Musings On Two Of The Dumbest Wars The US
Has Ever Fought
By The
Saker
September 19, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Unz
Review"
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No,
this won’t be about Grenada, Panama, Iraq,
Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan
or any other US military war of choice
which, while dumb, could at least result in
some kind of appearance of victory, no
matter how feeble (say, against a few Cuban
engineers armed with AKs in Grenada). Today
I want to share a few thoughts about the two
wars the US has been engaged in for decades
even though they never, ever had a chance to
win: the war on drugs and the war on guns.
Shocked that I would put these two wars in
the same category?
Think again.
True, the war in drugs is something the
(so-called) Right loves. The war in guns is
the favorite of the (so-called) Left.
Granted. That is one difference I won’t
deny.
But
the rest?
First, both wars are based on a logical
fallacy: that an object, an item, is the
source of evil. This is why politicians on
both sides (let’s just pretend that there
are, really,
“sides”
in the US official political spectrum, even
if there are none) love them. Put yourselves
in the shoes of a US politician and ask
yourself what you would prefer: to deal with
a complex problem (violence/addiction) which
has its roots deep inside human nature and
which is exacerbated by the very nature of
our society, the society which has put you,
the putative US politician, into a position
of power and which now dangles the promise
to let you join the select club of the
ruling 1%ers or to simply ban an inanimate
object by voting “yea” on a piece of
legislature?
Think of all the risks a US politician would
take if he/she wanted to deal with the real
issues, especially those who are either
rooted in, or the result of, our deeply
dysfunctional social and political order.
And think how smart, courageous, principled
and even heroic you, the politician, would
look if you took a “tough stance” against
drugs/guns? All you really need to do is
make sure first is whether your constituents
suffer from drugs-phobia or gun-phobia and,
voilà, you are a hero! Simple and
very, very effective.
Second, both wars are easy to explain to the
dumb and ignorant. Let’s be honest here, as
a politician you need to mostly cater to the
left side of the Bell Curve with some
attention given to the center. Not only do
smart folks tend to distrust politicians,
but they also like to reach their own
conclusions, often based on lengthy research
and the analysis of complex arguments. To
make things worse, smart people often tend
to be
anti-authoritarian – individualists who
favor free choice over state enforced laws,
rules and regulations.
Third, both wars are easily fueled by the
fear factor: “drug warriors” have a phobia
(in the sense of both hate and fear) of
drugs just as “gun warriors” have a phobia
of guns, which means that rather than
rationally analyze the issue, their position
will be emotionally driven, free from all
the complexities of real life. A politician
will always prefer an emotional argument
over a rational one because only emotion
generates the kind of unthinking loyalty a
politician needs to secure his/her power
base.
Fourth, both wars are a bureaucratic and
financial bonanza. Why? Because these are
wars which will never, ever, be “won” and
that, in turn, guarantees not only a steady
streams of dollars, but even the creation of
specialized agencies such as the DEA or the
ATF whose very existence will depend on
never winning the war on drugs/guns. A
bureaucrat’s dream come true!
Fifth, there is also a much more subtle but
no less important aspect of the war on
drugs/guns: they make it possible to
easily detect potentially disloyal
elements. Drugs users,
especially, since they break the law to
consume their drugs, have already crossed
the psychological line of deliberately
breaking the law and disobeying the doxa
of the state and society and they are much
more likely to engage in other forms of
disloyalty (such as engaging in various
forms of crimethink) than law
abiding citizens. Legal gun owners in the
USA are extremely law abiding (In Florida
and Texas, permit holders are convicted of
misdemeanors or felonies at one- sixth the
rate that police officers;
source), but a lot of them are also
fiercely individualists who do not like to
rely on the state for their defense and who
often even believe that the 2nd
Amendment was crafted with the specific
intention to allow citizens to resist
against a state turned authoritarian (of
course, illegal gun owners are, by
definition, felons and criminals who are
extremely disloyal to anything but
themselves). So, in a way, the use of drugs
or the possession of weapons is a good way
to, shall we say, “screen” for those
elements who could turn out to be potential
trouble makers.
Of
course, at this point in time gun owners
have it much, much, better than drug users.
Alas, there never was a constitutional
amendment protecting the right of each
citizen to ingest, smoke, inject or
otherwise consume any substance he/she wants
simply because at the time of the drafting
of the Constitution that freedom was an
self-evident truth (wars on booze and drugs
happened much later). In fact, the list of
right specifically granted to the state was
assumed exhaustive and the state could not
engage in any legistlation not specifically
authorized, while today we see the exact
opposite of that: whatever freedom is not
expressly protected is fair game for the
millionaire lawyers sitting in Congress. But
considering the very real risk of a Hillary
Presidency soon, the 2nd
Amendement might well be soon eroded to such
a degree as to become unrecognizable. Even
the Republicans have an ugly record,
especially at a local level, for passing all
sorts of petty and dumb regulations which
gradually but constantly limit the
constitutional right to keep and bear arms.
In some jurisdictions the mere possession of
a firearm is already considered a felony
while others try hard to make self-defense a
crime in almost all circumstances. So yes,
the 2nd Amendement is still
there, but barely, and if Hillary gets to
nominate the next Supreme Court Justice it
might be gone soon. Besides, what the
gun-haters failed to achieve in the courts,
they have already achieved in a cultural
sense where, for example, a revolver is seen
by many as an “instrument of murder” rather
than a home-defense tool, a hunting tool, a
sports tool or just a harmless symbol of
freedom (historically, free men were allowed
to carry weapons, slaves were not).
I
want to make it clear that I am not
comparing guns and drugs by themselves. I am
only comparing the rationale and methods
used by the regime in Washington to wage a
war on these otherwise completely different
things.
Now
let’s engage in a little thought experiment.
Let’s imagine that Congress decides to
legalize all drugs and guns overnight: all
drugs, medical or recreational, would be
come available over-the-counter in any store
willing to sell them and the right to bear
arms would be completely protected under “Constitutional
carry” guarantees. What would happen
next?
Some will say that the US would turn into a
gigantic war zone where millions of citizens
sky-high on PCP and crack cocaine would
begin shooting each other with assault
rifles and that all those not busy murdering
each other would be lying around terminally
stoned. Do you believe that too?
I
don’t.
For
one thing I believe that the number of
people using drugs or owning guns would
change very little. Sure, there would be a
short-term novelty effect, but soon the
numbers would stabilize. Shootings and
overdoses would also remain pretty much at
the same level as today. What would drop
dramatically and immediately would be crime
rate, not so much because of the deterrent
effect of an armed citizenry (just like
today, most folks do not go around carrying
a firearm) as due to the fantastic effect of
a complete collapse of the illegal drug
market following a legalization of drugs.
[Sidebar: A friend of mine is a detective in
the Daytona Police Department. He used to be
in Narcotics for years. I recently asked him
what percentage of crime in Daytona is
drug-related. He said “almost all of it”. It
turns out that not only does the trafficking
in drugs result in a huge share of the
violent crime in Daytona, but that most
burglaries, thefts, break-ins, etc. are also
committed by drug addicts. And even though
drug traffickers and users cannot legally
obtain a gun (convicted felons don’t have
that right in Florida), drug dealers all
pack firearms (even if most of their guns
are in very poor condition or even broken,
and the felons themselves very bad
marksmen). The truth is that if drugs were
made legal the size of US police departments
could rapidly and dramatically be reduced
and that the remaining small force could go
back to “normal”, civilized, police
functions rather than fight the kind of
military war in drugs with APCs, helicopters
and SWAT teams they are engaged in every
day.]
My
point?
Simple: mainly to show to that those who
want legalize drugs (the so-called
“Liberals”) have much more in common with
the defenders of the 2nd
Amendement (the so-called “Conservatives”)
than they think, and to show to those
cherish their right to keep and bear arms
that they, in turn, have a lot in common
with the “potheads” they are so-willing to
condemn and put in jail. At the end of the
day, it makes absolutely no more sense to
authorize drugs/guns and ban guns/drugs than
it makes to oppose abortions and support the
death penalty. Just as life is either a
sacred value or not, so is the freedom of
each person to decide for himself/herself
how he/she chooses to live. It all boils
down to a few simple questions: do we feel
that it is our right to curtail the freedoms
of our fellow citizens because we do not
approve of their choices? Do we believe that
inanimate objects can, by themselves, cause
such evils as violence or addiction? Do we
believe that it will ever become possible to
eliminate weapons or mind-altering
substances from our societies? And, most
importantly, do we believe that each
individual ought to have the right to answer
these questions for himself or herself, or
do we believe that the state ought to
enforce its choices on the rest of us?
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