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Pandering is not a solution for Conservatives

When I wrote "Understanding the 67% Hispanic vote for Obama" (http://www.facethestate.com/articles/12556-understanding-67-hispanic-vote-obama) it was intended to serve as a reminder that the facts do not always match the rhetoric.
 
This will serve as the theme for what the Rocky Mountain Foundation (http://www.RockyMountainFoundation.net) intends to acomplish in the coming months and, hopefully, years to come.
 
I welcome your comments as we enter into an era where economic uncertianties loom and government is poised to grow in ways never before conceived by our Founders.
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Visit the new Rocky Mountain Foundation web site

Visit http://RockyMountainFoundation.net to join us in addressing issues that matter.
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You Can’t Have It Both Ways, Fellas

This letter-to-the-editor by Rocky Mountain Foundation president John Dendahl was published online by The Denver Post on December 7, 2008.

Post readers were treated last Sunday to some of Ted Turner’s advice to the next president (”Address causes of climate change”). Turner wrote as chairman of the United Nations Foundation, which many Coloradans will remember has as its president former U.S. Sen. Tim Wirth.

So I went to the foundation’s website to see what it has to say about energy. Right at the top is a recent article by Wirth, blather that could have come out of the environmental movement 35 years ago supplemented only by mention of the new bugaboo, that nasty carbon stuff.

In close to 900 words, this man who long ago drank the global warming Kool-Aid never mentions “nuclear.” Nuclear-electric power has achieved a safety record unmatched by any other industry since the Industrial Revolution, and the plants do not emit any of the so-called “greenhouse gases” that are blamed (falsely) for global warming (that may no longer be occurring).

Here’s the deal: Tim Wirth, Ted Turner, Al Gore, et al, have the resources to know that nuclear energy must be used far more extensively if they are serious about a transition away from fuels that produce carbon dioxide. Until they advocate nuclear energy, their worry about global warming should be considered a flat-out lie and ignored.

NOTE: Apparently Tim Wirth's article linked above has been taken down. Here's one that's even worse, an address of nearly 3000 words titled "Realistic Strategies ..." in which nuclear energy isn't mentioned!

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Carbon-free fad is a recipe for economic disaster

The following article by Rocky Mountain Foundation president John Dendahl was published December 4, 2008 at the top of its editorial page by the Rocky mountain News.

Two university professors writing in the Rocky (“The cure for carbon,” November 22) on climate change got one thing right: cap-and-trade programs are a looming economic disaster.

Though probably inadvertent, give them further credit for predicting that Barack Obama’s election will give debate about climate policy “a much needed boost.” How often have we heard from Al Gore et al that the debate is over? It’s just now getting warmed up.

The professors are jubilant about Obama’s plans for $150 billion to develop carbon-free energy technologies.

The “carbon-free” fad is where we are today in a massive international scheme of deception. Its origins among a few scientists may have been honest enough, but the status today is partly fraud (Gore’s movie is evidence) and partly politicized science driven by an unholy combination of ideology, government funding and corporate appeasement.

Winston Churchill observed in a slightly different context, “An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last.” Xcel Energy and ConocoPhillips are companies prominent in Colorado that are carbon hysteria appeasers.

The citizens of Colorado are being asked to pay dearly in at least two ways.

One, we have a political establishment, dedicated to environmental extremism (for starters: a governor, one U.S. senator soon to be two, and a utility regulatory commission), that decrees Coloradans must pay a very high price to subsidize fledgling energy sources like wind and solar.

Two, the anti-carbon crazies are asking us to forego untold billions – an understatement if shale oil possibilities are considered – in tax revenues from producing the state’s enormous hydrocarbon resources (oil, gas, and coal).

Climate scientists won’t even agree as to whether average temperatures today are rising or falling. Wouldn’t that be more evidence of the utter stupidity of too many politicians? They would lead us into ruinously expensive climate “fixes” when they don’t even know whether it’s broken or how.

Wake up, neighbors. Ignorance is the poisonous byproduct of the snake oil we’re being sold, and it’s a far greater threat today and tomorrow than is climate change.

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To Gov. Ritter: Lenin, Hitler and Goebbels are bad models

Public policy development is skewed by outrageous claims made by public officials either favoring or disfavoring an energy source. Last October, Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter larded up his rhetoric in favor of the so-called “New Energy Economy” with the claim that some 90,000 Colorado jobs had been created by “the renewable energy industry.”

The Ritter claim was lifted from a report out of Boulder from the American Solar Energy Society. Read here what Vincent Carroll, editor of the editorial pages at the Rocky Mountain News, discovered when he “looked beneath the covers” of that promotional report.

Cautionary note to Gov. Ritter: Vladimir Lenin famously said, “A lie told often enough becomes the truth.” A few years later, Adolph Hitler said something similar and his propagandist Joseph Goebbels said, It is the absolute right of the State to supervise the formation of public opinion.” Lenin, HItler and Goebbels shouldn’t be your models.

 
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Nobel Gaffe – Peace Laureate Gore Is a Threat to Peace

The following article by Rocky Mountain Foundation president John Dendahl originally appeared at www.familysecuritymatters.com and is reprinted here with permission of that Web publisher.

Nobel Gaffe – Peace Laureate Gore Is a Threat to Peace

By John Dendahl

On November 28, 2007, while ruminating on Al Gore’s astonishingly successful deceit (about which more below), I jotted some thoughts “on the back of an envelope.”

I noted that one of the great ironies of 2007 was Gore's sharing the Nobel Peace Prize. Gore’s climate change crusade, it seems to me, is a threat to peace. In fact, if the Nobel Committee’s current members could be transported back in time to about 1938, one might see another master propagandist, Leni Riefenstahl, similarly honored. Maybe sharing the prize with Neville “Peace in Our Time” Chamberlain.

(Riefenstahl produced Triumph of the Will and other propaganda for Adolph Hitler, but avoided conviction at Nuremberg for war crimes by convincing judges that her fascination with Hitler’s Nazis didn’t include knowledge of their Final Solution or concentration camp atrocities.)

The point there wasn’t to compare Gore to Hitler.  The point is that history is riddled with wishful thinking as to what will lead to peace. To be generous, let’s just say the Nobel Committee’s track record of late has been spotty.

While I would love to claim clairvoyance, I won’t.  About two weeks later, however, on December 10, Gore actually received his prize in Oslo and gave a speech in which a Wall Street Journal Web newsletter reported he “[warned] that world leaders who give short shrift to the issue of global warming are the equivalent of ‘those who ignored Adolf Hitler's threat’ in the 1930s.” Adolph Hitler, eh?

There can be little doubt that the world leader first and foremost in Gore’s mind there is the man who defeated him in 2000 to become President of the United States, George W. Bush. His mention of Hitler is a clever reminder of slanderous comparisons of Bush to Hitler made from time to time by Gore’s political teammates like George Soros and MoveOn.org.

Gore has opened a huge question as to which position on climate change is the better fit for recalling Hitler, his or Bush’s. Leave aside the Nazis’ Final Solution of which Riefenstahl claimed no knowledge, and consider only Hitler’s quest for world domination. According to the source cited above, in his December 10 speech Gore “called for ratification of a United Nations treaty capping carbon emissions worldwide that would take effect everywhere at the start of 2010. Heads of state from every major country, he insisted, should meet every three months until the treaty is brought into effect. A worldwide tax on CO2 would also be required ...” Does this not sound like someone seeking world domination for his environmentalist views?

Gore is the cheerleader for a pernicious worldwide fraud, a 21st century threat that must not be ignored.

One reads ad nauseam these days that “the debate is over,” that scientific consensus now includes all but an insignificant fringe, that Earth is warming with apocalyptic potential, and that the warming is caused by mankind (mainly producing the dreaded “greenhouse” gas carbon dioxide – CO2 – by burning carbonaceous fuels like wood, methanol, oil, natural gas and coal). Hmmm. Sounds to me like the diversionary tactic of a bunch of scoundrels about to get whipped in debate by opponents who are just now getting warmed up (not intended here as a pun).

Item: In April 2006, Richard Lindzen, Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Atmospheric Science at MIT, wrote in The Wall Street Journal about shocking corruption among some in the scientific community, hell bent on silencing science-based challenges to the government-grant-rich orthodoxy of global warming.

Item: At the end of his brilliant novel State of Fear, the scientifically trained (and, sadly, recently deceased) Michael Crichton presented 1) an Author’s Message thoughtfully addressing how “astonishingly little” we know “about every aspect of the environment ...” and 2) an Appendix discussing “Why Politicized Science Is Dangerous.” In the latter, Crichton reminded readers of the overwhelming scientific and political consensus that surrounded the “science” of eugenics a century ago. Those, like me, in need of a refresher can read it here. Crichton said,

 “... [eugenics’] history is so dreadful—and, to those who were caught up in it, so embarrassing—that it is now rarely discussed. But it is a story that should be well known to every citizen, so that its horrors are not repeated.”

Item: Political scientist and author Bjørn Lomborg, Director of the Copenhagen Consensus Center, lines up with those who believe human activity contributes to global warming but exposes Gore as an alarmist selling snake oil. Here is Lomborg in an article published recently in The Vancouver Sun:

“The fear of Armageddon stifles sensible dialogue. Those who dare question the alarmist rhetoric are labeled ‘climate change deniers.’ This is typically used as a catch-all for anybody who doesn't accept the standard interpretation that mankind is to blame for global warming and that we should cut CO2 emissions dramatically.

“Proponents of such drastic cuts seldom mention their cost. Read Al Gore's entire book and watch his whole movie: You won't find a single mention of the cost of seriously addressing global warming.

“The best estimate is that the Kyoto Protocol will stop about 4,000 heat-caused deaths in developing nations by the middle of this century. This will come at the humongous cost of $180 billion a year. Without the Kyoto Protocol, there would be many, many fewer cold-related deaths.”

Item: Gore’s film An Inconvenient Truth got him nominated for the Nobel and won him an Oscar from the Motion Picture Academy for “Best Documentary.” Some documentary. Christopher Monckton of Brenchley, an advisor to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, has published an analysis titled “35 Inconvenient Truths, The Errors in Al Gore’s Movie.” In there, we find that Gore exaggerated by up to 10,000 percent potential sea level changes; lied that global warming is melting the snow on Africa’s Mount Kilimanjaro; lied that global warming caused Hurricane Katrina; lied about polar bears drowning while seeking ice melted away by global warming; and so on.

Pure, unalloyed deceit.

Stewart Dimmock, the parent of two school-aged children, sued education authorities in England, alleging they illegally distributed Gore’s “documentary” to classrooms throughout the country. Noting the film’s serious errors presented to him, Judge Michael Burton ordered that a revised “Guidance Note” accompany the film, presumably in the hope that teachers would correct for their students the gross misimpressions it creates. Burton said, “... as will be seen, some of the errors, or departures from the mainstream, by Mr Gore ... do arise in the context of alarmism and exaggeration in support of his political thesis.”

Exaggeration in support of a political thesis is, by definition, propaganda. So much for the myth that An Inconvenient Truth is documentary. Gore is simply a better-groomed Michael Moore.

What does all this have to do with security?

Diversion. Remember Gore’s December 10 speech insisting on a U.N. treaty and quarterly meetings among the heads of state of every major country until it is brought into effect? Most reading articles at this site are riveted on today’s challenges, like Islamofascism and nukes coming into the hands of megalomaniacal dictators. Gore’s alarmist coterie of scientists haven’t even validated the models on which their predictions are based, let alone demonstrated that the remedial actions they propose are likely to succeed, economically practical, and best among alternatives – or any of the three.

Leaders of the world’s major countries need to keep their focus (and our resources) on the right urgent problems.

International rivalries. Just who is going to command, say, China and India to curtail use of CO2-producing fuels during this period of their rapid economic growth and prosperity? Are other countries supposed to stand down to compensate for their emissions? It is evident after ten years that most signatories to Gore’s beloved Kyoto Protocol aren’t meeting their own agreed CO2 emission targets. What kind of real international trouble would follow Gore’s new directive at a time of quite fierce international competition for energy resources?

Prosperity. The suffering that accompanies poverty is among the drivers of insecurity around the world. Vaclav Klaus, president of the Czech Republic, has written eloquently that “ambitious environmentalism is the biggest threat to freedom, democracy, the market economy and prosperity.”

Al Gore, zealous environmentalist and master propagandist, is a threat to world peace.

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Prohibition Fails Again – Bigger and “Worser”

By John Dendahl, Chairman, Republican Party of New Mexico

The Albuquerque Tribune – December 23, 1999

In June, Gov. Gary Johnson put his prestige as a high elected official behind those challenging the national War on Drugs.  During a conversation with me, he said something like, "I think illegal drug use is the worst problem facing us today.  Our current policies aren't working and are probably making the situation worse.  We should be discussing alternatives, including decriminalization"  I said I agreed with him.  So began one of New Mexico's top news stories of 1999.

In 1919, the U.S. Constitution was amended to prohibit manufacture, sale, transportation, import or export of "intoxicating liquors."  Many of Prohibition's most ardent supporters soon joined its most dedicated opponents, leading to repeal in less than 15 years.

Prohibition was overtaken by the Law of Unintended Consequences.  Al Capone and his ilk became a wealthy, violent threat to domestic tranquility.  Consumption of alcohol was neither eliminated nor, aside from a brief dip, even reduced.

Were the opponents of Prohibition pro-alcohol?  Some would answer "Certainly," but I think that would be wrong.  This was more a coalition of freedom lovers opposed to Prohibition in the first place, and realists sobered by the pernicious crime it spawned.

The drug war is alcohol Prohibition writ large.  Annual, inflation-adjusted enforcement costs are running at least 200 times those of Prohibition, yet the consensus estimate is only about ten percent of the available drugs are interdicted.  Instead of a few machine-gunnings among rival thugs, we have drug-financed guerilla wars in Colombia and Peru, and broad-daylight murders of a Catholic Cardinal and political leaders in Mexico.

At home, instead of the occasional unconstitutional search, we have law enforcement agencies becoming addicted to property takings (forfeitures) that flout the Constitution's Fifth Amendment.  Children, enticed by money and knowing that juvenile crime is punished with light sentences, are the street pushers of choice, often selling to their impressionable peers: other children, who then turn to burglary or worse.

The list is endless, and the trend is terrifying.  All of this is fueled by an illicit international market, grossing an estimated $300 billion per year, in which we in the U.S. are the dominant buyer group.  Some say demand could be snuffed out by a stepped-up "war" effort.  For example, we could impose universal drug testing with stiff punishment of all users caught in the net.  That won't fly.

We don't need to throw in the towel.  We do need to get smart and heed George Santayana's observation, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it."

It seems to me the criminal enterprise and substance abuse parts of this situation can and should be considered separately.  As with alcohol during Prohibition, the enormous profitability in drugs arises from their being illegal.  Despite the incorruptibility and dedication of most law enforcement officers, the international criminals making and distributing drugs just keep truckin'.  Almost never are they caught, convicted and executed lawfully (though some die at the hands of their greedy rivals).  What if a change in public policy just dried up the expanding criminal profits buying ever-more-pervasive corruption?

There are some important things that decriminalization does not mean.  For one, use of alcohol and drugs by juveniles is not condoned.  To the contrary, every "decriminalizer" I have talked to supports increased state protection of minors, including more severe criminal penalties for adults who deal to kids.

Decriminalization does not mean barring employers from firing, or refusing to hire, drug users.  The same goes for admissions and internal discipline policies of educational institutions.  Decriminalization does not mean relieving users of strict liability for harm they cause others while under the influence.

Programs underway in other countries, like Switzerland, enable citizens to cope with addiction without resort to black markets and a life of crime.  The models are out there; we need only be sufficiently open-minded to examine and tailor them to fit our society and our needs.

Footnote:  The 1996 national platform of my party, the Republican Party, calls on Americans to step up the drug war, heavily emphasizing interdiction, testing and incarceration.  I share with my party's many other leaders profound concern about drug abuse.  However, I am persuaded that the Prohibition model is inconsistent with our love of liberty.  Perhaps discussion in a spirit of civility, hope and mutual respect will lead others to agree.

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Whither the War on Drugs?

John Dendahl, for the Chili Club (a private social organization of 12 members)

May 19, 1997 (with sequel dated June 15, 1998)

One might suppose there's a "Newton's Law" that applies to markets:  For every benefit there is an equal and opposite cost.  Distillers profit and pay substantial public taxes on their products, but some consumers become alcoholics.  Drugs sold for nonmedicinal purposes create economic opportunity for farmers who grow, say, marijuana and coca, and for drug distribution organizations, but then there are the myriad related costs: direct harm done to the health of users and the collateral crime of users who believe others should pay for their habits.  One doubts that these benefits and costs always exhibit the equality governed by Newton's Law in physics.  More important than equality is, Who pays the costs?

            Answer 1:  Whether the addiction is to alcohol or drugs, the addict pays, and this addict is an adult who has freely exercised a choice.  Answer 2:  Anything that is not Answer 1.

            On January 16, 1919, the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified.  This was the liquor prohibition amendment.  Its repeal was ratified three constitutional amendments and fewer than 15 years later, December 5, 1933.  The campaign for Prohibition was largely waged on moral grounds, but one can be pretty sure that addiction and other problems associated with alcoholic consumption weighed heavily with some supporters of Prohibition.

            Unfortunately, the law of unintended consequences took over:  Consumption was reduced rather little if at all, an enormously profitable market in contraband liquor was created and American society paid hugely for criminalizing an activity that large numbers of adult Americans were unwilling to foreswear.  Nonetheless, federal enforcement expenditures during the first ten years of Prohibition were on the order of 750 million current (i.e., inflation-adjusted) dollars.1

            Who paid?  Mostly Answer 2.  Taxpayers and the victims of crime.  What also suffered?  The rule of law, on account of imposition of a restriction too few citizens were willing to support and too many were determined to flout.  It was like our erstwhile 55 mile-per-hour national speed limit.  In fact, if books and movies depicting social life in the speakeasies are not overly romanticized, it appears flouting the law was a major part of the fun!

            George Santayana observed, "Progress, far from consisting in change, depends on retentiveness.  Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it."  We may be learning that United States policy on drug use is a stupendous and regrettable illustration of that statement.

            Residents of the United States apparently constitute the largest national market of illicit narcotics users in the world.  This and our government's pressure for governmental action elsewhere combine to form the "force" behind a great deal of the mischief about to be described.

            Item:    By adding an allure of law-breaking adventure, prohibition may be inducing some drug use that would not otherwise occur.  Whether or not that is so, most of the end-user prices of drugs are associated with the risks and rewards of criminal activity rather than with normal production and distribution costs.  Police officials have estimated that perhaps half of all crimes in major cities are committed by addicts to support their habits.*

            Item:    Some national governments, ominously including that of our immediate neighbor and important trading partner, Mexico, are being infiltrated and destabilized by an international criminal element.  Just four days ago, an Albuquerque Journal story headlined "Mexico's PRI May Expel Ex-President" reported:

"Mexico's [Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, its ruling party] is considering expelling former President Carlos Salinas de Gortari because it suspects him of tolerating illegal activities by his brother during his presidency . . . Raul Salinas is accused of murder, corruption and money-laundering while an official in his brother's government . . . The Washington Post reported Sunday that U.S. officials were separately investigating whether Raul Salinas used U.S. bank accounts of a Mexican food subsidy program to launder drug money . . . They are also investigating whether Raul Salinas used that agency -- known as Conasupo -- to protect cocaine shipments into the United States."

             Item:    Peru's Maoist Shining Path guerillas were receiving up to $100 million per year through a marriage of convenience with drug traffickers.  In 1992, Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori abrogated the country's constitution to fight institutional corruption and rebel groups, including the Shining Path, all problems that were nourished by illicit drug trade.*

             Item:    The Cato Handbook for Congress states,

 "[Following Bill Clinton's 1996 decertification of Colombia, that country's] subsequent efforts to convince the United States it wishes to cooperate in the fight against narcotics led it to undertake coca eradication and other counter­narcotic initiatives.  Those initiatives have created resentment among peasant populations, who have consequently increased their support of major guerilla groups, and have reinforced the business relationship between drug traffickers and the rebels who protect illicit drug operation.  Indeed, Colombia's various guerilla organizations earn anywhere from $100 million to $150 million [per year] from drug-related activities.

 "Furthermore, the escalation of the drug war has recently provoked a wave of guerilla violence that has successfully displaced government authority in parts of the country.  'If you can single out one act that has played a decisive role,' Defense Minister Juan Carlos Esguerra explained, 'I have no doubt that it is our frontal offensive against narco-trafficking in the southeast of the country.' . . .

 "The United States has responded by increasing aid to the Colombian military, renowned for its human rights abuses and links to paramilitary groups.  The U.S.-orchestrated drug war in Colombia and elsewhere has thus weakened civilian rule, strengthened the role of the military, and generated financial and popular support for leftist rebel groups [like the Peruvian Shining Path]."

             Item:    The same Cato publication warns that Mexico may provide the most urgent warning to us in the United States:

 "Major Mexican drug cartels have gained strength and influence as the U.S.-led interdiction campaign in the Caribbean has rerouted narcotics traffic through Mexico.  Unfortunately, the result has been a sort of 'Colombian­ization' of Mexico . . . The 1993 killing of Cardinal Juan Jesús Posadas in Guadalajara, the assassinations of top ruling party officials, and the discovery of hundreds of millions of dollars in the overseas bank accounts of former president Carlos Salinas' brother all appear to be connected to the illicit drug business."

             The Cato statement goes on to observe the regional inconsistency of our decertifying Colombia while fully-certifying Mexico and suggests a reason:  "[T]he internal contradictions of U.S. foreign policy would probably become too conspicuous were Washington to threaten sanctions against a partner in the North American Free Trade Agreement."

            One of my political heroes, President Ronald Reagan, declared our "War on Drugs."  Until recently, unmindful of Santayana's observation about those who don't remember history, I never seriously questioned whether this was appropriate public policy.  It was and remains my opinion that most of the drug use we are talking about here is harmful to the user and has no redeeming benefit.  I was and remain angered by the local crimes against people and property committed by users to support their habits.  I was and remain appalled by the international criminality associated with drug trafficking.  So why not a war, so to speak?

             One factor I didn't consider was what we should have learned from Vietnam:  The United States cannot win a war without American public support.  In the Vietnam case, many Americans like Bill Clinton who were vulnerable to being called into uniform simply skipped, while many who weren't saw to it that the requisite political support vanished.  The metaphorical "skippers" in the war on drugs are the 25 million Americans who refuse not to be users.  The rest of us are -- or ought to be -- increasingly opposed to the assaults on Americans' civil liberties without which this "war" appears not to winnable.

             Meanwhile, the only winners are criminals, whether we are talking about a 13-year-old who pays his mother's rent out of his drug earnings* or the multi-billionaire leader of a Mexican or Colombian drug cartel.

             But we must be doing some good by keeping drugs away from someone, right?  Sure, there are doubtlessly some out there who, on account of U.S. government action, haven't become users and gotten hooked.  But the statistics are discouraging and the monetary costs are astronomical.

             Remember that ten years of Prohibition enforcement cost three-quarters of a billion of today's dollars.  During the Reagan and Bush presidencies, United States federal expenditures on the drug "war" were about $67 billion, and the current rate is about $15 billion a year.  Drug arrests in the United States now aggregate over 1 million per year, and drug offenders account for 60 percent of the federal prison population.*  How many of those are pushers, contrasted to users, I don't know, but these are eye-popping costs.

             The public tragedy is that, even if one cannot prove conclusively that drug use is pretty much undeterred by these draconian measures, a credible argument  to that effect can be made.  How much more draconian do the measures have to become before this "war" can be won?  Martial law in the United States?  Bomb Colombia -- and any other country identified now or in the future as a significant source country -- back to the Stone Age?  Institute mandatory, universal testing and impose the death penalty for every third-time offender?

             Bear in mind that we are talking here about an illicit, $300 billion global industry, able to react to counternarcotics strategies with ease.*  Maybe defeat of this arrogant, corrupting enemy requires a smarter approach.  What if it were just starved by elimination of the criminal enterprise profits?  What if drug use were decriminalized?

             In the Nineteenth Century, drug use was not illegal in the United States, and it is not currently illegal in the Netherlands.  Apparently, the only way America's drug problem is worse today is the cost of domestic law enforcement and the significant troubles we may be causing other nations' governments.  To the extent drug use, per se, is a problem, it apparently is neither significantly better nor worse.

             I have come to agree with those who advocate decriminalization of drug use.

             However, there are some caveats with that agreement.

             Caveat 1 -- Protection of the young.  It will be acknowledged that one's decision to be a drug user can be made responsibly only by an adult.  Since those who are not adults cannot make this decision responsibly, it will be a major crime for anyone, whether or not an adult, to be complicit in making drugs available to a non-adult.

             Caveat 2 -- Personal responsibility.

             a.         Those who choose to become drug users will be entirely responsible for themselves.  They will not, for example, be held financially harmless by government entitlements such as AFDC, SSI and the like.  Nor will their drug-induced deficiencies be excused by appeals, for example, to the Americans with Disabilities Act or the Civil Rights Act.

             b.         Financial or bodily harm caused to another by an individual under the influence will carry the same legal sanction(s) as if the harm were caused wantonly by someone not under the influence.

             Caveat 3 -- No protection against stigmatization.  Drug users will enjoy no protection against being stigmatized by others.   Thus employers, educational institutions and all others will be free, if they choose, to refuse any association with those whom they consider undesirable on account of drug use.

             So  this is my proposal:  Decriminalize drug use among adults.  Make adult users totally and personally responsible for any adverse consequences of their drug use.  Zealously protect non-adults against addiction until, as adults, they can be deemed capable of making the choice to be users.  Refuse users any legal protection against discrimination on account of their drug use.

 June 15, 1998 Sequel

 The drug lords continue to get richer; the expensive and ineffective War on Drugs continues to corrupt American foreign policy; and the threat to American civil liberties grows.

 The principal story on the front page of today's Albuquerque Journal is headlined "Border Troups Panned."  Its subject is opposition in Arizona to deployment of armed military personnel along our border with Mexico to combat "terrorists, drug traffickers and illegal aliens."

 Also today, The Santa Fe New Mexican reprinted a Los Angeles Times editorial about a sting recently carried out by American officials.  This operation, made possible in part by covert American activities in Mexico, resulted in the arrest of a number of Mexican bankers subsequently lured to the United States.  The Mexican bankers are charged with laundering drug money.  The Mexican government is understandably furious over what they view as a violation of Mexico's sovereignty by a purported ally.

 The Journal story mentioned above reported that the United States spent $1.7 billion in its last fiscal year on "drug-fighting efforts along the [Mexican] border."  Remember that ten years of Prohibition enforcement cost about half that amount in today's dollars.

 We're still losing the drug war.  Too bad Americans, most especially Republican Americans, continue heading in the same losing direction.  I submit that, without the criminal enterprise profits represented by the largely American market, the drug cartels would, along with users, be the losers.


     1Material published or distributed by the Cato Institute provided many of the facts cited in this paper, such as this one about Prohibition expenditures.

       * I have attempted to indicate with a raised asterisk each statement that is based on Cato Institute publications.

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