Secret Search for Drugs

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Fri, 16 Aug 2002 12:00:00 GMT
From my memory of a book I read in 1982:
Every cell is a sex cell. -- Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh (AKA Osho)

From Quotes of the Day:

"When buying and selling are controlled by legislation, the first things to be bought and sold are legislators." -- P.J. O'Rourke
and:
"If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt." -- Dean Martin

I sent my postcard to GW, yesterday morning at 8am, right when the post office opened. Did you send yours? If not, why not today?

The Give 'em L! discussion list, formerly at Yahoo, has moved to Topica. Give 'em L! [smith2004]

Candace Faber at Armed Females of America - Why Would You Ever Want To Shoot A Gun? - one woman's report on her first trip to the range. [firearmnews]

Returning to my questions of the other night, I remember the nightmares I had as a child. I never feared fire, or monsters, but my nightmares consisted of "bad people" breaking into our house and taking our things or hurting my family. As I shivered yet again at the thought of some physically strong and possibly armed man crawling through my beautiful little sister's window, I know why I would really want to shoot a gun. The vision of a world where arms are found only in the hands of criminals is incredibly frightening. In a world where short sighted individuals work day in and day out to restrict our rights and turn this ominous vision into reality, it is not just our individual freedoms that are at stake, but the entire American experience of liberty.

Paul Boutin at Wired - Disputed Air ID Law May Not Exist - apparently there still is no law that requires an ID to fly. Their are regulations that require airlines to ask for an ID and allow them to refuse transport if it is not presented, but no law requires the ID to fly. There are also regulations that require that airlines refuse to transport "any individual who does not consent to a search or inspection of his or her person." [wired]

Ben Shapiro at TownHall.com - Rachel Carson's deadly Summer - blames the banning of DDT, due to the publication of Ms. Carson's Silent Spring, for malaria deaths in the third world and West Nile Virus deaths here in the U.S. He may have a point about malaria. I wouldn't call a handful of West Nile Virus deaths a real problem in the U.S. From what I've heard, only people with weak immune systems even become symptomatic from it. Yes, their deaths are tragedies, but it's even a smaller problem that school shootings, which you shouls know that I believe are statistically insignificant. [trt-ny]

Until now, Third World deaths due to lack of DDT didn't affect us here at home. We could ban DDT and be fine -- our geography and affluence allowed us to easily use different pesticides. But with the outbreak of West Nile Virus on our shores, Rachel Carson's deadly work is finally beginning to hit home.

Garry Reed, The Loose Cannon Libertarian - Good Government: a Hit or a Myth? - explodes one clueless person's claim that two truths about government are actually myths.

Sunday is my day to knock back in the recline-o-matic, sip on a glass of sun tea, and lazily browse the local gazette. All was tranquil until I sipped and reclined my way to an editorial page offering by Neal Gabler (Senior Fellow at the Norman Lear Center at USC) entitled "Mr. Businessman goes to Washington."

That's when I nearly inhaled an ice cube.

There are two great myths about government, asserts the Senior Fellow. Myth one: government is inefficient, bloated and wasteful. Myth two: politicians are more interested in serving themselves than serving the good of the nation.

If these are myths, Hagar the Horrible must be a real live Viking knocked back in a recline-o-matic somewhere reading me.

Karen Bouffard at The Detroit News - Drug raid raises concerns - Detroit police are the first abusers of the USA PATRIOT act's secret search provision. Shoot 'em. [cures-not-wars]

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