News (Media Awareness Project) - US: OPED: It's A Sin |
Title: | US: OPED: It's A Sin |
Published On: | 2000-01-09 |
Source: | Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 07:03:19 |
IT'S A SIN
But the question is: Should it be a crime?
We would be a happier people if we made more clear the distinction between
sin and crime. Sin is an offense against God. Crime is an offense against
man.
Most crimes are also sins, because God tends to judge our devotion to Him by
how we treat our fellow men. But relatively few sins are, or ought to be,
crimes. God will one day judge sinners in a court of His choosing. It smacks
of double jeopardy to punish sinners in temporal courts as well.
Our system of government is derived from the principles of Protestant
Christianity. Neither liberty nor democracy will survive for long if we
depart much further from them.
But liberty also is threatened when we rely upon coercion to promote moral
values, and we gain little from this effort. Laws against immorality tend to
be futile in the absence of a social consensus supporting morality, and
unnecessary if such a consensus exists.
If we criminalize only that conduct that harms others or threatens public
safety, we can create a social atmosphere in which tolerance can flourish.
Government would neither be shoving morality down the throats of some, or
offending the morality of others.
I am thinking here chiefly of the so-called "victimless crimes" of gambling,
prostitution and drug use. All three can accurately be described as
ubiquitous, despite a host of statutes against them. And we step into the
quicksand of hypocrisy when we attempt to enforce these laws.
Why are state lotteries - where the odds of winning are much less than at
nickel slots - "good," while casino gambling is "bad"?
What is the moral difference between the hooker on the corner flagging
motorists, and the pretty young thing who marries a rich old guy for his
money, or the executive who sleeps with her boss to get a promotion? And
which is the greater threat to public morals: a section in a city like
Hamburg's Reeperbahn where prostitution is legal? Or television sitcoms
which glorify loveless sex?
In spite of - in some respects because of - the unstinting efforts of
courageous law enforcement officials, the drug cartels are larger and more
diffuse than ever; more cocaine and heroin are entering the United States,
and marijuana has become our No. 1 cash crop.
All we have to show for our interminable "war on drugs" are some appalling
intrusions upon our civil liberties and the destabilization of several Latin
American countries.
We treat consumers of illegal drugs as if they were victims, and producers
and distributors as if they were the most heinous of criminals. But drugs do
such harm as they do only when they are ingested. If all people did was
carry lumps of cocaine around like pet rocks, no harm would be done. As it
is, most of the social harm we attribute to drugs is more a product of their
being illegal than of what people do under their influence.
Those who favor criminalizing sin say people need to be protected from
themselves. But there are all sorts of destructive behaviors - voting
Democratic, for instance - we would never dream of making illegal.
If we start criminalizing behaviors which are not in themselves threatening
to others, where do we stop? Some health nazis want to ban tobacco. Others
would prohibit SUVs, or the wearing of fur. There is no shortage of people
who want to tell others how to live.
Decriminalization of sin could lead to more effective social sanctions. It's
no business of the government if unmarried people - even unmarried people of
the same sex - wish to cohabit. But no apartment owner who believes such
behavior is immoral should be required to rent to them. We may decide it is
unsound public policy to imprison people who use drugs. But employers should
be permitted to express their disapproval in their hiring and promotion
policies.
The political scientist Harold Lasswell coined the terms "public order" and
"civic order" to distinguish between government and the web of private
decisions and voluntary associations that constitute the stuff of everyday
life. The public order is government. The civic order is family,
neighborhood, church, business enterprises and labor unions, professional
associations, civic groups.
The public order is the nation's club. But the civic order is the nation's
conscience. We must provide enough latitude for that conscience to operate.
But the question is: Should it be a crime?
We would be a happier people if we made more clear the distinction between
sin and crime. Sin is an offense against God. Crime is an offense against
man.
Most crimes are also sins, because God tends to judge our devotion to Him by
how we treat our fellow men. But relatively few sins are, or ought to be,
crimes. God will one day judge sinners in a court of His choosing. It smacks
of double jeopardy to punish sinners in temporal courts as well.
Our system of government is derived from the principles of Protestant
Christianity. Neither liberty nor democracy will survive for long if we
depart much further from them.
But liberty also is threatened when we rely upon coercion to promote moral
values, and we gain little from this effort. Laws against immorality tend to
be futile in the absence of a social consensus supporting morality, and
unnecessary if such a consensus exists.
If we criminalize only that conduct that harms others or threatens public
safety, we can create a social atmosphere in which tolerance can flourish.
Government would neither be shoving morality down the throats of some, or
offending the morality of others.
I am thinking here chiefly of the so-called "victimless crimes" of gambling,
prostitution and drug use. All three can accurately be described as
ubiquitous, despite a host of statutes against them. And we step into the
quicksand of hypocrisy when we attempt to enforce these laws.
Why are state lotteries - where the odds of winning are much less than at
nickel slots - "good," while casino gambling is "bad"?
What is the moral difference between the hooker on the corner flagging
motorists, and the pretty young thing who marries a rich old guy for his
money, or the executive who sleeps with her boss to get a promotion? And
which is the greater threat to public morals: a section in a city like
Hamburg's Reeperbahn where prostitution is legal? Or television sitcoms
which glorify loveless sex?
In spite of - in some respects because of - the unstinting efforts of
courageous law enforcement officials, the drug cartels are larger and more
diffuse than ever; more cocaine and heroin are entering the United States,
and marijuana has become our No. 1 cash crop.
All we have to show for our interminable "war on drugs" are some appalling
intrusions upon our civil liberties and the destabilization of several Latin
American countries.
We treat consumers of illegal drugs as if they were victims, and producers
and distributors as if they were the most heinous of criminals. But drugs do
such harm as they do only when they are ingested. If all people did was
carry lumps of cocaine around like pet rocks, no harm would be done. As it
is, most of the social harm we attribute to drugs is more a product of their
being illegal than of what people do under their influence.
Those who favor criminalizing sin say people need to be protected from
themselves. But there are all sorts of destructive behaviors - voting
Democratic, for instance - we would never dream of making illegal.
If we start criminalizing behaviors which are not in themselves threatening
to others, where do we stop? Some health nazis want to ban tobacco. Others
would prohibit SUVs, or the wearing of fur. There is no shortage of people
who want to tell others how to live.
Decriminalization of sin could lead to more effective social sanctions. It's
no business of the government if unmarried people - even unmarried people of
the same sex - wish to cohabit. But no apartment owner who believes such
behavior is immoral should be required to rent to them. We may decide it is
unsound public policy to imprison people who use drugs. But employers should
be permitted to express their disapproval in their hiring and promotion
policies.
The political scientist Harold Lasswell coined the terms "public order" and
"civic order" to distinguish between government and the web of private
decisions and voluntary associations that constitute the stuff of everyday
life. The public order is government. The civic order is family,
neighborhood, church, business enterprises and labor unions, professional
associations, civic groups.
The public order is the nation's club. But the civic order is the nation's
conscience. We must provide enough latitude for that conscience to operate.
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