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With pot and porn outstripping corn, America's black economy is flying high
The Guardian ^ | 5/2/2003 | Duncan Cambell

Posted on 05/01/2003 10:31:41 PM PDT by UnBlinkingEye

With pot and porn outstripping corn, America's black economy is flying high

Illegal migrants provide the muscle for US black market

Duncan Campbell in Los Angeles Friday May 2, 2003 The Guardian

Marijuana, pornography and illegal labour have created a hidden market in the United States which now accounts for as much as 10% of the American economy, according to a study. As a cash crop, marijuana is believed to have outstripped maize, and hardcore porn revenue is equal to Hollywood's domestic box office takings. Despite laws that punish marijuana cultivation more strictly than murder in some states, Americans spend more on illegal drugs than on cigarettes. And despite official disapproval of pornography, the US leads the world in export of explicit sex videos, according to Reefer Madness: Sex, Drugs and Cheap Labour in the American Black Market, by Eric Schlosser.

Although the official American economy has been suffering a downturn, the shadow economy is enjoying unprecedented levels of success, much in the way that the prohibition period fuelled the illegal markets in the 30s. Schlosser found that three specific industries accounted for a major portion of this boom.

No aspect of farming has grown faster in the US over the past three decades than marijuana, with one-third of the public over the age of 12 having smoked the drug.

While the nation's largest legal cash crop, maize, produces about $19bn (£11.9bn) in revenue, "plausible" estimates for the value of marijuana crops reach $25bn. Steve White, a former coordinator for the US drug enforcement administration's cannabis eradication programme, estimates that the drug is now the country's largest cash crop.

Marijuana Belt

Schlosser writes: "Although popular stereotypes depict marijuana growers as ageing hippies in northern California or Hawaii, the majority of the marijuana now cultivated domestically is being grown in the nation's mid-section - a swath running from the Appalachians west to the Great Plains. Throughout this Marijuana Belt drug fortunes are being made by farmers who often seem to have stepped from a page of the old Saturday Evening Post."

Some of the most expensive crops are grown indoors on the west coast using advanced scientific techniques but the American heartlands account for the largest volume. Some estimates suggest 3 million Americans grow marijuana, although mostly for their own or their friends' use, but between 100,000 and 200,000 are believed to do so for a living.

The laws against the drug are strict. There were 724,000 people arrested for marijuana offences in 2001 and about 50,000 are in prison. Commercial growers can serve sentences far longer than those for murder, but the high risks appear to have had little effect on production or availability: 89% of secondary school students surveyed indicated that they could easily obtain the drug.

The annual number of hardcore video rentals in the US has risen from 79m in 1985 to 759m in 2001. Hardcore pornography in the shape of videos, the internet, live sex acts and cable television is now estimated to generate around $10bn, roughly the same amount as Hollywood's US box office receipts.

Americans spend more money at strip clubs than at Broadway, regional theatres and orchestra performances combined. The industry has mushroomed since the 70s, when a federal study found that it was worth little more than $10m.

Now the US leads the world in pornography; about 211 new films are produced every week. Los Angeles area is the centre of the film boom and many of those in the trade are otherwise respectable citizens.

Nina Hartley, a porn star, told Schlosser: "You'd be surprised how many producers and manufacturers are Republicans."

The majority of women in the films earn about $400 a scene. At the moment, there is a surplus of women in California hoping to enter the industry.

The internet has provided a fresh and profitable outlet. In 1997 about 22,000 porn websites existed; the number is now closer to 300,000 and growing.

More than a million illegal farmworkers are estimated to be employed in the US, with the average worker being a 29-year-old from Mexico.

Surplus labour

The total number of illegal immigrants is estimated at about 8 million and many are being paid cash in a shadow economy.

Many live in primitive conditions: a survey in Soledad, in the heart of California's agricultural territory, found that 1,500 of them, one-eighth of the town's official population, were living in garages. There are mutual economic benefits.

"Migrant work in California has long absorbed Mexican surplus labour, while Mexico has in effect paid for the education, health care and retirement of California's farmworkers," writes Schlosser. "Maintaining the current level of poverty among migrant farmworkers saves the average American household around $50 a year."

The advantages to the employer are clear, most notably in LA county, where an estimated 28% of workers are paid in cash.

Schlosser believes that the shadow economy will continue to thrive as long as marijuana and pornography remain illicit.

"A society that can punish a marijuana offender more severely than a murderer is caught in the grip of a deep psychosis," he concludes. "Black markets will always be with us. But they will recede in importance when the public morality is consistent with our private one. The underground is a good measure of the progress and the health of nations. When much is wrong, much needs to be hidden."

· Reefer Madness: Sex, Drugs and Cheap Labour in the American Black Market by Eric Schlosser, published by Houghton Mifflin


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: addiction; blackmarket; cheetos; constitution; dopeheads; government; heywereeurotrashnow; itscalleddope; libertines; oppression; taxes; undergroundeconomy
Our rulers have determined that plants are more dangerous than murder and most of you voted for them.

Food for thought.

1 posted on 05/01/2003 10:31:41 PM PDT by UnBlinkingEye
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To: UnBlinkingEye
Food for thought.

Yep it is food for thought that you would believe something published in the Marxist Guardian, hook, line, and sinker.

Oh BTW, this article is already posted, here.

2 posted on 05/01/2003 10:35:23 PM PDT by Dane
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To: UnBlinkingEye
.....Appalachians west to the Great Plains. Throughout this Marijuana Belt drug fortunes are being made by farmers

Big-time fortunes. Quality outdoor plants grown in the appropriate climate can yield over one pound of bud per plant. And if one grows around 100 plants per season, selling the bud for anywhere between $3000 and $4000 per pound (selling in bulk), we're talking some major dollars. ....And some farmers grow thousands of plants per season.

3 posted on 05/01/2003 10:42:04 PM PDT by Mr. Mojo
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To: Dane
Yep it is food for thought that you would believe something published in the Marxist Guardian, hook, line, and sinker.

Do you believe what FOX News or CNN reports is the truth?

Why do you feel you have any right to dictate what people prefer as a means of relaxation as long as it does no harm to others?

4 posted on 05/01/2003 10:49:02 PM PDT by UnBlinkingEye
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To: Mr. Mojo
My question is why is growing plants a crime?
5 posted on 05/01/2003 10:53:43 PM PDT by UnBlinkingEye
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To: UnBlinkingEye
Do you believe what FOX News or CNN reports is the truth?

Why do you feel you have any right to dictate what people prefer as a means of relaxation as long as it does no harm to others?

Fox about 99% of the time. They ain't perfect, nobody or no human establishment will be. CNN, IMHO, consciously tries to taint and bias the news, just like this writer for the Guardian.

I did a google search and it seems that the writer of this article, Duncan Campbell, is a big fan of Michael Moore, and was quite positive about Mr. Moore's debunked "documentary", "Bowling For Columbine".

Mr. Campbell's support for Michael Moore sends up red flags to me about his objectivity.

6 posted on 05/01/2003 10:58:38 PM PDT by Dane
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To: UnBlinkingEye
Because the dominate impulse of JBTs is to punish the man with a superior capacity for happiness (to paraphrase H.L. Mencken). Prohibition didn't work when they tried it with alcohol, and their efforts are bound to fail (eventually) with marijuana as well.

And, of course, one has to follow the money. Who benefits financially from drug prohibition?

7 posted on 05/01/2003 10:58:45 PM PDT by Mr. Mojo
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To: UnBlinkingEye
Why is CONSUMPTION of a plant a crime? Because we "Druggies", that measley percentage of people who have tried pot, suffered no ill effects and recognize a BIG LIE are delusional and a danger to society.
8 posted on 05/01/2003 11:06:55 PM PDT by okiesap
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To: UnBlinkingEye
Pot and porn. Now there's a healthy, happy lifestyle. I think I'll stick with corn flakes.
9 posted on 05/02/2003 12:28:33 AM PDT by Russell Scott (Don't blame me for being Islamophobic, I was born that way.)
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To: UnBlinkingEye
And a national sales tax would see that consumers who earned their take in the underground economy still paid something to the government.
10 posted on 05/02/2003 1:14:16 AM PDT by weegee (NO BLOOD FOR RATINGS: CNN let human beings be tortured and killed to keep their Baghdad bureau open)
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To: UnBlinkingEye
"You'd be surprised how many producers and manufacturers are Republicans."

I wouldn't.
11 posted on 05/02/2003 7:55:29 AM PDT by headsonpikes
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To: Russell Scott
"I think I'll stick with corn flakes."

Yeah.......but they're a bi*ch to keep lit.

12 posted on 05/02/2003 8:02:39 AM PDT by RightOnline
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To: UnBlinkingEye
Libertarian lament!
13 posted on 05/02/2003 8:05:40 AM PDT by verity
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To: verity
Nina Hartley, a porn star, told Schlosser: "You'd be surprised how many producers and manufacturers are Republicans."

LOL! Nina, I told you not to rat me out . . .

14 posted on 05/02/2003 9:10:25 AM PDT by JohnnyZ (You can quote me on that, but I'll deny it.)
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To: UnBlinkingEye
The whole basis of the aritlce is wrong. Porn is legal, and thus not a part of the underground economy. The ecocnomic fortunes of porn are reflected in our national statistics, and just about everyone involved in porn pays taxes just like everyone else.
15 posted on 05/02/2003 6:16:46 PM PDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: UnBlinkingEye
10 percent of the economy implies that the average person spends 10 percent of his income on porn, weed, and products made by imigrants. Sorry, NFW! 10 percent is like the gays hyping their power saying that 10 percent of the country is gay.
16 posted on 05/05/2003 9:26:20 AM PDT by biblewonk (Spose to be a Chrissssstian)
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To: biblewonk
10 percent of the economy implies that the average person spends 10 percent of his income on porn, weed, and products made by imigrants.

If you include imported products 10% may be too low.

17 posted on 05/05/2003 8:16:12 PM PDT by UnBlinkingEye
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