Archive for category Consensual Crimes

Sprite Loves Gay Suicide Bukkake

When I first saw this commercial, I free-associated: “gay; suicide; bukkake”.

Exploding into other people in a burst of flavor? Commercials are depicting the exact drug experiences that prohibition attempts to prevent us from having. No wonder we’re getting mixed messages.

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Drug-related Hypocrisy (Or Not)

Someone, somewhere wrote:

I believe that informed adults should be allowed to inflict whatever suffering they wish on themselves.  But we are not entitled to harm other people.  I know people who drink fair-trade tea and coffee, shop locally and take cocaine at parties.  They are revolting hypocrites.  Every year cocaine causes some 20,000 deaths in Colombia and displaces several hundred thousand people from their homes.

I’d like to address the “revolting hypocrites” charge. Lemme ask you, if I drink fair-trade tea, but not coffee, am I a hypocrite? What about tea, coffee, but not chocolate? Where’s the line between “doing nothing” and “completely acting out your ideal in every aspect of your behavior” where I stop being a hypocrite? You can’t charge someone with being a hypocrite because they do some things, but not enough to suit you.

I see this a lot when people want to cut down someone else who’s trying to achieve some ideal. Somebody starts eating vegetarian most of the time, but every once in a while they eat meat. “Hypocrite. You say you care about the animals, but look at you.” Somebody buys a fuel efficient car because they want to reduce petroleum consumption, and the nay-sayers respond, “Big deal. You’re still killing the environment with all the other industrial processes that support your life.”

Tell you what: why don’t I just kill myself, and then I won’t do any harm to anybody anywhere. At least you won’t be able to accuse me of being a hypocrite anymore. The fact is that doing something is usually better than doing nothing, or at least not worse. Just because I don’t act out a given ideal 100% of the time doesn’t make me a hypocrite. It makes me a human, operating in complex and interconnected web of causalities.

Okay, you might say, the hypocrisy is because of the severe consequences of “cocaine”. If you claim to care enough to buy fair-trade coffee, shouldn’t you care about Colombian kids getting their arms cut off? But pointing that question at the drug consumer carries with it a moral judgment that consuming cocaine is wrong. Why aren’t we asking the prohibitionists, “If you care so much about life, why don’t you end prohibition?” The fact is that the prohibitionists can end almost all of the criminal enterprise around drug production and trafficking by ending prohibition. You don’t see kids getting their arms chopped off over tobacco or Prozac, do you?

Assume, if you will, that the choice to legally consume cocaine and the choice to prohibit it are morally balanced and you have to choose one of them based on the outcome. Assuming that you believe that taking cocaine is inherently harmful, the choice to take cocaine in the absence of a prohibition-induced criminal context harms only the consumer. The choice to prohibit cocaine induces the creation of a criminal market that harms, among others, innocent Colombians. Which choice is morally superior? Harming yourself or harming others?

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Military Tactics vs. Police Tactics In The “War On Drugs”

In a previous post, I discussed how the metaphorical “War on Drugs” has become deadly literal. I then discussed the case of Derek Copp, who was shot by police during a raid of his home when he moved his hand to shield his eyes from their flashlights. Derek’s case is hardly isolated. Any time armed people break into someone’s home unannounced, the chances of a casualty go up.

There are casualties on both sides. In the case of Kathryn Johnston, the mortality was the ninety-year-old homeowner, who probably thought she was being robbed when she fired at the people who were breaking in her metro-Atlanta door late at night. In the case of Ryan Frederick, the mortality was a police officer, and Ryan was convicted of manslaughter (although I’m not sure why shooting at someone who is breaking in your door in the middle of the night should be a crime).

Police argue that no-knock raids are necessary to prevent suspects from destroying evidence when they realize the cops are at the door, but I wonder whether other techniques could accomplish the same goals while reducing the likelihood of casualties. I read about a case (sorry, extensive googling failed to find the link) in which police knew that kids were in the home and so opted to make a traffic stop and arrest the suspect on the side of the road, in order to spare the kids the risk of an armed raid. The mom didn’t realize that the traffic stop was anything but routine until it was too late.

After reading about that case, I started to wonder why no-knock raids were the norm, when more subtle and creative techniques could be just as effective and safer for everyone involved. One obvious answer is that the police are operating with a fundamentally military mindset, and so they choose to confront the “enemy” with overwhelming force. Is this answer too simple? Is there more to the situation? Let me know in the comments.

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X-Factor’s Paris and statutory rape

Congratulations, judges, you have just committed statutory rape.

Okay, not literally. After all, a sixteen-year-old would still be underage for these judges, but not for a seventeen-year-old, who presumably wouldn’t be any better at judging age. It appears that they mistook a fourteen-year-old for a sixteen-year-old. They missed by as much as two years, which is the same difference as 16 to 18. This is after there were presumably producers checking the contestants to see if they met eligibility requirements. So the girl presumably showed fake ID, lied about her age, and fooled everybody at the show. Since no sex was involved, as long as the show performed due diligence, the’yd be off the hook because of her fraud.

Compare that to a situation that is exactly the same, except sex occurred. Sixteen-year-old female represents herself as eighteen, even shows ID to an adult, who proceeds to have sex with her. Welcome to jail time. And the sex offender registry for the rest of your life.

How does that make sense? Yes, it should be illegal for adults to have sex with children. No, it isn’t right to put people in jail and stigmatize them for the rest of their life when all they’ve done wrong is mis-judge a person’s age by two years.

If you think you’re any better, try guessing the age of these people from guessmyage.net:

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Well, did you screw any minors?

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Drug propaganda and swine flu

Sandro Galea is an epidemiologist who studies human behavior in public health emergencies. He’s the director of the Center for Global Health at the University of Michigan. He was recently interviewed on NPR about the public’s response to the recent media attention on swine flu. He said:

I think it’s pretty clear that a consistent, clear, but honest message about what is going on is essential. People realize that public officials may not know the answers to everything, but people react much better and have a much more predictable reactions when they know that they’re being told as much information as is available and that they are being given sound, sane advice. I think the one thing that we probably want to avoid is a cacophony of conflicting information from different sources, and possibly different information.

One of the problems with anti-drug propaganda is that it fails the test that Dr. Galea describes. The public does not believe that we are being told as much information as is available; we are being told often-exaggerated information about the harmful effects of drugs. We do not believe that we are being given sound, sane advice; we are being given hysterical propaganda. We are not receiving a “consistent, clear, but honest message about what is going on”; we are receiving a consistent, clear, message about what the producers of the propaganda would like for us to do.

This may be completely in line with the intentions of the drug-warriors.  The host’s question, after all, was what to do “if you’re trying to avoid panic, fear, or confusion,” and the goal of the drug-warriors is not to educate, but to create panic, fear, and confusion so as to influence people not to use any illegal drugs at all.

Which interaction would you prefer: one in which the person desires to give you as much information as possible so as to allow you to make a choice for yourself, or one in which the person desires to manipulate you into coming to the conclusion they desire?

You can hear the NPR interview with Dr. Galea at this link.

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