Yes Sir, Mr. Bogan, I agree that the "War On Drugs" is a failure. Lives have been lost and money wasted on an unbelievable scale. My concern is that this video, which appears to be marketed to a young demographic, carries with its primary message an undertone of irreverence and disregard for those laws one deems to be wrong-minded. The young and "unformed" in our culture have enough difficulties discerning right from wrong as it is. I would hope that we could teach them to obey all laws - even the ones with which they don't agree. Fight to change the law... but obey it until it is changed.
Well Mr Lawson, I intend to piss you off. (Let me first say welcome aboard and I hope you keep posting because its all in good fun here, but sir, I intend to rip you a new one. Purely for your own good dontcha know

).
Oh yes, back to my point, solicitude for the newbie aside.

I, much to your horror I presume, used to teach poli sci at the University of Texas. I taught intro to American and Texas government and Con Law. Essentially I was teaching the "young and uninformed". I taught them a lot of things, mostly facts that I hope they would remember, lessons about the founders and our philosophy of government which I pray they will remember, and then I taught them a few home truths about life. Among the latter, I stressed that the relationship between free citizens and the state and its agents, was one of master and servant. Its the same relationship that exists between a dictatorship and its subjects. The difference being that in a free republic we are the masters, and the state and its employees are our servants, not the other way around. I explained that the state didn't see it that way, and unless we reminded them of this they might get to taking our compliance for granted. They would forget that they were working for us, not the other way around. Therefore, I told my students, they should always insist on exercising their rights because rights, like muscles, disappear if not used.
So I told them that in dealing with officialdom it was always a good and proper thing to be polite and not to lose one's temper, as that would accomplish nothing. HOWEVER, I did stress that the most important words they could learn when dealing with the police were "No sir".
"May I search your car"?
"No Sir".
"May I come in"?
"No sir".
"Would you let me look around"?
"No sir".
If "no Sir" didn't work, I told them to use five more. "Do you have a warrant"?
Failing that they were to use the words "I want a lawyer" and say nothing more.
I guess the reason I am laying into you is that you sound like an authoritarian. Someone who thinks that we should just obey unless and until someone in authority says we don't have to. Me? I'm a libertarian, and quite frankly I don't understand that authoritarian attitude. I believe that all authority should be questioned, and obeyed only if it is necessary. Note, I'm not an anarchist, I do believe in the law. I just think that we should be teaching the young and impressionable to question as a first reflex and obey as a second one. What's going to chap your ass is that over my years at UT I used your tax dollars to teach that very Jeffersonian argument to a few thousand of your neighbor's kids. Upside is that they all knew that I was NRA.

FQ13 who again welcomes you aboard.