Monday, October 23, 2006

To the Politicians:

If you want my vote, then you are going to have to demonstrate that you have at least a basic understanding of the principles upon which our nation was founded. If you can’t understand why you don’t get to veto what people do of their own free will to themselves or with willing others, then you certainly can’t be trusted with power over others. If your marriage or sexuality is in any way threatened by anonymous people, freely engaging with each other as they wish, hundreds and even thousands of miles away from you, then you can’t be trusted with power over others.

If you think you have a “right” in deciding whether one person you do not even know may freely enter into a lifetime bond with another whom you do not know, then you clearly do not understand the nature of minding your own business, and thus, cannot be trusted with power over others. If you want my vote, you have to address the fundamental question of our day: why in the world are we allowing our government to deny and withold the most fundamental of our rights as equal citizens? Most importantly: what are you going to do to bring it to a halt?

The question is not whether or not one has the right to smoke a joint, or have sex with another person of the same gender. The question is whether or not the government has the proper legitimate power to hold accountable and punish those who act upon themselves. It doesn't matter if the act in question is inhaling smoke from a plant or shoving a burning hot knitting needle into your own eye -- you cannot be legitimately punished by the rest of us for doing so.

The core principle that people fail to realize when they insist that you don't have the "right" to smoke pot, is that in saying so, they are agreeing with the supposition that the decisions you make about what you do to yourself can be voted against by the collective citizenry. In other words, your will toward yourself is subject to being voided by others claiming a superior power to do so based on outnumbering you.

The argument that what you do to yourself "affects others," and is therefore properly subject to inspection and revocation by a group of your fellow citizens, is easily dismissed with actual data. Getting a sunburn may lead to skin cancer -- should we make getting a sunburn illegal? If the criteria we apply to drugs are used to make the determination, then we certainly need to start no-knock raids to see if people are in possession of sunscreen. Those who have young children but do not have sunscreen should be arrested immediately and their children carted off and placed in foster homes to "protect" them.

Think it's absurd? According to the mortality data in the CDC's on-line mortality database, from 1979 through 1998 inclusive, all illegal drugs combined were the underlying cause of death for 44,727 people (out of 42,868,083 total deaths over the span). Meanwhile, over that same time, there were 121,001 deaths attributed to malignant melanoma of the skin.

So, if we need to punish people for using drugs because they might die, then we need to punish people who get sunburns for the same reason. Skin cancer is killing people at a rate nearly triple that of illegal drugs. And think for a moment: if the possibility of immediate death is not deterring people from using the drugs, then what good is *any* law you may dream up?

People dying "too young" from skin cancer "has affects on others." but then again, everything can be said to "affect" others -- that's what makes it such a crappy criteria for outlawing what one does to oneself.

Most people have heard of the theory that "if a butterfly flaps it's wings" off the coast of Africa, that the cumulative "effects" of having moved the air can eventually add up to a typhoon in Madagascar. Which could of course kill and otherwise "affect" lots of people. Bad butterflies!

What happens when you fart? Did fart power lead to hurricane Katrina?

And if every person is only six people away from any other person on earth -- then what is your link to bin Laden?

Drug use costs society money? Oops, fat people cost society over twice as much as those using illegal drugs. Obviously, it should be illegal to be fat. The really obese have all sorts of negative effects on those around them. Let’s round 'em up and lock 'em up -- then we can force them to exercise and control what they eat.

The issue is not whether or not you have the right to smoke pot -- the issue is that no one has the right to punish you for what you choose to do to yourself. Whether that involves smoking pot, shooting heroin, having sex with a cucumber, chopping your own hand from your body, leaping from airplanes, or merely laying around on the beach somewhere baking in the sun, the issue remains the same: no one has the right to punish you for doing something to yourself.

Any criteria you may wish to apply to support the drug war can be used against every person in the nation for some other equally specious "reason." The republic is in very grave danger. It is time to once again rise to the defense of individual liberty.

You have the right to do what ever the hell you want to yourself. No one has the right to punish you for it. It is the fundamental right, without which, there is no other right possible. After all, how can you even vote for the politicians who are taking away these rights, if you don't have the right to make your own decisions in the first place? If I am not allowed to choose what to do to myself, then how am I "allowed" to vote?

It's time to get our nation back on the path of ensuring that all of us are treated as equals. I won't vote for someone who votes to deny rights to the citizens. I will only vote for people who understand that the government is charged with protecting those rights.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Outstanding! And to think I thought we had lost our Thomas Paines, Patrick Henrys, and others such as them.

Brian, you are absolutely right, the issue is not pot, alcohol, sunburn or obesity and how can we outlaw these so-called purges on society; it is about life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, personal freedom, the ability to make your own choices and taking responsibility for your own actions.

What a great statement, too bad you don't write for one of the mainstream newspapers (but then you would probably be controlled in what you can say, let alone the topic). Will pass on the link to this page in all my emails and add to MCNORML's website too. Thanks for all you do!

anti-drugwar czar said...

hi christeen,

i'm glad you liked it, and thanks to you too! i really want equality to be the focus of the next presidential election. 230 years is long enough to have that one figured out.

b

"Radical" Russ said...

Outstanding, Brian. People ask me why I'm so focused on the War On (Certain American Citizens Using Non-Pharmaceutical, Non-Alcoholic, Tobacco-Free) Drugs when there are bigger real-Wars going on.

My point is similar to yours: if we can't recognize the basic sovereignty of self, we cannot possibly recognize freedom on any larger level. A country that will lock up a pothead will find it very easy to waterboard a suspected terrorist, for example.

Keep up the good work. I link to you often.

"Radical" Russ Belville
Associate Director & Webmaster
Oregon NORML (ornorml.org)

anti-drugwar czar said...

hi russ,

great to hear from you!

hell, the "terror" angle is the most frightening aspect of allowing tyranny to run about unfettered in our society. fear is just a really crappy basis for governance. and considering what they do to us to try to stop us from doing things to ourselves, i don't even want to imagine what they will attempt in the name of "protecting" us from terrorists.

we have a huge job to do -- and i'm really glad you are on the front lines doing it russ! anybody reading this should absolutely check out the oregon norml site (www.ornorml.org), and keep paying attention to what "Radical" Russ and his folks are doing.

congrats on winning the local talk radio contest -- i hope you win the national contest too! and i really miss your blog. you had the absolute best coverage of the last national norml conference i found anywhere.

go packers!

b

Anonymous said...

I think that it is wrong when the government spends al;l this money that could be going toward healthcare and education instead of the war on drugs. The statistics show that more people have died from alcohol and tobbacco than any other illegal drugs alone

anti-drugwar czar said...

hi anonymous!

i have to agree there are certainly any number of things that the money being wasted on the drug war could be better spent on.

and you are certainly correct that "death by drug" is not as big a deal as it is made out to be. as luck would have it, i'm currently doing a full exploitation of drug-induced deaths from 2003 -- i'll have the results posted on my site within the next couple of weeks, so stay tuned.

b

Anonymous said...

Thanks for making a stand. I think what you have forgotten is that these politicians for keeping drugs illegal are in fact communists. Their arugument is that the commune or collective might be injured if one person steps out of line. Since drugs use is hard to catch, the communists resort to KGB tactics. These politicians need to be called what they are, KGB commie pinkoes hell bent on turning the USA into the USSR. They have almost made the transition. Their God is Stalin and they are modelling thier drug war program after Stalinesque methods. It would be great to count the commie ways the politicans are acting, and then march on washington calling them commies who are attacking the constitution, freedom and liberty. We could have signs that say death to communism- not commies or you will get in trouble. We could put BEtter Dead than Red, Dont tread on me and dress up like minute men from the revolutionary war. We could signal one by land and two by see and distribute Tom Paines common sense. Let us be the patriots this time and kick the red-coats out of washington. ITs time this country learn the ancient art of MYOFB! Let us turn the commie label where it deserves to be attached- the drug warriors. There are only two people that want drugs illegal, the KGB communists or drug dealers. Which is your local politician?

anti-drugwar czar said...

hi anonymous!

thanks for weighing in. i agree with your basic premise -- but the word "commie" conjures up too many knee-jerk reactions in people, so we probably ought to use a few different words to describe what is going on: i recommend using tyrants and tyranny.

part of what motivated me to quit my job in the intelligence business was the fact that our nation has been doing a steady slide into totalitarianism for the past several decades. the war on drugs and the excesses committed in the name of waging it is simply the most obvious example of this turn of events.

so, hell yeah, i agree on the whole "don't tread on me, Tom Paine, one if by land" thing -- we need to sound the alarms! however, in order to get people to pay attention and not just dismiss us as a bunch of loons, i think we need to craft our messages to address the real enemies: fear and ignorance.

fear is driving us in the direction of totalitarianism, and ignorance is paving a smooth road for it to travel upon. the whole "war on terror" is likewise a bunch of bullshit in which fear and ignorance are leading us farther down the road.

the time has come: we must rise, or we surely will perish.

b

Anonymous said...

Ron Paul for President in 2008!