Watching the state birth an entire bureaucracy for dealing with 
legalized marijuana has been a little like watching a late-season 
Mariners game — you know it’s going to be a meaningless comedy of 
errors. There’s no chance of making the playoffs, because the game is 
being played primarily with rookies and guys who started the season in 
the minors, along with a few end-of-their-career veterans.
I recently attended a meeting, where the speaker was Clallam County 
District Court Judge Rick Porter, discussing the state’s impending (it’s
 not yet legal) legalization, proposed enforcement, taxation, and 
marketing of reefer. The judge was a pretty entertaining speaker, and 
made a lot of his more serious points using humor.
However, the one point he made that really isn’t too funny when you 
think about it, yet elicited the biggest chuckle from the audience 
because no one was at all surprised, was this: By the time the state 
taxes pot at the grower level, the processor lever, and again at the retail 
level, the cost will be just about twice the current illegal street price. 
This was supposed to be a gold mine for the state, and it’s spending 
millions of our tax dollars creating the bureaucracy to oversee it. Personally, I believe 
those supposed business geniuses down there in Olympia could figure out how to lose money selling 
whiskey in a whorehouse.
 
 
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