America’s
Untermenschen, or Independence Day Blues
by
Myles Kantor
The
Fourth of July witnesses mass affirmations of American freedom,
but it is a false chorus.
It
is a false chorus because America’s splendid ethos of freedom is
in fact a caste. While indisputably sincere Americans extol our
country at block parties, BBQs, and fireworks shows, many of our
countrymen have been reduced to something less than fully human.
I
refer to those Americans who on this first Independence Day of the
new millennium are in prison for using particular chemicals. The
War on Drugs, futile and immoral, has subjugated and continues to
subjugate thousands upon thousands of Americans.
Vincent
Bugliosi observes, "By making the use of drugs a crime, the
anomaly is created of the perpetrator and victim of the crime being
one and the same person." Immense treasure and police power
are thus paternalistically deployed to smash a personal indulgence.
Bugliosi concludes, "[T]he only rationale for making
the use of drugs illegal is that we want to protect people from
themselves."
I
consider narcotics a stultifying waste a money, so I don’t have
to worry about incarceration and disenfranchisement on a drug charge.
This might prompt some to ask, "Why should you care about anti-drug
laws since you’re not affected by them?"
As
citizens, we are all affected when our government enacts laws that
deny our self-ownership and renders a class of Americans inferior
for innocuously using their elemental property (i.e., their bodies).
An anti-drug law, in other words, threatens enslavement for
a certain exercise of self-ownership. (Murray Rothbard described
such policies as a "totalitarian cage" for a reason.)
Terribly,
there appears to be a consensus of indifference to drug users behind
bars. Consider the dismissive sentiments of Jonah Goldberg:
…prisons
haven’t been overflowing with non-violent, first-time drug offenders.
The latest numbers…show that only 8.8 percent of the more than
1 million people in state prisons (where 90 percent of all prisoners
reside) were there for drug possession…Aha! But what about the
federal prisons we hear so much about? Well, there, only a meager
2.2 percent of criminals were imprisoned solely for drug possession.
The idea that our prisons are filled with harmless stoners is
a myth. (See "Lock them up and keep ‘em there!"
JewishWorldReview.com,
June 15, 2001)
The
thrust of this is that taking a chainsaw to families, dreams, and
livelihoods for a victimless preference is negligible if the dispossessed
are a minority. This attitude is many things, but conservative or
decent isn’t one of them.
Imagine
a law is passed that makes it a felony for albino libertarians to
criticize Mao Zedong. I’d speculate this law would affect a paucity
of individuals. Anyone with a scintilla of concern for freedom,
however, would demand the law’s repeal. Such conscience is largely
absent with respect to criminalization of drug use.
Murray
Rothbard envisioned a world where "a person’s ownership rights
in his own body…are not invaded, are not aggressed against."
For the antithesis of his vision, look at the War on Drugs.
A
country that claims to be a land of freedom cannot demolish certain
citizens’ freedom without betraying itself. The drug war’s counter-constitutional
demolition of American liberty does not do our country proud. So
long as this iniquitous crusade persists, America is the land of
the free only in relative terms.
To
paraphrase Frederick
Douglass, what to the imprisoned drug user is the Fourth of
July?
July
4, 2001
Myles
Kantor [send him mail]
edits FreeEmigration.com
and lives in Boynton Beach, Florida
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
Myles
Kantor Archives
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