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Are Conservatives Addicted to the Drug War?
The Fountain of Truth ^ | May 19, 2002 | Douglas F. Newman

Posted on 05/19/2002 8:13:50 PM PDT by hellonewman

ADDICTED TO THE DRUG WAR

May 19, 2002

Drug dealers are the scum of the earth and the dregs of humanity.

There. I hope that satisfies you.

Some, no doubt, will ignore this because this is an essay about the futility of the Drug War. Political correctness is not just a liberal's disease. Many conservatives -- not all, but many -- have done with the Drug War what liberals have done with racial quotas and gay rights. When anyone says anything in opposition to the Drug War, they spaz out as if they were tripping on Angel Dust.

Such were my thoughts after reading Bill O'Reilly's May 16 column on World Net Daily in which he classifies drug dealing as a "crime against humanity." O'Reilly tells some gut wrenching stories about drug addicts and their families, and lays the blame at the feet of the dealers who sold the drugs to these addicts. He writes that, "If nobody sold drugs, there would be no drug problem".

Liberals frequently brand those who oppose racial quotas "racists" and those who oppose gay rights "homophobic." Conservatives, likewise, frequently brand those who oppose the Drug War as "pro-drug". In this respect they are no different from those people theysay they oppose diametrically. They fail to recognize that just because the government is doing nothing to address a certain issue, does not mean that nobody is doing anything to address this issue. They fail to recognize that their agendas have produced numerous unintended consequences and that continuing with these agendas will only make bad problems worse.

O'Reilly writes: "The truth is that selling hard drugs to people who may die from using them, may become enslaved by addiction, may abuse their children while intoxicated, and may commit crimes to buy more drugs is a vile enterprise that should be condemned by society. The (New York State drug) laws were passed to protect Americans from people who would prey upon them. The average pusher on the street sells to scores of people every day. The damage that person is doing is enormous."

Let us pretend that this is the 1920s, and we are advocating a continuation of alcohol prohibition. "The truth is that selling alcohol to people who may die from using it, may become enslaved by drunkenness, may abuse their children while intoxicated, and may commit crimes to buy more booze is a vile enterprise that should be condemned by society. The Eighteenth Amendment was passed to protect Americans from people who would prey upon them. The average bootlegger sells to scores of people every day. The damage that person is doing is enormous."

The Eighteenth Amendment was passed with good intentions. It had broad support from Christians who longed to turn America into a "no-sin zone", if you will. However, alcohol prohibition produced nothing but disaster. By the early 1930s, alcohol was more abundant and dangerous than ever, crime had skyrocketed. Bootlegging could make you millions. Al Capone virtually owned the city of Chicago, and a good chunk of the Kennedy fortune was amassed by old Papa Joe Kennedy bootlegging that hooch.

As historian George Santayana said, those who do not learn from history are condemned to repeat it. O'Reilly and his ilk have learned nothing from alcohol prohibition. Prohibition doesn't work. It is a great big game of "let's pretend" that produces nightmarish results.

All the bad things drug warriors detest keep happening in spite of the Drug War. Perhaps 100 million Americans have smoked the Devil's Lettuce (i.e. marijuana) at one time or another. We have far harder drugs than we did 30 years ago. The outrageous profits earned by drug dealers -- and hence the huge amounts of money that go to terrorists -- are a direct result of drugs being illegal. And because prohibition has made drug dealing so profitable, there are always people willing to traffic in drugs. Prohibition stopped none of the horrific events O'Reilly recounts in his column.

Drug War fanaticism has led to a quadrupling of our prison population since 1980. (Imagine this: America, "the land of the free", has the highest incarceration rate of any non-communist country.) Why are our prisons so overcrowded and why do rapists and murderers go free? Can you say "War on Drugs"? Last year, the authorities were so busy arresting 730,000 people on drug charges that they apparently had no clue as to what would happen on September 11.

At least there was still enough respect for the Constitution in 1919 to pass an amendment before the government embarked on a new course. Today's drug warriors show reckless disregard for nine of the ten amendments in the Bill of Rights. They micro-monitor bank transactions, seize assets without due process, impose draconian fines and sentences on non-violent people, routinely kick in doors in "no-knock" raids, and - here is the most damnable aspect of the Drug War - deny medication to suffering and dying people who have exhausted all other avenues of relief.

But won't we solve the problem if we just eradicate the pushers? Because prohibition has made drug dealing so profitable, if you put a pusher in jail and two or three more pop up in his place. Drug dealers prosper because they satisfy demands. Millions of Americans are so morally and spiritually bankrupt that they will do anything for a cheap thrill. There is not one thing that government can do about this.

But won't increased interdiction efforts stop the flow of drugs into the country? Drugs do not magically "flow" into the country. People transport them here because Americans want them. And when you make it tougher to import drugs, Americans turn to "made in America" drugs like methamphetamines. And when the authorities "crack down harder" on meth labs, someone will come up with an even more diabolical drug.

But look at China? They cracked down hard and solved the drug problem. Yeah, and they also "crack down hard" to "solve" the Christianity "problem." If totalitarianism is the price you are willing to pay for a drug-free society, then move to such a country. Given the choice between a free America and a drug-free America, I will choose the former any day. While we are on the subject, solving the drug problem is a totally utopian objective that no government can attain.

But I don't want my kid doing drugs. Well, if you raise your children properly you greatly reduce the chance that they will do drugs. The government cannot raise your children for you. 100 years ago, it was perfectly legal for a ten-year old to walk into the local drug store and buy heroin, and we had nowhere near the problems we have today. Why? Because raising kids was the duty of parents and churches. If you are really serious about keeping your kids off drugs, you have got to look somewhere - anywhere - besides the government.

The Drug War has become a veritable addiction for many of those who support it. While it may make its proponents feel good temporarily, it provides no solution to what is ultimately a moral and spiritual problem. Like so many hard core addicts, drug warriors are never satisfied: they constantly demand that we intensify the thing that makes them feel so good. Their ultimate high -- a drug-free America -- will never come to pass, but they keep pursuing the Drug War anyway. So many Americans have become so accustomed to seeing things through the prism of the Drug War that they cannot imagine life without it. They forget that the solutions lie not in politics, but in the homes and churches of America.

Ranklin Fineo Doosevelt was a lot of bad things. However, he was right on in applauding the end of alcohol prohibition. I do not have the exact quote in front of me, but when the Twenty-First Amendment was ratified, Roosevelt said something to the effect we do not need alcohol control nearly as much as we need self-control. Today, we do not need a national drug control policy nearly as much as we need individual self-control. This is a virtue that no "policy" can instill.


Freely Speaking: Speeches and Essays by Doug Newman

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TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: conservatism; drugs; drugwar; prohibition; wodlist
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To: RLK
I'm not. I just happen to believe, as much as I believe anything, that America will not survive drug use or the mentality facilitated by drug use.

I guess you believe that America will not survive then. Because whatever happens, drug use will continue, as it has in the past, it will in the future.

The WOD failed. It cannot succeed. Take it or leave it.

61 posted on 05/20/2002 10:35:24 AM PDT by Protagoras
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To: Kevin Curry
Our choice is: prison at one end of the spectrum, nanny government rehab and coddling at the other, with a combination of the two in between.

Only in what passes for your mind. Other choices exist even if you can't conceive of them.

62 posted on 05/20/2002 10:38:48 AM PDT by Protagoras
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To: southern rock
Do yourself a favor and put at least half the energy you put into bashing drugs and drug users into bashing taxes and the IRS, and you might gain some credibility.

He is an authoritarian, he won't do that.

63 posted on 05/20/2002 10:40:47 AM PDT by Protagoras
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To: Kevin Curry
Society will never leave drug abusers alone.

"Society" doesn't go after drug abusers now. It is government interests that do.

Oh, btw, the was no War on (some) Drugs before 1970.

What you fail to realize is that Liberty is a zero-sum game.

64 posted on 05/20/2002 10:42:59 AM PDT by Eagle Eye
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To: Lancey Howard
Some people apparently think America should be just like those countries.

Only big government socialists. The credible people who oppose the insane WOD never, never advocate government involvement at all much less in bailing out people who have not taken responsibility for their own actions.

65 posted on 05/20/2002 10:44:01 AM PDT by Protagoras
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To: Texasforever
Excuse me but that is just sophistry of the first order.

Excuse me but that is just sophistry of the first order.

66 posted on 05/20/2002 10:46:05 AM PDT by Protagoras
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To: Kevin Curry
Our choice is: prison at one end of the spectrum, nanny government rehab and coddling at the other, with a combination of the two in between.

Well put....

67 posted on 05/20/2002 10:46:53 AM PDT by wardaddy
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To: Don Myers
The Libertarians sure are.

Please explain this cryptic comment.

68 posted on 05/20/2002 10:49:47 AM PDT by Protagoras
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To: Hemingway's Ghost
How do you explain the ease with which euthanasia swept through the Netherlands? I attribute it to several things, one of them being that the population is too busy using drugs to be bothered about what is happening in the government. They are desensitized.
69 posted on 05/20/2002 10:52:59 AM PDT by JMJ333
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To: rdb3
Is the American body politic truly ready for decriminalization of narcotics?

Getting closer every day. Several states have legalized pot under certain circumstances and yet the federal government has persisted in prosecuting it's own unconstitutional laws in those states. The jig is up and many people, apparently you are one of them, can't see the shift in opinion. It's over. In ten years you will wonder what ever led you to ask that question.

70 posted on 05/20/2002 10:54:05 AM PDT by Protagoras
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To: JMJ333
I attribute it to several things, one of them being that the population is too busy using drugs to be bothered about what is happening in the government.

Care to post credible figures on drug usage in the Netherlands which shows that registered voters use drugs in numbers greater than in the past and that they are the majority?

Your theory is Swiss cheese.

71 posted on 05/20/2002 10:57:10 AM PDT by Protagoras
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To: JMJ333
How do you explain the ease with which euthanasia swept through the Netherlands?

Their Western European culture is obviously amenable to that sort of thing. Ours doesn't seem to be.

I attribute it to several things, one of them being that the population is too busy using drugs to be bothered about what is happening in the government. They are desensitized.

You honestly believe a bunch of evil zealots slipped this sort of legislation by a population because they were too stoned to realize what they were doing? I've been to Amsterdam twice now, and honestly---the only people that seem to frequent the coffeeshops in large numbers are the tourists from places where weed isn't legal. The Dutch are out holding jobs and making money like everyone else all around the world.

I cannot say this strongly enough: AMSTERDAM IS NOT A CITY OF STONED ZOMBIES.

Your theory is 200% whacked. It reeks of your own personal agenda and has no basis at all in reality.


72 posted on 05/20/2002 10:58:22 AM PDT by Hemingway's Ghost
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To: Lancey Howard
Amsterdam is actually much nicer than most American cities,
73 posted on 05/20/2002 10:58:39 AM PDT by ContentiousObjector
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To: wardaddy
Well put....

For a comedy routine.

74 posted on 05/20/2002 10:58:52 AM PDT by Protagoras
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To: Hemingway's Ghost
So you don't think drug usage has any effect on the direction the country takes politically or morally?
75 posted on 05/20/2002 11:00:08 AM PDT by JMJ333
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To: Lazarus Long
"Users will use whether or not they're legal, so why rip up the Bill of Rights"

There is a class of people who refrain from certain things only because those things are illegal and carry stiff penalties.

For example, I do not cheat on my federal income taxes.

Drugs are no different. Legalization or decriminalization will increase the number of users. At least at first. Then I would expect a fine example of natural selection to take place.

76 posted on 05/20/2002 11:25:52 AM PDT by Tauzero
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To: Lancey Howard
"You forgot to include government dispensing of heroin to hordes of zombie losers wandering around in superior, more enlightened countries like Norway, Sweden, and Netherlands. Some people apparently think America should be just like those countries."

The problem with the Netherlands is not its drug policy but its welfare state policy.

Drugged-out zombies had a distinct survival disadvantage in the pre-welfare-state America.

77 posted on 05/20/2002 11:30:06 AM PDT by Tauzero
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To: southern rock
Really? Someone here said the government should give out free heroin? I must have missed that.

LOFL!!!
The rats get about half the popular votes in this country, mostly from the parasites. They do this by confiscating from society's producers and giving out "free stuff" to the parasites in order to buy their votes. You don't think the Democrats would just LOVE to include heroin in the "free stuff" they use to buy votes? What planet you been on?

78 posted on 05/20/2002 11:46:11 AM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: jayef
Asheville Nuggets. Kind bud. It's just good pot.

The stuff stinks. You youngsters have no class.

79 posted on 05/20/2002 11:47:57 AM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: jayef
You ever been to Hollywood?

Oh, I wish!!! Hollllywooood! Wow!!!
That's where all the beautiful people live.
The miserable, vain, dead-like-everybody-else-sooner-or-later, beautiful people. Wow.

80 posted on 05/20/2002 11:52:27 AM PDT by Lancey Howard
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