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Addicted to the Drug War
Ludwig von Mises Institute ^ | December 28, 2001 | Ilana Mercer

Posted on 12/30/2001 1:25:13 AM PST by NoCurrentFreeperByThatName

Now that it is being rededicated as part of the war on terrorism, the hapless war on drugs will claim even more liberties and lives than it already has. While omnibus antiterrorism bills were being rammed past pliant populations in the U.S., Canada, and Britain, Tony Blair got on the drug tack by ominously pointing out that the avails from drugs finance roughly 25 percent of the world's terrorist activity.

Blair, whose New Labor is committed to a "curious blend of moralism and utilitarianism" (TLS, September 14), one that has enshrined in law coercive drug testing and compulsory treatment protocols, proclaimed that fighting terrorism must extend to the war on drugs. This implies that the war effort will entail a renewed assault on individuals for their consumption choices.

Last year alone, roughly 1.5 million Americans were arrested on drug charges, most of them for marijuana possession. Sure enough, since September 11, DEA agents have stepped up the savage crackdowns on infirm medical-marijuana users.

There is no denying that the drug trade is a source of revenue for al-Qaida and for armed insurrections the world over. However, had governments not outlawed these substances, profits would not be excessive, and criminals would be looking elsewhere for a quick fix. Had the trade not been outlawed, the $400 billion worth of illegal trade per annum would not be in the hands of a criminal class whose market share is captured with guns.

The avails from drugs, moreover, would be much less likely to be funneled to unsavory causes if the trade were in the hands of legitimate law-abiding business. It is ironic that terrorists owe a debt of gratitude to governments for the solid financial base they enjoy.

Besides indirectly sponsoring terrorism, governments terrorize their citizens in more direct ways. While gangsters fight turf wars with other gangsters in order to maintain their upper hand in the lucrative market of illegal drugs, they don't go out of their way to assault their bread and butter, their drug-consuming clients. Drug dealers are not responsible for the incarceration on any given day of some 500,000 adults--100,000 of whom are nonviolent--in U.S. jails for drug taking. It is not drug lords that carry out unconstitutional assaults on adults because they happen to choose to consume marijuana, heroin, or cocaine, instead of alcohol, nicotine, or prescription drugs. Governments do.

The brutal punishing of adults for the substances they ought to be able to ingest, inhale, or inject at their own peril is based on a parochial and moribund prior restraint argument. Policy wonks have arbitrarily decided that heroin consumption is potentially worse for individual and society than compulsive eating, bunjie jumping, gambling, alcohol consumption, fatty foods, or tobacco. This serves as a justification to trample the constitutional rights of people before the foreseeable harm comes to pass. Considering the extent and severity of its assault on otherwise peaceable people, the state's conduct in the war on drugs befits the conduct of a criminal class, albeit a criminal class that enjoys the protection of the law.

If we accept prior restraint arguments, then apply them we must ad absurdum. We would have to stop all teenagers from driving, all people from eating Twinkies, or all socialist parents from procreating, lest they too sire proponents of state theft. "As soon as we surrender the principle that the state should not interfere in any questions touching on the individual’s mode of life," wrote Ludwig von Mises in 1927, "we end by regulating and restricting the latter down to the smallest details."

SUPPLY AND DEMAND

Despite the libertarian gush over the Hollywood motion picture Traffic, it was simply reiterating what seems obvious to almost all, except to President Bush's new drug czar, John Walters: The war on drugs is a dismal failure. Walters, who backs tough penalties for drug users and opposes the use of marijuana for medical purposes, intends to reinvigorate the flailing war. To make the thing hale and hearty again, the new chief of the U.S. antinarcotics operation has promised to shift the focus of his $20 billion-a-year office to "the demand side of this problem."

The attempts to reduce demand can be traced as far back as the 1917 Harrison Act that outlawed cocaine and other illicit drugs. While the criminal penalties over the decades have become harsher and harsher, demand has actually grown apace. The government spends billions attempting to brainwash children into "Just Saying No" to drugs. In the process it has managed to create not much more than an ever looming forbidden fruit syndrome.

The urge to experiment with psychoactive drugs is seemingly as strong now as when, in "On Liberty," John Stuart Mill argued that the freedom to consume alcohol and opium is one of the most basic civil rights. It is unlikely to cease any time soon. Most moderate users, however, do not become addicts. This is the secret that is concealed by the addiction industry’s hysterical chemical McCarthyism.

The irony becomes even greater when law enforcement turns its attentions to the supply side of the problem. In British Columbia, the media commend the Vancouver police force whenever it performs one of its sting operations. But what happens when supply is reduced? Why, prices shoot up. And what happens when prices go up? The potential profit causes a renewed influx of dealers into the trade, resulting in more crime. In the war on drugs, success is failure. A free market in drugs, however, will bring prices down drastically, inclining fewer pushers to enter the trade.

THE COSTS OF ILLEGAL MARKETS

Prohibition--not drug use--is responsible for the current crime and chaos. Prohibition makes the price of drugs far in excess of their cost of production. The production costs of common drugs are low. These chemicals are derived from hardy plants. A poppy is not an orchid. Neither is cannabis a particularly fragile plant. As with other illegal commodities, the price is pushed up by the high costs of circumventing the law as well as by the reduced supply brought on by prohibition. The price of pure heroin for medicinal purposes is a fraction of its street price. The difference amounts to a state subsidy for organized crime.

Again, in British Columbia, policy pundits are perennially alarmed at the flood of extra-potent drugs into Vancouver's East Side area, where drug use is endemic. Last year there were over 200 overdoses. Why the surprise? Prohibition is directly related to the potency of drugs. Given the risks involved in circumventing the law, dealers would rather transport the more potent and lucrative drugs. Reduced to criminals by law and held to ransom by mercenary suppliers, consumers have no recourse to the courts when they are sold adulterated or poisoned substances.

To "deal with supply," it is now the habit of the U.S. to invade foreign countries, to seize property on finding miniscule amounts of dope, to search people willy-nilly, to break into their homes and threaten their safety, even kill them. While the motion picture Traffic did not warrant the gushing praise it got from libertarians, it did provide some sober lines. As the protagonist decreed, "[T]here is no sacred protection of property rights in our country. You grow marijuana on your farm, be it an ounce or an acre of plant, that farm can be seized, that farm can be sold." And you can be killed. . .

The U.S. has been able to make prohibition piety an integral part of its foreign policy. It's quite clear that President Bush’s new warlord and his retinue will preserve the uniquely made-in-America flavor of the war. One of the ploys favored by Walters is the issuance of report cards, certifying or decertifying a nation in accordance with how its drug warriors perform. The U.S.’s drug strategy is predicated on ensuring prohibition is written into every international treaty and properly used as leverage in foreign agreements. Sweeping antiterrorism measures will further bolster these powers.

VOLUNTARY TRANSACTIONS

One question ought to loom large: When a drug purchaser and a drug seller make an exchange, is it voluntary? If it is voluntary, then both parties expect to benefit ex ante. A voluntary exchange is, by definition, always mutually beneficial inasmuch as, at the time of the exchange, the buyer valued the purchase more than the money he paid for it, and the seller valued the money more than the goods he sold.

Writing in the Journal of Business Ethics (1993), economist Walter Block points out that there will always be meddling third parties seeking to circumscribe and circumvent a voluntary activity not to their liking. Some feminists want to stop lovers of pornography from making or consuming it. Other busybodies would like to stop adults from gambling. These third parties have no place in a transaction between consenting adults, unless these transactions infringe directly--not foreseeably--on their property or person.

Any transaction that was at the time of occurrence voluntary, and hence beneficial to the participants, can, retrospectively, be denounced as harmful and regrettable. A litigious culture that shuns personal responsibility facilitates this. Consider the Sicamous, British Columbia, man who bought cocaine from the same dealer for ten years running. The drug consumer is now suing the dealer, alleging dealers "owe a duty of care to their customers." Is this the same kind of care the baker owes the obese buyer, or the local pub owner owes the alcoholic?

If the legislator has no place in a voluntary exchange between adults, what role can the state properly arrogate to itself?

THE ROLE OF THE STATE

The safest--to say nothing of most just--society is one that demands accountability from people, and treats them--so long as they are compos mentis--as if they have "initiative" and free will, for they do. Policymakers, however, don’t get votes for fostering reliance; on the contrary, they get lifelong co-dependence from their voters for getting them off the hook.

Currently, instead of being punished and shamed, the therapeutic state exculpates, treats, and often rewards addicts who commit crimes. Crimes perpetrated under the influence are cast as a disease for which a lesser sentence is meted. Often, criminals like this even go on to become advocates, mainstream role models, and preachers of the gospel of abstinence. It gets worse: state subsidized treatment has the victim, the taxpayer, pay for the ostensible restitution of the criminal. This kind of inversion of the moral order shields the perpetrator from the consequences of his actions and guarantees recidivism.

Drug use is a choice and a private one. If people should be arrested, it is only for crimes they perpetrate against another’s person and property. The correct solution is to visit the full force of the law on anyone who commits a crime against another's person or property. If an addict tosses a used needle in a public park, and a toddler steps on it, the addict must be made accountable for reckless endangerment. If the victim gets Hepatitis B or HIV--both diseases that can kill--the addict is complicit in attempted murder.

Incidentally, many libertarians have no difficulty stating that parks ought to be privatized in order to avoid the eventuality I describe. But they refuse to concede that, since the existence of public property is a reality, it is incumbent on government to manage this property as if it were private. These libertarians err on the side of libertinism by supporting the right of a bum to intimidate library-going children, or the right of the user to dispose publicly of his intravenous weapons.

When an employer is free to exercise property rights, he can implement a policy of compulsory testing as a prerequisite for employment. Should he refuse employment to a user, the user is free to either look elsewhere or quit the habit. In contrast to the state, members of the community cannot, unless they violate the law, take away a person’s liberty or interfere with the integrity of his person or property. With its protected species and anti-discrimination regulation, the state disrupts the market’s self-correcting mechanism.

The State must then exert its only mandate, and that is to protect people and their property from incurring unprovoked harm. Acting for the state, the criminal justice system must stop ameliorating punishment with a disease label or treatment protocol. Once the secular liberal state retreats from managing what people ingest, inhale, or inject, it will fall, once again, to custom and religion to reinvigorate those informal checks on behavior the therapeutic state has undermined. Shame, loss of face, being denied membership, excommunication, counseling, and support are some of the ways moral communities have, in previous eras, kept their members in check.

ADDICTION: VICE OR DISEASE?

The film Traffic grows heavy with portent when the protagonist takes a few drinks before dinner. In an attempt at some foolish equivalencies, or slippery-slope error, it's implied that the hard-working--if vocationally misguided--father's predinner drinks are on a par with the addiction of his slack-jawed teen. "We are all out of control" is the hysterical message. Neither is it without significance that Traffic ends with the twelve-step session. Had Oprah Winfrey made a grand entrée, the scene could not have been more endorsing of the disease model of addiction. Lost in the hysteria is that most people, even when they help themselves regularly to a joint or indulge in a few drinks, choose not to descend into the addiction abyss or turn their backs on life's responsibilities.

On the issue of drugs, adherents of the left and right appear incapable of coming down from a shared high. Prohibitionists unanimously support outlawry, coerced treatment protocols (incidentally, the success the proponents of this treatment claim for it is no argument in its favor), and deny that people are capable of making conscious choices. Both hawk and harm-reductionist dove believe addiction is not a problem of behavior, but a disease as organic as cancer or diabetes.

There are, however, no genetic markers that distinguish the addict from the moderate user or the nonuser. There is no inherited mechanism that leads a person to be unable to control his substance use, to go on tremendous binges, or to leave off his connection to people and environments in order to consume a substance. The scientific evidence for brain-based addiction theories is shabby.

When people take drugs, their brain functioning changes. When they have sex, cuddle their toddler, or eat chocolate, similar changes occur in the same brain centers. Do changes in the brain tell us anything about the person’s behavior or its motivation? Hardly. Can we draw conclusions about whether the connubially preoccupied is addicted to sex from the fact that certain centers in the brain--the very same centers that react when drugs are taken--perk up when said individual has sex? Of course not. When people recover from addiction--by any means at all--their brain functioning changes once again. This does not amount to saying that addiction is organic or biological in the sense that appendicitis or diabetes is.

Everything we do involves our brains, and brains alter their physical structure and functioning in response to the environment. We could just as well say that learning French is a biological accomplishment, though most of us would rather call it an intellectual achievement (John Winston Bush, Ph.D., unpublished Letter-to-an-Editor, SSCP Listserve).

Identifying activities as stimulating the cerebral pleasure centers fails to explain why people find different things pleasurable and why different people react in destructive, addictive ways to some of these things, while others incorporate them into a balanced overall lifestyle ("Medical Mumbo Jumbo Does not Explain Addiction," Ilana Mercer, The Calgary Herald, 2000).

REDUCING DRUG ADDICTION

Reducing addiction lies in withdrawing the perverse incentives that reinforce the maladaptive behavior. To use twelve-step locution, free treatment programs are "enablers." The dismal failure of state programs launched by the addiction industry and the high rates of recidivism alert us again and again to the fact that addicts quit when they decide to. And they are more likely to be nudged in that direction when made to shoulder the consequences of their lifestyle.

Currently, we don't have free-market insurance. It is legally impermissible to exclude or refuse to insure certain risky populations. Some self-destructive behavior has acquired disability status and hence is legally protected. If insurers cannot transfer to the addict the full costs of the risk he poses, they must make those of us who choose to watch our diets, exercise, and refrain from smoking or drug taking the repository for these costs. Legislative interference ensures we subsidize the lifestyle of the smoker, compulsive eater, drinker, and addict.

Over and above the immorality of forceful wealth distribution, socialized schemes (like the Canadian healthcare system) distribute wealth from the risk averse to the reckless, stealing from responsible adults, and rewarding the rash and imprudent.

Insurance on the free market would restore the right to discriminate between risk groups. With such discrimination comes the incentive on the part of the insured to avoid lifestyles or behaviors that incur costs.

If a society wishes to persist in pursuing a worldview where misdeeds are parlayed as diseases--where the thief is considered a kleptomaniac, the arsonist a pyromaniac, and the promiscuous a sex addict--it must at the very least stop forcing the majority of people to sponsor this deviance. In the absence of distribution schemes, these behaviors will become less prevalent.

CONCLUSION

A free market in drugs, aver the determinists, will bring prices down drastically and send demand rocketing, causing rampant addiction. These conclusions are based on assumptions not in evidence: There is no indication that, prior to prohibition, people flocked to the opium dens in proportionally greater numbers than contemporary addicts flock to the crack houses. In the same vein that biological hardwiring fails to explain this vice, addiction cannot be understood as a mere byproduct of environmental exigencies.

Try as the egalitarians do to whittle down the differences between people to simple schedules of reinforcement, they invariably fail. Not being laboratory rats, human behavior is mediated by--and cannot be explained without reference to--values, conscious choices, and probity of character or lack thereof.

Conversely, because drug taking--like most things--involves elements of choice, it would be inaccurate to blame the dire situation of addicts entirely on the absence of a competitive market. The impeded accessibility of drugs is not insignificant in the plight of the user. But, absent drugs, a person with such proclivities may well branch into other antisocial behavior.

It is not unreasonable to postulate, however, that, were addicts able to purchase drugs at market prices, and were they not forced to structure their lives around obtaining a fix, criminal conduct among users would be considerably reduced. These pragmatic predictions aside, prohibition is unconscionable and should no longer be finessed.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: wodlist
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To: jwalsh07
In your world, you would force me and others like me to live under the tyranny of a small minority who think that drug use is an unalienable not legislatable by the citizens of states. So who's the statist here?

I, for one, believe that it's the FEDERAL component of the drug war that is the most anti-freedom and statist. Take, for example, the recent busts of the CA medi-pot clinics by the DEA. They were operating LAWFULLY under CA law, but Asa Hutchinson and his fedgov jackboots decided that they knew better what was good for the citizens of California and shut down the clinics, confiscating plants, supplies, and records. And this just 6 weeks after the WTC attacks, when one would think that law enforcement's priorities have changed.

A much better approach would be to put the DEA out of business and allow states to regulate marijuana and other drugs, just like they regulate alcohol. Some states (or even localities, like "dry counties" in states like Kentucky) would have prohibitory laws; others would be more lenient. This would be a Constitutional approach, and one that would work much better than the unconstitutional War on Drugs.

501 posted on 12/31/2001 6:34:43 AM PST by bassmaner
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To: Roscoe
OK, so by point two in the lame commerce clause justification in the CSA, the because snotrag I just blew my nose in was imported, you can write federal laws prohibiting me from flicking boogers at Drug Warriors? Right?
502 posted on 12/31/2001 6:42:24 AM PST by eno_
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To: Roscoe;zon;donh
Libertarians are as hungry as liberals for judicial legislation.

Wrong. Libertarians question the very basis upon which such unconstitutional (prohibitory) legislation (re. your post #499 and elsewhere) was enacted. If the Constitution was followed in all judicial decisions, the CSA would be rendered unconstitutional and voided, and the finding of the administrative judge in this case would be rendered academic.

But the politics of the drug war trumps common sense. And it is the politics of EMOTION rather than REASON, just like the politics of the Left.

503 posted on 12/31/2001 6:43:06 AM PST by bassmaner
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To: bassmaner
Excellent post. The fact is, it isn't about drugs. It's about the feds sticking their noses where the don't belong. I grew up in a dry town. It was a local choice. That's the way things should work.

As for the Drug Warriors posting the commerce clause fig leaf from the CSA as if it answers the constitutional issue, it actually illustrates the opposite: You could reliably find every federal law of dubious constitutionality by searching for the same phrases.

In fact the commerce clause is only supposed to enable the federal government to prevent state governments from interfering in interstate commerce. So even the underlying basis of this make-believe link to constitutionality directly contradicts the Drug Warriors' position.

Most simply stated: Why did it take an amendment to prohibit booze, and why is an amendment not needed to prohibit certain drugs?

504 posted on 12/31/2001 6:52:14 AM PST by eno_
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To: eno_
...the because snotrag I just blew my nose in was imported...

Have a cup of coffee.

505 posted on 12/31/2001 7:02:13 AM PST by Roscoe
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To: bassmaner
...unconstitutional (prohibitory) legislation...

Persistent nonsense.

506 posted on 12/31/2001 7:04:23 AM PST by Roscoe
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To: eno_
Why did it take an amendment to prohibit booze

Because the regulation and prohibition of alcohol had a well established history of exclusive state and local control.

507 posted on 12/31/2001 7:09:04 AM PST by Roscoe
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To: tpaine;Hemlock;laredo44
The irony is this is a conservative forum. Not a Libertarian forum. I find big-L Libertarianism to be politically sterile. I am a registered Republican in a very liberal state. I am exactly the kind of upper middle class law abiding white male the LEOs assume would be on their side. I hope it gives them nightmares to know I AM NOT on their side, nor are many - probably most - people like me. Ironically, the biggest supporters of no-neck LEOs out there pushing the Drug War are the infantile Oprah-watching Worried Moms in the minivans. It is also obvious to me that the only people agruing for the Drug War are themselves on the Drug War gravy train.
508 posted on 12/31/2001 7:09:23 AM PST by eno_
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To: Roscoe
So computer software, because there is no long history of state and local law, coudl be federally regulated? Oh, wait, there's that other crappy unconstitutional law, the DMCA, that can make me a criminal for having certain software on my PC. The Drug War is in excellent statutory company.
509 posted on 12/31/2001 7:12:22 AM PST by eno_
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To: eno_
Viruses.
510 posted on 12/31/2001 7:15:19 AM PST by Roscoe
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To: A CA Guy
So you don't DISCOUNT the Constitution. That's mighty big of you. However, any "additional law" created MUST CONFORM TO the limits of power granted to government BY the Constitution. It's that simple. The Constitution does NOT say that whatever the Federal Government wants to do is OK. It says: (Amendment X)

"The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. "

And there is NOTHING in the Constitution providing for government to make war on its own people. Got it yet? It's not about using drugs; it's about violating the SUPREME law of the land and that MUST STOP!

511 posted on 12/31/2001 7:17:07 AM PST by dcwusmc
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To: Zon
Cultural Jihad and Clamper are heros here. Some day, when you put down your dope and grow up you'll appreciate that this country is run by people like them. 145 posted on 12/28/01 10:55 AM Pacific by VA Advogado

Zon ... I would hope that you know what I think of the VA "person" and I have NOTHING and I mean NOTHING that I agree with him on. Let it be known that as far as I'm concerned VA does NOT exist. I will not respond to him or acknowledge his presence.

512 posted on 12/31/2001 7:22:26 AM PST by clamper1797
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To: Roscoe
Persistent nonsense.

Bravo sierra.

Where in the Constitution has the federal government given any authority to prohibit anything? The invocation of the interstate commerce clause is really the "persistent nonsense" - if it were invoked constitutionally, there could be no law passed preventing citizens from growing marijuana or any other psychoactive plant on their property for their own use, but we all know how far that would get :-(.

The temperance movement types realized that it would be unconstitutional to pass a federal law banning booze in the early 20th century and successfully sought a Constitutional amendment giving the government that authority. It promptly exercised that authority with the Volstead Act, and ushered in 14 years of lawlessness known as Prohibition. Thankfully, common sense eventually prevailed and that abomination of liberty was repealed. You Drug Warriors, however, hide behind the generalized raping of the Constitution that was justified by FDR's New Deal, and never saw fit to change the Constitution to further your goals.

That's why drug prohibition is UNCONSTITUTIONAL.

513 posted on 12/31/2001 7:22:26 AM PST by bassmaner
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To: Roscoe
Because the regulation and prohibition of alcohol had a well established history of exclusive state and local control.

Then why the need for a federal constitutional amendment, if the states and localities were so good at it? And why no federal constitutional amendment allowing federal drug prohibition?

514 posted on 12/31/2001 7:25:46 AM PST by bassmaner
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To: bassmaner
Where in the Constitution has the federal government given any authority to prohibit anything?

By such "reasoning", there isn't any such thing as illegal aliens. Can't "prohibit" illegal entry into our country, can we now?

Perhaps that's why the leftists and their Libertarian allies support open borders and opposed Proposition 187.

Regulatory powers necessarily include powers of prohibition.

515 posted on 12/31/2001 7:30:00 AM PST by Roscoe
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To: Roscoe
is that your version of a smoke screen, Roscoe? Can't win on the WOD, so move to immigration so you can attack Libertarianism? Pretty weak, man, pretty weak
516 posted on 12/31/2001 7:42:19 AM PST by WindMinstrel
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To: Roscoe
And that line of reasoning results in the conclusion that the federal government has the authority to control every material object in your posession, and any activity you might possibly engage in that could have some potential economic consequence. Do you believe that this is what the intent of the founders was when they wrote:

To regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states, and with the Indian tribes; ?

517 posted on 12/31/2001 7:44:39 AM PST by tacticalogic
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To: WindMinstrel
Regulatory powers necessarily include powers of prohibition.

No answer, of course.

518 posted on 12/31/2001 7:44:57 AM PST by Roscoe
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To: tacticalogic
...control every material object in your posession...

Really? Who is doing that?

The rationalizations of the legalize "crack and smack" crowd grow ever more absurd.

519 posted on 12/31/2001 7:50:37 AM PST by Roscoe
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To: Roscoe
Do you believe that this is what the intent of the founders was when they wrote:

To regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states, and with the Indian tribes; ?

520 posted on 12/31/2001 7:55:28 AM PST by tacticalogic
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