Pubdate: Tue, 24 Aug 1999 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 1999 The Denver Post Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Author: Ed Quillen, Special To The Denver Post PRIVATE FOR HIM? PRIVATE FOR US ALL August 24 - In a sensible polity, we would be counting our blessings that this is not a presidential election year. But in this Republic, pundits are already handicapping the 2000 race while the media insist that we care about what happened when a bunch of Iowa Republicans got together a while ago. One side effect of all this attention has been the questions about whether Texas Gov. George Walker Bush, the presumptive Republican candidate, has ever used cocaine. At first, I rather respected Bush's standard answer: "When I was young and foolish, I was young and foolish.'' The media questions persisted, rephrased and reiterated. Now we have been told that he could have passed an FBI White House security-clearance check at any time since 1974, whatever that means. What to make of all this? My initial theory was that it was merely a media contrivance to inject some controversy into an exceedingly tedious non-event. What's the point of being a big-time journalist who travels with the leading candidate for the most powerful secular office on earth, if there's no story and thus no front-page byline nor evening-news lead-in nor invitation to appear on a Sunday morning talk show which leads to extravagant lecture fees from people who will pay vast sums for the privilege of breathing the same air as a celebrity? And if there's nothing except the usual blather about "compassionate conservatism,'' then start asking questions until the candidate either contradicts something he said earlier, talks about something new, or erupts in anger. This kind of behavior goes a long way toward explaining why millions of Americans despise and distrust "the media,'' and I was working up a righteous anger myself. ED QUILLEN After all, it's none of my business what, if any, botanic by-products that someone may have sampled. So why do such questions and responses constitute "news''? Granted, it's August and the peak of the silly season, but still, can't they find any UFO abductions, self-proclaimed Saudi princesses or Elvis sightings? However, candidates for almost every political office in this country, from local school board to the presidency, generally claim that such matters are their business, that the presence of certain organic compounds in your bloodstream or mine is a matter of vital social concern. Only the Libertarians and the infrequent but sensible maverick say otherwise. The rest all call for more testing, more screening, more clandestine military action in Latin America, bigger prisons, longer sentences, more noknock raids, more searches, more civil asset forfeiture - in general, ever more vigorous pursuit of the War on Drugs. Bush has never criticized this war, except perhaps to insist that it be prosecuted more fervently, and as governor of Texas, he signed a bill that would send people to prison for possession of less than a gram of cocaine. And so, even if you or I or millions of Americans may believe that his past relationship with cocaine is a private matter, he obviously doesn't. If he truly thought it was a private matter, he'd have vetoed that law while dismantling the enforcement machinery of the state of Texas and ordering Texas Rangers to protect the privacy of Lone Star citizens from any federal incursions upon their civil rights and liberties. That hasn't happened. He's stuck between a rock and hard place. If it's a "private matter'' for him, then why isn't a private matter for the Texans whom he now send to prison as that state's chief law-enforcement officer? Since it's not a private matter for anyone who marshals public resources to delve into citizens' blood chemistry, then the public deserves an explanation. The explanation might go into some detail as to how he managed to escape the cocaine culture of the 1970s and become a productive citizen without going to prison, which is the recovery site now supported by most officeholders of either major party. If chain-gang servitude and anal rape are good therapy now, how did he manage without such intervention? He might also talk about how, even if the reporters are obnoxious with their questions, they aren't half as horrible as being confronted by an armed DEA investigator who will threaten to seize his home, car and bank account unless he can provide some names of people who might have bought, sold or provided a controlled substance. There's more he could say, of course, but the odds are that he's just hoping this will go away. I hope so, too. What about a truce. We citizens won't ask politicians what substances they may or may not have ingested, and in return, they (and their agents if they gain office) won't ask us citizens. Doesn't that sound sensible and fair all the way around? - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D