The War on Drugs : A Government
Con-Game
by R. Belser
There's a rather vulgar expression which nicely summarizes
the War on Drugs: "don't piss in my pocket and tell me it's raining". In
the history of the War on Drugs, we can examine one of the prime
mechanisms by which government first creates a "crisis", then rides in to
the rescue with an array of freedom-killing "solutions"---solutions which
(predictably) worsen the "crisis" and engender a fresh tier of agencies,
laws, and policies. Just as predictable is the uncanny way in which the
Propasphere melds with government in demonizing the supposed source of the
problem--guns, drugs, "violence", etc.
In the case of drugs, the government first criminalized the use,
possession and sale of certain drugs in the 1914 Harrison Act (it's more
than mere coincidence that a panoply of other freedom-killing and NWO-preconditioning
legislation was enacted at roughly the same time: creation of the Federal
Reserve system, of the popular election of senators, of federal income
tax, alcohol prohibition...and--some would say--women's suffrage). A
precedent was set whose full import and ramifications would not be felt
for decades, but an ominous principle implicitly contained in the
Harrison Act had been swallowed whole : the government had the right--superceding
any personal liberty guaranteed by the Bill of Rights--to decide what was
good for you and what wasn't, and to enforce its decision with
felony-level punishment. Not only that; the government could invoke the
"common good" to infringe upon a citizen's sovereignty over his own body
and mind, in matters which did not involve either force or fraud committed
against others (the natural limitations of governmental jurisdiction).
Even more: government's intrusion could be as arbitrary as it wished and
have little or nothing to do with actual social harm represented by an
individual's actions in the area of victimless crimes.
Prior to the Harrison Act, heroin, cocaine, and other drugs were easily
accessible by any adult who wanted them. The law of supply and demand --
in the absence of interposing legislation -- is such that these drugs were
cheap (as they would be today). Yet their easy availability and low cost
did not result in the creation of enormous numbers of addicts, nor was
there "drug-related" crime in the sense we see it today. In the case of
the opiates (opium/laudanum, morphine and heroin), there were many
"functioning" addicts. Perhaps an exemplary case is that of
Dr. William
Halsted, the famous surgeon who developed one of the first effective
mastectomy procedures and who was a co-founder of Johns Hopkins. While
investigating the anesthetic properties of cocaine, Halsted became
addicted to it and overcame that addiction-after many failed attempts
using other methods--by becoming a morphine user for the rest of his life.
You'll note my use of the word "user" rather than addict; certainly
Halsted was addicted to morphine in the sense that he needed to take it
daily in order to function, but the level of that "functioning" was such
that he continued the practice of medicine and surgery for decades, with
no diminution of his customary high output of journal articles and quality
performance in surgery.
Of course, Halsted was an exceptional person to begin with, but in more
prosaic lives, many people who were addicted to the opiates managed to
fill their stations in life unremarkably, from the housewife imbibing
"homemaker's ease" in the form of laudanum at the end of day, to the
Chinaman smoking his pipe after a day's or week's work in the laundry.
There were certainly dissolute types, living literally in the gutters, but
it would be a gross error to attribute their condition to addiction. In
fact, unlike alcohol, the opiates, taken daily in maintenance doses, do
permit a high level of functioning--as one can observe today in Methadone
Maintenance patients, whose numbers include lawyers, accountants, and
members of all the professions, as well as the lower-class constituency
one might expect.
The creation of a vast and lucrative black market followed drug
criminalization as night follows day--and was a development which was
equally predictable. The illegality of drug use/possession/sale meant high
prices for small amounts (heroin today is literally worth more than its
weight in gold---many times more). The logistics involved in
growing, purchasing, smuggling and distribution meant that control of the
drug trade would be contested among large and ruthless
organizations...i.e., "organized crime". The artificially inflated prices
of drugs mean that very few can afford to buy them using only legitimate
sources of income. For women addicts, this means either prostitution or
theft; for men it means theft, robbery, and dealing at the street level.
Contrary to the Propasphere-created image of the sinister figure lurking
by the schoolyard, most low-level dealers are addicts themselves, selling
to "colleagues"; in an endless round of selling-to-Peter-to-pay-Paul,
low-level dealers at best are in it to minimize as much as possible what
they must pay for their own drugs. The usual end of this story is prison
or death.
Many articles have been written detailing the billions spent by the
federal, state, and local governments on drug enforcement and the high
percentage of prisoners incarcerated for drug-related offenses --- so it
should be clear that drug laws have a large share of the blame for
clogging the court system, diverting police resources from real crime and
making prison construction a real growth industry. Occasionally such
articles mention the contagion of corruption these laws leave in their
wake. But almost every mainstream article/documentary ignores the worst
effect of these laws: more than any other single tool, these laws have
been used as a wedge to attack the foundations of the Bill of Rights--and
to prepare what the National Alliance's William Pierce calls the
"lemmings" for a lifelong umbilical leash. The War on Drugs has been used
to justify legislation which has gutted: the 1st Amendment (via the
Methamphetamine Non-proliferation Act); the 2nd Amendment (gang
shootings--often the result of turf wars over drug territory/profits--have
been used to whip up support for killing the 2nd Amendment); the 4th
Amendment (search and seizure and pre-trial asset forfeiture); the 5th
Amendment (compulsory immunity); the 6th Amendment (the right to confront
one's accusers has been "adjusted" to accommodate the needs of informers--i.e..,
snitches, and the right to a speedy trial has become a joke); the 8th
Amendment (excessive bail); and the 9th Amendment (reserved powers). More
than any other single ploy, the War on Drugs, with its TIP
(turn-in-a-pusher) lines and use of informants, has acclimated the public
to accepting as a way of life the reporting on one's neighbors to
"the authorities". It has entailed the creation of the DEA (Drug
Enforcement Administration) and the naming of a "Drug Czar" and is on the
verge of involving us in another Vietnam-- this time in Colombia. But the
most frightening aspect of the War on Drugs is the exponential growth of
Big Brother regulations, the majority of which have been put into effect
without even being noticed. A good example of this kind of thing, which
drew attention and opposition only because it was publicized by the
Internet, was the Know Your Customer Law, a regulation which was proposed
by The FDIC (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation). This would have
required every bank insured by that entity (i.e., almost every bank) to
create a "customer profile" of every one of its customers, based upon that
customer's usual pattern of transactions, to flag customer accounts
showing deviation from that accustomed pattern, and to then report
that customer and turn over his banking records to the FDIC, IRS, DEA, and
other government agencies. Even though a wide-spread Internet-based
campaign to prevent this law from being adopted was successful, something
on the order of 88% of all banks have agreed to meet the provisions of
this law voluntarily. The telling thing about this, is that this is
but one regulation formulated by just one government agency, and that we
even heard about it before it could become law was a fluke. Its
justification, of course, was the need to bring attempts at money
laundering (mostly from the drug trade) to light. There have been so many
incursions of this sort during the course of the war on Drugs, that the
Constitution resembles Swiss cheese; i.e., a lot more holes than cheese.
And until recently, the mindset from the Drug War has so permeated our
society, that physicians have been reluctant to prescribe morphine even to
terminal cancer patients; heroin is still not available to them.
When you see all branches of the
NWO-the
UN ,
ZOG, the EU--speak as with
one voice on an issue, it should be enough to make you suspect that the
"other side" of the issue--whatever it might be (immigration, the "global
economy", etc.)-- has merit. When it comes to the War on Drugs, all of the
above are adamant in their opposition to decriminalization. For one thing,
the supposedly noble objectives of the Drug War (saving people from
themselves) have provided yet another platform from which these entities
can issue international, border-nullifying policy positions, with a long
list of regulations, agencies, and so forth as mortar to solidify the
architecture our would-be masters have been constructing for some time,
with the knowledge that inertia and time will favor them. The idea, of
course, is that the more ad hoc "crises" over which these One World
Government planners can involve their respective nations in agreements,
sovereignty-annihilating international police forces, etc., the more
quickly the NWO can become an over-arching reality. As with other such
tactics, this one relies upon gradualism-- accustoming the peoples of the
different nations to a relatively slow and incremental abridgement of
personal and national autonomy.
The War on Drugs, like other initiatives taken by the NWO, incorporates
itself into the fabric of society a manner congenial to the
parasite-mediator class (of which the
Jews are, of course, masters) in
just the ways you'd expect: so-called "substance-abuse" treatment centers
have proliferated like a night-blooming fungus throughout the country,
entire careers in the "helping professions" have been based upon supposed
expertise in the field, and great gobs of Medicaid money and other
"transfer payments" have lines the pockets of psychiatrists, program
directors, and other professionals whose business it is to create nothing,
repair nothing, build nothing, and to produce nothing...nothing, that is,
but reams of paper filled with jargon, psycho-babble and little if any
meaning. All this forms a huge part of that monster spawned by
liberal-left politics, the Welfare State, and its chief industry, "social
work". It's interesting to speculate about what would be the fate of the
"substance-abusing" Edgar Allen Poe, were he alive today and sucked into
the maw of this system. Or of Dr. Halsted. Perhaps the anonymous creator
of a bumper sticker I recently saw was pondering such things when he
wrote: Reality is for people who can't face drugs.
Exactly what would be the consequences of repealing drug prohibition?
Well, for one thing, a lot of bottom-feeders would be out of work. Entire
bloated federal and state government agencies would lose their
justification for existing. There would be plenty of prison vacancies
which could be filled with serious miscreants; property crimes would drop.
And the main factor fueling gangs and gang warfare--drug profits--would
cease to exist. Those who had nothing better to interest them than vegging
out on drugs (or alcohol) would do so--as they always have done--but at
sharply reduced cost to the general public. Would there be a great
increase in the number of addicts? It's hard to believe that there would;
drug laws have never really kept those interested in drugs from consuming
them and in fact have made drugs, enveloped in the mystique of the
forbidden and criminal, more attractive than they might otherwise be.
But as powerful a force as the enormous profits to be made from drug
prohibition is in keeping drugs criminalized, the real reason you
won't see decriminalization is that it provides irreplaceable services to
the NWO. Like "guns" and "racism", the word "drugs" needs only to be
articulated for the tumblers to fall into place in the brainwashed minds
of the West. |