutually exclusive).
Yeah, there are many political reasons for criminalizing it.
What I found pretty eye-opening in the sense of "Oh wow, that's so obvious, I actually didn't think about that" was that one of the reasons was the American Prohibition in the 30s, and after it was abolished, a bunch of people were about to lose their jobs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXPOw2unxy0
In college, my economics professor put a question on the final about how we might solve the economic issues around the corn blight in Malawi. At the time, I wouldn't have dared raise this as the answer.
They are shifting focus from growing tobacco to growing weed. This really doesn't solve anything aside from replacing the economic output from a rapidly declining industry.
The European cannabis market is early and developing. Many companies have been bitten by building out capacity before demand. All of the Canadian cannabis companies way over produce for the Canadian market so they planned to sell to Europe and possibly the US. Other countries like Columbia are also aiming to get this international export market.
From what I understand the overproduction isn't because of lack of demand, but provinces' slow rollout of sale and distribution.
For instance, here in Ontario the government had a plan that would have had 40 physical stores across the province by October 2018 with plans for more. The incoming government killed that. The province saw fewer than 20 stores by the following April, largely concentrated in Toronto.
Everything did look primed for a great market and it was essentially kneecapped out of political spite.
IIRC, the value of the combined public Canadian cannabis companies was >$10B (before the 2019 q2/q3 collapse). The size of the Canadian cannabis market is <$5B. I believe analysts priced in the export market opportunity, particularly to Europe and the United States.
I do believe problems with the implementation in the Canadian market hurt cashflows and accelerated the expected timeline of investors to find other markets. These rollout problems certainly hurt but everyone knew Canada isn't a huge market.
malawi already has a reputation in southern african countries of producing some potent weed. I guess, this is a good move for them. hopefully, in SA n zim they will able to access Malawi weed easily now
Probably not a big deal? The fed still thinks weed is illegal and if customs is doing their job, above-board imports won't be permitted. The existing smuggling industry is probably already cornered by cartels and don't pay much for their supply anyway.
Canada presently prohibits all import and export of cannabis. It's legally restricted to a purely domestic industry. That could change of course, but probably not until a number more countries legalize the growing and export of cannabis.
Finally. I've got the impression that many drugs were politically criminalized in order make sure non-western countries would not get wealthy by them. (Yet publicly different reasons were used)
And no this is not like oil. Mining (for oil or gold among others) is a very different business than farming (for weed or coca or opium among others), leading to a different wealth distribution. All that western "free trade" promotion BS while being so so careful with importing agricultural products to "protect local farmers" whom in turn became a small % yet heavily amplified in output by their diesel machines: this clearly made winners and losers in the global "free" trade game.
Nuf ranting: this news shows some movement towards common sense policy.
93 comments
[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 163 ms ] thread> legalised the growing, selling and export of cannabis.
> But the country still restricts the legalization of cannabis for personal use
So you can grow it and even sell it.. But if you dare consume it you're a criminal ? Or the person you sell it to, if they consume it they're breaking the ?
This sounds very odd!
EDIT: My mistake, its for hemp and oil production. That makes way more sense.
> The Commentary notes that "Whether the prohibition of drugs in Schedule IV (cannabis and cannabis resin, desomorphine, heroin, ketobemidone) should be mandatory or only recommended was a controversial question at the Plenipotentiary Conference." The provision adopted represents "a compromise which leaves prohibition to the judgement, though theoretically not to the discretion, of each Party." The Parties are required to act in good faith in making this decision, or else they will be in violation of the treaty.
(Wikipedia)
Clever and morally void: what we in the UK call "Tory".
https://beta.spectator.co.uk/article/homegrown-industry
Note that these numbers aren't for Malawi's climate but the difference is definitely still going to be there.
[0] https://www.agmrc.org/commodities-products/fiber/industrial-... [1] https://www.statista.com/statistics/190479/rice-yield-per-ha...
I'd argue that the genetics of cannabis/hemp for use as fiber have been relatively more explored than seeds by selective breeding of Cannabis Sativa during the milleniums in some cultures when hemp fiber was the fiber of choice.[0]
[0] https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-teenage-mind/201...
As for genetics, the tools we have now are so much better for breeding than even 25 years ago. For example, cannabis in the 90s was ~5% THC. Now it's easy to find strains over 30%. Similarly, CBD flower and CBG flower didn't exist even 5 years ago and now we have 20% CBD flower strains.
I'm sure people are working on genetics similarly for seed production and fiber but the money isn't there yet. Entire supply chains have to be built to support the industry. It's not just the farmers and genetics. There's processing equipment on multiple levels required as well as consumer markets that have to be established.
For example, all cannabis flower (non-extracted) is harvested by hand and then trimmed by hand. Recently machines were made to trim large amounts of cannabis efficiently with high quality. It used to take one person at least an hour to trim a pound of weed. Now a machine can do 10lbs a minute.
Throughout the supply-chain, there are machines that must be built to support the physical scale. This isn't unique to cannabis, vaping had the same problem. The cartridges used to all be filled by hand until someone invested in the machinery. That what causes standards and grades to be created. None of that really exists in cannabis/hemp right now.
It's known for atleast 5000years.
https://doctor.ndtv.com/living-healthy/8-myths-about-rice-yo...
Kid might go for Sugary drink or cereals or snack over something like broccoli
What does it prove?
People in south Asia atleast don't consume Rice alone, rice has handful of amino acids when it's coupled with lentils (of different kinds) which have other complementary amino acid profile it becomes a complete protein like any other protein from whey
This is often smth which Indian people say, "bro our diet lacks protein". Yea what you consume everyday as "Dal bhaat rotti" if if it's protein then what it is?
More something like it's healthy and they know it. By whatever means...
Hemp :is: a strain of cannabis. You may have meant to say 'THC producing plants' which would still be technically wrong.
While sensamilla is probably what most people are used to these days, that is not to say seeds are not involved / don't appear in capital C cannabis.
I would bet $10, based purely on the deadpan authoritative delivery of completely factually wrong information, that you are either American or British. Close?
Not the gp here, but I think that comment is uncalled for.
I'm not American or British and I have been totally wrong, and convinced that I was right, many times.
The gp was commenting in a normal tone. I think a simple correction should be enough.
But buddy if you think Americans and British people don't do this more than other nations, then you must have missed the whole colonialism thing.
No other nations have the same YouTube compilations where people on the street get asked if made up countries should be bombed - resulting in emphatic and authoritative confirmation that yes they need to be punished.
If we're not even allowed to talk about the particular kind of dumb we have then how can we get better?
My background: tryplainjane.com is my company. We farm and manufacture as well.
"Hemp is not the same strain of Cannabis that produce THC in levels found in Marijuana type plants. Also the THC is harvested from the flower and so you don't typically get a meaningful harvest quantity of seeds, because the flowers are taken before seeds develop."
Maybe I am wrong, but your attitude sucks.
Edit: I guess you are just an angry person - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22187216
People grow coffee and chocolate whilst their countries suffer famines. People sell water rights to multinationals whilst their countries suffer droughts ...
If one country stops producing a certain food type, that just increases the amount of money to be made in another country. It will balance itself out pretty quickly, which is why any shortage is acute and not a long term problem.
It's a net gain for the world, especially as they are already growing cannabis in other countries and you're taking money from cartels and criminals and turning it into a self-sustainable crop for impoverished African countries. Ones that provide a superior return than prior ones.
They require a lot of water/irrigation, though. Probably also why they grow so fast.
Similarly, would wealthy khat growers be willing to pay more for food? Since they have more wealth? If so then it would create inflationary pressure on food prices and thus make growing food pay more than it had before.
I can easily imagine that the markets would be imbalanced at first, but it seems the mechanisms would correct that if it is simply more valuable to grow khat.
If the infrastructure for transporting that food exists, then yes. The problem with relying on food from other countries is that it undermined your (food) security. It's possible that this can be used as a tool in in relations against your country or in the time of a crisis you're more likely to be left hanging. Eg look at all those companies/countries that depend on some important goods from China. During the current crisis the resources in China will be used in China first. Now imagine that same situation, but with food. I think that's why western countries subsidize agriculture so heavily.
If I have village where no food can be imported and limited amount of agricultural land. If I grow khat how am I going to feed my family if outside food can not come in ? Will the villagers be willing to pay more khat even when food is scarce ? I think I am missing something.
At worst it might be raising food prices for non farmers, but farmers are going to be strictly better off.
Yeay democracy, I guess.
So the question here isn't whether a farmer should grow khat or corn and how that effects the food supply - it's whether land distribution, the opportunity to chose what to farm, is distributed in a fair enough manner that everyone has the opportunity to avoid starvation.
It is extremely likely that a corrupt country doesn't have a decent allocation of land and has favored designating a lot of land to specific influential people, but whether those people grow khat or corn doesn't matter at all except in terms of further securing their influence.
If it's more lucrative to grow cannabis than growing cannabis means you've produced more food - the only issues arise when the supply of food is artificially limited (for instance due to import sanctions) and the value of that cannabis isn't convertible into food - in this scenario, then, the value of cannabis would tank and it'd become nearly worthless - or we'd have a scenario of uneven enforcement where an external to the country entity (like a drug cartel) is funding the farming and removing the product from the local market for re-sale elsewhere where the value hasn't tanked and, in this scenario, the best response is for the government to legalize the substance so that the market can equalize the value of the cash crop toward an actual value in terms of food.
Honestly, most of these weird market effects is because the US absolutely hates drug production and has a "war on drugs" that they actively export... All while constantly consuming truckloads of the stuff. If things were legalized in the US a lot of these problems would just naturally correct themselves - barring that legalizing them overseas removes a lot of the power that cartels have. This is since, if the product is illegal, only the large criminal organizations can afford the distribution network - if it's legal then a drug cartel can just purchase the drugs on an open market and allow farmers to individually make the choice of which crop to grow without worrying about people with guns.
Could you please clarify more ? I think I am missing something. If khat pays more wouldn't it mean you can sell khat and buy food with that money ?
Are you implying that you're going to buy khat from a local source. Then sell it to another local source, despite the fact that there's already a cheaper source, and then buy food that is more or less nonexistent locally, and expensive to import by yourself as a person without a warehouse?
If there is already a cheaper source than growing Khat isn't more profitable. Khat is only more profitable if it can be sold for... more profit. That large profit should, assuming the market isn't distorted for other reasons[1], allow you to purchase more food than if you grew the food locally - if that isn't the case then growing food becomes more profitable.
1. I touched on this in a longer sibling comment, but a big reason is artificial supply restriction (as in, sanctions) with continued access to external markets for the black market goods.
Marijuana cultivation attempts to grow mainly seedless female plants, but hemp fiber farmers won't starve.
Also, stable food production requires multiple growing cycles. It is possible for short-term famines to be created by farmers' choice of more lucrative products. While food production can be restored over subsequent years, that is cold comfort to all the people who had to do without in the interim.
By giving consumers, who are troubled balancing recreation and addiction, the proper treatment?
In my opinion, it's definitely easier to "handle" drugs when we can openly talk about them and their negative effects, without business and government telling us what to think about them.
Your mistake is to assume a simple relationship between legalisation and use, and that there are no benefits to those young people already using or who would use anyway.
Keeping kids out of the criminal justice system is a huge thing.
In Florida, 1.6M felons were "given" the right vote again (1). Most of the large elections in Florida are decided by less than 100K votes. The governor's race was more like 35K difference. Who do you think these ex-cons will vote for?
1) https://www.wsj.com/articles/florida-voted-to-give-1-4-milli...
What I found pretty eye-opening in the sense of "Oh wow, that's so obvious, I actually didn't think about that" was that one of the reasons was the American Prohibition in the 30s, and after it was abolished, a bunch of people were about to lose their jobs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXPOw2unxy0
1. https://time.com/5752765/lesotho-africa-cannibabis-exports/
For instance, here in Ontario the government had a plan that would have had 40 physical stores across the province by October 2018 with plans for more. The incoming government killed that. The province saw fewer than 20 stores by the following April, largely concentrated in Toronto.
Everything did look primed for a great market and it was essentially kneecapped out of political spite.
I do believe problems with the implementation in the Canadian market hurt cashflows and accelerated the expected timeline of investors to find other markets. These rollout problems certainly hurt but everyone knew Canada isn't a huge market.
And no this is not like oil. Mining (for oil or gold among others) is a very different business than farming (for weed or coca or opium among others), leading to a different wealth distribution. All that western "free trade" promotion BS while being so so careful with importing agricultural products to "protect local farmers" whom in turn became a small % yet heavily amplified in output by their diesel machines: this clearly made winners and losers in the global "free" trade game.
Nuf ranting: this news shows some movement towards common sense policy.