DAVE ROSS

Will marijuana split the union?

Feb 20, 2014, 9:42 PM | Updated: Feb 21, 2014, 6:29 am

Dana Cain, director of the Denver County Fair, shows a poster advertising the fair at a print shop in Denver. Colorado's Denver County is adding cannabis-themed contest to its 2014 summer fair. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)

(AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)

Accepting legal gay marriage was difficult enough for some states, but now they’re facing the consequences of legal marijuana.

On a San Antonio TV station, a reporter discovered that smuggling is going on.

San Antonio Reporter: How often do you smoke pot?

San Antonio woman: Every day

Reporter: This San Antonio woman, who didn’t want her identity revealed, says she smokes pot every day. Her hookup isn’t the dealer down the street, but rather, hundreds of miles way in Colorado.

You heard right. This woman who lives in Texas is smoking pot every single day, and getting it from Colorado.

Of course, it is illegal to export pot from America’s pot republics into non-pot territory. So how is it getting into Texas?

“She says people buy it in Colorado and disguise it in their packaging,” says the San Antonio reporter. “A music box or teddy bear.”

That’s right. It’s being smuggled in teddy bears! Never mind fencing the Mexican border, we may need to fence the Colorado border.

This is pretty much a major crisis in Texas. Whereas in Washington and Colorado, this is like smuggling a ham sandwich.

In fact, those two states are already counting the money. Pot taxes are expected to bring in $99 million in Colorado and $190 million in Washington – the kind of money no state in its right mind is going to give up.

They say marijuana itself isn’t addicting, but once a state gets used to the money there’s no going to rehab for that. The rest of the country is going to have to deal with it.

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Will marijuana split the union?