From: Jim Choate <ravage@einstein.ssz.com>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 299921940b08bb5588e13afcb99c88d0cfd28c10d8c281875d75178d7dabd043
Message ID: <199609140236.VAA03531@einstein>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-09-14 04:14:59 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 14 Sep 1996 12:14:59 +0800
From: Jim Choate <ravage@einstein.ssz.com>
Date: Sat, 14 Sep 1996 12:14:59 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: common sense (fwd)
Message-ID: <199609140236.VAA03531@einstein>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text
Forwarded message:
> Date: Fri, 13 Sep 1996 11:33:24 -0700
> From: Dale Thorn <dthorn@gte.net>
> Subject: Re: common sense
>
> HipCrime wrote:
> > And rather than "dispensing drugs in clinics," why not simply
> > scrap the drug laws entirely? People have a *right* to do as
> > they please with their bodies.
> > Let's hear it for common sense. It's the first decent posting I've
> > seen to this list.
> > -- HTTP://www.HIPCRIME.com
>
> A question for you: In the Civil Rights era (1960's mostly), we dealt
> with the question of whether people had the "right" to not only choose
> their neighbors, but whether they could extend that logic, so once they
> move in, whether they could "enforce" the status quo by preventing other
> people from moving in if those other people didn't "fit in" somehow.
>
> If drugs and/or other items of Vice are liberalized, there will be a
> tremendous marketing opportunity created, and new stores and new
> departments within existing stores will pop up everywhere offering the
> newly-liberalized goods and services. So my question is, since there are
> "dry" areas in the country now, where the citizens can vote to exclude
> alcohol sales, for example, will drugs, prostitution, gambling, etc.
> fall within the purvey of citizen democracy as in the "dry" county
> example, or will there be new problems with this analogy, and will any
> of those new problems relate to the Civil Rights issues I mentioned
> previously?
>
History already has examples of such incidences. Alaska, California, and
other states have tried various levels of legalization. To date I believe
that all such experiments have ended because of federal pressure on the
uncooperative states.
The Indians 'right by treaty' to operate gambling casino's is another good
example of a contemporary situation.
Jim Choate
Return to September 1996
Return to “Jim Choate <ravage@einstein.ssz.com>”
1996-09-14 (Sat, 14 Sep 1996 12:14:59 +0800) - Re: common sense (fwd) - Jim Choate <ravage@einstein.ssz.com>