Get Rid of ALL Vice Laws!!!

{{BIG IRON – I dont’ think the spouse/child/parent/friend of a drug addict (or a gambling addict) would say that the only victims of these addictions are the uses/gamblers. When a person has an addiction that he or she will neglect family obligations, drain bank accounts, and perhaps even commit crimes to support, the victims are many. It’s like dropping a pebble into a pool – you can’t say that conequences are limited to the person with the habit. }}

Y’know, I considered that an then blew it off on the theory that negligence in parental and similar duties is a separate offense, regardless of the cause.

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“Vicimless” is a perfectly accurate word to describe these crimes, inasmuch as the only POSSIBLE victim is the criminal him/herself. And even then it’s somewhat rare for the criminal to be seriously harmed.

By your definition, then, is suicide a victimless crime? A “victim” in a broad sense is an invidiual who is adversely affected by a force or agent. In this sense, the crime itself is the force.

I can look for and post some statistics of lives ruined by these “victimless” crimes if you wish.

My earlier post was not intended to be construed as an argument against legalizing anything. It was simply to point out the misnomer of “victimless” crimes. >> Sly

Let’s put it this way – as they’re written they sure don’t require any victim.

There is, obviously, an extent to which society itself is the victim of certain crimes, insofar as a majority of citizens prefer that certain activities not be legal. You’ll note that in criminal cases like, say, murder, the case is not “the family of victim X vs, defendant Y”; it is “the people vs. defendant Y.”

If you want to change the laws, change the opinions of the people.

I cannot comment on gambling, I can go gamble if I want to, (which is very seldom) so for me that is not illegal. I still do not know where to stand on legalizing drugs, to be more specific using a slang term, weed. I agree with Egospark that if the government put a hefty sales tax on it, we could make a scratch on the deficit. But the downside is regulation… would you put up with someone smoking a joint during your dinner at your favorite restaurant? Not me. Or if they confine use to in the home, how would they enforce that effectively? There is a good side and a bad side… maybe they should legalize it in a county or a state and see how well it works first. Its sort of the same debate over prostitution… it is against the law to have sex without revealing you have AIDS, that is along the lines of giving someone a drink without telling them you poisoned it. Who would regulate and test the prostitutes and enforce that they be tested? Would they make legal “brothels” for you to go to? Would every prospective john have to be tested beforehand? Who knows exactly what would happen if these vices were made legal.

I’m realy not sure what planet some of you people live on, but first off, you seriously underestimate the size of the deficit. That scratch wouldn’t even be atom-sized. Christ, look at how heavily cigarettes are taxed, and how many people smoke, and that has no effect on the deficit at all. Especially since much of it is just channeled back through crop subsidies and insurance.

Second, you do all realize that taxing a activity heavily causes fewer people to participate, right? That’s the concept behind taxes some activities prohibitively, to the point where the cost outweighs any possible utility. So, such taxation would be counterproductive except in advancing the goal of lowering marijuana use.

Stoidela:

Can you please provide a cite for this? Have you ever seen or known a heroin addict?

Big Iron:

Well, first of all, an enormous number of people share this opinion. Including seemingly unlikely folk like William F. Buckley.

Secondly, the beauty of our democracy is that it is not designed to bend to the will of the people, but to make sure that we are free and equal under the law, whether “the people” like it or not. It is certainly imprefect in its application, but that was the original design.

It is my contention that vice laws fly in the face of our freedom by dictating to us what we can do in our private lives, by telling us that our private behavior, which hurts no one else, is a crime. And that is insane on the face of it, but even more insidiously, it gives the government a handy excuse for chipping away at our constituionally protected freedoms. And why this doesn’t bother more people is a constant source of wonder to me.

Neobican:

You speak as though the vice laws were in place everywhere. it’s no mystery what would happen if vice laws were disposed of. Prostitution is legal in most of Nevada and a number of other countries. What happens? Everybody is safer and healthier. Drugs are legal or very nearly in a number of other countries. What happens? Everybody is safer and happier. Gambling is legal to some extent in alot of states, but most completely in Nevada. What happens? Everybody except the casino owners is a little poorer.

PLDennison:

Absolutely, have you? (My little sister is a junkie.) And what is your point in asking?

As for the cite, I’ve read about it a number of times, but there was also a segment on 60 Minutes a year or two ago. Sorry I can’t be more specific, I didn’t expect to be debating it with you today.


Stoidela

Stoidela brings up a very important point that the current government is violating our freedoms. The one that really bothers me is property tax. Correct me if I am wrong, but the right to own property was a fundamental right. Yet I must pay taxes to the governmetn to keep my property. If I don’t they seize the property and auction it off. In essence, I am simply renting the government’s property from them.

The Government has overstepped its boundaries and eroded our individual freedoms. I do not use drugs, but let’s say I get accused of selling drugs and the government decides to prosecute. They can use this vice law to annex and keep my property…all of my property including cash assets.

When put together it starts to sound more like the aristocracy taking what they please. And we have gotten to this point because many voters have traded their freedoms for safety. Legal drugs may be less safe, but I will trade the safety for the freedom.

Maybe that is the fundamental debate. What is more important, a safe society, or a free one, or a reasonable compromise?

Thor:

I believe we have reached a point now where they dont’ even have to prosecute you, much less win. All they have to do is accuse you.

It a travesty, and I’m deeply disturbed.


Stoidela

Nope, 'twas me.

Appealing to authority isn’t going to convince anybody, and I question your use of the word “enormous.” If that many people felt that strongly about it, it would already be legal.

It is also designed to see that the greatest number of people get what they want. Obviously, the greatest number of people do not want legalized heroin use.

No, you are paying a premium to have the exclusive use of whatever you own, rather than anybody who wants to being able to use it at his or her whim. Being free to own property doesn’t mean the property is free.

pldennison said: “No, you are paying a premium to have the exclusive use of whatever you own, rather than anybody who wants to being able to use it at his or her whim. Being free to own property doesn’t mean the property is free”

So i am paying to use what I own so that other people can’t use it without my permission?

are you saying that if we don’t have a property tax that we will have to be a socialized country with no privite ownership of property where everyone has equal rights to all land? I don’t get the logic.

You are right about one thing, property is not free. I paid for it, I own it.
Two points:

  1. If I own it, and the tax is to ensure my exclusive rights to it that still does not explain how the government can annex my property for failure to pay the premium. If the premium (tax) buys me the right to exclusive use, tehn failure to pay should mean that I simply lose the right of exclusicve use, but still retain the property. “hey everybody, Thor didn’t pay his taxes so you can all go camp on his lawn and keep your beer in his fridge!”

  2. If I truly own something, it is mine…sort of the definition of “own.” I certainly own these clothes, I own my table saw, I own this pen. but I do not pay a tax that goes on ad infinitum for the right to use it without it being annexed. Now my car, I make payments on that. When I stop, they take it. That is a lease. When I have to pay someone to keep possession of what i have, that is rent, not ownership.

I know, I know, taxes cover roads and sidewalks and schools and so on. There are alternate taxing arrangements where we would not have our property taken from me for failure to pay my annual rent.

If the government can take it from me, it ain’t mine. It’s theirs. And this was what we hve a constitution to protect us from. Does anyone want the government to have the right to take their property?

In part. You are also paying for the roads that go to and from your home, and the infrastructure around it, and the police that protect it, and for some guys to take garbage away from it. In addition, the government has a legitimate right to continue to charge you for what, really, belongs to them.

Obviously, no.

In some socities, though, if I am bigger and better armed than you, I can simply take it away. Paying taxes helps to maintain a society in which this is not the case.

In 500 years, is anyone truly going to give a shit what you “owned”? It’s all temporary and conditional.

These are real basic civics concepts, here. Look up “excludable” and “nonexcludable.” Also think about the difference between consumer items and parcels of land.

This sounds to me like another person who wants to get without giving. You want to avoid that risk? Rent instead of owning.

It’s really theirs anyway.

They already can, according to the Constitution.

I am not trying to engage in a debate over metaphysical ownership: can one own land, can you truly own a tree?

I am not talking about other countries where “might makes right”

I am not talking about how much all of this will really matter in 500 years . Obviously it will not matter to you or I. (But maybe the Native Americans of today might have a few things to say about land rights over the past 200 years.)

Instead I am talking about the right of Americans to own private property vs the right of the government to annex it.

I see that it is your opinion that the governmnet owns it anyway and can take it at will. I would really like to see some quotes from the Constitution that support the logic underlying this conjecture.

As for taxes, there are many, many ways to tax the populace to support police, garbagemen, the senate, etc. you speak as if only property tax keeps us afloat. What about income tax, sales tax, automobile tax, etc? The fact that the state government can survive without a property tax is evidenced by teh survival of the states that currently do not have such a tax. Am I to believe that Montana has no police or garbage collection?

I will admit that I am unfamiliar with the term “excludable” as you apply it. Would you please supply a definition?

Quote:

“This sounds to me like another person who wants to get without giving. You want to avoid that risk? Rent instead of owning.”

This is a joke, right? Or is there some income tax exemption for renters?

STODEILA – Sorry it took me a couple of days to get back to this thread. I know about the convention in Butte because I live in Helena, sixty miles away. The controversy has not died down as far as I know; they’re having a forum on it next week – is your stepmother going? You said she’s already here – why? For the convention or does she live out here?

Back to the thread. My two cents is this: The people, through their duly elected representatives in legislatures, decide what behavior is legal and what is illegal. If we don’t like it, we need to persuade a sufficient number of our fellow men to get the laws changed – and good luck with that where legalizing drugs and prostitution is concerned. Personally, I don’t give the proverbial rat’s whether this stuff is legal or not; I don’t use drugs, I don’t patronize prostitutes, I don’t gamble (unless it’s legal) and I don’t cry over the “injustice” visited over those who do. As someone else said above, if you don’t like it, work to change it.

THOR – Surely you see the difference between taxing something and owning it? You pay taxes on your money and your car – does that mean that the government owns those things, too? Taxes are an obligation assessed on the public for payment of government services; in the case of property taxes, the property itself is the security for the obligation. In other words, if you don’t pay your taxes, they can take your property not because they own it but because you (at the point of seizure) owe them an amount of money equal to the value of the property (or a large percentage thereof).

The government has no more or less right to tax your property than it does to tax your income, which is also 100% yours and to which, in theory, they have no right. Except the courts have held repeatedly that they DO have that right. If you don’t accept that, I can put you in touch with a few wacko “freemen” out here who agree with you.

PLD:

Perhaps. I havent’ heard of any referendums on it. But here’s the important question: Why? Because the majority of people know heroin users? Because the majority of people have looked into it and recognized for themselves that the healthiest thing for our society is making criminals out of addicts? Or because the majority of people dont’ think about it much at all, have a knee-jerk reaction to the mere idea of drug addicts, and swallow whole the government supported hysteria about drug use?

Because the fact is that intelligent people without axes of any kind are more and more waking up tot he fact that the most damaging thing about drugs, to society as a whole, are the laws that make make them illegal and thereby turn otherwise perfectly law-abiding people into criminals because of a personal weakness that in no way affects society itself. People in a position to see firsthand the damage the LAWS, not the drugs, are doing: judges, prosecutors, cops, doctors, politicians.

So “the people” wanting to keep drugs illegal is not very persuasive, since “the people” are jsut reacting the way they’ve been trained.

Jodih:

Well, since she’s the one who is putting the whole thing together, she needs to be there! But she’s also thinking of moving permanently, she loves it there. And since the Dumas is going to be ISWFACE (International Sex Workers Foundation for Art, Culture and Education) headquarters, it makes sense for the president to be located there as well.

They plan to trun Butte into the next Aspen. Plans are big…

And as for being indifferent to vice laws because you dont’ participate? All the more reason you should care, since the criminal aspect that comes with these things is a direct result of their being illegal. Your life, health, and home would be alot safer without vice laws.


Stoidela

Butte the next Aspen!!! BWAHAHAHAH!!! I’m glad your step-mom likes it there; I think it’s a wretched place – economically depressed, dilapitated, big ugly mine, no culture . . . . The best thing about Butte is seeing it in the rear-view mirror. I know a lot of people really like it there (especially the natives), but I’m not one of them.

I’m interested in your assertion that legalizing vice crimes would make my life, health, and home a lot safer – I’m afraid I’m not following you there.

Well, she tells me that the skiing is fab, there are natural hot springs, you’ve got the historic downtown, etc. I haven’t seen it, so I don’t know, but she feels pretty good about it.

As for making your life, home, etc. safer? If all vice crimes were legalized, the rate of OTHER crimes would be significantly reduced. If drugs were cheap and available legally, you wouldn’t have the criminal element controlling it, and you wouldn’t have addicts forced to steal to support their wildly expensive habit.

We’d also have clean needles, which would drastically reduce disease. Some people might say “who cares? It’s just drug addicts getting sick!” But as we should all know by now, it’s not that simple. a junkie shares needles, gets hepatitis C, doesnt’ know it, gets clean, leads a better life, has sex with some nice person who has never done drugs in their life, gives it to them…etc. We know the story.

Take away the fear of prosecution, and addicts will come forward for the clean needles. They’ll even come forward for treatment.

Take only a small portion of the money now being spent on prosecution and punsihment and put it towards treatment and education, you help reduce the number of addicts overall.

If prostitution were legalized and regulated, you would have alot fewer streetwalkers (the form of prositution most people think of, though it is only a small portion) and the criminal pimps they hang out with. Also less disease, since prostitutes would be tested and licensed.

Bottom line is that vice crimes breed other crimes and other problems. If you take the “crim” out of “vice”, you take alot of the crime and problems with it. Not to mention having alot more money and manpower to deal with REAL crimes.

So society as a whole is safer, healthier, and better off.


Stoidela

Stoidela - Notwithstanding your other points, I still don’t buy the “safer without vice laws” argument. I do not necessarily believe that legalization will drive down the price of drugs, but even assuming a 50% decline, how would an addict be able to support a $250 a day habit as opposed to a $500 a day habit? People today commit crimes to obtain all manner of legal items, crimes to support a drug habit are the vast minority. Legalization of vice will also have no effect on the "criminal element. Most businesses that organized crime controls are legal - trucking, construction, garbage collection, and in Nevada, legalized gambling and prostitution. Don’t expect the criminals to go away just because you legalize the products. They just take those now legal profits and use them to further other illegal endevours.


The overwhelming majority of people have more than the average (mean) number of legs. – E. Grebenik

I was only skimming, so this may or may not be relative to the subject at hand, but if I may…

I’m going to paraphrase Gov. Jesse Ventura from an interview I saw on CNN a few weeks back. He has a really good idea (to me, who really knows jack about politics) about eliminating the income tax and creating a nationwide 15% sales tax. In doing this, the government would receive monies from drug and prostitution transactions. The interviewer stated that he would worry about an increased number of people using drugs and calling on the services of prostitutes if such things were legalized and regulated, to which the governor answered (something to the effect of)“If drugs are legal, are you going to go out and buy some? If prostitution is legal, are you going to go out and get yourself a hooker? I don’t think you will, I don’t think a lot of people will, but the people who do can do so without fear of fine or imprisonment.” (Remember I’m paraphrasing) Anyway, I thought he was brilliant.

Of course there would have to be mandatory routine testing for the prostitutes, just as there is for medical people. And of course there would have to be laws stating that a prostitute must be able to prove his/her majority age, all methods of birth and disease control must be used at all times, and a clean bill of health must be immediately produced on demand. Yes, Neo dear, there would probably have to be a “brothel”, and a “john” would most likely have to also be able to produce a clean bill of health and probably pay a membership fee or something to that effect. I’m reasonably certain that all the fun and excitement of anonimity would be taken away, but hey, it’s still a consensual thing, and if a person wants to pay to have sex with someone, or if a person wants to get paid to have sex, so what?

Regarding legalizing drug use, it should be much like tobacco use now and at least have a stipulation that you must be 18 to purchase and use. As far as public smoking of marijuana, it’s likely that there would be certain places (see: hash bars) where one would have to go if they felt the need to be smoking pot in public, otherwise, home would be the only place such things are allowed. IMHO, I don’t think there should be any public place designated for the usage of drugs other than pot; heroin, crack and the like should be confined to a person’s home only. And before someone gets started on me about this point, let me just say that if you are going to use drugs in your home, and you have children in your home, you’d better be wise and lock it up and store it up high where it can’t be seen or accidentally “found”.

Gambling? No major opinions, here. It’s the most “accepted” of the three and to be honest, I didn’t even know there was a law against it, considering all the casinos littered all over the country.

Note regarding drug usage: Granted, it is up to the person doing the drugs, but I would have to say here that I’m completely against using drugs if you are pregnant. At that point it is no longer your choice, it’s your baby’s life and that is probably the only major situation where drug use should be punishable by law, aside from the aforementioned purchase and use by a minor. Another sidebar: It should go without saying that sex and drug education for everyone should be mandatory. I’m rambling now, probably saying things that have been said before, but that’s only because I have a fat bankroll burning a hole in my pocket and I can’t decide whether I should hit the poker table, visit my favorite working girl, or score a bag first.

Heroin used to be legal, you know. Now it isn’t. You think there might be, oh, I don’t know, a reason why it isn’t? I mean, they made alcohol illegal, and in just about a decade, people decided that the social costs of easily-available and legal alcohol did not outweigh the benefits. They have not, though, been clamoring for legalized heroin. Do you suppose maybe society decided that the costs of legal heroin did outweigh the benefits? Or do you think you have some monopoly on truth?

Thor, I guess I can’t explain it the way I want to. Let’s look at it this way–first, we need to make a few assumptions:

–the Earth is made of land, and everyone we know lives on it,
–human beings prefer to organize, group and live in societies,
–living in societies confers some benefits but also requires some costs and compromises

Also, for the purposes of discussion, “excludable” means anything that other people are and can be prevented from using when you are using it; “non-excludable” means the opposite. Other people cannot use your shirt or your pen, but there are other shirts and pens that are for all practical purposes identical, and nobody can be prevented from buying one given that they have the money; your land, on the other hand, is unique, and once you own it, nobody else can.

Now, if we are going to gather in societies, we will want them to provide certain things for us, and those things cost money. And, it is assumed, those who choose to live in a certain society are going to take the responsibility to support that society financially, in order to gain those benefits.

The one certain way to assure that said support is provided is a tax–taking a certain percentage of each member’s income, or a portion of each transaction. Since everybody needs land for some purpose or another, taxing land is a way to collect that money. And, if you are a landowner and are unwilling to provide that support, you lose the right to own that piece of land. The tax is the ongoing price you pay to keep your land excludable.