The Drugs of John Gray
by Laurence M. Vance
http://mises.org/story/3736

(In this Picture: John Gary)


The government's War on Drugs, like its War on Poverty and its War on Terror, is a failure. It has clogged the judicial system, unnecessarily swelled prison populations, fostered violence, corrupted law enforcement, eroded civil liberties, and destroyed financial privacy. It has encouraged illegal searches and seizures, ruined countless lives, wasted hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars, hindered legitimate pain treatment, and had no impact on the use or availability of most drugs in the United States.

As a consequence of this failed drug war, people from all across the political spectrum are now, more than ever, calling for some degree of drug decriminalization or legalization.

A recent example is political philosopher John Gray. In an article entitled "The Case for Legalising All Drugs Is Unanswerable," Gray makes a strong case for drug legalization. The worldwide war on drugs should be ended because

*

The drug war has maimed, traumatized, or displaced uncounted numbers of people.
*

In spite of it, drug use has remained embedded in the way we live.
*

The costs of drug prohibition now far outweigh any possible benefits.
*

Penalizing drug use drives otherwise law-abiding people into the criminal economy.
*

Prohibition exposes drug users to major health risks.
*

Illegal drugs can't easily be tested for quality and toxicity.
*

A great many drug users in years past lived productive lives before drugs were banned.
*

Drug users face inflated prices, health risks, and the threat of jail.
*

Politicians who have used drugs have not suffered any significant political fallout.
*

The extreme profit reaped from selling illegal drugs corrupts institutions and wrecks lives.
*

The antidrug crusade in Mexico has escalated into something like low-intensity warfare.
*

Some states have been more or less wholly captured by drug money.

He could also have pointed out, like many others have, that certain illegal drugs have proved effective in pain relief, that people who smoke marijuana have a decreased risk of certain diseases, or that prescription-drug abuse kills people (Elvis, Heath Ledger, Michael Jackson) just like illegal-drug overdoses do. He could have noted that alcohol abuse is a greater social problem than illegal drug use, or that there were 1,702,537 drug arrests last year in the United States alone, almost half for simple possession of marijuana.

The problem with Gray's "unanswerable" argument is that it is utilitarian. It is not an argument based on the freedom to take drugs for freedom's sake. If the drug war stops maiming, traumatizing, and displacing people, if the costs of drug prohibition become less than its benefits, if illegal drugs can be tested for quality and toxicity, if the low-intensity warfare in Mexico ends, etc. — then, according to Gray, the war on drugs might be a good thing.

The only unanswerable argument is the argument from the standpoint of liberty and freedom from government intrusion into one's personal life. Nowhere in his article does Gray even consider that it is neither the job of government nor the business of any individual to prohibit, regulate, restrict, or otherwise control what a man desires to eat, drink, smoke, inject, absorb, snort, sniff, inhale, swallow, or otherwise ingest into his body.

Whether drugs are used for medical or recreational use is of no consequence. And neither does it matter whether drug use will increase or decrease. A government with the power to outlaw harmful substances or immoral practices is a government with the power to ban any substance or practice. There should be no such thing as a controlled substance.


"It is neither the job of government nor the business of any individual to prohibit, regulate, restrict, or otherwise control what a man desires to eat, drink, smoke, inject, absorb, snort, sniff, inhale, swallow, or otherwise ingest into his body."

Conservatives who revere the Constitution should support both the freedom to use drugs for any purpose and a free market in drugs. Nowhere does the Constitution authorize the federal government to intrude itself into the personal eating, drinking, or smoking habits of Americans. Indeed, before the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act of 1914, there were no federal drug laws in the United States.

John Gray warns against a "libertarian utopia in which the state retreats from any concern about personal conduct." But that is not what we need to be concerned about. It is puritans, busybodies, nannies, and other statist do-gooders — in and out of the government — who are the problem.

The drugs of John Gray are regulated, licensed, taxed, monitored, and otherwise controlled. But without a real free market in drugs, drug legalization is really nothing but state control of the drug market, as Thomas Szasz has pointed out.

John Gray's case for legalizing all drugs is answerable; it is the case for liberty that is unanswerable.

Views: 14

"Destroying the New World Order"

TOP CONTENT THIS WEEK

THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING THE SITE!

mobile page

12160.info/m

12160 Administrators

 

Latest Activity

Doc Vega posted a blog post

The History of What Led to The Iran Surgical Strikes

To his credit, President Trump held off with negotiations as long as possible in trying to reach a…See More
20 hours ago
Doc Vega favorited tjdavis's photo
22 hours ago
Doc Vega commented on tjdavis's photo
Thumbnail

Game Night

"Ha! Good one!"
22 hours ago
Doc Vega commented on FREEDOMROX's blog post MRNA VACCINES: Question
"Listen man I know where you're at but back in October of 2023 thru December of 2023 for months…"
22 hours ago
tjdavis posted a video

Architecton | Official Trailer HD | A24

SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/A24subscribeWritten and directed by Victor Kossakovsky and starring Michele De Lucchi. ARCHITECTON – Coming Soon RELEASE DATE: Comin...
yesterday
tjdavis posted photos
yesterday
tjdavis posted a blog post
yesterday
Burbia posted a video

Europe Will Not Survive

The hubris.All things Archaix at www.archaix.com
yesterday
FREEDOMROX posted a video
Saturday
Burbia commented on tjdavis's blog post Track AIPAC
Saturday
rlionhearted_3 commented on Doc Vega's blog post Latest Details on Missile Exchanges Between Iran and Israel
"May get really ugly over there?"
Friday
Doc Vega posted a blog post

Latest Details on Missile Exchanges Between Iran and Israel

Latest information about the air attacks between Israel and Iran as the US moves another carrier…See More
Thursday
tjdavis favorited Less Prone's video
Thursday
tjdavis posted a blog post
Thursday
cheeki kea replied to cheeki kea's discussion Tartaria
"Some interesting information has come to light ( from the renaissance period ) which explains that…"
Thursday
Sandy posted a video
Thursday
John Miller replied to MAC's discussion BREAKING! UFO whistleblowers drop BOMBSHELL on D.C. | Redacted with Natali and Clayton Morris
"Yes, the whole whistleblower situation is getting more intense, especially with all these bombshell…"
Wednesday
Doc Vega posted a blog post

Silent and Blue

Thought I'd lost myself today The meaning seemed so far away Then you slowly faded into disarray I…See More
Wednesday
Burbia posted a video

Disturbing Videos That Left Me Needing Answers!

#disturbing #video #strange #scary #scaryvideos #strangevideos This is a compilation of the most disturbing videos on the intern...
Wednesday
Erica Woodward is now a member of 12160 Social Network
Tuesday

© 2025   Created by truth.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

content and site copyright 12160.info 2007-2019 - all rights reserved. unless otherwise noted