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- Someone asked about what the jackbooter's letter that I quoted early
- was in reference to. It was an excellent editorial in Tucson's Arizona
- Daily Star of Nov. 28, and referred to a Gallup poll with particularly
- chilling results:
-
- Rights? What Rights?
-
- How the Constitution lost the War on Drugs
-
- Ask Americans what makes them so special and most will talk about liberty,
- freedom and a lot Bill of Rights stuff.
- Ask Arizonans to hand over one of those rights in the name of the War on
- Drugs, and most will say, "sure."
- A recent poll of Arizona employees found 95 percent favor some sort of
- workplace drug testing. Fifty-six percent support random drug testing of all
- employees, whether there was cause to suspect a problem or not.
- So much for the Fourth Amendment's guarantee against unreasonable searches
- and seizures. So much for the "right of the people to be secure in their
- persons."
- So much for common sense.
- Drug testing is a simplistic non-solution. It ignores the causes of illegal
- drug use. It treats a freedom-loving people like chattle. It is often
- inaccurate. It is an invasion of privacy.
- And it magnifies the problem all out of proportion. In 1985, say researchers
- at the University of California at San Francisco, alcohol abuse accounted for
- $27.4 billion in lost productivity; drug use accounted for $6 billion.
- In 1989, the National Institute on Drug Abuse reported that drug abuse had
- been declining for 10 years, most dramatically in the last five years. Severe
- problems do exist, especialy among unemployed, disenfranchised Americans who
- seek escape from their miserable lives in addiction. But these people are not
- the target of the frenzy to install an Office of Drug Testing in every
- workplace.
- Drug abuse on the job is a problem, and, depending on the type of job, it
- can be dangerous. But when a freedom-loving nation begins to mindlessly
- acquiesce to an erosion of its freedoms, that's a bigger problem.
- More and more private businesses are requiring drug tests. They are spurred
- on by the self-serving interests of those who make money selling drug tests.
- Together they, and the federal Captains of the Drug War, are whipping up the
- populace: Give us your privacy and we'll solve the drug problem.
- Private businesses may be within their legal rights to demand drug tests.
- But should Americans be bleating approval of this invasive approach? Shouldn't
- they be demanding better answers?
- They should be, but they aren't. The recent Gallup poll of 500 Arizona
- workers was comissioned by the Washington-based Institute for a Drug Free
- Workplace. The institute, representing businesses, is conducting 12 such polls
- around the nation. It won't be surprising if all show similar results. Previous
- polls have indicated support nationally for random drug testing.
- America says it's OK to strip away a few rights in the name of War on Drugs.
- Which suggests the freedom Americans love the most may be the freedom from
- thinking.
-
- -------
- Phew! and there you have it folks. We have a big job ahead of us...
-
- andrey
-
-