You can get a pizza delivered. You an get a movie delivered. You can get a book delivered. You can even get your groceries delivered. Why shouldn’t you be able to get a gram of cannabis delivered?
Do we really need physical storefronts, or could the whole legal cannabis market be virtualized?
Keith_Humphreys says
More to the point: You can get wine and beer delivered.
NCGatSmFcts says
No offense, but what is the attraction of a more impersonal world?
As a convenience I guess it makes sense — but from what I have been told, there is a lot of variation in effects and one might really do better to go in and talk to the people who know the product. Make a new friend even.
What I think is bad is forcing people to use cash. And as always … don't drive high, y'all.
me2i81 says
People are funny about this stuff. I live in Washington State. People here voted to legalize it, but when a marijuana shop wanted to open in our neighborhood, my neighbors banded together in protest, because they were sure "the wrong element" would show up. I went into Seattle with my son because he wanted the experience of buying weed at a legal store (he's over 21) and the "wrong element" looked to be mostly clean-cut college kids (at least at 11pm) to me. But now he buys it locally (illegally) because it's convenient and 1/2 the price. The "wrong element" isn't going to pay $22/gram.
CharleyCarp says
During our brief experiment with "legal" weed, there was an outfit that advertised, on the radio, that they delivered.