Pubdate: Sun, 14 Jan 2001 Source: Telegraph (NH) Copyright: 2001 Telegraph Publishing Company Contact: P.O. Box 1008, Nashua N.H. 03061 Website: http://www.nashuatelegraph.com Author: Jonathan Van Fleet ALCIERE BILLS TARGETED REPEAL OF DRINKING, DRUG-CONTROL LAWS NASHUA - Tom Alciere says he is not the cop-hater he was made out to be. His interests were varied, he said, and the bills he filed in the Legislature were proof of it. All along, he said, his intention as a lawmaker was to restore freedoms that he believed the government had taken from the people. Some people applauded him, but most reviled him for what he said on the Internet before he was elected. "They wanted to portray me as the bad guy," he said. Once he was elected, he wanted to get away from his old "jackass" self, he said, the one who wrote those things on the Internet. He wanted to do some good. Alciere said he considered going through every state law and filing a bill that would change what he considered to be unfair. When he realized that would be too big a job, he set out to file a handful of bills he believed would address some of the worst areas of state law. Among them were bills to repeal all drug-control laws and replace the public school system with computer-based Internet learning. He said he wanted to do the best he could to make all of his bills law, but he couldnít help it if "other representatives vote wrong." "It is my responsibility to do everything humanly possible to restore the rights of the people," he said. "I think what we have in society is many people trying to take liberties away from each other. It's hard to say why; they just do, and I see that as a trend." When he resigned he left his bills in the hands of state Rep. Gary Greenberg, R-Manchester, who promised to sponsor them. Greenberg said later he would oppose them and ask that they be killed without discussion. So it appears there will be no hearings, no debate and no votes on the bills Alciere hoped would restore liberty to the people. Specifically: - - He wanted to lift the drinking age restrictions. "The government has no right to set a drinking age," Alciere said. "Itís none of the government's business because it does not own the beer or the person buying it." The government does not have a right to make second-class citizens out of people who are under 21, he said, noting such laws breed contempt of the government and politicians. "Alcoholic beverages are not a big deal unless you put the label of forbidden fruit on them," Alciere said. "People enjoying liberty does not constitute any harm." - - He wanted to crack down on drunken drivers. "I have no sympathy for drunk drivers," he said. "They shouldn't be driving drunk" because that violates another person's right to drive on the road safely. He said fines, penalties and suspensions should be increased. And, yes, he knew the police would enforce that law. "I've known all along there is a particular role for them to enforce laws that don't violate other people's rights," Alciere said. - - He wanted to eliminate the requirement for students to attend school. Alciere said students could go if they wanted, but didn't have to be forced to go. It's their life, their liberty and their choice what they do with their time, he said. - - He wanted to set up a commission to study the zoning laws and make them simpler. "Zoning is an extremely expensive set of regulations that serve the rich at the expense of the poor," he said, noting zoning should be scaled back to minimum safety standards. He said rents would go down with less zoning. - - He proposed a pregnant refugee act. It would offer pregnant teens safe haven if they wanted to keep their babies and were expelled from home. He thought it could get support from both pro-life and pro-choice advocates because it enforced a young woman's right to choose to keep her baby despite the pressures from her parents. "It's a tactical way of cutting down some of these abortions," Alciere said. "This is an area that hasn't been addressed." - - He wanted to replace the public school system with online learning. He said it would scale back education costs and let students educate themselves "free from government bias." - - He wanted to repeal all drug-control statutes. He said the government has no right to dictate which drugs are legal and which ones are not. Besides, the war on drugs is a costly, miserable failure, he said. "The cost in terms of human misery and suffering is immeasurable," he said. Even though he is not a drug user, he said, he proposed that bill because, "If I don't stick up for the rights of other people, what happens when the government wants to trample my rights? Who will stick up for me?" - - And he wanted to end the involuntary incarceration of the mentally ill. He said the state license plate says it all: "Live free or die." "The government has no right to make mental illness a crime," he said. Alciere said he didn't hatch these ideas overnight. He said he had been thinking about them since he was a teen-ager. He figures it was then that he first wanted to be a politician. "I'm not an apathetic guy," he said. "I wanted to make a difference. I get angry when the government takes it upon itself to write away peoples freedoms." - --- MAP posted-by: Kirk Bauer