gnomon
Well-Known Member
LOL - I don't think I could possibly disagree more, gnomon. I think the war on drugs is an excellent example of a failed attempt to legislate morality. Much like prohibition in the 20's, it has achieved almost the exact opposite of what the intent was.
I'm not talking about success in stemming the flow, creation or use of drugs.
If legislation in this thread is being defined as "creating" a morality then the Drug War has done an excellent job. Starting with racial propaganda to gain support by playing to base, racial fears in legislating against opium and marijuana through the attitudes of predominantly white America against drugs, once known and used, is a well crafted attempt by the government to create a morality against drugs in the majority of the populace. The general publics stance towards illegal drugs has been in line with the governments stance for decades. That is why it is so easy for the government to enact new laws. So easy for them to do away with well established rights. By creating the mentality among the populace that the drugs themselves are bad or even evil.
This is all banking on the definition I've said is used in this thread. Legislation as creating morality. If we change the definition from creating to legislation as merely being a regulatory function, which in truth is exactly what it is, than legislation's primary purpose is to legislate morality. We are no longer discussing legislating as creating. Just passing laws for the sake of regulation.
The New London decision by the SCOTUS will be the next moral test. Taking another persons property and giving it to another private party was considered immoral. Not just illegal or unjust but immoral. Private property is a long held basis of all our rights in this nation. Noticing the flaccid response of the states in the wake of that decision and the lack of concern among the populace. As these takings continue to transpire, coupled with the ability of regulatory legislation to take private property with no recompense at all, it's interesting to watch a new moral paradigm seep into the minds of the masses. That you have no right to not just your private property but that property you define as home. That the state can take it for essentially any reason and give it to another for no public use is a new moral paradigm.
Most people don't think about that issue or at least as a moral one. If that isn't one, then essentially nothing is.
edit: Anyway...this argument is often one over semantics. This could have been a much shorter response by focusing on that but I've been listening to an individual on the radio discussing property seizures recently.