Prisontime in Paris
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
DIGG THIS
Who is Paris
Hilton? I don’t know, either, and like you, I don’t care. But I
cannot avoid seeing her name and pictures all over the news because
of her latest brush with the law. Now it may be, and almost certainly
is, true that she is a nonentity whose only claim to fame is that
– she’s famous !! – thanks to plenty of money to spend on publicists,
personal representatives, and other flunkies, whose sole purpose
is to put her in the news and keep her there.
What makes
her worth talking about, therefore, is not her accomplishments,
which, to my admittedly scant knowledge, are non-existent. It is
her encounters with the justice system that justify writing about
her, because it illustrates the nature of that system beautifully.
She was arrested
last September, and found to have a blood alcohol of .08 – the minimum
level that justifies arrest. The original charge of Driving Under
the Influence was later reduced to Alcohol Related Reckless Driving.
She was placed on probation, fined about 1500, and her driving license
was suspended for four months. Subsequently she was stopped by police
three times and charged with driving with a suspended license. She
failed to attend an alcohol education class ordered by the judge.
After being caught for the fourth time driving with a suspended
license, she has been sentenced to 45 days in jail.
To my knowledge,
Ms. Hilton injured no one while behind the wheel, and damaged no
one’s property. The only complaints against her have been brought
by the state. There seems to be a consensus that her jail time serves
her right, for thumbing her nose at the law.
But what is
the law all about? Isn’t it about protecting people’s rights? Thus,
if she had injured or killed someone, or destroyed someone’s property,
the law would quite property be brought to bear upon her. But she’s
done nothing like that; the only injured party is the state, which
is responding to her ignoring its demands by placing her in jail.
And the jail sentence is unusual, as I understand it, because most
"offenders" with similar sentences have them reduced,
or serve in work release, or home confinement with an ankle-bracelet.
Her punishment, in other words, is only partly related to her "crime,"
and partly to teaching a lesson to others who might attach insufficient
importance to the huffings and puffings of a judge.
The state,
in other words, places itself on an equal standing with the sovereign
citizen. Claiming to be the servant of the public, it demands to
be served by the public. It has rights, which it has given itself,
and which you dare not ignore. Doing so is an offense punishable
by imprisonment. Its rules are the "law" because it says
they are. The state has the authority to punish those who ignore
it because it has given itself that authority. It can determine
how much alcohol in your blood qualifies you as a criminal. It can
make driving your automobile without its permission (i.e., license)
a crime. (Of course, it charges you for that license, just as it
charges you for a license for your car.) It can punish you for driving
it faster than the speed it has determined to be the maximum. It
can make you attend classes to improve your behavior. You may challenge
that authority, in which case you may find yourself in a court owned
and operated by your adversary, operating under your adversary’s
rules, with a judge in the pay of – guess whom?
Do we still
call this government by the people, for the people, and of the people?
Not if our eyes are open, and we are conscious. Rather, we have
government by, for, and of government itself. And don’t forget it,
or you could end up in jail, too!
June
2, 2007
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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