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Keeping Up
With The News

---------

RALPH BRAX

Viewpoint

Once again, I will take a look at those fascinating and critical stories that somehow missed the front page of most newspapers.

 

Priorities at Antelope Valley College

 

   We should all know by now that the Board of Trustees at AVC chose to spend a massive chunk of the $139 million of Measure R bond funds on a state-of-the-art sports complex. The most recent example of this waste of taxpayer dollars came in late March when the college unveiled its new $4 million baseball stadium. 

 

    Hey, Frank McCourt and the Dodgers have nothing on us.

 

    Head coach John Livermont declared, “I’ve never seen anything like it, it’s on a professional level.” One of the Marauder players observed that the new dugout is “big enough to park a yacht in.” Does anyone have a yacht that needs a home? 

 

    At the time the stadium opened, the team had a record of 3 wins and 17 losses. But now it can lose in style.

 

    Meanwhile the 45-year-old classrooms and science labs go without any renovation or remodeling, which, of course, was promised voters and students back when the bond was passed. Can anyone spell “RECALL”?

 

Obama Aids Education

 

    Last month President Barack Obama visited Northern Virginia Community College to sign a new education bill into law. The legislation provides for $36 billion for federal Pell Grants, nearly $3 billion for minority-serving colleges, and $2 billion for community colleges to improve job training for the unemployed. 

 

    And it’s all being paid for by ending the hideous government subsidies (welfare) to big banks and loan companies that give federal backed student loans. If you want to help college students, this is the way to do it, not by building new athletic facilities that satisfy the egos of certain Board members and administrators.

 

Republicans Keep On Partying

 

    One thing the Republicans know how to do is party. Last month it was revealed that Michael Steele and the Republican National Committee approved the expenditure of nearly $2,000 in party funds at a racy West Hollywood strip club. GOP big wigs watched scantily clad women “play out bondage and sadomasochistic scenes.”

 

    In addition, reports indicate the RNC spent nearly $15,000 on limousine services, hotels and food in Las Vegas, Beverly Hills and New York. A representative of the Concerned Women for America asked why a staffer would believe these practices were acceptable if they had not been approved in the past. Indeed.

 

Trouble for Meg?

 

    As you probably are aware, billionaire corporate executive, and friend of the common man, Meg Whitman, wants to be our next governor. She kind of reminds me of Arnold Schwarzenegger, without the accent. 

 

    After spending millions of dollars of her own fortune on a TV blitz, polls find her in a virtual dead heat with Attorney General Jerry Brown, who hasn’t spent a dime. Not good news for Meg. And now she refuses to even debate Jerry.

 

    It turns out she has made billions investing in hedge funds that profited from Californians losing their homes when they couldn’t pay their mortgages. She also accused Jerry Brown of threatening companies belonging to the California Chamber of Commerce with punitive actions if they didn’t support him. When asked to be specific, Whitman declined to name any company that Brown supposedly threatened.

 

    In addition, she has given large sums of money to well-known Democrats, like Senators Ben Nelson (Nebraska), Maria Cantwell (Washington), John Kerry (Massachusetts) and our own Barbara Boxer.

 

    My gosh, Meg has given more money to Democrats than I have!

 

    And the beat goes on…


  -------------------------------------------
 

    The opinions expressed in this article are those of Ralph Brax and should not be misconstrued by the reader to necessarily be those of The Political Observer. 

 

 

 

 

I Fought the Law. . .
And I Won

                                 ------


STEVE BIERFELDT

Campaign for Liberty

 


   We often forget that the power wielded by government exists only because there are those willing to carry out its orders.

 

   The “Government” is not an Artificial Intelligence that exists in a science fiction movie. Rather it comprises real people who have the choice to either follow or refuse an order.

 

   In wake of the 1832 Supreme Court case, Worcester v. Georgia, presided over by Chief Justice John Marshall, President Andrew Jackson is famously rumored to have stated, “John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it.”

 

   Knowing the Supreme Court had no army, police or agents to enforce their decisions, the implication was clear.

 

   A law passed by Congress, signed by the President, and upheld by the courts will never be carried out or enforced unless there are men with badges and with guns willing to comply. It is important we remember this when we reflect on laws that are passed, directives that are issued and agencies that infringe on our civil liberties.

 

   Just one such example of such an agency is the Transportation Security Administration or TSA.

 

   Campaign for Liberty regularly holds conferences and events to energize our members and educate those new to the ideals of liberty. From the sale of tickets, books, t-shirts, and generous donations, a weekend of excitement often finds Campaign for Liberty with money to transport back to headquarters.

 

   In my responsibilities as Director of Development I often find myself tasked with carrying this money.

 

   On one occasion, things got interesting: www.thestatevsyou.blogspot.com/2009/06/cnn-news-piece.html

 

   As I always do when transporting money from Campaign for Liberty events, I place the funds in a thin metal cash box similar to that found at a raffle or church bazaar, with the box then placed in my carry-on bag.

 

   After working my way through the numerous levels of checkpoints, I finally came to the baggage screening. I handed my ticket and my license to the initial TSA agent and proceeded to the screening.

 

   After I had walked through the metal detector and handed my ticket to the attendant for further verification, I waited for my items to come out of the machine. The screening attendant motioned for assistance and an additional TSA attendant soon came over.

 

   This individual ordered me off to the side and proceeded to search through my bag. As he looked through my belongings, he eventually took out the moneybox and informed me he needed to look through it.

 

   I asked him if I was being detained or if I was free to go. Upon his second demand to search it, I asked if the box was being detained. Never did he provide a direct answer to my question, and likewise never did I offer my consent to a search.

 

   He began to grow hostile and told me he was sick of the back and forth. He ordered me into a side room next to the security checkpoint. Not wanting to inform Congressman Ron Paul and Campaign for Liberty members I had lost their generous donations, I followed him.

 

   As I was being led into this room off the concourse, I thought of situations that often begin this way and far too often do not end well for the lone individual questioning the government’s presumed authority.

 

   As the agent settled in I quickly took out my mobile phone, highlighted the proper setting, slipped the phone upright in my front jacket pocket, and began recording the conversation.

 

   The full recording can be heard here: www.aclu.org/national-security/audio-recording-aclu-client-steve-bierfeldts-detention-and-interrogation-tsa

 

   It has often been said that, “The Camera is the New Gun.” Such words ring true. In an age where agents of the government create more regulations and wield more power, it can often seem hopeless for individuals to do anything to challenge an authority that does not follow its own laws.

 

   However, a simple video camera or audio recorder can often have a far-reaching effect. In this case, it changed the policy of the federal government. Some important things to remember when dealing with anyone in law enforcement:

 

 

Be Prepared

 

   Some have asked me if I planned the situation, wanting to be caught and wanting to cause a scene. In reality I was tired from the weekend, trying to respond to old emails via my cell phone, and gritting my teeth as I had another few hours of air travel ahead of me. The last thing on my mind was a desire to argue with the government.

 

   However, carrying a pocket Constitution and having the presence of mind to record a conversation are things everyone can do. Without question the inquiry most often made is, “What program did you use to record that?”

 

   The application was called “iTalk” and is a free application you can download to your iPhone. Determine if your mobile phone can record audio and if possible video. If it cannot, download or buy the software.

 

   The tool it will provide against government abuse will be worth it.

 

 

Know the Law

 

   While I do not have a tremendous knowledge of the law, in my interaction with TSA and subsequently the St. Louis police, I was aware of what I had to say and more importantly what I did not have to say.

 

   I knew full well that I did not have to tell the TSA where I worked, and despite the TSA’s lies or ignorance of the law themselves, I also knew I did not have to tell the police either.

 

   Don't just talk about Constitutional liberties and what they mean. Study them and incorporate that knowledge into interactions in your daily life.

 

 

Keep Your Cool

 

   Despite the TSA’s and police department's claim that I was “being difficult” or “acting like a child,” only one of us ever raised his voice, used offensive language, or threatened physical action.

 

   One slip up and the government’s whole story changes. Now the TSA is justified because you swore at them, called them names, or insulted their job. Don’t give them the slightest opportunity.

 

   In any interaction with any type of law enforcement, remain calm and respectful. You may find out that the officer knows the law also, and will let you leave. If not, you'll be taking the high road (and hopefully remembering to record the conversation).

 

   With the recording now going, I entered the room and watched the TSA agent sit down and begin filling out paperwork. He asked me what I did for a living and in return I asked him if that was relevant.

 

   Upon being told it was, I asked if I was legally required to answer. He was not pleased and amidst a fury of expletives stated that while I was not required to tell him, I would be required to tell a police officer. (I knew full well I wasn't, though decided not to tempt the situation.)

 

   What then occurred was a 30-minute interrogation at which any given time a half dozen individuals were crowded in the small office. At first a police officer entered and informed me that I did indeed have to tell the TSA where I worked. Upon my asking for clarification he backed off his initial statement.

 

   When a second police officer entered, the interrogation continued. Amid threats of involvement with the FBI and DEA, I saw firsthand the strong-arm tactics that unfortunately some in law enforcement use.

 

   The questioning went back and forth between myself, TSA, police officers, and random individuals entering and leaving. Consistently I kept my responses simple, yet polite, and asked questions in return.

 

  “Am I legally required to answer that?... Does the law state I have to tell you that information?... Can you please tell me what my rights are concerning that inquiry?...” As I continued, I was either yelled at or accused of refusing to comply.

 

   At one point I was informed, “If you have nothing to hide, just answer the question.” I cringed as I listened to the argument used by those who give preeminence to the state over the individual.

 

   This line of training had apparently been bred into in these agents and was unfortunately well engrained in whatever type of training they had received.

 

   Though it is easy to look back on the situation and claim that it was under control the whole time, I was still in a situation I would have preferred to avoid. I was in a small, enclosed room with no windows and a locked door.

 

   A half dozen government agents, some of them carrying loaded firearms, surrounded me. And I was cursed at, berated, and threatened with arrest.

 

   Anything can happen in that situation. Someone slips, someone falls, someone gets nervous, and suddenly you're in a situation where you not only risk the word of six people against yourself, you risk possible physical harm.

 

   After a half hour of back and forth, these “authorities” informed me I would be taken down to the station and asked me if I needed to be handcuffed, to which I politely declined.

 

   Upon my further statement that I was looking for guidance and did not fully understand the law, I was told, “We’re gonna help you understand the law.”

 

   One can only wonder what they meant by that. Thankfully I did not need to find out.

 

   I was actually led out of the interrogation room and about 10 yards down the concourse, a plain-clothes official stopped the parade of government employees. He called them back and upon looking at the money stated matter-of-factly that they were contributions to “Campaign for Liberty.”

 

   (The fact there were numerous checks that were actually written out to “Campaign for Liberty” was apparently missed by the half dozen officers taking parting in the interrogation.)

 

   After one of the police officers asked for my contact information and phone number in order to follow up (I graciously declined to give it to him), I was on my way within a matter of minutes.

 

   Upon my return home I began to speak with individuals well versed in legal matters and decided to push forward against the government abuse that had taken place. Judge Andrew Napolitano featured a piece on his show, “Freedom Watch” (www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMB6L487LHM) and I spoke with legal experts on both the left and the right.

 

   I determined the American Civil Liberties Union was the most professional in this matter as they shared my goal to push for principle and a change in policy over financial compensation.

 

   The suit was filed in response to the violation of my Constitutional rights and soon Bierfeldt v. Napolitano, (www.aclu.org/national-security/bierfeldt-v-napolitano-tsas-rule-56-statement) a suit against the Department of Homeland Security and its Secretary Janet Napolitano (no relation to the judge), was underway.

 

   Curiously, only a week before the government's response was required, the TSA stated they would be altering their policy for flight security. Their screening process would be limited to searches for the purpose of safety only and their illegal searches and detainments of the past could not continue.

 

   With this change in policy the ACLU voluntarily dismissed the suit, pending TSA's compliance. No longer can the TSA harass passengers for carrying cash. Suspiciousness searches unrelated to airline safety should be a thing of the past.

 

   With an adherence to the Constitution, the latest technology, and a tremendous amount of support from Campaign for Liberty members and Liberty advocates all throughout the country, we had been able to influence a direct change in federal policy.

 

   We had fought the law, and we had won.


      -------------------------------------- 

   This column originally appeared at the Campaign For Liberty website, and has been republished in the Political Observer with permission.

 

   The Campaign For Liberty promotes and defends the great American principles of individual Liberty, constitutional government, sound money, free markets, and a non-interventionist foreign policy, by means of educational and political activity.

 

   Visit us on the Web at: www.CampaignForLiberty.com

 

   Steve Bierfeldt is the Director of Development for Campaign for Liberty. He co-authored the book “Who Is the Real Barack Obama?” and often writes on issues of Liberty from a Christian perspective.

 

The Drug War vs.
The Bill of Rights


ANTHONY GREGORY

Campaign for Liberty

   This is from Ludwig von Mises's economic masterpiece, Human Action, written in 1949:

 

   The problems involved in direct government interference with consumption. . . concern the fundamental issues of human life and social organization. If it is true that government derives its authority from God and is entrusted by Providence to act as the guardian of the ignorant and stupid populace, then it is certainly its task to regiment every aspect of the subject's conduct. The God-sent ruler knows better what is good for his wards than they do themselves. It is his duty to guard them against the harm they would inflict upon themselves if left alone.

   Self-styled “realistic” people fail to recognize the immense importance of the principles implied. They contend that they do not want to deal with the matter from what, they say, is a philosophic and academic point of view. Their approach is, they argue, exclusively guided by practical considerations. . . .

   However, the case is not so simple as that. 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. A good case could be made out in favor of the prohibition of alcohol and nicotine. And why limit the government's benevolent providence to the protection of the individual's body only?

 

   Is not the harm a man can inflict on his mind and soul even more disastrous than any bodily evils? Why not prevent him from reading bad books and seeing bad plays, from looking at bad paintings and statues and from hearing bad music? The mischief done by bad ideologies, surely, is much more pernicious, both for the individual and for the whole society, than that done by narcotic drugs.

   These fears are not merely imaginary specters terrifying secluded doctrinaires. 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. The naïve advocates of government interference with consumption delude themselves when they neglect what they disdainfully call the philosophical aspect of the problem. They unwittingly support the case of censorship, inquisition, religious intolerance, and the persecution of dissenters.

 

   Radicalism on the drug issue is often seen in terms of the politics of the 1960s and since, but twenty years before Woodstock one of the most serious and significant thinkers ever to ponder the importance of Human Liberty said all this, going far beyond what most critics of drug policy would say today.

   But is Mises correct? Does he overstate his case? Is the abolition of the right to consume whatever someone wants really taking all his Freedom away? And does drug prohibition really send us on the path to censorship and religious persecution?

   In America, our Liberties our ostensibly protected by the U.S. Constitution, and particularly the Bill of Rights. How much has the drug war compromised our Constitutional Rights? Let us consider a countdown, starting with the Tenth Amendment and moving to the First.

 

Amendment X

   The Tenth Amendment says “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.”

 

   This effectively means that if the Constitution does not grant the power to the federal government over something, then it is for the States and their people to decide. Some people would say this is the most important Amendment. If the federal government obeyed it, the entire drug war as we know it would be impossible.

   In 1909, Hamilton Wright, U.S. official to the Shanghai Opium Commission, complained that the Constitution was "constantly getting in the way" of his drug war ambitions. Indeed, in domestic politics, there is no Constitutional authorization for a federal drug war whatsoever.

Without a grant of power, the U.S. government is supposed to butt out.

   In 1914, Woodrow Wilson signed the Harrison Narcotic Act into law. There was no Constitutional basis for this, but at least by the time alcohol prohibition came around, it was recognized that the federal government would need Constitutional authority to ban liquor. They passed the 18th Amendment in 1919, and then repealed the disaster of alcohol prohibition with the 21st Amendment 14 years later in 1933.

   By 1937, however, there was no more such deference to Constitutional procedure. That year, Franklin Roosevelt signed the Marijuana Tax Act into law, effectively banning marijuana at the federal level. All the major federal drug laws since then had no Constitutional basis, and all of them seemed to come with general expansions of federal power.

 

   Just as Wilson's ban on heroin and regulation of cocaine came during the activist Progressive Era and marijuana prohibition was part of FDR's New Deal, the next major wave of federal drug law came in the 1960s, during the Great Society, and culminated in the 1970 Controlled Substances Act just as Nixon was continuing LBJ's policies of guns and butter.

   This relates to the medical marijuana debates since the 1990s. When States began allowing medicinal pot, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush both cracked down on their dispensaries; and many advocates of States' Rights decried this violation of federalism.

 

   A case went to the Supreme Court on 10th Amendment grounds and all the liberals on the court - all favoring a federal government with few limits on its power - upheld Bush's raids. Three conservatives dissented, including Clarence Thomas, arguing that the federal government had no authority through the Commerce Clause to interfere with California's medical marijuana policy.

   If Obama indeed stops the medical marijuana raids, it will probably not be because, as his spokesman says, he believes “that federal resources should not be used to circumvent State laws.” On general questions of policy, including the drug war, Obama and most liberals favor federal supremacy.

 

   If California goes through with legalizing marijuana outright, will Obama really do nothing about it? Will the administration actually find ways to crack down on medical marijuana while claiming the operations it's targeting are not for medical use - as it has done before? Is it possible that Obama, not believing in the Constitutional principles at stake, will accelerate other aspects of the drug war? The Tenth Amendment alone invalidates the federal drug war, and so too does the next one down.

Amendment IX

 

   The Ninth Amendment says "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."

   This means that just because a personal Right is not specifically mentioned does not mean the federal government can infringe upon it. Certainly the Rights to use and sell drugs are being attacked in this very way. And in moral terms, this is what the drug war means. It is the denial of self-ownership.

 

   Someone who can't decide what to put in himself does not own himself. The logic of the drug war is that the government owns you.

   We look at all the Rights trampled in the name of the drug war and we see how all Rights are connected. People are denied the Right to self-medicate and take the treatment they desire. Not just in regard to illegal drugs either, but those that are regulated.
  

    The Food and Drug Administration is tied at the hip to the Drug Enforcement Administration. The pharmaceutical interests who control federal prescription drug policy have a stake in maintaining a control on what drugs people can do. The FDA, by keeping life-saving drugs off the market, has forced tens and tens of thousand Americans to die prematurely.

 

   What would amuse me if it were not tragic is that so many liberals defend the FDA even as they question the drug war. But if you have a Right to do drugs to get high, you surely also have a Right to do any drug that you think might save your life. Medical Freedom in its true sense is totally impossible without drug Freedom.

   Because of the drug war, the Right to travel is impeded, and the Right to have and transfer money. Laws against money laundering - itself a victimless crime - have sprung up almost entirely because of the drug war. And anyone who believes that the Right to practice free enterprise is important and guaranteed by the Ninth Amendment must necessarily oppose the drug war, which violates Free Market principles in a million ways.

 

Amendment VIII

   Next on our list is the Eighth Amendment, which guarantees that, “Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.”

   Surely any punishment is cruel for a victimless crime. Conservatives might say this is a liberal reading of the Amendment. But at the time the Bill of Rights was adopted, prisons as we know them hardly existed, and the notion of imprisoning someone for ten years for growing hemp, on which the Constitution was drafted, would have been seen as quite cruel and quite unusual.

 

   In the 1970s and 1980s, Congress passed mandatory minimum laws which reduce the discretion of judges in handing out sentences - almost all such federally determined sentences are for drugs or guns. The average sentence in federal prison for drug trafficking is longer than for sexual abuse. The burgeoning prison-state is one of the most horrifying features of modern American history, with the drug war playing a huge part.

 

   About one in five Americans prisoners are there for non-violent drug offenses - acts that were totally legal in the 19th Century. Before Reagan stepped up the drug war, there were half a million Americans in prison or jail, and another 1.5 million on parole or probation.

 

   There are now more than two million behind bars and seven million total in the correctional system. Prisons grew by 500 percent from 1982 to 2000 in my State of California.

   Approximately one out of five prisoners are there for drugs alone. And for their non-crime they are sentenced to a personal totalitarianism: Gang violence, an alarming frequency of prison rape, beatings and sometimes death.

 

   Americans by the hundreds of thousands who have never raised a finger against anyone are in constant fear of being abused and turned into slaves by their cellmates. How any American can think this is in any way consistent with civilized society boggles the mind.

   Bail is often ridiculously high for drug war victims - $1 million or more. The advent of asset forfeiture - whereby the government confiscates your property and essentially accuses it of being guilty of a civil offense - has become an effective way to circumvent the "excessive fines" clause.

 

Amendment VII

 

   What about the Seventh Amendment? It reads: “In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise reexamined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.”

    I mentioned civil asset forfeiture. It is important to recognize that there is no criminal hearing for the vast majority of forfeiture victims. The property is seized through civil litigation. But since the property itself, and not the owner, is on trial, the Bill of Rights offers no protection.

 

   There's no Right to a trial. If a person wants to reclaim his confiscated property, he must ask for a trial. If the court rules that the property be returned, the government can merely make return of the property contingent upon the victim paying tens of thousands of dollars in fines.

   You might be a charter pilot who has his plane taken as part of a drug investigation and be unable to pay the six grand to get your plane back after being bankrupted by the legal system. This happened to Billy Munnerlyn in the early 1990s. You could be the wrong color or have the wrong amount of cash on you and lose it all to confiscators who get to keep a cut of what they steal.

   One point of the Seventh Amendment was to protect the Rights of Americans to sue government officials for wrongdoing, and have a fair trial - not the type of mock trial the Founders saw used by the British Crown to let their officials off easy.

 

   The drug war has turned this entire idea on its head. Now the government can just take your property without charging you and all you can do is hope that it lets you make your case that you are innocent - in a fixed, sham proceeding.

Amendment VI

 

   The Sixth Amendment reads, “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defense.”

   For standard crimes like murder, theft, rape and the like, it is perhaps possible to have trials reasonably available to every suspect. But there are simply too many drug offenders for this and no victims to serve as reliable witnesses. So the standard of evidence has been lowered to the point where the mere existence of enough cash and a cop's say-so is enough to convict.

   What's more, defense attorneys are often burdened with a hundred clients at once, so they must prioritize and leave those who are fated to only a year in prison to lesser hearings. Some judges have even refused to assign public defenders in drug cases.

   A dangerous alternative to the trial system is the “drug court,” wrongly touted by some reformers, including the Obama administration. In Obama and Biden's Blueprint for Change they propose to “Expand Use of Drug Courts” to “give first-time, non-violent offenders a chance to serve their sentence, where appropriate, in the type of drug rehabilitation programs that have proven to work better than a prison term in changing bad behavior.”

   But as Morris Hoffman, a State trial judge in Denver and an adjunct professor of law at the University of Colorado, warned at the USA Today blog in October last year:

 

   “[It's] not just that drug courts don't work, or don't work well. They have the perverse effect of sending more drug defendants to prison, because their poor treatment results get swamped by an increase in the number of drug arrests. By virtue of a phenomenon social scientists call ‘net-widening,’ the very existence of drug courts stimulates drug arrests.

   ”Police are no longer arresting criminals, they are trolling for patients. Denver's drug arrests almost tripled in the two years after we began our drug court. At the end of those two years, we were sending almost twice the number of drug defendants to prison than we did before drug court.”

 

   Attempting to win the drug war, even in a more progressive sense, is thus no substitute for abandoning it altogether. The only change I can believe we'll see under Obama is more erosion of the Sixth Amendment.

 

Amendment V

 

   The Fifth Amendment states: “No person shall be. . . subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.”

   Mandatory drug testing can be seen as self-incrimination, as soon as the results are used in criminal prosecution. Civil asset forfeiture has allowed for the deprivation of Life and Liberty without due process, and also for the effective phenomenon of double jeopardy, as people are punished both in the civil and criminal systems.

   The Psychotropic Substances Act of 1978 expanded the use of forfeiture to include any property connected to the drug crime in any manner. An early 1990s study estimated that 80 percent of people who lost their property to civil asset forfeiture were never charged with a crime.

   We often hear of money being confiscated for drug residue, which can be found on cash in circulation. We hear of people losing their homes, cars, boats and businesses because of the presence of marijuana seeds.

 

   The drive to get loot, some of which police get to personally keep, has even led to some deaths, as was the case with Donald Scott, a California rancher gunned down because bureaucrats wanted to seize his land on which they claimed they found some seeds.

 

   Michael Bradbury, the Ventura County DA, said that the police raid was “motivated at least in part, by a desire to seize and forfeit the ranch for the government... [The] search warrant became Donald Scott's death warrant.”

 

Amendment IV

 

    The Fourth Amendment has also been compromised.

   ”The Right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”

   Where to begin? Warrants have become a mere bureaucratic technicality, rubberstamped or often neglected altogether in the pursuit of drug offenders. No-knock raids have become a commonplace in modern American life.

 

   Ninety-two year-old women are murdered and have drugs planted on them. Men who shoot no-knock invaders are sentenced to death, and if they're lucky, have their sentences reduced to life - this happened to Cory Maye in Mississippi.

 

   Children are shot in the back. Family pets are killed by laughing officers as they break into homes searching for drugs.

   With a real crime, it is often possible to have an “Oath or affirmation” backing the warrant, which can actually “describe the persons or things to be seized.” In a murder case, a warrant can describe a bloody knife. Drug war warrants are typically too vague to pass Constitutional muster.

 

   Mere suspicion that some law is being broken is often enough.

   The courts have ruled that if the government tries to arrest you when you're in public, and you escape into your home, they can now search the home without a warrant. As for automobiles, drug war roadblocks have erased the Fourth Amendment concerning cars, which are now treated as the property of the State.

  

   The Supreme Court recently ruled that police may prevent people from entering their own homes while the police apply for a warrant. These abuses are often glorified on television as the necessary implements to catch vicious criminals, but they originated with, and are principally used for, the War on Drugs.

 

Amendment III

 

   Americans tend to look at the Third Amendment as an anachronism. “No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law.”

 

   Surely this hasn't been touched by prohibition, has it? Even by a very narrow reading, I believe it has. In one instance, in 1997, 40 members of the Army National Guard moved into the Las Palmas Housing Project in Puerto Rico to search for drugs. Years later, there were hundreds there.
 

   More broadly, the entire spirit of the Third Amendment has been trounced. The point of the Amendment was to prevent the abuses seen with the British Quartering Act, to protect Americans from having to quarter soldiers - to support them, even financially - except at wartime, when, and through, legal means.

 

   But all around us, we have seen the police militarized in the name of the drug war.

   Some conservatives objected when Bush modified the Insurrection Act and amassed more presidential power to call up the National Guard on his own say-so. But this trend began before 9/11.

 

   In a hearing on the drug war in 1994, then Congressman Chuck Schumer said, “The National Guard is a powerful, ready-made fighting force. Redefining its role in the post Cold War era presents exciting possibilities in the war against crime.”

   Also troubling have been the attempts to weaken Posse Comitatus, which, since Reconstruction has forbade the use of the military in civilian law enforcement. But before the war on terrorism, there was the drug-war loophole.

 

   In the 1980s, Posse Comitatus was amended to allow for military-police cooperation in drug interdiction. Whereas the military was understood to be inappropriate for the enforcement of federal Civil Rights during Reconstruction, it was supposedly okay for the drug war.

 

   This precedent culminated in the largest massacre of American civilians by their own government since Wounded Knee.

 

   Why was the military involved in Waco? Because the government decided to treat their upcoming publicity-stunt raid as a drug measure. They claimed the Branch Davidians had a meth lab. That's how they got the warrant and military involved. That's how they got the military weapons.

 

   It was only later that the excuse shifted to child abuse or illegal gun ownership.

 

Amendment II

 

   Which brings us to the Second Amendment. One of the terrible tragedies of our time is that more people do not understand the connection between the drug war and gun Rights. As soon as violating the Rights of The People to find drugs became excusable, the crusade against private gun ownership got a big boost. Both concern the ownership of inanimate objects.

 

   As wars on possession crimes, both government crusades rely on the same kinds of dirty tactics: the punishment of minor offenders with disproportionately long sentences as a deterrent, the erosion of due process, privacy, and the Rights of the accused. The relationship between the drug war and violent crime has been documented.

 

   The spike in violent crime following prohibition has traditionally led to more severe enforcement of gun laws. Both gun control and the drug war lead to violent black markets and thus more State power in a spiraling vicious cycle of mutual reinforcement.

   It was, after all, the bootlegging gangs that emerged out of alcohol prohibition that served as the inspiration for the first major federal gun law: The National Firearms Act of 1934. A year after the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937, the Federal Firearms Act of 1938 passed on a similarly used and abusive interpretation of the Commerce Clause.

   Moreover, just as with terrorism, the two issues became linked in law enforcement. Federal law mandates additional penalties if drug dealers are caught in mere possession of a firearm. Nobody wants to stick up for the Rights of drug dealers to keep and bear arms, but so long as they are violating no one's Rights, they should be left in peace. There are many legitimate reasons, from a moral perspective, that a dealer would want to defend himself.

   Many non-violent drug convicts are automatically denied the Right to bear arms. This is a serious and grave attack on the Human Rights of drug convicts who have already paid a debt to society that they didn't even owe. The lesson is clear: If you want your Right to self-defense protected, you must oppose drug prohibition.

 

Amendment I

 

   Last but not least is the First Amendment, which states “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”

    For years, politicians have wanted to censor us, using the drug war as an excuse. Probably the most notable example was Senators Feinstein and Hatch's proposed Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act, which in its original language would have outlawed speech that advocated drug use or production and cracked down on websites that merely linked to sites that sold drug paraphernalia.

 

   Then there is the more general chilling effect of students being harassed in public schools for outwardly advocating drug use or legalization. Here in New Hampshire, Ian Freeman has been threatened with criminal penalties for the act of advocating drug possession.

   As for religious Liberty, American Indians have long used hallucinogens as religious rites, and have risked penalties under federal law for the peaceful exercise of religion. This brings us to a fundamental incompatibility between the First Amendment and the drug war.

   Under the American Indian Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1994, American Indians can use peyote because it is part of their religion. But if something is peaceful, anyone should be allowed to do it, whether it is recognized by the government as religious or not.

 

   For peyote users to be jailed because they do not believe in its spiritual dimension is a de facto official government endorsement and granted privilege for some religious groups. If it can conceivably be allowed for the religious, it must, Constitutionally, be allowed to everyone.

 

    Yet for peyote users to be jailed despite their religion is a violation of their religious Liberty. The only way to reconcile religious Liberty with federal drug law is to abolish it altogether.

   Thus we see that Ludwig von Mises was hardly off the mark. The entire Bill of Rights has been shredded in the drug war. In Constitutional terms, “If one abolishes man's freedom to determine his own consumption,” one does indeed “take all freedoms away.”

 

   With even the precious First Amendment battered, Mises was right that the drug warriors “unwittingly support the case of censorship, inquisition, religious intolerance, and the persecution of dissenters.”

   The alternative, say the drug warriors, would be worse. They persist in their claims that we are utopians and unrealistic. But it is their vision of a drug-free America that is unrealistic.

 

   America's prisons are constantly monitored and prisoners have very little of what we call Civil Liberty, yet drugs flow throughout the system. America itself could become one big drug prison and their vision would be no closer to being obtained.

 

   PART II of this series, titled, Drug War Casualty: Truth & Honest Debate, will be published in the March 2010 Political Observer.

 

   This article was originally published at www.lewrockwell.com and is republished in The Political Observer with permission.

 

   Anthony Gregory is Editor-in-Chief at Campaign for Liberty; a research analyst at the Independent Institute; a columnist at LewRockwell.com; a policy adviser for the Future of Freedom Foundation; a Freedom activist; and, a musician.

 

 

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