Don't "Legalize" Drugs; Abolish The Laws

in #abolition8 years ago (edited)

Though I am an anarcho-capitalist and a libertarian, the “War on Drugs” is pretty far down on my list of things to speak out against when it comes to government. However, like many different issues, I see my fellow libertarians understand the problem correctly, but are advocating the wrong solutions. If the idea is to limit the government’s control over substances, legalization is the direct opposite of what we should push for. There’s a difference between legalization and abolition.

We are beginning to see this play out with marijuana. Because the public’s opinion of it has changed, we will see many politicians and potential government officials push for legalization of marijuana. This has resulted in many people seeking legalization and celebrating cases where it occurs, much like we saw in Colorado. Politicians are very smart people, which is why you’ve heard some political figures begin to switch their stances. But this is nothing more than a political okie doke designed to boost the perception of the politicians. Legalization does not solve the issues, however, nor does “decriminalizing.” The government still makes the rules, thus the government still controls the usage and ultimately controls the substance in general because of this. I’m not suggesting that the wishes and desires to decriminalize drugs are wrongful, I just do not think people have thought critically about the actual solution. In many cases, it does nothing but strengthen the government and their monopoly.

I like to use marriage to exemplify my point. Last year, the Supreme Court seemingly granted the “rights” for gay couples to seek marriage licensing. I saw many libertarians celebrate this as a victory, but was it really? The government still ultimately makes the rules and we should ask, why was it their decision to make in the first place? If the state still has to recognize one’s marriage for it to be considered legitimate, where is the victory? Again, if the objective is to limit the state we should have been pushing for abolition of marriage licensing all together.

Abolition of laws help both sides but there’s a lot of money to be made in politicizing issues by government, so they tend to push for legalization. Even though abolition would mean that all sides win. In marriage, if the laws were abolished one would be able to see marriage in whatever way they see fit with whomever they wanted. Equally, if entities didn’t want to acknowledge others’ marriages they are not bound by laws to force them to recognize it.

But that’s too easy, isn’t it?

So legalization of marijuana would not be a victory, but it would certainly seem like one to those who have to use it in secrecy because they would be punished by law; it would also seem to be victorious for those who spent time in jail for such a nonviolent offense. But we must look at the source of the issues: the laws. Making new laws isn’t a solution. It simply means that the state makes new rules but they’ll just let you use it under circumstances they see fit. They’ll let you smoke a little weed but they can still control marijuana, dictate how and who can use it, and they will most certainly tax it to raise their revenue. So the state still wins and individuals lose.

It’s expected of liberals to fall for this scheme, but libertarians should see right through it. Abolition of the laws surrounding drugs is the way to limit the state (that is, if that’s the goal). Legalization and new rules is nothing more than a way to get to shut up for a little bit, which legitimizes government.

Abolition > Legalization.

-Eric July

Sort:  

Don't just stop at the abolition of drug laws either. Any law that violates individual liberty ought to be abolished. And for that matter, the violent coercive state in general ought to be abolished. We'd all be better for it.

Might as well just stop calling them laws. The word "law" makes these arbitrary edicts seem organic, natural and immutable. What statists call "laws" are really just "demands" and "death threats". There's only one moral law: do no harm.

"Legalization" doesn't remove the threat of jail or theft; it just universalizes the theft and violence. What happens to people who don't comply with "legal regulations"?

Oh yeah, "comply or die".

Good post Eric

Right to the point brother, as usual.
It boggles my mind that so many people don't recognize how absurd a marriage license is. Or- getting permission to smoke a leaf that they could grow in their own back yard.
Looking forward to the new album! (bet you could get up-votes by releasing the next track on Steemit! Just sayin' ;-) )

I'm bisexual and I rejected the Supreme Court Ruling on gay marriage. The Government... any government has no right to regulate love or personal associations... The government itself has no right to exist in the first place. It is unjust and an abuse of our natural rights and our subjective morals.

I completely agree, the moral argument for abolition completely overwhelmes that for legalization.

"If the idea is to limit the government’s control over substances, legalization is the direct opposite of what we should push for. There’s a difference between legalization and abolition."

If ownership is defined by whoever exercises control over property, and you naturally own yourself and therefore control your actions, then any excuse to try to involuntarily control the actions of another non-violent human is to advocate for slavery. Great post!

Could we abolish all victim-less crimes while we're at it? Would the abolishment of these types of laws be the first step in a stateless society, or would some other action in the state be the first?

Abolition>Legalization. Couldn't have said it better. This applies to all laws by the way.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.21
TRX 0.14
JST 0.030
BTC 68643.84
ETH 3277.52
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.67