home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- The Libertarian Party asks:
-
- SHOULD WE RE-LEGALIZE DRUGS?
-
-
- * Should We Re-Legalize Drugs?
-
- Libertarians, like most Americans, demand to be safe at home and on
- the streets. Libertarians would like all Americans to be healthy and
- free of drug dependence. But drug laws don't help, they make things
- worse.
-
- The professional politicians scramble to make names for themselves
- as tough anti-drug warriors, while the experts agree that the "war on
- drugs" has been lost, and could never be won. The tragic victims of
- that war are your personal liberty and its companion, responsibility.
- It's time to consider the re-legalization of drugs.
-
-
- * The Lessons of Prohibition
-
- In the 1920's, alcohol was made illegal by Prohibition. The result:
- Organized Crime. Criminals jumped at the chance to supply the demand
- for liquor. The streets became battlegrounds. The criminals bought off
- law enforcement and judges. Adulterated booze blinded and killed
- people. Civil rights were trampled in the hopeless attempt to keep
- people from drinking.
-
- When the American people saw what Prohibition was doing to them,
- they supported its repeal. When they succeeded, most states legalized
- liquor and the criminal gangs were out of the liquor business.
-
- Today's war on drugs is a re-run of Prohibition. Approximately 40
- million Americans are occasional, peaceful users of some illegal drug
- who are no threat to anyone. They are not going to stop. The laws
- don't, and can't, stop drug use.
-
-
- * Organized Crime Profits
-
- Whenever there is a great demand for a product and government makes
- it illegal, a black market always appears to supply the demand. The
- price of the product rises dramatically and the opportunity for huge
- profits is obvious. The criminal gangs love the situation, making
- millions. They kill other drug dealers, along with innocent people
- caught in the crossfire, to protect their territory. They corrupt
- police and courts. Pushers sell adulterated dope and experimental
- drugs, causing injury and death. And because drugs are illegal, their
- victims have no recourse.
-
-
- * Crime Increases
-
- Half the cost of law enforcement and prisons is squandered on drug
- related crime. Of all drug users, a relative few are addicts who commit
- crimes daily to supply artificially expensive habits. They are the
- robbers, car thieves and burglars who make our homes and streets
- unsafe.
-
-
- * An American Police State
-
- Civil liberties suffer. We are all "suspects", subject to random
- urine tests, highway check points and spying into our personal
- finances. Your property can be seized without trial, if the police
- merely claim you got it with drug profits. Doing business with cash
- makes you a suspect. America is becoming a police state because of the
- war on drugs.
-
-
- * America Can Handle Legal Drugs
-
- Today's illegal drugs were legal before 1914. Cocaine was even found
- in the original Coca-Cola recipe. Americans had few problems with
- cocaine, opium, heroin or marijuana. Drugs were inexpensive; crime was
- low. Most users handled their drug of choice and lived normal,
- productive lives. Addicts out of control were a tiny minority.
-
- The first laws prohibiting drugs were racist in origin -- to prevent
- Chinese laborers from using opium and to prevent blacks and Hispanics
- from using cocaine and marijuana. That was unjust and unfair, just as
- it is unjust and unfair to make criminals of peaceful drug users today.
-
- Some Americans will always use alcohol, tobacco, marijuana or other
- drugs. Most are not addicts, they are social drinkers or occasional
- users. Legal drugs would be inexpensive, so even addicts could support
- their habits with honest work, rather than by crime. Organized crime
- would be deprived of its profits. The police could return to protecting
- us from real criminals; and there would be room enough in existing
- prisons for them.
-
-
- * Try Personal Responsibility
-
- It's time to re-legalize drugs and let people take responsibility
- for themselves. Drug abuse is a tragedy and a sickness. Criminal laws
- only drive the problem underground and put money in the pockets of the
- criminal class. With drugs legal, compassionate people could do more to
- educate and rehabilitate drug users who seek help. Drugs should be
- legal. Individuals have the right to decide for themselves what to put
- in their bodies, so long as they take responsibility for their actions.
-
- From the Mayor of Baltimore, Kurt Schmoke, to conservative writer
- and TV personality, William F. Buckley, Jr., leading Americans are now
- calling for repeal of America's repressive and ineffective drug laws.
- The Libertarian Party urges you to join in this effort to make our
- streets safer and our liberties more secure.
-
-
- 800-682-1776 Libertarian Party
- 202-543-1988 1528 Pennsylvania Avenue SE
- Washington, DC 20003
-