Then why ask?
I don't understand how you think I'm the butthurt one in this situation.
I presented factual, recently released data disproving your hypothesis. You asked if I had data from Washington, as if there is some but I'm just choosing to ignore it. The implication was that there is some data on Washington that contradicts what I presented. I'm saying if that data exists, I'd absolutely like to see it. If not, why are we talking about some nonexistent data in the first place?
Um, hang on Mr Conspiracy Theory. You are jumping to some conclusions.
He asked a simple question. "Got any data from Washington?" Not because he already knew the answer, but because he figured someone like you who is all over this pro/con argument would have that info at your fingertips. You had several possible responses, any of which could have been correct.
1. No, you only looked at Colorado data.
2. Yes, you looked at Washington data as well, but it was pretty much the same as Colorado and you were already hinging on TL;DR territory, so you didn't mention it.
3. Yes, you looked at Washington data but chose not to mention it because it did not support the Colorado data, and you wanted to make a statement without silly facts and figures clouding the issue.
Accusing him of some grand plot against you when few others saw it that way is the sign of a delusional mind. You smoking a Sherm?
Sani's point is that you can't make an assumption based on one set of data points. Scientists run an experiment multiple times to corroborate their findings. Some scientists do nothing but repeat other folks experiments in an attempt to prove or disprove them. One set of findings from Colorado does not a hard and firm factual case make.
Now, back to your regularly scheduled toke of generic unaltered pot.