Saturday, October 9, 2010

Sticks and Stones

I jump through an empty pane barely big enough to fit my 5'11'' 150lb figure through. The shouting of the crowd is sounding further away with every step. It's about 10:30 at night and the streets of the industrial downtown Tacoma are as vacant as the buildings lining them. Large vans parked slightly exposed from their commercial driveways block what would otherwise have been a straight run down the sidewalk. Running in the street I'm completely exposed and easily spotted. I have to maneuver the sidewalk and find somewhere to hide or this is gonna be a very short night. Turning toward the sidewalk I notice an open garbage dumpster on the side of a medical building and jump in.

110901 is ghost.

I don't close the lid because I've been exposed for too long and can't risk one of them seeing me during however long it takes to close it. Moments later a large mob runs by angrily yelling, “Get him!” and “Fuck that chi-mo!”. This is not the worst though. Far from it. Once I spent 3 hours running away from a group of people who were threatening to castrate me. After encountering as many angry mobs as I've encountered, I have become an expert in the art of evasion.
The mob's racket of footsteps dies down to the few solitary feet of the slowpokes scampering to catch up. I put my hands on the ledge of the dumpster and balance myself on bags of wet trash so that I can stand up high enough to look over the dumpster without making any noise by ruffling the moist trash around. Two people walking slowly enough to seem like they are doing a detailed search yet quickly enough not to lose the rest of the group pass by. Eventually the mob will realize that I’ve escaped and they’ll turn back to make a real detailed search, so I have to leave now.
I climb out as quietly as possible and make my way across the street toward the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. My best friend and only friend left these days, Dave Strattman is supposed to meet me under the bridge at 11:30. I've known Dave my entire life. The parents around our neighborhood used to joke that Dave was a blonde version of the brown haired me. We’re both close to the same height, at about 185 lbs Dave is about thirty five pounds heavier than I am. We went to the same schools from elementary all the way until I got kicked out of Princeton. Dave was always the reckless one who did things like bungi jumping, sky diving, and a few years ago, he even tried cliff diving. I have never even tried skateboarding. Needless to say, he was the man for this job.

110901 is free. Phase II.

The bridge is gated!
A few years ago the city of Tacoma made a law that criminalized sex offenders living within 600 meters of a school. Since the city of Tacoma has so many schools, the sex offenders had nowhere to live, so they all ended up living under the Tacoma Narrows Bridge illegally. It wasn't the safest place to live, but at least it stopped the rain. At first the town didn't really bother them that much except for the occasional thrown cola can or water bottle. It only took about a month for the people of Tacoma to protest them. Once the protests started happening, Tacoma PD arrested all of them for violation of their respective probations. They must have gated under the bridge to prevent anyone from making it a home again.
I'll just wait by the gate and hope he sees me.
A few minutes later I see Dave's green Hummer H2 pulling up. Thank God he remembered to turn his lights off. “Hey Dave, thanks for helping me out man. I realize how dangerous this is for you.”
Dave seems completely at ease and says, “Fuck those bastards! You know I got your back dude. Let’s do this thing!” as he opens the passenger side door issuing me to get in.
While climbing into the H2 I say, “Man, you really haven’t changed at all.” His hair is bleached blonde and shaved down the sides as if it were a mohawk that he just hasn’t put up yet.
He laughs at me and says, “I see you’re still the little same bitch you’ve always been. You meet any sweet girls in prison?”
He must have thought that last comment to be seriously funny because he’s laughing like he’s never heard anything funnier. “Yea, I met your last girlfriend. Or at least someone who looks like her.”
That shut him up. Finally. I’ve been in the car with him for five seconds and already I’m tired of him. Jesus, this is gonna be a long night.

110901 is mounted. License plate: W234X4A Driver: white blonde male heavy, average height.

That’s it, I’m leaving this place for good. There’s no turning back now.
I’m definitely not gonna miss my job though. The only way people like me can find work is through sleazy scum bags who want to make a quick buck off of someone who can’t fight back. Mr. Gorchepov is one of those people. He’s a construction contractor who uses whatever labor he can get for less than minimum wage. He really likes hiring people like me because he can treat us like crap, and we’ll stick around.
Every couple of months there was another rumor floating around the workplace about a good job somewhere for us, or an employer that wasn’t checking records. Almost every time they were proven to be just rumors, but one rumor stuck around.
There was said to be a place somewhere in Nevada where people like us made up the entire town. Everybody from the shop owners to the mayor would be in my same shoes if they didn’t live there. In fact, the mason on my job sight a week ago has a brother in law that lives there right now and even owns a gas station.
The problem is that it is supposedly extremely hard to find and it's across two state borders. Being that felons are not allowed to cross from one state to another without a pass from the respective probation officer, and a damn good reason why the trip is necessary, this trip could be very difficult.
Staring at the dashboard of his car, Dave asks, “So we're just gonna drive through both borders and then what? Follow that piece of shit GPS you got?”
He looks nervous. I don’t think I’ve ever seen him nervous before. “I'm gonna stay in the trunk until we get to nevada. Nobody's gonna notice us, and if they do, nobody would even think to search you. I know it's risky, but it's the only option I got.” I make my way to the trunk.
We're going to take I-12 through the Snoqualmie National Forrest and then drive south through the desert all the way until Nevada. We figured that the drive would be a relatively smooth one considering we aren't going through any borders via any major roads. I figured it would be a desolate ride but a little difficult to maneuver through.

They're on the move. Driver: David Strattman age: 28 no priors.

Man. How did it come to this?
The terrorist attack on December 2nd, 2023 initiated the US Congress' 2nd National Security Imperative which allowed local police departments to hire people under the age of 18 to prevent terrorism. Since then, the police departments all used under age detectives called “Junior Detectives” to catch stores selling cigarettes to minors or sometimes to catch drug dealers dealing to minors (since dealing to a minor drew a lengthier sentence). At times, fake ID's would be made up so that the Junior Detectives could get into age restrictive places for a bust.
Dave and I were 21 years old living in New Jersey, going to Princeton University and we used to go out to local bars to meet girls almost every night. One night Dave and I walked into our usual Thursday night bar (in the basement of a Days Inn), when we both noticed an unusually attractive woman at the bar. She was hispanic with long flowing dark hair, long legs wearing black tights that show how the inner thighs curve inward toward the hips and allow the butt to stick out and a loose fitting top that suggests a level of modesty to counter the pants. She stunned both of us.
Dave went up to her and said, “Hey, can I buy you a drink?” Dave was better with the ladies so it was only natural that he would talk to her. Besides, I always got shy around women anyway.
She looked him up and down and said, “Sure. But who's your friend?”
Dave looked over at me to make sure she was really talking about me and not some other guy, and sure enough, she was. Bewildered he walked over to me and said, “Bro, she wants to talk to you”.
At first I wasn't going to talk to her. I mean, she was way out of my league. She had dark lipstick on thick lips and an attitude that gave the impression that she knew what she was doing and was completely comfortable doing it. I couldn't talk with her. I had no clue what I was doing, and was entirely too uncomfortable doing it. Besides, if she already turned Dave down, what chances did I have?
Dave called me a pussy enough times to motivate any man, so I got up, took the shot of Jack Daniels that I had been nursing and walked over to her.
“Uh, hi. My name's Jeremy, uh... So what do you do?”
She chuckled and said, “I'm Karina. Why are you so nervous? You're too cute to be nervous.” Then she shot me the cutest smile with her head cocked slightly to the side while her eyes looked slightly down and curled her hair in her finger. She nudged the bar stool next to her with her foot, beckoning me to sit while staring at me with her big brown eyes. She could have done anything to me at that moment, I was smitten.
We stayed at the bar and had a few more drinks. I never really got over the nervousness, but the alcohol made me not care as much about it. Usually if Dave didn't find a woman to have sex with within the first hour at a bar, we'd go to another one until he found one, but this time was different. Dave was having enough fun watching me with a woman for a change. He had the look of a man watching NASCAR just waiting for a crash, which did nothing to raise my confidence. To our surprise, a few hours later, Karina wanted to go back to my dorm. I was too drunk to drive, so Dave drove us back to the dorms.
I had only been with one other woman at that point, and she was a girl I dated for five years, so needless to say, I was very inexperienced in the art of wooing women. As luck would have it, Karina was an Undercover Junior Detective working on catching sexual predators.
I was arrested and imprisoned without a trial because sex crimes were deemed to be too immoral and no longer needed trials for convictions. Four and a half years later, I was let out of sing sing without anywhere to go. Princeton wouldn't accept me back, and no other schools were accepting sex offenders. Even if they were accepting, getting to school would be a near impossibility, and my family wanted nothing to do with me.

110901 approaching 523.

We're slowing down. That means that we're either close to the border, or we're getting into some traffic around midnight. If it's traffic, that can only mean one thing; Checkpoint. They'd search every car for illicit substances, criminals, illegal aliens, weapons or subversive materials which would end up with me going back to prison.
Ugh, just the thought of going back to prison scares the crap out of me. It's not so easy for a sex offender in prison. They, like everybody else, don't want to hear your story. They just see another reason to screw somebody over and seem justified in doing so.
The muffled sound of, “Just give me your fucking papers sir!” brings me back to the present. I can feel Dave rustling around for his documents. “A few seconds later the car starts to move.
“Hey Jer, come up here bro, we're past the Oregon border.”
I release the back seat with the latch inside the trunk and crawl up to the front. “I almost pooped myself when I heard that cop. How close was that?”
“Way too close for me. Hey, if I have to, I'll tell them that you kidnapped me and forced me to do this. I'm not going to prison for you bro.”
His blunt approach is a little bit shocking but I don't blame him, “I get it. Don't worry. I'll even play along.” Just because my life sucks doesn’t mean his has to. He looks a little more assured now, but I can tell the consequences are still boiling around in his head.
Dave looks around from mirror to mirror frantically. I ask, “Are you ok?” as I turn around to see what he's looking at. The only thing I can see is a cloud of dust.
“There's a trail of dust behind us that we're not making.”
“Are you sure? Where is it?”
“Yes I'm fucking sure. It's to the left. Fuck! There's a fucking SUV. It's the cops, I'm sure of it.” The sound of the engine changes from a low rumble to a high pitched chainsaw like sound. He didn't take the restrictor chip out so if the cops chasing us want to catch us, they're not gonna have to do much in the way of extreme driving.
Looking around for something to separate us from the cops in a desert is kind-of like looking for a black hair on black sheets. But I finally find a miniature ridge that we could jump over. It probably wouldn't stop the SUVs, but it would slow them down at least, or maybe just mess up their suspension. We’re in an H2, we can handle it but I don’t know if their Suburban can. “Over there! Go over there!” And for once, he obeyed without question.
“Stop your vehicle or you will be killed!” the cops must have figured out what we're up to.
I look at Dave. He's freaking out. “Just keep on going, there's no way they're getting over that ridge. It's gotta be like 12 feet high and they don't have the center of gravity that we've got.” Really it seems more like six feet which they can easily make, but I figured telling him the truth would just scare him more.
The ledge is coming up faster than expected. Rocks are smacking the sides and undercarriage of the Hummer as we tunnel onward toward the mini cliff. The police are gaining on us considerably but if we can make it to this cliff, they'll probably slow down to see if there's another way down. I hope.
“Pull the vehicle over or we will fire!” A stream of bullets tear through the rear passenger side door and one smashes the window above.
Dave mumbles, “Why do they even say that shit if they're already firing at us?” As if on cue right as he said “us” a bullet shattered the rear view window. We're only a couple hundred feet away now.
Another burst of machine gun fire rips through the side door and pops the rear passenger side tire. If we try to stop now we'll end up sliding off the cliff. I can see Dave already thought about that and is committing to the original plan.
A few seconds later and we're in the air. The back tire is flopping around with every revolution of the wheel. I can hear the tire coming off the wheel with every turn. We’re not going to make it too far on this busted wheel. We're going to have to stop to change the tire once we land and get away from these cops.
I turned around to look behind us and I could see the SUV slowing down and a man hanging out the passenger side window holding an Uzi submachine gun aimed at me. “Shit!” I turn around and try to hunker down to make as small of a target as possible.
“WOOOO HOOO!” comes from the driver’s seat as we are shuttled through the air and bullets tear through the back seat of the car. How the fuck can he be enjoying this?
The front tires hit ground and my legs smack against the floor of the car. Pain shoots up the side of my left leg. I look down to see that my leg is covered in blood starting from my upper calf. I've been shot.

110901 is clear.

“You’re one crazy fuck, you know that, Dave?”
“Haha, yea, I get carried away sometimes. What did I say though? I got yo back dude!”
“That’s true, but we should probably get out and change the tire soon”
“No. We're only about a mile away from your camp. Let’s just get this done, huh?”
He just doesn't want to get caught. I am perfectly ok with that. “You think we'll make it to the camp on this busted tire?”
“I'll probably have to get a new wheel later, but we'll get you there.”

110901 at final checkpoint.

Dave stops the car, looks over to me and says, “Alright man, this is as far as I go. Your camp is right over there.” He points to the west where something that looks like a fort is clearly visible.
I respond with, “Yea, thanks again. Well, I guess this is it, huh? It was nice knowing you.” I get out of the car and make my way toward a new life. The compound looks like it's only about a hundred meters away.

110901 is gone. Pick up Strattman.

I get to the compound, the doors opened welcoming me to my new home. As I walk up to the doors I notice the armed guards on the roof around the complex. A necessary evil, I assume, after all, they do need to keep this place safe from any non-residents.
Within the doors, the entire place is dark. The smell of bleach fills my nostrils. Too dark to tell whether or not there's anyone inside, also for security. Once I get about four feet inside the building the large hanger-like doors start to close but they lights don't turn on. They lock with a sound only heavy steel on steel can make. Man this place is a fortress. The lights turn on and immediately I see in four foot red letters above a man in a blue uniform with an all to familiar patch on his shoulder, written the words, “Work Liberates The Soul”.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

My America


My America

Just as a bully clenching at the sight
of a smaller being trembling in fear,
our altruism - just veneer
under which our swagger appears.

Senseless brutality has ruled the past.
Needless crimes to prove one's right
to lead society from the plight
of darkness he bestows, into the light.

Guised with defense or benefaction
the murderous toll climbs up the vast
victorious cliff toward soldiers amassed
realizing their role has been miscast.

Oh America! When will you learn?
Your wars and butchery, no honor will earn.

War Torn


 Termites infest my ever burning legs.
Ground pounds feet like sledge hammers to walls.

Trek down desert streets; Crumbling floors
piled like junked cars, sandy and undermined.
Walls speckled with dents, their reminder
Of our gracious meat hammer of love

Vest tears down between the shoulders.
A shrug to reposition the physical burden.
Only youthful aggression drives me onward
no longer playing Cowboys and Indians.

Pop pop pop.
Reflexively drop.
Rock pebbles
stab elbows.

Focus on the prey
Heart racing
Birds fleeing
Yelling in the distance

A wall splinters just a tree
under a woodpecker's assault.
A child's insistent pestering
to say “hello” and run.

Pull an explosive
Tube from it’s case
load the cartridge
Aim to perfection

The weight of prior engagements
Lowers the barrel considerably

Finger hesitates
For just a second
pull the metal blade
With a click, it’s done.

Keep both eyes open -
Fight the subconscious attempt
to disconnect the effect and cause.

Where is it?
The flying golden grenade
Hidden with the bright sun.

Pulse throbs against my neck guard
With vision closing in perfect sync.

Panic set in.

 Where the fuck is it?!

There it is.
Too shallow,
thank god.

Aggressively shout,
“Get some!”
Friends cheer.
Reload.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Freedom and Reason: The Case For Drugs

Freedom and Reason: The Case For Drugs
    Today, as per MSNBC one out of every 31 adult residents in The United States of America are in some stage of the prison system (Associated Press. 1 in 31). The U.S. population is approximately five percent of the global population, yet a survey done by the British government shows that we house one in four prisoners worldwide (Walmsley, World Population List). For a nation that thinks of itself as "the land of the free", we sure do use our prisons a lot. What has happened to our once "free" land? Why do some Americans see prison sentences as a cure for social differences? Our legal statutes are filled to the brim with pointless laws, that when analyzed, actually hurt us rather than help us. Do we really care if a person that we will never see uses illegal substances? Laws such as the ones restricting narcotics use are the reason we have become a prison society. Recreational drug use should be legal.
    If we still want to call this country "the land of the free" then we need to realize what it means to be free. The freedom for which our nation's founders fought refers to freedom of choice. How can we say that we are free if there are laws needlessly restricting the choices we make? The only reasonable excuse for restricting a person's freedoms in an otherwise free society is if by not restricting that one person's freedom more freedoms are restricted. For instance, if one person's drug habit were to restrict another's freedom of choice, then drug laws would be somewhat founded. The only "freedoms" that are restricted by the use of narcotics are either not relieved by drug laws or are actually not freedoms at all. Nearly every president since Reagan has used "freedom from drugs" to advance the war-on-drugs. They sold the illusion of narcotics robbing us of our "freedom from drugs," but even if that were achievable, do we really have that right? A person suffering from arachnophobia clearly does not have the "freedom from spiders," so why do we assume that people have the right to freedom from drugs?
    We must realize that research into the effects of narcotics are one sided before we can analyze the freedoms that drug use supposedly restricts. The problem with this research is that only criminals were used as test subjects. Productive, responsible drug users tend to disguise their drug use rather than flaunt it for a survey or some other form of research. The only willing research participants are usually criminals in some stage of the prison system seeking the benefits of cooperation. It stands to reason that any research derived solely from criminals would show a link to crime.
    Furthermore, what incentive do these researchers have to discredit the link between drugs and crime? If there is no link, drug research ceases to be a hot topic and would inevitably lose funding. Downsizing would be the eventual precursor to the elimination of the drug research program. Every drug researcher has a motive to keep drugs interesting and dangerous.
    Even though the available research is biased, some research suggests that illicit substances do not make a person more violent. After studying the criminal records of over one thousand addicts in the Chicago area, Bingham Dai (a drug/crime researcher), found that the vast majority of crimes committed by drug users, other than narcotics law offenses, were peaceful property crimes (Goldstein, Drug Crime Nexus 5). More purposeless violent crimes would be committed by drug users if drugs made people violent. The fact that most drug using criminals and nearly all non-criminal drug users tend to avoid violence means that violence is not directly related to drug use.
    There is sociological proof that drug laws actually create violence rather than deter violence. Because drugs are illegal if a drug dealer gets robbed, he cannot follow the same procedure a store clerk would follow after being robbed. The store clerk can call the police, file a report and wait for the insurance company to compensate the loss monetarily. A drug dealer does not have these resources. When a person gets into the drug dealing business, that person does so realizing violence is the only effective theft deterrent. Gangs excel in drug sales because they have more muscle and violence behind their salesmen. Competition and thieves alike find themselves up against a large number of violent criminals willing to kill for anything as small as reputation. When a gang grows and begins to intrude into another gang's territory, those two gangs usually begin a bloody turf war with many non-partisan casualties. Violence infects every area of the drug world because the drug world is forcefully incorporated into the world of crime.
    Adding to the systemic violence of the black market, we let violent criminals out of prison early to make room for non-violent narcotics law offenders. According to About.com there are currently federal prisons operating at 31 percent over capacity (Longley, U.S. Prison Population). To counter the gross overpopulation of our prisons, the Department of Corrections (DOC) has two choices. The first choice is to build a new prison facility, which according to DOC construction cost estimates, would cost approximately 90,000 dollars per cell for a metro single facility with 376 cells (Prison Construction cost). The alternative is to prematurely release prisoners who are nearing their release date. To counter this problem, Florida has recently adopted a policy that requires all prisoners to serve at least 80% of their respective sentences. Even with that limitation, violent criminals are still released prior to their release date to make room for non-violent criminals.
    Releasing violent criminals early is bad enough, but creating a violent criminal out of an ordinarily experimental child is far worse. Aside from the child abuse that we are responsible for, imprisoning youth creates adult criminals. The adolescent years are when most people learn to be adults. Most teenagers are deciding what career field to go into and generally issuing themselves into adulthood. A prisoner is far too preoccupied with his or her own safety to concentrate on career objectives. Everyday people get raped, murdered, beaten or abused in some other way in prison. The guards are far too outnumbered to do anything when a prisoner is attacked. Prisoners often resort to preemptively inflicting violence upon others as a defensive tactic. Even the toughest prisoners need gang protection because there is no hope for a prisoner who gets ambushed without a few allies. Then there is the matter of abuse from the guards. A guard can abuse an inmate without having to worry about the repercussions of his or her actions because if a prisoner tells somebody about his or her abuse, it comes down to the prisoner's credibility versus the guard's. Being figures of authority, abusive guards portray authority as abusive by nature. By the end of a two-year sentence, a child learns to hate authority for being cruel and learns to be preemptively violent. Aside from the valuable information picked up from the thieves in prison this child has not learned anything that could turn a once confused child into a productive adult member of society. To top it off, that child is now in a gang and is intimately familiar with the prison system. By sentencing children to prison for drugs we are creating violent criminals where there did not have to be any.
    Ultimately, we are trading a supposed danger for an all too real one. The supposed danger behind legalizing narcotics use could be easily avoided the same way we all avoid the angry drunk standing outside of a bar. It is usually very easy to notice when people are intoxicated, and it is easy to avoid them. The dangers brought about because of drug laws however, are not so easily avoided. Danger is threaded into the fabric of our society through the systemic nature of the illicit substance world, through the premature release of violent criminals, through child imprisonment and through gangs. Gangs are funded primarily through drug sales, and often use the murder of innocent people as an initiation process for new members. Clearly the theory of narcotics creating violence is not a well-founded reason to make drug use illegal.
    Maybe the criminalization of drug use has more to do with property crimes than violence. If the threat of thievery is enough to make drug use illegal, then drug laws should protect our money. How much would we expect to be stolen annually if narcotics were legal? Keep in mind, according to psychologist and drug researcher Dr. P.J. Goldstein, the majority of drug related economic compulsive crimes are committed in the perpetrators own neighborhood (Goldstein, Drug/Crime Nexus 5). So, if one is truly worried about being victimized by drug users, one should simply not associate with people who use drugs and not move into a neighborhood of drug users. Even so, let us assume that if drugs were legal Americans would have three billion dollars stolen annually due to drugs. According to The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University (CASA), between federal and state governments, $373.9 billion dollars (11.2% of the total $3.3 trillion budget) were spent on the war on drugs (CASA, Shoveling Up). That is over 100 times the amount we should be "saving" by having these drug laws. That is enough according to payscale.com, to pay for almost ten million teachers with over five years experience each (Middle School Teacher). With most of the states within the U.S. cutting multiple budgets including education, we really cannot afford to keep drugs illegal.
    Some people will say that drugs are dangerous and should be illegal. While drugs are dangerous, skydiving is also dangerous, but also legal. The important thing is how we deal with these dangers. When a person goes skydiving, that person must first go through an instructional course that explains the equipment, the physiology behind free fall from that altitude, and procedures that need to be taken during free fall. Once the class portion is completed satisfactorily, the amateur skydiver is only allowed to skydive tandem with an instructor. Since people are going to skydive no matter how dangerous it is, we teach people how to skydive as safely as possible. Only through this approach can we expect to reduce the risks of narcotics use. Classes on safe drug use cannot be truly effective in a society that punishes drug users. Even in places where safe drug use classes exist, potential patrons are skeptical of attending for fear of being under a legal microscope. Because of the laws restricting drug use, any American citizen that wants to experiment with drugs has to do so without any guidance as to how to do it safely.
    Quality control is another element missing from the black market. If drug sales are dependent on potency of the drugs being sold, it is in the dealers best interest to make his or her drugs seem as potent as possible. The most honest way of doing this is to research ways of increasing the potency of the drugs the dealer is selling. That can be quite expensive and really unattainable for most dealers. Most dealers who want to raise the potency of the drugs they sell resort to lacing the drugs with more powerful ones. Sometimes that means another illicit substance but most of the time that is not cost effective. The economical answer, disgusting as it may be, is rat poison. Nearly any drug can be laced with rat poison to give it a more potent feeling. If Jack Daniels whiskey blinded somebody because Jack Daniels Corp laced their alcohol with a dangerous chemical, the company would find itself in a lawsuit almost immediately. The same could be said about any legal substance. Companies generally prefer not being sued over being sued because getting sued costs a lot of money. Through legalization R&D becomes a far more cost effective way to increase product potency, thus increasing sales.
    Users of illicit substances are generally too wary of police intervention to call for an ambulance when a friend ingests poorly made narcotics. Involving the authorities seems out of the realm of possibility when paranoid from the drug's side effects. Rarely do cases of alcohol poisoning or the bends avoid the hospital. The problem is that we give people an incentive not to call an ambulance when there is a medical problem pertaining to narcotics. Drugs are illegal, and nobody wants to get caught doing something illegal, especially while intoxicated, so medical problems needlessly persist.
    Ultimately, is it the government's job to defend us from ourselves? Aside from the obvious totalitarianism this type of thinking creates, what makes the government enough of a subject matter expert in any field to be the ultimate decider on what is good and what is bad? Government officials like to think that the "best and brightest" work for the government, but that is simply not true. If we follow the rule of capitalism, people will for the most part, go wherever they get paid the most. The civilian sector has billionaires like Bill Gates, Steven Spielberg, etc., while Government salaries are notoriously low. The full benefit packages are usually the most enticing aspect of government employment, while money draws the best and brightest towards civilian entrepreneurship. Furthermore, the government is rampant with corruption. Every year politicians are found guilty of accepting bribes or some other form of corruption. How can we trust these people to assess what is good for us and what is bad while leaving their own interests out of the equation? The concept of the government defending us from ourselves is clearly not a logical one.
    The Bill of Rights was placed into the constitution as a countermeasure against this form of totalitarianism. The tenth amendment states, "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people." Since there is not a single mention of illicit substances anywhere in the constitution, the federal government does not have the authority to restrict the usage of said substances in any way. If the U.S. government decides that narcotics are to be federally banned, the Senate must amend the constitution like they did with the 18th amendment for prohibition. The fact that drug laws exist without any constitutional amendment is a scary but enlightening indication that our government is failing.
    Aside from the 10th amendment, our nation's Supreme Court has determined that any level of government restriction on what people do with their own bodies is unconstitutional. The constitution was intended to retain the rights of the people, not strip them away. Roe vs Wade was an abortion case fought in the early 1970's.The plaintiff was a woman by the name of Norma McCorvey who wanted to have an abortion but under the Texas state laws was not allowed one. She sued the state of Texas, and the case was appealed all the way to the United States Supreme Court. The Supreme Court decided that the state of Texas, or any other state did not have the right to restrict women from having abortions during the first trimester due to the ninth and fourteenth amendments to the constitution. Our nation's highest court decreed that one has the right to do as one wishes with regard to one's own body without government intervention. Why is there a separate set of standards when it comes to drug use?
    Children, however, do need to be protected from themselves because they do not have the ability to make rational decisions while weighting the consequences of those decisions. Laws against drugs seem to be having a reverse effect on children. According to a 2009 CASA survey of children ages 12-17, two thirds of high-school students report that drugs are available in their school (CASA, Attitudes Towards Substance Abuse). Perhaps it is time we adopt an anti teen substance abuse policy that works. According to a study done on teen smoking by the University of Michigan, teen smoking dropped from 13.6% to 12.6% between the years of 2008 to 2009 (Rabin, Teen Smoking). Clearly the teen smoking campaigns have found some success. Truth ads suffer from the common misconception that they are aimed at getting people to stop smoking when in fact, they are aimed at stopping children from ever starting. Trying to stop an addict is much harder than preventing someone from becoming an addict. Einstein once said, "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." After nearly 80 years of drug laws, is it not about time to try a new approach to the growing problem of teen drug use?
    “...all experience hath shewn (sic) that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable (sic) than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.” (U.S. Declaration of Independence). It seems that these brilliant men understood the true expansive nature of government. Simply growing accustomed to an evil does not make it any less evil. The fact is that ingesting illicit substances does not turn a good person into a bad person. Narcotics do not make a person hazardous to the point that we have no other recourse other than imprisonment. Laws restricting drug use are nothing more than superfluous legal padding that needlessly destroys lives.