LPM Online

January 19, 1999

Contents

  1. Upcoming Events
  2. Press Release: R. Friend for US Congress
  3. Drunk with Power

  1. Upcoming Events

    January 21, 1999 - 7:00 PM
    LPSC Business Meeting. Election of Officers. All Shiawassee County LP members are urged to attend. All others welcome, too.
    Location: Nancy's Family Restaruant, Durand
    Contact: Ben Steele III Phone: (517) 288-5616 E-mail: bsteele1@tir.com

    January 27, 1999 - 6:00 AM
    The January general meeting will be at Eastside Mario's which is on Southfield just north of 12 Mile. We'll be holding our Board member elections so if you want to help this is the time!
    Location: Eastside Mario's
    Contact: Lorna Tate Phone: (248) 588-6103 E-mail: LPOC2000@aol.com

    January 28, 1999 - 6:30 PM
    The Van Buren County Libertarian Party will host a special dinner meeting. This dinner meeting will take the place of our regular January meeting. Please contact Bill on or before Tuesday, January 26th if you plan to attend. All are welcome.
    Location: Home of John & Linda Cohen, 401 North Shore Dr., South Haven
    Contact: Bill Bradley Phone: (616) 637-4525 E-mail: bbradley@cybersol.com

    February 2, 1999 - 6:30 PM
    Monthly Meeting - LP of Wayne County. Dinner at 6:30pm, Program at 7:45pm. Featured Speaker: Laura Sager from Families Against Mandatory Minimums
    Location: La Trattoria Restaurant - Dearborn MI
    Contact: Joann Karpinski Phone: (313) 925-6917 E-mail: JMKLPW@aol.com

    February 10, 1999 - 6:00 PM
    Libertarians of Macomb County monthly meeting. Drinks and dinner at 6:00 PM, business begins at 7:00 PM.
    Location: USA Grill and Bar (810-775-2220), 27454 Gratiot Ave., Roseville (between I-696 and 12 Mile Rd.)
    Contact: Paul Soyk Phone: (810) 977-3523 E-mail: paulsoyk@flash.net

    February 13, 1999 - 7:00 PM
    The monthly meeting of the LP of MidWest Michigan will be held at the Kountry Kitchen. Guest Speaker TBA
    Location: Kountry Kitchen Restaurant, Cadillac
    Contact: John Willis Phone: (616) 775-0187 E-mail: adsman@netonecom.net

    March 2, 1999 - 6:30 PM
    Monthly Meeting - LP of Wayne County. Dinner at 6:3Opm, Program at 7:45pm Elect New Officers.
    Location: La Trattoria Restaurant - Dearborn MI
    Contact: Joann Karpinski Phone: (313) 925-6917 E-mail: Ben45@aol.com

    March 10, 1999 - 6:00 PM
    Libertarians of Macomb County monthly meeting. Drinks and dinner at 6:00 PM, business begins at 7:00 PM.
    Location: USA Grill and Bar (810-775-2220), 27454 Gratiot Ave., Roseville (between I-696 and 12 Mile Rd.)
    Contact: Paul Soyk Phone: (810) 977-3523 E-mail: paulsoyk@flash.net

    March 31, 1999 - 7:00 PM
    The MSU Libertarians are staging a "Second Amendment Awareness Day". This event will feature numerous speakers extolling the benefits of gun ownership and the importance of the free right to keep and bear arms. The speakers include prominent Michigan Libertarian Jon Coon, a state senator, Larry Pratt, President of Gun Owners of America, and possibly Charlton Heston, President of the NRA. (The NRA will send someone of equal magnitude such as Tom Selleck in the event that Mr. Heston is unavailable.) We have also attracted such high profile guests as John Engler, Michigan's governor.
    Location: MSU Auditorium, Michigan State University Campus, East Lansing
    Contact: Robb Zimmerman Phone: (517) 355-0388 E-mail: zimmer60@pilot.msu.edu

    April 14, 1999 - 6:00 PM
    Libertarians of Macomb County monthly meeting. Drinks and dinner at 6:00 PM, business begins at 7:00 PM.
    Location: USA Grill and Bar (810-775-2220), 27454 Gratiot Ave., Roseville (between I-696 and 12 Mile Rd.)
    Contact: Paul Soyk Phone: (810) 977-3523 E-mail: paulsoyk@flash.net

    More
    For more events, see the online calendar at:
    http://www.michiganlp.org/lpmonline/events.php

  2. Press Release: R. Friend for US Congress by Richard Friend

    R. Friend 2000	
    P.O. Box 611323
    Port Huron, MI  48061
    (810) 982-7178
    rfriend2000@advnet.net
    

    “Jail space is not the issue!” argues Richard Friend, Libertarian for U. S. Congress

    Port Huron, January 11, 1999:

    “Jail space would not be an issue if we would stop punishing consenting adults for engaging in consenting behaviors”, says Richard Friend, Libertarian for U.S. Congress. “We would have plenty of room if it were not for the fact that we are imprisoning more consenting adults than violent offenders. Well over half of those now in our county jails are there for some kind of non-violent drug related offense.”

    According to the 1993 U.S. Justice Department, Bureau of Justice Statistics, a person convicted of rape will spend on the average 5.2 years behind bars while someone convicted of LSD possession will serve an average of 10.1 years. This means that for every jail space used up by a drug user, one is no longer available for a violent offender. That implies that he or she will end up back on the streets to prey on us again.

    “It’s enough to wonder where our priorities are”, says R. Friend.

    Richard Friend ran under the Libertarian Party ticket for Michigan’s 10th District U.S. Congress in the 1998 election. He has already prepared for the year 2000 election by developing a campaign committee, raising $7,400.00 and speaking to as many people as possible.

    “Libertarians have routinely called for more jail space by leaving alone adults who engage in consenting behaviors.” says R. Friend. “The job of the government is not to police our personal lives but to protect our lives and property from those who would do harm to us. If you want the jail space you so desperately need, then it is time to adopt the Libertarian proposal of legalizing drugs.”

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  3. Drunk with Power by Tim O'Brien

    The following article is the latest in a series of Op-ed articles written by LPM Chair Tim O'Brien and submitted to news outlets across the state for publication. A version of this article was published in the January 14 Detroit News which can be read online at http://detnews.com/EDITPAGE/9901/14/column/column.htm

    In his final radio address of 1998 President Clinton called for new federal regulations requiring all fifty state governments to adopt a .08% blood-alcohol standard for drunk driving.

    Since the Tenth Amendment reserves jurisdiction in such matters to the individual states, the federal government itself cannot unilaterally impose the standard. However, the feds have found a nifty way around this constitutional inconvenience. They simply threaten to withhold federal highway funds from any state that doesn't go along.

    The potential of this little ploy was first realized in 1974 when in the throes of the putative "energy crisis" the U.S. Department of Transportation demanded that all states lower their freeway speed limit to 55 mph... or lose their federal highway money. One western state held out for awhile, but in the end all caved and complied.

    As with any extortion racket, capitulation inevitably brings new demands as often as the extortionist finds it in his interest or pleasure to make them. The "double nickel" was quickly followed by requirements to test auto emissions, raise the legal drinking age, mandate seatbelt use, register motor voters, etc., all backed up by the threat to not return federal gas tax money to any state that balked.

    The irony in all of this is that in defeating the "laboratories of democracy" concept upon which our republic was founded -- whereby as many as fifty different approaches to any problem may be tried -- we can easily end up with a bad solution universally imposed with no opportunity to measure its effectiveness against any other approaches.

    Like, for instance, lowering the blood-alcohol standard for drunk driving to .08%.

    In the first place it is well known that the most intractable part of the drunk driving problem is caused by individuals who at the time of arrest register far beyond even Michigan's current .10% standard -- often at twice this level, sometimes more.

    By way of comparison a woman of average body weight and metabolism can reach the .08% level after having two glasses of wine over a two hour dinner.

    Far from deterring drunk driving and raising awareness about the problem generally, this wholly unrealistic standard will more likely breed contempt for and disregard of the law by millions of average, otherwise law-abiding people.

    These facts have already been widely recognized. Just last year 23 states (including Michigan) considered lowering the legal drunk driving threshold precisely as President Clinton has threatened to mandate. After studying the proposal, all but one (not Michigan) decided against it.

    Now, arbitrary standards by definition cannot accurately reflect the real risk associated with different levels of alcohol consumption by different individuals. Inevitably, some will be unsafe drivers at blood-alcohol levels even below .08% while others will be perfectly competent at levels even above .10%.

    This is precisely because the potential impact on driving ability can only be approximately inferred from blood-alcohol level and extrapolated to the population as a whole. Actual, individual, driving performance is never measured.

    A far more effective solution to the problem would be to skip the indirect method of alcohol measurement entirely and instead directly test coordination, reaction time, and so forth.

    If the goal is to remove unsafe drivers, wouldn't it make more sense to test driving ability?

    In fact a device that does precisely this is already in use by doctors in evaluating whether certain recovering patients are able to safely get behind the wheel.

    Called the Proto-Clinic Glare Evaluation System it is a simulator that tests vision including color, glare coping ability and depth perception. A gas and brake pedal also measure coordination and reaction time.

    A less elaborate, more portable version of this device could easily evaluate any individual's driving competence in any situation in which a police officer has doubts.

    Though more effective, since it measures ability or lack thereof regardless of cause -- whether alcohol or other drugs, illness, fatigue or simple incompetence -- such an approach would undoubtedly encounter monumental political problems.

    Removing the relevance of the cause of impairment will deprive the morally self-righteous of their opportunity to "Tsk, Tsk" other people's lifestyles.

    Furthermore, it would likely result in the revoking of driving privileges for a large number of senior citizens who, though frequently a menace to navigation, are nearly all registered voters.

    As for President Clinton's threat to not return our federal gas tax money to us, the obvious answer to this is for Governor Engler to cite the Tenth Amendment ("The powers not delegated to the United States by the constitution...are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.") and simply impound the federal gas tax revenue before it ever leaves Michigan.

    Such a move would solve our road funding problems while simultaneously putting the feds back in their place.

    And as an added bonus it would also give all of the pundits who mischaracterized the recent House vote to impeach the president as a "constitutional crisis," the genuine article to talk about.

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