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Connecting the War on Guns & Drugs [my title]
SHOTGUN NEWS ^ | 1/11/03 | Amicus Populi

Posted on 01/11/2003 10:15:11 AM PST by tpaine

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To: robertpaulsen
robertpaulsen said: "Well then, Mr. non-dense one, why are gun rights enumerated in the second amendment and drug rights are not?"

Our Founders supplied us with Amendment IX:"The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people. "

There's an entire amendment, one tenth of the Bill of Rights, insisting that you do not do what your are doing; that is, claim that there is any significance to the ommission or non-enumeration of a right.

I suggest you refer to Amendment XIX. There you will find pretty convincing evidence that at one time the nation operated under the principle that a substance could not be outlawed by the federal government without a provision of the Constitution permitting it to do so. What changed? It was not the Constitution. It is the people who refuse to use it.

581 posted on 06/07/2005 7:35:15 PM PDT by William Tell
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To: anobjectivist

Billions of our dollars are wasted each year on this,... anobectivist

billions of dollars are spent on controlling americans because of the war on drugs... continuing the prohibition allows for the prohibition of certain freedoms detrimental to big governments goals.

teeman


582 posted on 06/07/2005 7:41:01 PM PDT by teeman8r
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To: tpaine

so far so good... you are winning and they are losing...
they will inevitably see the error of their socialistic tendancies.

teeman


583 posted on 06/07/2005 7:42:30 PM PDT by teeman8r
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To: Blood of Tyrants
It saddens me that many of the people here at FR will proudly calim their support for freedom in one thread and in the next they will talk about how the government needs MORE power to fight the WOD.

Bingo, and they don't even see it. I am always very optimistic about America, but I am bothered by this and the reactions from many FReepers.

584 posted on 06/07/2005 7:46:39 PM PDT by eyespysomething (Peace - that brief moment in history where everyone stands around reloading.)
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To: William Tell
(It was the 18th amendment. I know you know it.)

"There you will find pretty convincing evidence that at one time the nation operated under the principle that a substance could not be outlawed by the federal government without a provision of the Constitution permitting it to do so."

Sure they could. But the temperence reformers wanted a more durable amendment, rather than simply a statute.

585 posted on 06/07/2005 8:21:45 PM PDT by robertpaulsen
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To: robertpaulsen
robertpaulsen said: "Sure they could. "

You could save us some time if you clarified your own opinion here. The WOSD proves that they COULD. That there is no marijuana commerce possible that is not interstate commerce is ridiculous. It suggests that there is no commerce that is not interstate commerce.

I claim that the federal government SHOULD NOT involve itself in the control of drugs which cannot be proven to move in interstate commerce. I claim that there is no enumerated power which justifies what they are doing.

Other posters who claim that we don't want to be like countries which have legalized drugs because then our parks would be filled with drug users have obviously not visited Golden Gate Park in San Francisco recently. The place is effectively OWNED by druggies and other jobless elements.

In another post you stated: "You give me the moral, responsible society that we had back in 1776, and I'll vote for any drug law you want."

The only reason we don't have the moral, responsible society of 1776 is because we don't insist on it. We don't insist that people use firearms responsibly. Instead, there are attempts to disarm. We don't insist that people ingest substances responsibly. Instead, we criminalize possession and provide "treatment". We don't insist that eight-year-old school boys use pocket knives responsibly, as was done when I was eight. Instead, we exercise "zero tolerance" to suspend students for possession of a butter spatula simply because it is commonly called a "knife".

We are raising generation after generation of people who are not allowed to exercise responsible judgement and then some decry their lack of responsibility.

586 posted on 06/07/2005 8:48:34 PM PDT by William Tell
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To: citizenK
Perhaps not everyone has seen this recent ad - but it shows two teenage type boys in the family den getting stoned (smoking a bong) and handling a firearm. One of the boys comments that the gun is not loaded, then blam - the gun goes off and the editing implies that the one stoner shot the other dead. This ad represents a blatant example of the propaganda as discussed by the author where the government connects the issue of drugs and guns in a single advertisement, and plays on both the drug and gun fears to which your average American is now conditioned.

The association of guns and drugs in advertising is not new, nor accidental. The underlying concept is one of drug crazed maniacs wielding guns coming to a neighborhood near you--and no one is safe.

That is the fulcrum (safety) by which the lever of such propaganda is applied to even the most conservative psyche: drug related gang war, drug related killing, drug related crime...no one is safe.

While many would concede that the drug war is an abject failure, (something I will not), the inevitable answer to fighting that war more effectively has been a continuing erosion of the rights of all against unreasonable search and siezure, not just in the venue of controlled substances, but in the realm of firearms as well.

The concept has crept into the groupthink that some drugs are all right for personal self-medication, but others are too dangerous to allow the general public to use unsupervised, if at all. That same concept is being used to promote the ban of certain types of firearm, just substitute "guns" for "drugs" in the previous statement.

There are salient differences between the two.

First, people have used firearms on a daily basis and suffered no ill effects, even after many years.

Second, although a definite firearm enthusiast, I cannot honestly say I know anyone "addicted" to firearms. The physical dependency is not there.

No one is knocking over liquor stores to get their next box of .22s.

Babies born to households under the "influence of firearms" but where illicit drug use is absent seldom suffer birth defects at any rate greater than that of the general population, and are no more likely than the general population to be abused, neglected, or slain in acts of senseless violence, perhaps less so.

It would be disingenous to attempt to say the same of households where the parent(s) are drug addicts, even in the absence of firearms.

As for cheaper drugs, there is no guarantee that this would happen. When alcohol use was relieved of prohibition, alcoholic beverages were taxed. It would be highly uncharacteristic of Governmnet to ignore such a source of revenue, and while the result might be cheaper drugs, it is unlikely that prices would ever approach "cost".

If you advocate "state supplied" drugs, you are advocating my tax dollar supporting other people's bad habits, something I am as likely to condone as the average non-smoker would condone the Government picking up the tab for my La Gloria Cubanas.

It already galls me to be paying for "treatment" programs which have recidivism rates as high as 90+%.

While there is no easy solution, I cannot agree with the use of hyperbole to promote the "anything goes" approach to fighting the uncontrolled distribution and use of dangerous drugs. "No knock" dynamic entry, warrantless searches, the use of paid informants, and the erosion of due process all belie an increasing laziness on the part of law enforcement which used to rely on good police work. We have become so inured to such tactics that we have cast aside Constitutional protections on the false altar of "effectiveness", much as we have given up the ability to carry so much a a fingernail clipper on an airplane: all offerings to the false god of "Safety".

You mention compelling social interest, and aside from the public safety, there would be none if the Government had not already made its collectivist inroads into the family, making what would have been personal tragedies the collective responsibility (in financial terms) of the general public through welfare programs and taxation.

SO what's a mutha to do? For those who want to consume certain drugs of choice, licensure?

"Sign here, kid, you know you can get the buzz you want, but you will never drive the bus, the plane, the train, or hold public office. You forfeit your right to own a firearm, to hunt, or operate a motor vehicle. You may not work as a fireman, a policeman, a soldier, or in the medical profession. Forget being a cowboy, High on the Range was just a movie. If you ever wish to have children, you must test 'clean' on every random test for a period of 5 years, and are subject to genetic screening prior to reproductive approval. Just sign here, on line 3, 27, and 42, produce ID, and press hard, you are making several coppies...."

One last point, and I'll get off the page. Just because something was legal is not necessarily a good argument for making it legal again. Slavery was legal for nearly a hundred years after the Declaration of Independance was signed, and few would advocate its return.

587 posted on 06/07/2005 8:55:37 PM PDT by Smokin' Joe (Grant no power to government you would not want your worst enemies to wield against you.)
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To: caltrop
The incentive to push drugs would immedialtely disappear and we'd be on the way, over time, to almost entirely eliminating drug addiction in America.

THere would always be that contingent who would conceal their drug use, and thus, the underground market would remain, even if substantially diminished.

While I agree with much of your sentiment, the program is all carrot and no stick.

Add in execution for drug traffickers and addicts/users who try to subvert the system and it might be more effective. Harsh, you might say, but definite incentive to go with the program or not go at all.

588 posted on 06/07/2005 9:00:23 PM PDT by Smokin' Joe (Grant no power to government you would not want your worst enemies to wield against you.)
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Most Americans are moving to the idea that drugs and guns are evil and should be prohibited. Encouraging one way of thinking supports the other because the logic of the arguments is the same.

Why not prohibit a dangerous evil? If every drinker is a potential alcoholic, every drug-user a future addict, and every gun-owner a potential killer, why not ban them all? There is no defense against this logic except to challenge the lies that sit at the root of the arguments.
Those are the lies promoted by the prevailing propaganda in support of all Prohibition.

We cannot oppose one and support the other. To do so undermines our efforts because all these movements walk on the same legs.


__________________________________



The logical core of the article. --- Prohibitional power has never been granted to any level of government, federal/state or local.

Governments are limited to legally 'reasonable' regulatory powers by the basic principles of our constitution.

posted at #6






Logical core bump.


589 posted on 06/07/2005 9:13:53 PM PDT by P_A_I
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To: tpaine

Amen.


590 posted on 06/07/2005 9:42:01 PM PDT by wingnutx (Seabees Can Do!)
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To: William Tell
"You could save us some time if you clarified your own opinion here"

What I meant was that Congress could have banned alcohol without an amendment.

"I claim that there is no enumerated power which justifies what they are doing."

You of course agree that Congress does indeed have the power to regulate the interstate commerce of drugs? Well, that's all they're doing.

Now, in order to effectively regulate that interstate commerce, Congress uses the Necessary and Proper Clause (In Article I, Section 8) to write laws which control anything that has a substantial effect on their interstate regulatory efforts.

You don't like that. You say Congress shouldn't/can't do that. Well, what if Congress didn't?

Well, that would allow states and individuals to undermine and subvert Congress' legitimate interstate regulatory efforts. If that's what the Founding Fathers intended, then why give the commerce clause power to Congress to begin with?

Maybe Congress shouldn't regulate drugs. Maybe that should be left to the states to decide. Fine. Pass an amendment, similar in wording to the 21st amendment, just as we did with alcohol, removing that power from the federal government and returning it exclusively to the states.

"We are raising generation after generation of people who are not allowed to exercise responsible judgement and then some decry their lack of responsibility."

Keep in mind that the irresponsible behavior came first. Nobody's going to pass a law against cellphone use in the car until enough irresponsible people cause enough accidents. Then the law will pass.

The first laws against drugs were passed because there were problems associated with those drugs. Be it opium or heroin or morphine or cocaine or elixirs ... or marijuana.

591 posted on 06/07/2005 11:34:22 PM PDT by robertpaulsen
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To: eyespysomething

I was saying the same thing here:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1417459/posts?page=20#20


592 posted on 06/08/2005 1:38:44 AM PDT by SittinYonder (Tancredo and I wanna know what you believe)
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To: Joe Brower
The Second Amendment...
America's Original Homeland Security!

Be Ever Vigilant!

593 posted on 06/08/2005 8:01:41 AM PDT by blackie (Be Well~Be Armed~Be Safe~Molon Labe!)
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To: teeman8r

Too bad tpaine was bounced.


594 posted on 06/08/2005 9:29:28 AM PDT by MileHi
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To: robertpaulsen
robertpaulsen said: "You of course agree that Congress does indeed have the power to regulate the interstate commerce of drugs? Well, that's all they're doing."

I don't agree that there is no such thing as NON interstate commerce in drugs or any other commodity. Please explain how there is any limit whatever to claims of federal jurisdiction over all trade given the decision that there can be no NON interstate commerce in some drugs?

595 posted on 06/08/2005 12:24:54 PM PDT by William Tell
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To: robertpaulsen
"We're not fighting for drugs, we're defending the Bill of Rights!". Yeah, right.

So, you don't get it. I guess it doesn't make you a bad person. Just less of an American than the Founders were hoping for. Buckle up, and Don't forget your helmet.

596 posted on 06/08/2005 1:24:28 PM PDT by FreeRadical (That's no Open Container, that's My Beer.)
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To: FreeRadical
"So, you don't get it."

Oh I get it -- I simply don't believe it.

"Just less of an American"

You're the one who doesn't support the U.S. Constitution, and I'm less of an American? That's rich.

The USSC has ruled the Controlled Substances Act constitutional. Is the Court wrong?

"Buckle up, and Don't forget your helmet."

If I'm forced to pay for the health care of those involved in traffic accidents, then excuse me if I try to minimize my costs. If these idiots had their own insurance, they could ride naked for all I care.

597 posted on 06/08/2005 4:01:24 PM PDT by robertpaulsen
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To: Smokin' Joe

I've no problem with harsh measures for those who choose to remain underground. My only concern, as I'm certain you recognize, is for those who haven't been lured into the drug culture or those who are victimized to support an addict's habit.


598 posted on 06/08/2005 6:48:01 PM PDT by caltrop
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To: tpaine
The drug warrior socialists among us could care less. -- High crime justifies ever more effort to control society. This is socialisms goal

Likewise, the recent Patriot Act extensions and Senate approval to make them permanent..

This is all tying in together..
Border control.. = National ID cards..
Why is it that government says we can't control Illegal immigration?? Insufficient paperwork..
Solution?? National ID cards..( conforming to International ID card standards ) DNA testing.. etc...

Although the obvious solution of More border guards, use of the military to guard the borders, hiring of more INS employees and rigorous enforcement of existing immigration law, are typically ignored..
Why use existing law, when a new law can be created, further restricting citizen's rights??

599 posted on 06/08/2005 10:40:05 PM PDT by Drammach (Freedom; not just a job, it's an adventure..)
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To: tpaine; A tall man in a cowboy hat; robertpaulsen
The commerce clause, concerning regulating commerce "among the several states" was meant to encourage free trade, not prohibit commerce..

Historically, the several states began instituting protective tariffs and excise taxes on products entering their state in order to protect local producers..
The commerce clause was instituted to end such practices, and allow "free trade" without restriction or protectionism..

600 posted on 06/08/2005 10:53:17 PM PDT by Drammach (Freedom; not just a job, it's an adventure..)
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