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- Newsgroups: alt.drugs,talk.politics.drugs
- From: jpg8b@Virginia.EDU ("Jamie G.")
- Subject: Re: Why We Should Stop Trying to Legalize Psychedelic Drugs
- Message-ID: <1993May19.102404.29055@Virginia.EDU>
- Date: Wed, 19 May 1993 10:24:04 GMT
-
- While "Why We Should Stop Trying to Legalize Psychedelic
- Drugs" may make some valid points, all of those points can be
- addressed by other means rather than allowing drug prohibition.
- The obsession over the legal aspects of prohibition to the
- detriment of discussing the psychedelic experience itself could
- be dealt with through deliberately focusing a conference on
- that. This may be hard since the persecution of millions of
- people for thoughtcrime may overshadow any discussion on the
- topic. Likewise it is hard to discuss Hitler and the Nazis
- without mentioning the Holocaust- one can't separate the
- topics. Furthermore, I have seen the paranoia of prosecution
- ruin many trips in one way or another.
- As for the threat of licensing psychedelics or some other
- form of control, this may be yet another battle for Captain
- Libertarian to fight. We shall always be fighting for our
- rights- any amendment, law or change in law that protects
- liberty will never really guarantee liberty permanently, but
- they are one of the best means of expanding our painfully gained sphere of
- autonomy against social control, formal and informal. An even
- better way is the political empowerment of the drug culture,
- but that is easier said than done. We will eventually have to
- build a political force that can back up our demands with some
- juice. Not having our rights to vote taken away by felony
- convictions would really help this. Sometimes I wonder if the
- only way we can guarantee our freedom is to secede from this
- country and form our own nation, like Israel, that can defend
- itself against the "Straight People" and act as a harbor for
- refugees from drug persecutions from around the world. Even
- tolerant nations such as the Netherlands cannot be completely
- trusted as sanctuaries. The Netherlands, for example, is not
- overly enthusiastic to accept immigrants, especially those with
- felony convictions and could always, with a change of
- government, potentially become less tolerant of drug use. In an
- extreme crisis, such as the mass internment of anyone suspected
- of drug use or even the genocide of all drug users (if say Ross
- Perot or Darryl Gates, respectively, took power in this
- country), foreign nations may cold-heartedly turn us away. The
- British Navy's forcibly turning back ships, filled with Jews
- fleeing Europe for Israel, when the British government was
- perfectly aware that the Final Solution was already underway
- comes to mind. This may all seem very pessimistic and paranoid,
- but sometimes you are not paranoid, you're RIGHT. The legal
- position of Drug Users in this country is spookily comparable
- to the situation of Jews in Nazi Germany in the late thirties-
- we are marked, tracked, documented, banned from many
- professions, subject to property confiscation, imprisoned,
- etc.. I suggest Richard Rubenstein's The Cunning of History for
- anyone who wants a reason really to worry.
- Excuse my digression. As for instilling anti-social ideas,
- the absurdity of drug prohibition does help as I must admit it
- did with me. However, I think that probably no society will
- ever be so completely free of hypocrisy that one will not be
- able to find a reason to be anti-social. If there ever is such
- a society, well, why be anti-social? My experience with drugs
- and drug prohibition has led me to realize the hypocrisy is
- widespread throughout our society and may even be inherent, but
- this very widespread nature of the horror within the political
- system could be revealed many ways. One may be a soldier in a
- pointless vicious war, be beaten by a cop, etc..The main point
- is that while the Drug War may show the foul heart of darkness
- at the core of mass organizations, it is precisely such
- atrocities as the Drug Witchhunt that cause the suffering which
- causes the phenomenon to be considered horrible. Vietnam may
- have shed light on hypocrisy in American foreign policy, but it
- was such things that made that foreign policy condemnable.
- Granted a lot of folks in the late Sixties may have gotten to
- see the ugly side of their government through Vietnam, but was
- worth the napalming of babies and the mass bombing of cities to
- give a lesson in human nature.
- The fact is that the Drug War creates suffering, certainly not
- as much as the Holocaust or Vietnam did but real suffering
- nevertheless, and it is just not worth it at all. This does not
- make me any sort of hero or martyr or anything, but I served 343
- days in a federal prison of a thirteen month sentence for two
- goddamn doses of LSD- five dollars worth, for chrissakes- first
- offense! This time last year I was just a little over halfway
- through my time and counting every second. Anybody who has
- done time can tell you that the time drags on longer than you
- could conceivably imagine. Furthermore, I was doing one of the
- shortest sentences in that place- guys my age were serving
- three, five, ten, twenty, thirty-some year sentences, no parole, for
- non-violent drug sentences. It's absolutely insane! Every day
- that they serve in prison is intolerable and an atrocity. We
- acnnot allow them to suffer. I am still under "supervised
- release"- urine tests, random searches, constant monitoring,
- etc. for the next two and a half years, and I am a felon with
- no right to vote or to arm myself. Yeah, I guess this has all
- made me "anti-social"- my home was seized by the Feds, all of
- my fraternity brothers were kicked out and made homeless, I've
- seen friends of mine betray me to the thoughtpolice, I've been
- railroaded through the court system- I've become so anti-social
- that I still have nightmares about the raid, I feel close to
- vomiting everytime I see a police
- officer, and I feel trapped, unable to emigrate from a nation ruled
- by a government I absolutely hate with every iota of my being.
- Anti-social?! Yeah, I guess I'm anti-social! Not to mention
- paranoid, cynical, nihilistic, hate-filled, walking around
- feeling like I am going to burst. The Drug War and its personal
- consequences for me have taught me that humans are fundamentally
- crazy, evil, and vicious, and I just want to go somewhere where I
- far away from the rest of humanity and be left alone. Some
- great little lesson in human nature, eh? Some little
- experiment.
- I not only think that it is absolutely mandatory that we
- legalize drugs immediately and guarantee our freedom over our
- minds and body by all means necessary- Constitutional
- amendments, whatever it takes, but I wonder what should we do
- with the war criminals responsible for this outrage. The drug law
- enforcement bureaucracy has been responsible for the trashing
- of our Constitution, breaking every oath they made to protect
- it and they should be held accountable for their crimes against
- humanity. They willfully and knowingly execute laws that are
- obviously at odds with our self-evident, inalienable rights,
- and if the Nazis could excuse themselves by claiming they were
- just following orders or carrying out the laws of the Nazi
- regime at the time, I see no reason why DEA agents should be at
- least called to account for their personal involvement in
- fascist persecution. We may never really address this guilt-
- the Nazi War Crime trials were a historical anomaly as the vast
- majority of official terror in the world is never punished- but
- I personally hold agents of this intolerable persecution of my
- culture and people morally responsible for the suffering
- caused. If there were any justice, the Drug Culture would not
- only be freed from oppression but even fully compensated for every
- dollar seized and every day served.
- I may be obsessed by the issue of legalization to the
- detriment of other psychedelic issues, but the suffering of
- millions demands immediate action.
-
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-