Dear Abby:
My father is a businessman who travels.
Each time he returns from one of his trips,
his shoes and trousers
are covered with blood—but he never forgets to bring me a nice present;
Should I say something?
Signed, America.--Tony Hoagland, "Hard Rain"
Unless you count yourself among those who own stock in or are employed by the companies that federal, state, and local governments pay to fight the War on Drugs, -- in places such as Afghanistan -- you're a loser in that war.
"The war on drugs is really a war on people -- on anyone who uses or grows or makes or sells a forbidden drug."
--Ethan A. Nadelman, Drug Policy Alliance
What has the rest of America lost, aside from the tens of billions spent at all levels of government to fight the Drug War?
The approaching anniversary of Liberty for Utahns! inspires me to explain why I came up with the title for this blog that I did.
Doing so requires an exploration of some differences between both libertarianism and statism, and liberty and democracy.
If you glance at the upper-right section of the LPUtah's homepage, you will see a diamond-shaped graphic that contrasts not only left-liberals and right-conservatives, but libertarians and authoritarian-statists.
The position of these labels describes the degree of economic and personal freedom favored or disfavored by those who hold these political philosophies.