The War on Private Property
by
Laurence
M. Vance
Recently
by Laurence M. Vance: The
War on Drugs Is a War on Freedom
This talk
was given at the Orange County/Central Florida Campaign for Liberty
Monthly Meeting in Orlando, Florida, on October 11, 2012.
Do you want
to live in an authoritarian society? Do you desire an intrusive
government? Do you wish for a government that is a nanny state?
Do you yearn for government bureaucrats to tell you what you can
and cannot do? Do you like puritanical busybodies telling you how
to live your life? Do you believe that the government should define
and enforce morality? Do you reason that vices should be crimes?
Then you should support the war on drugs.
Do you love
liberty? Do you treasure freedom? Do you want to live in a free
society? Do you prefer government at all levels to be as limited
as possible? Do you think people should be responsible for the consequences
of their own actions? Do you wish the federal government would at
least follow its own Constitution? Do you reason that vices should
not be crimes? Then you must oppose the war on drugs.
There is no
middle ground. The war on drugs is a war on the free market, a free
society, and freedom itself.
If you oppose
drug use, you should oppose the war on drugs even more. If you consider
drug abuse to be evil, you should consider the war on drugs to be
more evil. If you think that taking drugs is a sin, you should think
that the war on drugs is a greater sin.
Now, lest there
be any misunderstanding, let me make myself perfectly clear. I don’t
abuse drugs. I don’t use drugs. And I don’t recommend that anyone
else abuse or use them either.
But not only
do I not use what are classified by the government as illegal drugs,
wouldn’t use them if they were legal, and would prefer that no one
else do so whether they are legal or illegal, I would rather see
people use drugs than the government wage war on them for doing
so.
Even though
I neither advocate nor condone the use of mind-altering, behavior-altering,
or mood-altering substances, I don’t think anyone should support
the government’s war on drugs any more than they should support
the government’s wars on poverty, obesity, dietary fat, cholesterol,
cancer, tobacco, and salt.
And even though
I consider the use of any drug for any reason other than because
of a medical necessity to be dangerous, destructive, and immoral,
I consider the government’s war on drugs to be even more dangerous,
destructive, and immoral.
Yes, I know
I am being redundant. But that’s because some people still just
don’t get it. So if I wasn’t clear enough for you, then let me try
again: Smoking crack is evil. Getting high on marijuana is a vice.
Snorting cocaine is destructive. Shooting up with heroin is sinful.
Swallowing ecstasy is immoral. Injecting yourself with crystal meth
is dangerous.
But as bad
as these things are, that doesn’t mean there should be a law against
any of them. And it doesn’t matter if those who favor marijuana
legalization or drug decriminalization just want to get high without
being hassled by the police. The drug war should still be opposed
root and branch.
Okay, now that
you know for sure that I don’t want kids to use drugs, that I would
rather air traffic controllers not be high on the job, and that
I prefer Americans don’t walk around all day stoned out of their
minds, I can talk about the war on drugs and why it is a war on
freedom.
There was a
time in this country when drugs were perfectly legal – all drugs.
Just like there was a time in this country when you were free to
do what you wanted with your own property without the EPA declaring
it a wetland, freely associate with whomever wanted to associate
with you, and hire and fire whomever you wanted to.
Although drug
freedom was drastically reduced by the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act
of 1914, the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937, and the Comprehensive Drug
Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970, it was President Richard
Nixon’s condemnation of drug abuse as American’s "public enemy
number one" that really began the war on drugs that wars against
our liberties every day.
Nixon declared
drug use to be a "menace," an "increasing grave threat,"
and a "national emergency." He appointed the first drug
czar and oversaw the establishment of the DEA. He talked of an "effective
war" and a "full-scale attack" on the problem of
drug abuse to be "faced on many fronts."
The country
was used to unconstitutional wars by then. Over 36,000 American
soldiers died fighting a "police action" in Korea in the
1950s that began with neither a declaration of war nor the slightest
pretense of consulting Congress. The undeclared war in Vietnam,
which Nixon inherited and then escalated just like Obama inherited
and then escalated the war in Afghanistan, was raging at the time
Nixon began his war on freedom we call the war on drugs.
The drug war
was expanded by Ronald Reagan and the "Just Say No" campaign
of the 1980s, reached the height of absurdity under George W. Bush’s
Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic Act of 2005, and continues unabated
under Barack Obama and his crackdowns on medical marijuana dispensaries.
And what are
the results of this 40-year war on freedom?
One result
is the huge bureaucracy known as the Drug Enforcement Administration.
The DEA employs 10,000 government parasites in 226 offices in 21
divisions throughout the United States and 83 foreign offices in
63 countries around the world. There are 300 chemists working for
the DEA. The DEA’s Office of Aviation Operations has 100 airplanes
and 124 pilots. The agency made almost 31,000 arrests last year.
And this is just the federal DEA. Each state has a similar agency.
Another result
is the increase in violence that is directly correlated with the
drug war. I don’t need to tell you about the murder and mayhem that
has taken place in Mexico as a result of its president declaring
war on Mexico’s drug cartels in 2006. But even if this violence
had not spilled over into the United States, all you have to do
is look at the gangs, drug lords, and ruined lives in American cities
to see the destructive effects of the government’s drug war. When
the government bans something, it creates huge financial incentives
for people to sell it on the black market. This is exactly what
happened during the days of Prohibition.
Another result
is the United States intervening in yet more countries. It is bad
that Mexico is fighting a drug war, but it is even worse that the
United States is fighting Mexico’s drug war. The United States has
agents from the DEA, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Marshal
Service, ATF, FBI, Coast Guard, TSA, and State Department in Mexico
waging war on drugs. And just last month the Associated Press reported
that a "team of 200 U.S. Marines began patrolling Guatemala’s
western coast this week in an unprecedented operation to beat drug
traffickers in the Central America region, a U.S. military spokesman
said."
Another result
is gross absurdities. Like when a grandmother from Mississippi was
arrested in Alabama for making an out-of-state purchase of Sudafed,
abused, humiliated, and jailed for 40 days before being released
– thanks to George Bush and the Republicans passing the Combat Methamphetamine
Epidemic Act in 2005. Or like when police in the city of Daytona
Beach Shores illegally strip-searched female dancers in front of
a group of male officers during a raid on a club because its employees
allegedly sold illegal drugs to patrons.
Another result
is making crimes out of things that have no victims. Every crime
needs a victim. Not a potential victim or a possible victim but
an actual victim. Having bad habits, exercising poor judgment, engaging
in dangerous activities, and committing vices are not crimes. It
is on this latter point that Lysander Spooner so famously explained:
"Vices are those acts by which a man harms himself or his property.
Crimes are those acts by which one man harms the person or property
of another."
Yet another
result is an unnecessarily swollen prison population. The United
States leads the world in the incarceration rate and in the total
prison population. According to the Justice Department’s Bureau
of Justice Statistics Bulletin "Prisoners in 2009" (the
latest year available), there were, at the end of 2009, over 1.6
million prisoners under the jurisdiction of state or federal correctional
authorities. There are almost 350,000 Americans in state or federal
prison at this moment because of drug charges. Almost half of those
in federal prison are incarcerated because of drug charges. And
no wonder, since there is one drug arrest in the United States every
19 seconds. According to the FBI’s latest report, "Crime in
the United States," more than 1.6 million Americans were arrested
on drug charges in 2010, with almost half of those arrests just
for marijuana possession.
Still another
result is yet one more failed government program. It is without
question that the war on drugs is a failure. In spite of decades
of prohibition laws, threats of fines and/or imprisonments, billions
of dollars spent, and massive propaganda campaigns, the war on drugs
has had no impact on the demand, availability, or use of most drugs
in the United States. It has failed to prevent drug abuse. It has
failed to keep drugs out of the hands of addicts. It has failed
to stop drug overdoses. It has failed to keep drugs away from teenagers.
It has failed to stop the violence associated with drug trafficking.
It has failed to help drug addicts get treatment. It has failed
to prevent the cultivation of marijuana and the making of illicit
drugs. It has failed to halt the flow of illegal drugs into the
United States.
And not only
does the $40 billion a year cost of the war on drugs not exceed
its supposed benefits, all of the results of the drug war
are negative. It has destroyed financial privacy, violated personal
privacy, clogged the judicial system, fostered violence, corrupted
law enforcement, taken finite law-enforcement resources away from
fighting real crime, militarized the local police, resulted in ridiculous
sting operations, hindered legitimate pain management, unreasonably
inconvenience retail shopping, eroded civil liberties, made a mockery
of the Fourth and Tenth Amendments, and last, but certainly not
least, the war on drugs has increased the size and scope of government.
Clearly, the
war on drugs is a monstrous evil that has ruined more lives than
drugs themselves.
Yet, the drug
war enjoys wide bipartisan sponsorship in Congress, is equally supported
by both major presidential candidates, is not an issue in any congressional
race, is backed by the majority of Americans, is cheered by most
religious people, is espoused by most parents with young children,
is championed by liberals and conservatives alike, is encouraged
by the majority of law-enforcement personnel, and is even defended
by those who say they advocate "civil liberties" or "limited
government."
The biggest
supporters of the drug war are the conservative Republicans who
talk the most and the loudest about free markets, limited government,
and the Constitution. But how could anyone who said he believed
in following the Constitution support the federal government’s war
on drugs? One does not have to be a libertarian to recognize that
the drug war is incompatible with individual liberty, private property,
personal responsibility, free markets, limited government – and
the Constitution.
"The
powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government,
are few and defined," said James Madison in Federalist
No. 45, "Those which are to remain in the State governments
are numerous and indefinite."
Nowhere does
the Constitution authorize the national government to intrude itself
into the personal eating, drinking, or smoking habits of Americans.
Nowhere does
the Constitution authorize the national government to regulate,
criminalize, or prohibit the manufacture, sale, or use of any drug.
Nowhere does
the Constitution authorize the national government to restrict or
monitor any harmful or mood-altering substances that any American
wants to eat, drink, smoke, inject, absorb, snort, sniff, inhale,
swallow, or otherwise ingest into his body.
Nowhere does
the Constitution authorize the national government to concern itself
with the nature and quantity of any substance Americans want to
consume.
Nowhere does
the Constitution authorize the national government to ban anything.
If cocaine and heroin were the most dangerous substances known to
man, the federal government would still have no more authority to
ban them than it would to ban baseball, hot dogs, or apple pie.
When the national
government sought to prohibit the "manufacture, sale, or transportation
of intoxicating liquors" after World War I, it realized that
it could only do so by amending the Constitution. That is why the
18th Amendment to the Constitution was adopted in 1919.
So why does
the Constitution Party candidate for president say: "Without
commenting on morality, drug laws should be enforced"? The
platform of the Constitution Party is ambiguous. After quoting the
Tenth and Fourth Amendments, it says about drugs: "The Constitution
Party will uphold the right of states and localities to restrict
access to drugs and to enforce such restrictions." But then
it says: "We support legislation to stop the flow of illegal
drugs into these United States from foreign sources. As a matter
of self-defense, retaliatory policies including embargoes, sanctions,
and tariffs, should be considered." Does that mean federal
legislation or just state legislation? Embargoes, sanctions, and
tariffs are things done by the federal government. Does the Constitution
Party advocate national action to halt the influx of drugs? Apparently
so.
But aside from
the Constitution, it is simply not the purpose of government to
protect people from bad habits, harmful substances, or vice. As
the economist Ludwig von Mises so powerfully wrote in Human
Action: "Opium and morphine are certainly dangerous,
habit-forming drugs. But once the principle is admitted that it
is the duty of government to protect the individual against his
own foolishness, no serious objections can be advanced against further
encroachments."
So, what are
we to make of conservative Florida politicians like Connie Mack,
John Mica, Mike Haridopolis, Jeff Miller, and Allen West? They are
enemies of the Constitution if they support the federal war on drugs.
And they are also enemies of freedom. Ron Paul took a lot of heat
for saying during one of the presidential debates that Americans
don’t need government prohibitions against heroin to keep them from
using heroin, but he was exactly right. Practically all other politicians
see themselves as nannies and overseers entrusted to use the power
of government to stamp out vice and keep Americans healthy and safe
because they are too stupid to take care of themselves.
The war on
drugs is an illogical, illegitimate, and unconstitutional function
of the federal government.
Yet, even some
libertarians think that absolute drug freedom is a nice philosophical
concept that is fine to intellectually assent to, but should never
be talked about publicly. The issue embarrasses some libertarians
so much that they would rather not mention it outside of libertarian
circles. Again we turn to the wisdom of Mises: "As soon as
we surrender the principle that the state should not interfere in
any questions touching on the individual’s mode of life, we end
by regulating and restricting the latter down to the smallest detail."
Even the Libertarian
Party presidential candidate is not in favor of absolute drug freedom.
Gary Johnson has said although marijuana should be legalized, "harder
drugs should not be legalized," because marijuana "is
a big enough step."
Either Johnson
is limiting his position to only legalizing marijuana because he
is trying to be tactful and not offend too many people that might
be inclined to vote libertarian, in which case he is being deceitful,
or he actually believes what he says, and I have no reason to think
otherwise, and is therefore confused about the nature of libertarianism.
The libertarian
view on the drug war is simple and consistent: Since it is not the
business of government to prohibit, regulate, monitor, restrict,
license, limit, or otherwise control what someone wants to eat,
drink, smoke, snort, sniff, inhale, inject, swallow, or ingest,
then there should be no laws whatsoever regarding the buying, selling,
possessing, using, growing, processing, or manufacturing of any
drug for any reason. Therefore, not just marijuana, but all drugs
should be decriminalized – immediately; all drug laws should be
repealed – immediately; all government agencies fighting the drug
war should be abolished – immediately; and all those imprisoned
solely for drug crimes should be released – immediately. Ending
the drug war is not something that needs to be planned out, like
say, ending the government-created dependency that is Social Security.
The war on
drugs is the most senseless and hypocritical of the government’s
wars.
Have you ever
noticed that there is no government ban on alcohol and tobacco?
Yes, they are heavily regulated, but anyone is free to drink and
smoke as much as he wants in his own home. Yet, alcohol and tobacco
use are two of the leading causes of death in the United States.
It seems rather ludicrous for the government to outlaw drugs and
not outlaw alcohol and tobacco.
Everything
bad that could be said regarding drug abuse could equally be said
of alcohol abuse – and even more so. Alcohol abuse is a factor in
many drownings, home accidents, suicides, pedestrian accidents,
fires, violent crimes, divorces, boating accidents, child abuse
cases, sex crimes, and auto accidents. In fact, the number one killer
of young people under twenty-five is alcohol-related car crashes.
Numerous studies have shown that smoking marijuana is much safer
than drinking alcohol.
Tobacco use
is supposed to cost the U.S. economy nearly $200 billion annually
in medical costs and lost productivity and cause more than 440,000
premature deaths each year from heart disease, stroke, cancer, or
smoking-related diseases. One of the new cigarette warning labels
that the FDA tried to institute before being thwarted by a U.S.
appeals court said: "Smoking can kill you." Yet, the number
of deaths attributable every year to marijuana smoking is a big
fat zero. And the majority of drug overdoses are caused, not by
heroin or cocaine, but by prescription opioid painkillers.
Most of the
negative externalities that result from people’s taking drugs are
due to the government’s war on drugs.
But in spite
of all the hypocrisy and lunacy that is the war on drugs, the drug
war continues full speed ahead with no end in sight. Yet, there
is no logical or sane reason that a policy like the war on drugs
that is so blatantly unconstitutional, that has so trampled on individual
liberty, that is such a miserable failure, that has so eroded civil
liberties, that has so destroyed financial privacy, and that has
fostered so much violence should be supported by so many people.
So why is it?
I think all
the arguments against legalizing drugs can be reduced to three reasons:
Using illegal drugs is unhealthy, dangerous, and immoral.
I don’t dispute
these things. But since doughnuts are unhealthy, parachuting is
dangerous, and adultery is immoral – yet no drug warriors support
the government waging war on these things – I find their arguments
hypocritical, nonsensical, and unconvincing.
I think the
real reasons are ignorance of the freedom philosophy, looking to
government to solve problems, paternalism, and authoritarianism.
"The only
freedom which deserves the name," said John Stuart Mill, "is
that of pursuing our own good in our own way, so long as we do not
attempt to deprive others of theirs, or impede their efforts to
obtain it. Each is the proper guardian of his own health, whether
bodily, or mental and spiritual. Mankind are greater gainers by
suffering each other to live as seems good to themselves, than by
compelling each to live as seems good to the rest."
In the absence
of drug prohibition, drug abuse could be handled the same way as
alcohol abuse – by families, friends, religion, Alcoholics Anonymous-type
programs, physicians, psychologists, and treatment centers. Wasn’t
it conservative icon Ronald Reagan who said: "Government is
not the solution to our problem; government is the problem."
The nanny state
is at its worse when it comes to the war on drugs. Busybodies in
and out of the government think it is their business to mind everyone
else’s business. And as C.S. Lewis remarked: "Of all tyrannies
a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be
the most oppressive. It may be better to live under robber barons
than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron’s cruelty
may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated;
but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without
end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience."
There are,
unfortunately, too many people in the United States – the land of
the free – who want to remake society in their own image and compel
others to live in ways that they approve of. Did you ever notice
that there is no shortage of Americans willing to kill for the military,
torture for the CIA, wiretap for the FBI, grope for the TSA, and
destroy property for the DEA?
The war on
drugs is a war on personal freedom, private property, personal responsibility,
individual liberty, financial privacy, the free market, and the
natural right to do "anything that’s peaceful" as long
as one is not aggressing against someone else’s person or property.
Practical and
utilitarian arguments against the drug war are important, and I
use them, but not as important as the moral argument for the freedom
to use or abuse drugs for freedom’s sake. That’s right: there is
a moral case for drug freedom, and I don’t just mean the freedom
to get high. The moral case for drug freedom is simply the case
for freedom. The theme is freedom. Freedom to use one’s property
as one sees fit. Freedom to enjoy the fruits of one’s labor in whatever
way one deems appropriate. Freedom to make one’s own health and
welfare decisions. Freedom to follow one’s own moral code. Freedom
from being taxed to fund government tyranny. Freedom from government
intrusion into one’s personal life. Freedom to be left alone.
Those of us
who advocate absolute drug freedom and a free market in drugs are
the ones taking the moral high ground. What is the war on drugs?
It is simply government bureaucrats, nanny state do-gooders, and
puritanical busybodies telling you want you can and can’t grow,
buy, sell, and put in your mouth. And as Mises observed: "It
is a fact that no paternal government, whether ancient or modern,
ever shrank from regimenting its subjects’ minds, beliefs, and opinions.
If one abolishes man’s freedom to determine his own consumption,
one takes all freedoms away." And as G. K. Chesterton reminds
us: "The free man owns himself. He can damage himself with
either eating or drinking; he can ruin himself with gambling. If
he does he is certainly a damn fool, and he might possibly be a
damned soul; but if he may not, he is not a free man any more than
a dog."
The war on
drugs is not only incompatible with a free society, it is not a
war on drugs at all; it is a war on freedom.
October
18, 2012
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
writes from central Florida. He is the author of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State, The
Revolution that Wasn't, Rethinking
the Good War, and The
Quatercentenary of the King James Bible. His latest book
is The
War on Drugs Is a War on Freedom. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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