Pubdate: Fri, 09 May 2008 Source: North Bay Nugget (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 North Bay Nugget Contact: http://www.nugget.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2226 Author: Chris Buors Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n470/a09.html STATE NO LONGER SERVANT, NOW OUR MORAL MASTER Letter writer Bill Taylor (Readers Views, Monday) would likely support the army doing a house-by-house search for drugs given that is the equivalent of locking down a school for a drug search. Worse, implying that kids who experiment with pleasure drugs are somehow dirty is repulsive to say the least. Teen smoking has been going on for a couple of hundred years and no one unleashed the dogs on school children over that deadly habit. But that was when the state was our servant and not our moral master like it is today. Canadians could unleash a total state in the war on drugs. Or we could repeal drug prohibition. Those who put their trust in a total state have been disappointed many times in the past. I would sooner put my faith in liberty and truth than a total state bent on moral cleanliness. The Christian Crusades, The Spanish Inquisition and Nazi Germany were all scapegoat persecutions that enjoyed the powers of a total state in accomplishing their goals. The drug war will belong to the same category; a vast drama of scapegoat persecution that enjoyed strong public support in the name of moral righteousness. Bill Taylor gives us an insight into why scapegoat persecutions of the past raged on. One can never be too secure from whatever perceived threats. Yes the vice of drug taking will go on, but, in a free country, you have to be prepared to live with the vices of others lest your own vices don't become criminalized too. Those who seek to abuse the law as a shortcut to the 1,000 year sin-free existence that is said will bring about the Second Coming have not rested for 2,000 years and are unlikely to ever rest. It is for that reason that Thomas Jefferson told us that the price we must pay for liberty is eternal vigilance against such pious moralizations. We are supposed to have a separation of church and state in Canada. Sending the police in to do the work of the clergy was a mistake in the first place. Drug taking is a personal responsibility that is none of the neighbours' business, just like it is none of your business if the neighbour has a drink when he pleases. Chris Buors Winnipeg - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin