News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: PUB LTE: Fascist-Like Atrocity In War |
Title: | CN BC: PUB LTE: Fascist-Like Atrocity In War |
Published On: | 2002-07-17 |
Source: | Comox Valley Record (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-22 23:19:51 |
FASCIST-LIKE ATROCITY IN WAR
Sir,
Re: Substance abuse costs Valley $5 million a year, July 9.
The escalation of the so called 'War on Drugs' in North America in the last
30-years, with literally millions of innocent civilians thrown into
increasingly brutal gulags, is a fascist-like atrocity that reminds me of
the early stages of the Holocaust. Here's why.
Why else did Hitler embark upon a program (pogrom, if you will) to
persecute the Jews and other marginalized groups if it wasn't to distract
the population's attention from government failures in other areas while
giving the people a measure of vicarious pleasure in witnessing the
persecution of various disdained minorities?
The nation's media were co-oped, also, into encouraging negative feelings
about those being persecuted. Similarly, there can be no other rational
explanation for punishing people who use certain supposedly harmful drugs
while leaving alone those who use other harmful drugs except that it is a
bid to emulate Hitler's example and distract the population's attention
from government failures in other areas while giving the people a measure
of vicarious pleasure in witnessing the persecution of a disdained minority.
As was the case with the internment of Canadians of Japanese ancestry
during World War II, there is no need for government coercion to persuade
our media to encourage feelings of distaste and derision towards those
being persecuted. That said, I readily admit the Holocaust was much worse
than drug prohibition in that its innocent victims were slaughtered and not
just imprisoned or fined and also because it included children. However,
the Holocaust did not involve gas chambers at first so I am fearful that,
unless we put a stop to drug prohibition, it might soon begin to resemble
the later stages of the Holocaust as well as its beginning.
We must be vigilant, it seems to me, not only to prevent a repeat of the
Holocaust, but to put a stop to any government program that, even in small
ways, has points of similarity with that repugnant strategy. It is time to
end drug prohibition.
Alan Randell
Sir,
Re: Substance abuse costs Valley $5 million a year, July 9.
The escalation of the so called 'War on Drugs' in North America in the last
30-years, with literally millions of innocent civilians thrown into
increasingly brutal gulags, is a fascist-like atrocity that reminds me of
the early stages of the Holocaust. Here's why.
Why else did Hitler embark upon a program (pogrom, if you will) to
persecute the Jews and other marginalized groups if it wasn't to distract
the population's attention from government failures in other areas while
giving the people a measure of vicarious pleasure in witnessing the
persecution of various disdained minorities?
The nation's media were co-oped, also, into encouraging negative feelings
about those being persecuted. Similarly, there can be no other rational
explanation for punishing people who use certain supposedly harmful drugs
while leaving alone those who use other harmful drugs except that it is a
bid to emulate Hitler's example and distract the population's attention
from government failures in other areas while giving the people a measure
of vicarious pleasure in witnessing the persecution of a disdained minority.
As was the case with the internment of Canadians of Japanese ancestry
during World War II, there is no need for government coercion to persuade
our media to encourage feelings of distaste and derision towards those
being persecuted. That said, I readily admit the Holocaust was much worse
than drug prohibition in that its innocent victims were slaughtered and not
just imprisoned or fined and also because it included children. However,
the Holocaust did not involve gas chambers at first so I am fearful that,
unless we put a stop to drug prohibition, it might soon begin to resemble
the later stages of the Holocaust as well as its beginning.
We must be vigilant, it seems to me, not only to prevent a repeat of the
Holocaust, but to put a stop to any government program that, even in small
ways, has points of similarity with that repugnant strategy. It is time to
end drug prohibition.
Alan Randell
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