Paris
Hilton: Another Victimless Criminal
by
J.
H. Huebert
by J. H. Huebert
DIGG THIS
Paris Hilton
finally finishes her much-publicized 23-day prison stint today,
but as far as I'm concerned her release comes 23 days too late.
Never mind
the obvious unfairness of making her serve a longer sentence than
everyone else who commits the same crime simply because she's rich
and famous, though that's bad enough.
The more important
question is, what real crime has she committed?
Initially,
she was fined and given 36 months probation for driving under the
influence of alcohol. Her blood alcohol level was 0.08%, the minimum
to support an arrest. The minimum level used to be 0.10%, so there
was a time when she wouldn't have been arrested at all for driving
in the exact same condition. But in the year 2000, Bill Clinton
and Congress used bribes to states through highway funding to make
them move the blood alcohol limit down. And Paris Hilton is in jail
only because of this entirely arbitrary government fiat.
Whether the
level is 0.08% or 0.10%, why
should someone's blood alcohol level in itself be a crime?
Maybe having
that much alcohol in their blood makes some people less likely to
drive safely. But there are lots of perfectly legal things that
can make you a less safe driver. Cell phones and ipods are common
distractions. A law school professor of mine was known to read books
while driving. Then there's one of the biggest, most dangerous distractions:
the person sitting next to you. And don't forget noisy kids in the
back seat. All legal, at least for now, despite putting other drivers
at an increased risk of collision. (In California, using a cell
phone while driving will get you a $20 ticket – a far cry from prison
– beginning in December 2008.)
Why should
alcohol consumers be singled out for punishment – as demanded by
the 19th century Woman's Christian
Temperance Union – except that the
prohibitionists' modern-day counterparts, such as Mothers Against
Drunk Driving, are organized against them?
And there's
still more discrimination involved: because men on average are larger
and heavier than women, men can consume more alcohol than women
without reaching the magic number set by our federal overseers who
say when we should say when. Could Paris be a victim of unlawful
gender bias here? Where are the feminists on this one?
In general,
we don't punish people because of some factor that may simply make
them statistically more likely to harm others. Instead, we punish
people only when they actually harm someone else. If we arrested
people based on statistics, rather than their own culpability, members
of demographic groups most likely to commit violent crimes could
find themselves arrested merely for walking the streets at night.
Certainly no one would approve of that outrageous result – and there
is no reason why peaceful alcohol consumers should receive such
unfair treatment, whether they're driving, walking, riding a bicycle,
or sitting on a park bench.
Miss Hilton
is in jail now not for the drunk driving itself, but for driving
again after her license was suspended. This too is an injustice.
After all,
driver's
licenses have nothing to do with safe driving. As anyone who's
traveled Los Angeles freeways knows, having a license does not make
one a competent driver. And there are plenty of people without a
license who undoubtedly would be fine drivers. Even without licensing,
you already have a much stronger incentive to drive safely than
the government could ever provide: your own life is at stake each
time you get behind the wheel.
Instead of
ensuring safety, driver's licenses serve as a money-maker for the
state. Worse, under the federal Real ID act, they will be a de
facto national
identification card, compromising everyone's liberty and privacy.
We are on a slippery slope from driver's licenses to "Your papers
please!" and ultimately it may take widespread civil disobedience
to stop it. I'm reasonably confident Paris Hilton didn't have that
in mind when she broke the law, but she was justified in doing it
all the same.
So
although I've never watched her tv series or her sex video (really!),
and I doubt whether she will produce anything I will want to consume
in the future, I welcome Paris Hilton back to society – to which
she never owed any debt, and which, despite her millions, may owe
her something for her unwarranted trouble.
This article
originally appeared in the Orange
County Register.
June 26, 2007
J.
H. Huebert [send him mail]
an attorney and an adjunct faculty member of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute. Visit his website.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
J.H.
Huebert Archives
|