Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jun 2006
Source: Smoky Mountain News (NC)
Copyright: 2006 Smoky Mountain News
Contact:  http://www.smokymountainnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2714
Author: Chris Cox
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

THE PRINCIPLE IS ALWAYS IMPORTANT

"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, 
papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, 
shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable 
cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing 
the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution guarantees Americans the 
right to privacy. It protects citizens from the government intruding 
upon that right without "probable cause." Americans like to say, 
although not as much as we used to, that we are all "innocent until 
proven guilty." It is a bedrock principle in our rule of law, and 
would presumably be near the top of any list of the central tenets 
defining what it means to be an American.

How, then, can we reconcile the Haywood County Board of Education's 
approval of a policy of random drug testing for student athletes with 
a strong belief in the "innocent until proven guilty" precept?

Random drug testing, by definition, is a means for these particular 
Americans to prove they are innocent. There is no probable cause.

No warrant.

If they are chosen and refuse to submit to the test, they fail 
automatically. In other words, they are presumed guilty.

Thus, our rule of law is inverted - Haywood County school athletes 
will be presumed guilty until proven innocent.

Yes, I know that the random drug testing will not be used on all 
students. It can't be. The Supreme Court, in ruling that random drug 
testing can be used in public schools at all, stopped short of 
allowing comprehensive testing, consenting that it would be a 
violation of the students' Fourth Amendment rights.

By limiting the testing to students who participate in athletics, the 
Court was able to "get around" the Fourth Amendment by saying, more 
or less, "Hey, you don't have to get tested.

You don't have to play sports."

I would argue that students should not have to shed their basic 
Constitutional rights because they choose to play sports.

I am a parent, and I would not be pleased if either of my children 
were forced to pee in a cup in order to satisfy the school's 
suspicion that they might be taking drugs. I was also once a high 
school athlete myself, and I would probably have quit the team before 
submitting to such a test myself, and I was not using drugs.

To me, the principle of the thing does matter, and that is what I 
find most disturbing about this entire issue - these days, anyone who 
speaks out on the principle of preserving basic Constitutional rights 
is usually seen as a liberal nutcase, a whiner, or an extremist.

Indeed, it seems almost MORE American these days to willingly 
surrender our civil liberties in the name of making ourselves safer - 
from drugs, from terrorists, from whatever.

I've heard more than one person say, "What do I care if they (the 
government) listen to my conversations, I've got nothing to hide." 
The same sort of comments are being made now by supporters of drug 
testing. "If you're not guilty, then you have no reason to worry 
about taking the test."

In addition to this objection on principle, I have to ask a simple - 
and I am sure to many a more practical - question: Does it work? I 
have yet to see a study that says it does, and I am aware of at least 
two major studies that say it doesn't. For one thing, although I am 
sure some tiny percentage of student-athletes may use or experiment 
with drugs, I cannot imagine that anyone anywhere believes that is 
where the real drug problem is - and those who DO use are probably 
knowledgeable enough to beat the test, or perhaps would even walk 
away from athletics rather than submit to the test, in which case the 
test is actually COUNTERPRODUCTIVE to the goal of reducing drug usage 
among students, since the likelihood of that student becoming a more 
frequent user of drugs has just multiplied. Something will fill the 
vacuum where athletics used to be, and it's a good bet that drugs may 
fill that emptiness. That is, after all, what drugs are for.

I sincerely do not believe that anyone on the board who voted for the 
policy - or anyone else who supports it - has anything but the very 
best intentions. The drug problem in our country is real, and must be 
taken seriously. In the 1980s, the Reagans launched the famous War on 
Drugs, which brought with it tougher laws, longer jail terms, and 
more resources to battle the drug scourge.

So did we win the war? Apparently not. When will we learn that the 
problem is cultural, and must ultimately be solved on a cultural level?

Random drug testing will not prove any more effective than the 
measures taken in the War on Drugs, but it will feel like we are 
doing something, and it will "validate" those who want to prove their 
innocence.

In the meantime, even as we face these challenges, we must also 
decide what kind of country we want to live in. The Fourth Amendment, 
"innocent until proven guilty" - are we really prepared to give these 
over in exchange for the illusion of greater security?
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman