Posted on 03/28/2006 10:51:21 PM PST by goldstategop
Getting high can be bad. Putting people in prison for it is worse. And doing the latter doesn't stop the former.
I was once among the majority who believe that drug use must be illegal. But then I noticed that when vice laws conflict with the law of supply and demand, the conflict is ugly, and the law of supply and demand generally wins.
The drug war costs taxpayers about $40 billion. "Up to three quarters of our budget can somehow be traced back to fighting this war on drugs," said Jerry Oliver, then chief of police in Detroit, told me. Yet the drugs are as available as ever.
Oliver was once a big believer in the war. Not anymore. "It's insanity to keep doing the same thing over and over again," he says. "If we did not have this drug war going on, we could spend more time going after robbers and rapists and burglars and murderers. That's what we really should be geared up to do. Clearly we're losing the war on drugs in this country."
No, we're "winning," according to the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, which might get less money if people thought it was losing. Prosecutors hold news conferences announcing the "biggest seizure ever." But what they confiscate makes little difference. We can't even keep drugs out of prisons -- do we really think we can keep them out of all of America?
Even as the drug war fails to reduce the drug supply, many argue that there are still moral reasons to fight the war. "When we fight against drugs, we fight for the souls of our fellow Americans," said President Bush. But the war destroys American souls, too. America locks up a higher percentage of her people than almost any other country. Nearly 4,000 people are arrested every day for mere possession of drugs. That's more people than are arrested for aggravated assault, burglary, vandalism, forcible rape and murder combined.
Authorities say that warns people not to mess with drugs, and that's a critical message to send to America's children. "Protecting the children" has justified many intrusive expansions of government power. Who wants to argue against protecting children?
I have teenage kids. My first instinct is to be glad cocaine and heroin are illegal. It means my kids can't trot down to the local drugstore to buy something that gets them high. Maybe that would deter them.
Or maybe not. The law certainly doesn't prevent them from getting the drugs. Kids say illegal drugs are no harder to get than alcohol.
Perhaps a certain percentage of Americans will use or abuse drugs -- no matter what the law says.
I cannot know. What I do know now, however, are some of the unintended consequences of drug prohibition:
1. More crime. Rarely do people get high and then run out to commit crimes. Most "drug crime" happens because the product is illegal. Since drug sellers can't rely on the police to protect their property, they form gangs and arm themselves. Drug buyers steal to pay the high black market prices. The government says alcohol is as addictive as heroin, but no one is knocking over 7-Elevens to get Budweiser.
2. More terrorism. The profits of the drug trade fund terrorists from Afghanistan to Colombia. Our herbicide-spraying planes teach South American farmers to hate America.
3. Richer criminal gangs. Alcohol prohibition created Al Capone. The gangs drug prohibition is creating are even richer, probably rich enough to buy nuclear weapons. Osama bin Laden was funded partly by drug money.
Government's declaring drugs illegal doesn't mean people can't get them. It just creates a black market, where even nastier things happen. That's why I have come to think that although drug addiction is bad, the drug war is worse.
I ask you again Roscoe, what are you hiding from that you post under the Mojave alias?
If you deny a pothead the right to smoke pot, you can also deny the people the right to marry. Both are covered under the Pursuit of Happiness.
mugs99
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
paulsen:
Can I deny a homosexual his right to life without due process?
Can I deny a homosexual his right to marry without due process?
I rest my case. Pursue your happiness some other way.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Well done Muggs. -- Once again we see paulsens real distain for our Constitution.
Yeah, that pesky Constitution gets in the way of his utopian dream.
This actually:
I was wondering how anyone could be ignorant enough to think that state Attorney Generals derive their powers from the Commerce Clause. Then I considered the source and had my answer.
Your 'authority', Chambers, was not a constitutional conservative. At best he can be seen as a communitarian.
If I recall correctly, the last few pages of Rand's turgid opus, 'Atlas Shrugged' deal with a re-writing of the Constitution along lines more amenable to her philosophy. So if you're one of those objectivist libertarian types for whom 'Atlas Shrugged' is holy writ, --
Rest easy my boy, -- I'm not. -- I don't support re-writing our Constitution. [except for repeal of the income tax]
Insofar as my comment on dismal libertarian electoral performance is concerned, I was pointing out--albeit in a roundabout way--that in our type of government, the value of political philosophies is measured by the vote; the vote is the coin of the realm.
Yep, thats how 'majority rule' people think. Thanks for sharing.
Er, yes, I'm one of those majority rule people. Blame it on that pesky Constitution you invoke with such faux piety.
Communitarian 'majority rule' dogma is not based on our Constitution. You people ignore our rights to life, liberty, & property in your 'rules'.
Ergo, libertarianism--as a party, as a platform, as an ideology--is pathetically penniless. I'd use the term 'bankrupt', but that would imply that at some point in the past, the libertarians actually had something worthwhile to say.
They still do. They support our constitution & individual liberties. -- However, I do not support the 'party'. -- I support our Constitution.
I, - like most libertarians, welcome debate. Its infantile bashing, like yours, that initiates flame wars.
Rest easy my boy, -- I'm not.
-- And I don't support re-writing our Constitution. [except for repeal of the income tax]
Insofar as my comment on dismal libertarian electoral performance is concerned, I was pointing out--albeit in a roundabout way--that in our type of government, the value of political philosophies is measured by the vote; the vote is the coin of the realm.
Yep, thats how 'majority rule' people think. Thanks for sharing.
Er, yes, I'm one of those majority rule people. Blame it on that pesky Constitution you invoke with such faux piety.
Communitarian 'majority rule' dogma is not based on our Constitution. -- You people ignore our rights to life, liberty, & property in your 'rules'.
And what, by the way, do you mean by the term 'communitarian'? As in commune, as in somehow socialist?
Read much? Enforcing community standards that ignore individual rights is indeed a socialistic type violation of Constitutional principles.
Is that particular term some form of Rand-speak invective, sort of like Scientology's use of the term 'Agents of Chaos' to describe its enemies? It's common among cult members, I suppose, to invent their own semantic shorthand for concepts perhaps alien to the public at large.
Ergo, libertarianism--as a party, as a platform, as an ideology--is pathetically penniless. I'd use the term 'bankrupt', but that would imply that at some point in the past, the libertarians actually had something worthwhile to say.
They still do. They support our constitution & individual liberties. -- However, I do not support the 'party'. -- I support our Constitution.
I, - like most libertarians, welcome debate. Its infantile bashing, like yours, that initiates flame wars.
No flame war here, and certainly nothing infantile--
You boldly say I have a "faux piety" for our Constitution and infer that "cult members" oppose majority rule. That's infantile trolling.
my arguments against the objectivist libertarian fringe are as carefully structured and clearly written as I can make them, given the brief response time allowed by a news board format.
Brief? -- You can make your arguments any length you want..
I simply won't let skewed logic pass, particularly when it comes from Ayn Rand acolytes attempting to disguise themselves as political conservatives.
There you go again with the petty pejoratives. Childish.
You boldly say I have a "faux piety" for our Constitution and infer that "cult members" oppose majority rule.
That's infantile trolling.
I simply won't let skewed logic pass, particularly when it comes from Ayn Rand acolytes attempting to disguise themselves as political conservatives.
There you go again with the petty pejoratives. Childish.
Using the term 'cult members' when describing proponents of Ayn Rand's objectivist philosophy is not a 'petty pejorative'.
It is when addressed to me, as I am not a Randist.
If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it is a duck: you folks have a fearless leader who serves as a 'fountainhead' of indisputable truth, you make up your own specialized terminology to capture concepts peculiar to your, er, philosophy;
Your, "er", bit reminds me of another peculiar FR anti-libertarian, -Mojo-, long since banned. He too loved snide asides. -- Any relation?
e.g., 'communitarians', you shrilly cry foul when forced to argue that philosophy on its merits,
Not true, I welcome debate on libertarians vs communitarians, as do most of us here at FR.
and--just as Scientology, for example, claims legitimacy by describing itself a religion--Ayn Rand acolytes claim legitimacy by framing themselves as Constitutional conservatives.
I've yet to see anything posted by you that counters such libertarian legitimacy.
As an aside, your piling on of previous posts with every response is getting rather tiresome.
It is necessary because you like to misquote what was actually written. If you would learn how to present your counter-arguments, this could be avoided.
Is wearing your opponents down with sheer repetition a a debating tactic encouraged by the high command at Objectivist Central?
No, its a way to keep trolls honest, and on point.
If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it is a duck: you folks have a fearless leader who serves as a 'fountainhead' of indisputable truth, you make up your own specialized terminology to capture concepts peculiar to your, er, philosophy;
Your, "er", bit reminds me of another peculiar FR anti-libertarian, -Mojo-, long since banned. He too loved snide asides. -- Any relation?
Caught the implied threat when you brought up Mojo.
You did? A threat? Weird.
I guess you're implying that I'll be booted from the forum should I insist upon taking issue with the irresponsible laissez-faire morality of the libertarians--particularly when it comes to the legalization of drugs--or the downright wackiness of the Objectivist crowd.
Not at all. Mojo was booted because he couldn't control his pejorative trolling of ~everyone~. He was slightly, 'er', wacky that way.
e.g., 'communitarians', you shrilly cry foul when forced to argue that philosophy on its merits,
Not true, I welcome debate on libertarians vs communitarians, as do most of us here at FR.
and--just as Scientology, for example, claims legitimacy by describing itself a religion--Ayn Rand acolytes claim legitimacy by framing themselves as Constitutional conservatives.
I've yet to see anything posted by you that counters such libertarian legitimacy.
As an aside, your piling on of previous posts with every response is getting rather tiresome.
It is necessary because you like to mischaracterize what was actually written. If you would learn how to present your counter-arguments, this could be avoided.
Is wearing your opponents down with sheer repetition a a debating tactic encouraged by the high command at Objectivist Central?
No, its a way to keep trolls honest, and on point.
That's what, twice, three times you've made the troll accusation? Why?
Because that is what you're doing. This is a WOD thread, and you're trolling for a flame war about libertarians.
Because I think Ayn Rand is full of baloney? Whatever it is that her worshipfulness preached, it wasn't remotely conservative.
So you claim, an admitted 'majority rules community standards' type anti-conservative yourself. -- Our Constitutional principles 'rule' in the USA.
I've been on-point, sport, consistently throughout.
Bashing libertarians is on point?
If you truly believe I'm a troll (although a troll for whom, I'd be curious to know), then take action. Threats bore me.
No "threats" to you have been made. And calm yourself, as I don't use 'abuse' to win arguments.
this board has become a debate over political beliefs instead of the WOD...
How ARE you doing, BTW?
Criminals profit, criminals die, and communities go to hell when criminals establish and fight over markets to sell their product. This is less a result of drugs than it is of the Drug War. And I hide behind no smoke screen: I'm a free man. I do what I will.
Lastly, you've used a tone bordering somewhere between patronizing and accusatory when referring to my former political beliefs, as if those once-held views somehow taint my arguments now. I tell you what, when I did become a conservative, I never imagined I would hear another conservative proudly boast of buying and using drugs.
I'm sorry, but your former political beliefs color your current ones quite vividly. You haven't become a conservative so much as you've switched allegiance to a different master---in other words, you've traded one form of statism for another. You might be a Republican because now you pull the lever for the GOP, but "Republican" and "conservative" are not necessarily one and the same.The very core belief of conservatism is that sovereignty resides in the individual. Does not individual sovereignty include the right to determine what goes into one's own body?
You mistake me for a doctrinaire Libertarian, my friend, which I am not---I've never read one word of Ayn Rand and I think market forces provide a pretty poor underpining for a political system. While I hold with the general principle that one should be free to exercise his or her rights until they tresspass upon the rights of others, I maintain that the state can and should have the power to prohibit certain types of personal behavior provided it can make a compelling case for doing so. Absent such a compelling case, a society such as ours has to "err" on the side of individual freedom.
In no way do I think the state has made a compelling case for criminalizing the use, possession, or sale of marijuana.
You wrote that laws exist because people don't play well together without them. I agree with that sentiment, but I submit you're forgetting another reason that laws exist: because some people have the power to create them---and by so doing they can profit by exercising control over other people. Not all people support existing drug laws for moral reasons---there's a lot of money at stake here, and that's something you cannot deny. Just as some on your side accuse those on my side of opposing drug laws so we can smoke our pot in peace, I accuse some on your side for supporting drug laws just so they can keep the cash flowing.
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