EDITORIAL: Corrupting the Morals
of a Nation
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Feb. 18, 2000
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http://www.stopthedrugwar.org/wol/125.html#editorial
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Adam J. Smith, Associate Director, ajsmith@drcnet.org
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As the corruption scandal involving the Los Angeles police
department widens and deepens, it is essential that our leaders recognize
and confront the issue of our crumbling system of justice. That system,
and the institutions charged with maintaining it, must have the full confidence
of the citizenry if the rule of law is to be maintained. Placing
the integrity of the justice system at risk, especially at the
level of risk inherent in a policy of unenforceable prohibition, is nothing
less than a total abdication of responsibility on the part of our
legislators and executives.
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When the rule of law ceases to exist -- that is, when
the confidence of the public in the persons and the institutions charged
with enforcing the law and dispensing justice is shattered -- the government
itself becomes illegitimate. Where but to the rule of law can a nation
turn for order? Where but to the rule of law can a people turn for
assurance of the continuation of civil society? To which but the
institutions of the law can one generation point in teaching the next what
can be expected, and what will be expected of them as they move through
their lives?
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Do we overstate the case? Do we over-dramatize the
impact of the cancer that has metastasized in the LAPD? When sworn
officers of the law -- agents of the state -- frame the innocent, beat,
maim, and kill, steal, cheat, and lie, disregard the Constitutional
foundation of society -- can the root causes of the problem be responsibly
ignored? Are we to believe, blindly, that this scandal is in any
sense an isolated incident? Or would we be better served to view this as
a symptom of a
much more widespread and malignant disease -- one that we fail to ameliorate
at peril to the life of the republic?
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Early in the 20th century, alcohol prohibition, that so-called
noble experiment, had a similar corrupting influence on American law enforcement.
Payoffs, rip-offs and violence undermined public confidence in our institutions
of justice. In 1933, the 18th Amendment was repealed, a decision
not insignificantly informed by a growing intolerance of widespread corruption.
It was an unavoidable choice in that to further countenance the ills of
Prohibition would have likely done irreparable damage to the rule of law,
and society as a whole.
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Today, our own prohibition threatens -- in fact delivers
-- the same fate we tempted then. Is it time one must ask, for our
leaders to confront the folly of this second noble but ill-fated experiment?
Is it time to face the fact that to charge our institutions with this sisyphian
task, one whose absurdity is publicly underscored with every consensual
act of transfer or use of a banned substance, is to undermine their very
legitimacy? Is it time for our leaders to stand strong in the face
of all the moneyed interests -- both licit and illicit -- which profit
from this terrible game, and to call an end to the madness?
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It is time. It is past time. In fact, to do
otherwise would be to acquiesce to the dissolution of the rule of law and
thereby to the downfall of the legitimacy of the very government those
leaders represent. We have a word for such acts of acquiescence --
whether they are achieved by commission or by omission. We call it
treason. And if our leaders, elected and sworn to defend the
Constitution of these United States of America, fail to find the courage
to name and to oppose the most dangerous enemy of justice loose in the
land today -- Prohibition -- we will have no choice but to declare them
guilty of that most serious offense.