David762
Member
This issue is slightly irrelevant, though. Just because a small group of bankers are influencing the world monetary systems, are we to avoid looking at the issue itself, being our own situation, in relation to the US dollar and cannabis prices. That is the issue at hand.
It doesn't matter that other countries are going through the same devaluation, in the US, we are the ones who have to deal with the direct affects of the devaluation of the dollar, and the potential for serious hyperinflation.
I'm proposing the idea, that possibly cannabis prices will rise along with other important commodities, and that holding cannabis or medicines are going to be an actual value, in relation to the dollar, if the dollar drops.
As a commodity, and especially as a means of barter, cannabis has a limited shelf-life, not unlike canned/home-canned goods or frozen foods.
There was another thread here on ICMag that explored new packaging -- UV-proof bags of cannabis filled with dry nitrogen. Such an innovative packaging method would extend the shelf-life of cannabis, especially in conjunction with flash freezing and refrigeration. Hash oil packaged in a similar method would also make sense.
There would still be a place for gold or silver currency, but as a commodity cannabis would or should hold its value in relation to the dollar ... subject, or course to the issue of supply and demand.