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Drug Czar Czar: "an emperor or king having absolute
authority" Webster's Third International Dictionary, unabridged. Drug Czar: A very weird concept for a place called
the land of the free. Declaration of Independence, Bill of Rights, and the
Drug Czar. There's something not quite right here. Not that there isn't a
certain honesty to it. When it comes to altering your consciousness, you
need the King's permission. The hypocrisy of this is, of course, not lost on
millions of us serfs. So how does our government justify its position on
marijuana? William J. Bennet, my favorite Drug Czar to date,
didn't mince words: After acknowledging that marijuana is no more harmful
than alcohol, he stated bluntly, with a very Czar-like last word, "We have
enough problems with alcohol, thank you . . ." Forget the Bill of Rights. Forget the Declaration
of Independence. Big Brother is here. It's okay for you to slug down a
pint or two of Jim Beam and smoke a pack of Luckies, but that hardy plant
called marijuana, that Creation has placed on this planet so abundantly
cannot be smoked under penalty of law. This position is not only profoundly ignorant and
hypocritical, but it is unconstitutional as well. This is not complicated
stuff. It is obvious to anyone willing to put some thought into it. A
brief look at the Declaration of Independence spells it out: "We hold these truths to be self-evident; that all
men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain
unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of
Happiness. That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted amongst
Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, that
whenever any Form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is
the Right of the People to alter or abolish it, and to institute new
Government, laying its Foundation on such principles and organizing its
powers in such Form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their
Safety and Happiness..." Governments are instituted to secure our rights -
Rights enunciated as self-evident truths. These "self-evident" truths -
truths which leave no room for disagreement - are the bottom line. And
they always exist. We wrote down and agreed to what was obvious. Who are we? We are equal beings, each with CREATOR-given
inalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of
Happiness...". Our opportunity to exist and to explore this wonderful
universe is a gift of our CREATOR - not of the United States or any other
government. Big Brother is a game played outside the rules.
The laws against marijuana use, possession or cultivation are
unconstitutional. The issue is not decriminalization. "Decriminalization"
asks the government to please give We the People what we would like to
have. "Unconstitutional" says you, government, are acting outside the
rules. You are taking away our Liberty without authority. Cease and
desist. Align your actions with our "self-evident" freedom. Never forget that the Declaration of Independence
spells out our basic contract with the government. When the government
violates rules expressed in that document, we have a right to say NO. This is a basic freedom of choice issue. Two of our Bill of Rights, the first l0 amendments
to the U.S. Constitution, deal directly with it. Obviously, "freedom"
without freedom of choice is a charade. The first of these Amendments is
the First Amendment, Freedom of Religion, which affirms the right of each
of us to both believe and to practice our own concept of reality as long
as we are not interfering with the Rights of others. This is not a
hypothetical statement. It's the law. Governments twist and turn around
this constantly, but it is the law. It is our basic right -- affirming the
concept of individual liberty expressed in the Declaration of
Independence. Created equal means created equal. Creator endowed,
inalienable rights are Creator endowed, inalienable rights. Period! Your
Right to choose marijuana as your mind altering substance of choice is
your Right -- whether as a sacrament or as a way of life. The Fifth Amendment, reaffirmed by the Fourteenth
Amendment, acknowledges our right to due process and equal protection of
the law, protecting our right to equal treatment and freedom of choice. As
we are declared to be equal, then as long as we are not violating the
Rights of others there can be no "Big Brother," no legitimate "King"
telling us what we can or cannot do. Individual Liberty is what America is
about. It's the America we grew up to believe in. Government cannot take
away our Liberty "capriciously". The government has no legitimate
authority to take away our Liberty without meeting a heavy burden. This is
the law. The equal protection clause and due process clause
work together to tell us that it is simply constitutionally illogical for
alcohol to be legal while marijuana is illegal. We all have the Right to
be treated equally by the law. Where there is no logical, legal,
justification for marijuana prohibition in the face of what alcohol is
about, we have a violation of the due process and equal protection
clauses, whether we are cultivating or possessing. The government cannot
constitutionally take our liberty away because "we have too much of a
problem with alcohol." To add to the absurdity of it, as most every knows,
evidence shows alcohol to be the most dangerous and destructive drug,
mentally, physically and emotionally, in America. Pretty obvious stuff. Not complicated; and though
most Americans are not schooled in our basic freedoms, most Americans know
in their guts that the marijuana laws are simply wrong -- and wrong here
means unconstitutional. Everyone knows that alcohol is easily the number
one problem drug in America. But we live with it. We don't want the
government telling us whether or not we can get loaded on alcohol. We have
powerful, wealthy dynasties built on alcohol. There is a lot of money
being made on alcohol. We live with tobacco with all its dreaded side
effects because we don't want the government telling us whether or not we
can smoke cigarettes. A lot of people smoke marijuana. If they are
caught by law enforcement, they are subject to going to jail. And if they
grow it or are caught with a lot of it, they may go to jail for a long
time. Not only is this obviously unfair and
hypocritical, but obviously unconstitutional as well. Big Brother is not
allowed here. The Fourth of July is not just another holiday! We in America share an agreement: that we are each
explorers -- none of us with a perception of truth which may legitimately
be forced upon another. We live in a Nation, a political/social system
that was designed to protect the Right of each of us in our own
exploration -- the Right of each of us to come to terms with existence in
our own way. What holds true for freedom of choice and marijuana holds
equally true for other issues of personal preference. If you're not
interfering with the Rights of others, then you've got every Right to go
for your version of the adventure. Government is the servant, not the
master. You could even say that those who would argue otherwise are
un-American. |