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Originally Posted by The Dirt
Find us some data to back this up. This is a pretty bold and dubious claim, especially since you're tying it directly to the housing price increases, which started well before legalization. Anecdotal evidence with a pretty obvious confirmation bias isn't going to cut it.
As you can see, both rates have been declining at a much higher rate than the national average well before legalization.
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Couple things - regardless of these numbers, you can't deduce the number of in-migration of people who moved here primarily to partake in the MJ industry any more than I can, but how can you deny its impact on the local economy?
Secondly, medical marijuana was the start of this. There are numerous articles discussing the migration to Colorado for people seeking cannabis treatment, which I wholly support. I don't remember what year the MMJ started, was it 2008? Regardless, it was closer to 2007-2008 that we need to start to look at migration numbers, if you want to have the debate over MJ's impact on our population and economy.
Here's what cracks me up with you guys, you fail to understand that there are tens of thousands of MJ users - both recreational and medicinal - living here, add in thousands of pot tourists. They spend hundreds of millions on MJ-related products - the weed itself, accessories, clothing, etc. Add in the industry side into the equation - all of the infrastructure, buildings, materials, advertising, and security needed to run a business like this. Then add into the mix the restaurants and bars that knew they could capitalize on the munchies. MJ's impact is H-U-G-E! To think that MJ has not had a likely deciding factor on the state or our economy - at least along the Front Range - then you just don't get it, and lack basic inference skills.
D.