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Opposing the drug laws: one good and three bad reasons.

0 Freedom!

It is mean and foolish to raise the price of other people's consolations, however bad those consolations may seem.

1 "They can't be enforced."

1.1 To some extent they can be & are. Raising the price of something is bound to deter its consumption.
1.2 Many legitimate laws "can't be enforced". Most instances of littering and most traffic offenses are not detected and penalized, but that is not an argument against trash or traffic regulations.
1.3 Enforcement difficulty is arguably a saving grace of the drug laws. If drugtaking could be easily and cheaply prevented, such laws would be multiplied and would become so oppressive that it might be worth a civil war to get rid of them. As it is, we more or less put up with them and keep the peace.

2 "They bring the law into contempt."

2.1 Not necessarily. Many people are glad that there are laws that most people break, so that the police have the power to harass lowlifes -- so long, of course, as the definition of lowlife suits those people.
2.2 That contempt may be a price we are willing to pay (cf. 1.2).
2.3 Moderate contempt for the law may actually be a good thing; too much respect for law (as in Germany) may make tyranny easier, tho too little respect (as in peasant countries) may make it necessary.

3 "They are racist."

3.1 They are enforced preferentially against black people, but that's not what's wrong with them. Many other laws, including legitimate ones, are also so used. These days, however, racism is the fashionable evil in some circles, and it seems wicked to call anything wrong without calling it racist.

Of course, in building a political coalition, it is convenient---perhaps even necessary---to make use of bad reasons as well as good ones. That is one of many things that make politics a tiresome subject.
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(Simon Spotlight Entertainment, 2006)

This is an account of a soft collision between two major social evils: the drug laws and mass entertainment.  The author, a comedian & actor, made movies that were immersed in the drug culture and made fun of drug cops.  The Bush administration, in its meanness, undertook to get back at him by prosecuting him in connection with a paraphernalia business run by his wife & son.  He wanted to fight, but had to cop a plea to avoid prosecutions of his family.  He was sentenced to 9 months.  Because he was a celebrity, he was sent to a minimum-security prison and was treated with forbearance by the guards and the other prisoners.  He was indignant, but his religious beliefs saved him from excessive resentment:  God had sent him to prison to awaken him from his illusions of immunity.  He now claims to have quit illegal drugs, but continues to propagandize against the drug laws.

He appears actually to enjoy the perquisites of celebrity: "gorgeous" women, being driven to prison in a limousine, etc.  All that is, IMO, a magnification & glorification of a kind of natural foolishness, but I take care to remind myself that it is of some use to some people.

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November 2022

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