Freedom Solves Problems

Supporting freedom offers advantages that make it a wise policy choice.

The most obvious: it keeps people out of jail. If we can buy safe drugs legally, then the Mexican drug cartel suffers a disastrous defeat. The United States buyers stop sending millions of dollars to the violent groups that supply drugs north of the Mexican border. Since no good deed goes unpunished, Mexico will have to adjust to a major change in its economy and social organization. But even this problem has a sunny side. These adjustments will have an ending. The smuggling of drugs to the United States has no ending. Americans have made it crystal clear that they will use drugs no matter what laws politicians write. Bringing the law into alignment with human behavior is a basic benefit of freedom.

Instead of saying “No, don’t.” We say “Work with your doctor, and buy drugs made safe for users.” Making it legal brings tax revenue, another benefit of freedom, at a time when budget deficits present a seemingly insurmountable problem.

To make it obvious, freedom slams the Mexican drug smugglers, ends or dramatically reduces fentanyl use since the legal drugs will offer safety and a consistent high to consumers, allows doctors and patients to work harmoniously, and eliminates the threat of jail to the millions who have used illegal drugs.

One big policy change solves problems that are caused by the flawed policy of telling Americans they can’t use certain drugs when they have demonstrated they will use them no matter what public opinion, judges, police, and politicians say.

The justification for this dramatic change is written into the nation’s founding document: The Declaration of Independence. The men who told the monarch to get lost—so the United States could separate from England. They listed their grievances and specified a plan to make the United States a free country. One of their principles: governments are “instituted” to protect “the pursuit of happiness.” If there is one common theme to the reason why drugs are used it is, “It makes me feel happy.”

The simple truth: all the drugs can be used safely by adults, and in fact in the majority of cases drugs are used safely. Professor Carl Hart has “published numerous scientific and popular articles in the area of neuropsychopharmacology and is coauthor of the textbook Drugs, Society & Human Behavior (with Charles Ksir).” After a lifetime of study, he concluded that “recreational drugs can be used safely to enhance many vital human activities,” (Carl Hart. Drug Use for Grown-Ups: Chasing Liberty in the Land of Fear (p. 9)).

A major reason why we fear drugs: no freedom. Harsh laws have prevented users from discussing their pleasures with friends and neighbors, “Stop worrying. I’ve done it, and it caused no more problems than drink.” Hart offers a practical remedy. He wants drug users to come out of the closet and ignore the laws that force drug use into secret corners. It stops evil moralists from creating scary stories without fear of contradiction. Anyone who has worked for drug reform, realizes that policymakers and well-intentioned people falsely claim the illegal drugs have magical properties. Although merely chemicals, the peddlers of pathology state that illegal drugs overpower the human will, forcing people into a life of desperation.

In this way, millions who have used drugs silently acquiesce to those whose one-sided focus is exclusively and misleadingly on the problems caused by drugs, while ignoring their positive qualities. “Research shows repeatedly that such issues affect only 10 to 30 percent of those who use even the most stigmatized drugs,” (p. 11).

Professor Hart practices what he preaches. In his book, he cites his own experiences: “I am now entering my fifth year as a regular heroin user. I do not have a drug-use problem. Never have. Each day, I meet my parental, personal, and professional responsibilities. I pay my taxes, serve as a volunteer in my community on a regular basis, and contribute to the global community as an informed and engaged citizen. I am better for my drug use” (p. 14).

Freedom solves this problem, allowing truth to flourish. Drug users may freely speak of their own use of drugs and expose this truth to the light of day. Your friends and neighbors have used drugs and suffered no lasting harm. In fact, some of the happiest moments of their life are drug related.

Freedom lets truth flourish. It is the enemy of drug stigmatizers, which is often circulated even by fair-minded people like Senator Bernie Sanders, who accepts marijuana but damns harder drugs.

Today homosexuals are active players in government. Only rarely will we find a person who knows no one in the LGBTQ+ community. They became accepted as people learned their friends and neighbors were gay or had gay experiences. If we had freedom for drug users then we would know that they are responsible, average people like you and me. Freedom would stop the lies, allow truth to flourish.

A supermajor benefit of drug legalization is the defeat of racist practices. It stops the ugly record of arresting black and brown Americans in large numbers. Drug use no longer becomes a false explanation for poverty.

This change draws on the basic American principle: the pursuit of happiness.

I am still seeking an organizer who would bring life to the Freedom Democrats. At 83 and nearly blind, that person will not be me. I need help.

Please Help: Looking For An Organizer

The most urgent need is the search for who will leave their mark on history.

This blog calls for political change, dramatic change on behalf of the millions who do drugs, gamble, watch porn, accept LGBTQ+ people, buy and rent sex, and want to say, “Enough already; stop assuming we are weak, immoral, even sick. In fact, draw no conclusions about our character from the pleasures that we share.” The person who gets this message started will become a player in American politics.

They will be starting a new movement and helping to create a new organized force. This impact is built into the proposal. This blog explains some of the ramifications and this article explains why it’s a near certainty that we can do this.

We build our program from the text of the Declaration of Independence. A foundation of U.S. political history. This justification announces the importance of our ideas.

Freedom Democrats want a dramatic change that should be compared to the new moral truth vividly portrayed in the hymn “Amazing Grace”:

How sweet the sound,
  That saved a wretch; like me!
I once was lost, but now am found,
  Was blind, but now I see.

This new force spreads a new truth. All too often people who don’t like our habits damn us, turning us into wretches. The new view—“We are no longer blind.”—tells us we will stand tall and insist we are among the righteous.

“Amazing Grace” is history, a historic moment a gift bequeathed by the Age of Enlightenment: realizing that slavery was a horror and should be abolished. Freedom Democrats want to stop the pointing of fingers and silence the anger surrounding drug use, having sex for money, watching and performing in porn films etc. It will be our historic moment. Once we were blind but now we recognize the truth enshrined in the Declaration of Independence.

It declared that the newly united colonial governments are “instituted” to protect equality and secure the “pursuit of happiness.” It is a core right that cannot be taken away. It is a BIG DEAL.

Insisting on this right for the millions who enjoy “vices” will be an historic event. Winning elections is predictable, influencing elections is a sure thing. This is something the Freedom Democrats can promise. The new force will be players in American politics. Doing politics builds pride, it says I am just a citizen, equal to you. I am no sinner; I am no wretch. Our arguments encourage pride. The very act of speaking to friends and government officials is an act of pride. It is something to boast about. In this way, the new force will change the attitudes of its members. Showing a new world to America will foster pride, it worked for lesbians and gays and it will work for drug users. We are not strangers, we are not moral defectives, we just live different lives. Freedom Democrats will expand the live and let live view.

People who want to stop a habit will be able to do so with the same pride as a person who loses weight. This example is important because the people who condemn addiction, believing the illegal substances have magical powers, ignore this obvious truth. A common addiction is eating too much. Addiction is an all-too-common human condition.

We will have truth on our side and banish prejudice. If the LGBTQ+ community can do this, so can we.

Getting  high makes many feel better and stop pretending that these feelings are false. Professor Carl Hart makes this argument cogent in a few sentences:

Opioids are outstanding pleasure producers; I am now entering my fifth year as a regular heroin user. I do not have a drug-use problem. Never have. Each day, I meet my parental, personal, and professional responsibilities. I pay my taxes, serve as a volunteer in my community on a regular basis, and contribute to the global community as an informed and engaged citizen. I am better for my drug use.

(Hart, Carl. Drug Use for Grown-Ups: Chasing Liberty in the Land of Fear (p. 14))

Drug users are not the only group despised by a moral majority. Sex workers, gamblers, overeaters, the LGBTQ+ community, and porn watchers and performers are scorned. The test proposed by Professor Hart is worth emphasizing, “I do not have a drug-use problem. Never have. Each day, I meet my parental, personal, and professional responsibilities.” Professor Hart stresses that meeting responsibilities is an important test. Freedom comes with responsibilities. If a person meets their responsibilities, they are entitled to the pursuit of happiness. People who aren’t able to be functioning adults need help and are NOT moral defectives.

No judge should be able to tell somebody, “Get off drugs or stop renting your body, and then I will let you go.” Judges should have proof that the cause of their problem is tied to their habits before making that part of their sentence. It should be difficult for a judge to reach that conclusion because it is unlikely that a habit that offers pleasure or income is a bad thing.

This change will promote freedom and move the nation closer to the promises in the Declaration of Independence.

There must be a person who wants to start Freedom Democrats. I am 82, nearly blind, and clearly unable to be that person, but the articles in Legalize.blog explain how to start.

I will help. For example, I think that Stormy Daniels, whose testimony reflected the dignity that should be the right of every sex worker could possibly be an excellent leader. Reaching out to her would be the responsibility of the person I’m seeking.

It is a chance to make history and make the United States a better nation.