Pubdate: Thu, 23 Jun 2005 Source: News-Enterprise, The (KY) Copyright: 2005 News-Enterprise Contact: http://www.newsenterpriseonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1663 Author: Hank Stringer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) CONTROLLING THE CONTROLLED Pseudoephedrine cold medicines are now being controlled. And, "although the law may cause an inconvenience for law-abiding citizens . it is a big step forward in curbing the production of meth," Joel Thornbury said. The president of the Kentucky Pharmacists Association goes on to say, "And this is just the beginning . if it works, we may very well end up taking (the inconveniences) further." The national homeland security laws also are "inconveniences" to law-abiding citizens: keeping tabs on library and Internet usage among an abundance of other big brother monitoring. It is dangerous to use analogies of Hitler's early years as a comparison to ongoing American events, but how far are we - law-abiding citizens - prepared to be inconvenienced in order to feel secure? Hitler said the Jews had to be controlled; he said the gypsies had to be controlled; eventually, he said the law-abiding citizens that were not a part of the Nazi Party had to be controlled. I cannot drive my car unless I have papers - as the Nazi checkpoints would say: driver's license, proof of ownership and mandatory insurance . I cannot buy cold medicine without my papers: a properly recognized identification card . and international travel is another story. Laws and regulations make life a lot easier. Without laws and regulations (governmental controls) there is anarchy. But when free citizens are not concerned or involved in the processes of government, there is totalitarianism. Let the law-abiding citizens be just a little bit careful in how far they will allow statements like Thornbury's - "We may very well end up taking it (citizen controls) further" - to go. The president of the Kentucky Pharmacists Association may not be the president of the United States, or Congress, the U.S. Senate or the Supreme Court, but the statements are reflective of what those more powerful regulatory bodies are quite often saying. Do we really need to control the law-abiding in order to control the outlaw? Hank Stringer Cecilia - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin