R
Ridgerunner
Guest
I don’t know anything about the economics of crack cocaine, so I can’t address that.I have little clue where to buy moonshine in Milwaukee. Except for one half Puerto Rican on the South side I know. Other than that the corner stores (sell beer), liquor stores, lounges and bars corner the market. They’re on just about every corner.
And I don’t know about meth so I can’t speak to that. But crack cocaine if legalized would cost less than a single cigarette (which is about 35 cents each in a pack I believe). You have to add paper and other things to the tobacco product to make a cigarette. Crack is just cut with a razor blade and tied in a plastic bag after the cocaine is cooked up. In fact, when “droughts” hit the city from major police take downs or something, the price skyrockets by $2 to $5 bags selling for $10 bags.
If you made cigarettes illegal criminals could sell individual cigarettes for $10 a piece. Two cigarettes would cost a smoker $20 and 10 would cost a smoker $100.
And I doubt decriminalizing drugs is going to create a huge drug problem across the nation. Currently, it’s a bit tougher to get crack - and quality crack - in the City of Milwaukee. Not sure why. Consequently the quantity in a bag has dropped while prices remained same. But back in the mid 1990’s to about 2000 there were more distribution spots for crack on the North side of Milwaukee than there were distribution spots for alcohol. And we have stores and bars for alcohols just about every few blocks (sometimes on the same block). But with crack you could have 3 crack houses on one residential block, with some also standing on corners, with some also sitting in cars, with some also riding on bikes, with some also walking on foot. Just saturated.
But there’s not a lot of meth in Milwaukee, so, I know little about that stuff.
If cigarettes were criminalized, they wouldn’t cost $10/cigarette because tobacco is too easy to grow, cure and cut. There are lots of places in the U.S. where you could grow it in cheaply and in relative safety, just as is the case with marijuana. Illegal tobacco would be a big business, but there would probably be fewer people using it than now.
And meth is even cheaper than crack cocaine.