Simplify laws: No Victim, No Crime

in #philosophy7 years ago (edited)


We have a lot of laws in the United States. If you include the federal and state laws it is millions and growing at a rapid pace. The fact of the matter is each of them are primarily a way to limit freedom, not protect it.

In the U.S. we had a saying "Innocent until proven guilty"

This is still what the laws are supposed to be adhering to, but there are plenty of cases where they are not.

There are cases of innocent people doing long periods of time in a jail cell while they wait for their trial.

There are many cases of civil asset forfeiture where property, money, etc is seized by law enforcement because a crime may have been committed nearby. At least this type is primarily centered around the failed War on Drugs that they still are pursuing though it creates the black markets, and it fuels the crime, the asset forfeiture, etc.


Source: Rats in the Belfry

There is another sad thing. There are literally so many laws now that you are almost committing a crime by breathing. Yet, you wouldn't know this. Lack of knowledge about something being a crime in a court of law is not defense against prosecution. You are still considered a criminal. As to the breathing, had we gone along with the Paris Accords and pushed this Carbon Tax scheme on everyone then essentially you'd be getting fined and taxed regularly for breathing. If you didn't pay those then you would be committing a crime.

The laws are becoming so convoluted they naturally lay the groundwork for needing more and more lawyers and law makers. This means the people passing the massive amounts of laws are the ones insuring their job security. In other industries this would be considered a conflict of interest.

What if we could simplify this a lot?

What if we passed a bill that simply said "No victim, no crime?"

You would need to prove there was a victim before you could charge someone for a crime. This means you could smoke pot, heroin, or whatever. You could drive drunk. You could drink drano if you choose. A person cannot be considered a victim to themselves. That applies to other people. So what you do to your own body is up to you and you are also responsible for the consequences.

You may have been triggered by that "drunk driving" one in the middle there and I kind of threw that in there on purpose. You may be thinking how dangerous that is.


Source: Youtube

People do dangerous things on a regular basis. Until there is an actual victim we should not be using Pre-crime tactics and treating them as guilty of something they have not done. We should not be punishing them due to the actions of some other drunk driver.

Well how do you stop it?

There are already laws for property damage, murder, manslaughter, assault, etc.

Once there is a victim then apply the appropriate charge. There is no need to over complicate it by creating increasingly complex categorizations.

If you focus on the victim and what was done to them the actual laws required, and the reaction to them becomes a rather short list.

In fact it becomes simple enough that potentially anyone could know the laws. Uh oh, that might threaten the jobs of lawyers and law makers... We can't have that! (sarcasm)


Source: Soulation


Source: Justice for Jane Doe in Steubenville Rape Case

Now what is a victim?

That is worth defining. It should aim for simplicity. If simplicity is not the target then you provide another avenue for the law makers to start growing things like weeds again.



Let's take a weed whacker to the law... let's simplify it, make it something anyone can know and understand, and let's stop letting others dictate what you can and cannot do before there is a victim. If there are victims then we should be swift and just.

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it was a big surprise for me when I came to US what it something happened I would be guilty by default and it's my responsibility to hire a lawyer who would find evidences/alibey and defence me.

It's nonsense. In my country police investigated properly all things and only jury could make me guilty. I don't need to hire lawyer for investigation and collecting evidences. There is police responsibility to investigate the crime, but not a my lawyer

Yes in the U.S. though technically by our bill of rights and Constitution we are "Innocent until proven guilty" and we are required to be given "Due Process" those rights are frequently totally ignored. What is worse is attorneys being able to make these rules in the first place have made high demand for their services due to the legal maze they intentionally have completed, so many people cannot afford an attorney and the public defenders often can't do much of anything for you. It is highly corrupt, and a sham.

It's no longer "Innocent til proven guilty" It is now "Guilty until proven innocent" . The justice system is only to keep the crime competition lower than the main criminals so that only the Elite criminals can commit all the crimes they want. All politicians are criminals they all allow wars and killing innocent people around the world to say the least.

I also worry, because they start wars and kill innocent people on my money and they make me their partner in crime

I don't want buy weapon for, I don't want pay for those wars

That's a good idea. The only problem I see is with the implementation. The State's natural, most stable form is a big, high taxing, all regulating bureaucratic machine that forces some certain group's moral standards on everyone else. I think it is immoral, but is a highly stable form. They hold the force, the power, and can mess up with the incentives to keep things the way they want them to be. No amount of inside perturbation will take the State from this position. My belief is that the only way to fix it is to make a substitute from outside the State and enough people move to this new form of social organization, making the State unnecessary. Who knows, maybe bitcoin and steem are just the first steps towards this new thing that will take over the State :)

My belief is that the only way to fix it is to make a substitute from outside the State and enough people move to this new form of social organization, making the State unnecessary. Who knows, maybe bitcoin and steem are just the first steps towards this new thing that will take over the State :)

Exactly the plan I believe. One step at a time. Also need to make people wake up and see the truth and be willing to embrace freedom even with the dangers and risks that are a natural part of being free.

If by "Bitcoin" you mean it's technology then yes. The Blockchain and everything that can be done with it can decentralize many things and solve many problems. I may live to see a good change

It was @deadmosco that mentioned bitcoin. I do believe we can thanks to technology combined with blockchain and crowdsourcing initiatives handle and do a better job of the tasks currently "mishandled" by the government. It doesn't have to be bitcoin, in fact that one was simply first. I don't consider it the best by the long shot. It is just the most established. It currently is a currency only and we need to use the blockchain for a lot more things than currency if we are to replace government. It was a step in the right direction and it expanded the possibilities a great deal.

Over-criminalization is a huge problem and the topic in general ties in very well with your contribution on the prison-industrial complex and the use of prison (slave) labor in the U.S. For those who are interested, it can be found here.

An insidious aspect to this problem is that if someone in government with power wants somebody's life to be hell, there are countless ways to achieve that using laws or regulations, that is why it is called "throwing the book" at someone, because there is so much people don't know is illegal, it is possible to get anybody for something.

Nice to hear from you again. Thanks for linking to my post I did on prisons and slave labor. :)

Was traveling around for a few weeks and am catching up on my reading today and working on some posts I was jotting down in a notebook while I was away. Good to be back!

I see that you are knowledgeable about law from a voluntary perspective. I suppose you are familiar with the sovereign man/free man movement and the work of Dean Clifford? I recently stumbled upon an article about a man in Croatia who declared himself as a living man, and terminated the contract with the state of Croatia which in theory means that the law has no jurisdiction over him, but he is now experiencing problems and facing potential imprisonment for a traffic violation. I think he was done something wrong, but I don't know much about this topic, as I just know about the concept. Check it out, I would like to see your opinion.
https://steemit.com/anarchy/@drumsta/anarchist-from-croatia-unplugs-from-the-system-but-is-now-threaten-with-imprisonment-for-using-private-licence-plates-where-did

I've seen people TRY to do this in the U.S. too. The problem is the corrupt established system is still ACTIVE and all around us even if we say "No more". So we need to be smart about how we approach things and we can't realistically expect instantaneous change and acceptance.

Do you follow the work of Ken Cousins? In my mind he is the best when it comes to this. He established his own private society called Panterra D'oro.

No he does not sound familiar. I may have encountered him before, but I do not recognize him from the name.

I first saw the interview on Anarchast, and then watched all the clips on youtube. After that I checked out his gemstone university. Interesting stuff, and he sound like he knows his research. Check him out:

I will. Thanks. He might be someone new in these movements that I haven't encountered before.

Great video. Thanks, I had not encountered this guy before. I've encountered a lot of what he is speaking about before, and perhaps I was reading something he wrote years ago.

In my mind he is the one who went the furthest, but am not that conversant.

I see your logic, but contest, driving drunk does not kill people, but having control of a potentially deadly weapon without the proper faculties to wield it should not be acceptable. If someone is waving a loaded gun in a public square, unable to coherently define distances or cognitive motor skills, would you not rather they have there gun taken away then be given the opportunity to murder until the chamber empties. A driver who drifts into your lane at night, and ends your families life, or plows into a hydro pole and causes civic damages raising your taxes, These things, I believe, should be nipped in the bud, to make it unacceptable for people to endanger the life of others. If we all drove horse and buggies, I'd say hey, drive loaded. But no, we do 65mph in a ton of steel and fuel, passing within feet of other vehicles. There is not as much room for error as some would believe, and thousands of coroners and morticians would agree. I'm all for smoking pot casually when the work is done. If you can enjoy Heroin without it becoming an addiction which destroys you, you're welcome to it. But many (not all) laws are in place to serve and protect the people. And ones that are not following both of those objectives should be, and with reasonable governance would be, eradicated. Legalize pot and ban carrying weapons in public. The right to bear arms should be limited to how many you can safely lock up in one cabinet. The original rules were written so that the people would be armed against a despotic government, but unless America plans to set militias against its own highly trained and funded army, the reasons for them to store high powered automatic rifles. Cutting someone of in traffic should not result in a bullett through the head. But I'm off topic. Arrive alive, drive sober🖖🏽

All of those are slippery slope conditions. If a person is waving a gun there is nothing stopping people from trying to stop him. If he kills someone, harms someone, then throw the book at him.

If you start trying to DETER dangers based upon what MIGHT happen you create a slippery slope condition and precedent. This is used to create laws that strip away rights and punish people for things that MIGHT have occurred.

We must instead realize that REALITY has risks. Life has dangers. We will encounter dangers with or without these RULES that are imposed to stop things that MIGHT happen. Yet in the process we will also punish people who didn't do anything because something MIGHT have happened.

Are bad things going to happen some times? Yes. Guess what? Those bad things even happen WITH these laws. At least when you simplify them and punish people only for things that actually happen you are not punishing and restricting people for things they didn't do.

Life is risk. Being free is risky. Living in a bubble house with padded clothing, and safe from all danger is not truly being free.

Do bad things happen? Yes.

The difference also is that if something bad happens you throw the book at them and they are a pretty good deterant. I've known many alcoholics and have seen many drunk drivers in my life. The current laws are not much of a deterent at all. Friends stopping them seems to be the most common deterent. When they are caught the punishments are generally pretty minor unless they've done it many times, so they generally shrug those off as well.

Reality is we have created dangers much greater then nature ever intended. If we were to strip of these luxuries, then it would be acceptable law that to each there own as long as it doesn't hurt someone else. But when you add the breadth of damage someone can do, do you want to wait till intentions are fulfilled before deterrents are enforced? If a person is shopping for materials to build a bomb, builds a bomb, plans a bombing, places the bomb, then detonates it, where along that line should the law step in and save the hundreds of lives killed by the bomb and the thousands, if not millions of life's affected by those deaths. Is the store clerk supposed to talk him out of it? A nosy neighbor? What your suggesting is the bomb needs to explode before you can accuse him of doing anything wrong.

Again. Those things happen anyway. Sometimes outrage at laws and restrictive environments lead to them.

Worrying about WHAT IF and then stripping rights is a slippery slope. You pick one, it leads to another, then you are where we are now where people can dictate what you are allowed to put into your body, whether you can sell your body voluntarily for sex, and any number of other things. The thing is the laws don't actually stop it from happening now.

People think of those things because of examples of them happening and people being appalled by them. Being appalled would be no different if the laws did not exist.

You cannot FORCE morality on people. You can make them not feel free and make people who otherwise might not do such things embrace things like bombs.

It is just like guns. Making them illegal doesn't stop someone who intends to use them to kill or commit a crime from getting them. It is no deterant. It does restrict those who have no intentions of doing such things, and they also can't have one to now defend themselves from the criminal.

The laws don't prevent shit. In some cases they instigate it.

If you said no seat belts, I'd say fine, it's your life until you are thrown through the windshield as projectile into the other car, but mortality rates from car crashes are ever dwindling. Consensual sex with a eighteen year old, how about 17...16?...15?...14?... Laws draw lines, and people still disobey them, and some are enforced much more lax then others. In Canada, smoking weed may result in the cop asking you to but it out. Driving 120 km/h on the 100km/h road is the norm, but at 131, they will pull you over and can use the fact that you were 30 over to demerit your license and charge you, at 150 they will automatically impound your car and suspend your license. Things like driving are a privilege, not a right. You are using public infrastructure and thus are bound by public law. If you have your own property, a ranch, and you want to get shitfaced and drive 95, I think no one should be allowed to stop you, however if you leave your property, you are entering society, and society has rules in place to protect everyone's rights. Not everyone can handle a car at high speeds or avoid them, traffic lights are in place to keep an orderly flow of traffic, though are much better substituted with roundabouts. To say laws cause crime may work in cases of drugs, I have no problem saying the way pharmaceutical and other drugs are distributed in our society is a system that fails to deal with addiction instead opting to punish consumption. One of the hurdles we are facing with the upcoming legalization of marijuana in Canada is the ability to properly check for impairment to keep people who are not of capacity to operate a vehicle to be putting every passing car in danger that they become the victim of a misjudgement. I'm a very liberal person, but this is a little too left for me. I view as the difference between a conservative and a far right Orwellian society. But hey, whatever floats your boat as long as it doesn't sink mine.

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 7 years ago  Reveal Comment

Plus the NAP is totally fine with self defense and defending others so yes it would permit that, no law necessary. :)

 7 years ago  Reveal Comment

Great post and I agree with your premise. Our "Justice System" is nothing more than a big business that extorts money from everyday citizens. When you factor in bond money, lawyer fees, court costs, mandatory court programs, and mandatory court appearances that take you away from your job it is beyond a disgrace. But as we all know, someone has to pay for all of these state and county employees.

good man . i like you

thank you sir for vote :)

I almost didn't but, you got me. In general if anyone says anything other than simply "nice post" I try to give an up vote to encourage discussion. You didn't say "nice post" so I gave you an up vote. I do like the nice post comments, but I reserve up votes for something that doesn't feel like a template response. :)

Great post. See you soon in Ancapistan! 👌✌🏼

Well you'll see me on the path walking there... I suspect I'll be dead before it is completely built. The journey is worth it though.

Very interesting friend

Plenty of things that do harm are not considered a crime such as raping the planet for profit or exploiting workers/tenants. In fact most things that make the rich richer seem to be allowed.

I don't think anyone has proposed taxing breathing.

But I agree that the law is too complex and innocent people suffer. I'm just happy that I've never been caught up in it.

I don't think anyone has proposed taxing breathing.

Trading on Carbon is that if you actually read their plans in detail. Carbon offsets and such. You need an offset for yourself.

I doubt that. Human emissions are insignificant and not really up for reduction. I don't think 'trading' is an answer anyway. It just moves the problem.

Trading is not a solution, yet it is a gateway to a global tax and power if you look into it.

I think we already lost the tax thing :) I just want to see governments show they really care about what matters to people and not just business. I don't think things are a bad as some people make out. Most politicians are incompetent rather than evil

I can relate with that law "No victim, no crime." Though in some occasions like the drunk driving, I rather have it prevented from happening. I mean by logical sense, someone that would drive on a highway while being drunk would just ask for a victim(s). That being said, as for something like drugs, I don't care what people do as long as they leave others alone.

Though in some occasions like the drunk driving, I rather have it prevented from happening.

Though it isn't prevented. People still do it. In fact the LAW never seems to be why they don't do it. They don't do it due to conscience or someone stopping them, convincing them, etc. They get caught doing it by the LAW and punished but the LAW does not actually prevent them from doing it. The fear of the law doesn't appear to either.

I wonder what prompted this post? =)

On a side note, we just launched a community that I think you might be interested in joining (although at the moment we probably need you more than you need us). Please check this announcement for more information. I hope you can join and help us grow. =)

I wonder what prompted this post? =)

I don't remember. I've written posts on the topic before. I don't remember what inspired that post yesterday though. :) Just a lot of thinking.

so the state switched to police state. how does one convinces them to give up of such power tool? they surely invested a lot into building it up and making it work in 21 century. they invested a lot of time and resources. now its working. what would it take to gain back some freedom?

Removing support for people who endorse it. Before you vote for anyone study their actions and history. Ignore their words as the actions are what truly matter.

If they are already in office if you can find a reason and way to recall them DO IT. If you can't then plan to replace them.

Now I'd like to see no government, but I believe we must do things in stages... minimizing it to as little as we can get it is a step in the right direction as far as I am concerned.

 7 years ago  Reveal Comment

I think minimizing it to as little as we can get it is simply not participating in politics, not voting, not endorsing people that participate.

Unfortunately that doesn't stop them from passing laws and using FORCE to make you follow them. You can resist and not follow them and die, but that is not surviving.

So to some degree I believe we CAN minimize them by participating and by participating limit the crazy shit they can force upon us. It is it endorsing it? Not necessarily it is simply survival. Minimize it and convince people that ultimately it is not needed.

It is one of those things where we can SHOUT THIS IS WRONG AND I WILL NOT DO IT. Then we die.

One less person that understood now walks the Earth.

We must LEAD (not rule)... lead by example, and yes you can protest but if they don't understand then your protesting will do nothing.

So we must also work towards helping more understand self responsibility... and the idea that they shouldn't be able to force others... you see most of them still believe it is okay to FORCE others
they think RULERS are acceptable.

So they will impose rules upon you whether you protest or not.

 7 years ago  Reveal Comment

So you don't pay taxes? You drive the speed you want and ignore speed limits? You drive on whatever side of the road you want? You camp on any so-called public land wherever you want and ignore postings, etc.?

If you do all of these things then perhaps you have room to talk. It also would be a pretty amazing trick. If you don't do all of these things even if you see them as illegitamet then it may have something to do with doing what you must to survive.

People can talk from a high position all they want, that doesn't make such things realistic. So there are things you may believe are illegitamet, but if the system has not changed then what you THINK is pointless if you die in your pride.

I don't view it like an on/off switch. I believe that is a false dichotomy. It is another one of those things that makes people FEEL GOOD to say you are either for it or against it. Yet as with most dichotomies there are more choices than that.

You can also treat it more like a path where you are building a path towards where you want to go one stone at a time. I have no right to arrogantly tell you MY choice is the right one, and yours is the wrong one. They are different paths. Which one gets us where we need to go is the right one. Telling anyone YOU MUST DO AS I or you are a fool is not a way to speak either, for any of us so certain our path is the ONLY true path I think need to really consider what we are saying. There are many paths. Often they lead to similar places by different routes.

 7 years ago  Reveal Comment

I totally agree with this actually. I'm surprised to hear you say that though, kind of rebel-ish...but its true freedom really.

My profile says I consider myself an Anarcho-Capitalist. That means ultimately I'd like to see a world with no RULERS. And by that I mean people that are able to dictate rules that other human beings must follow against their will, and the capitalist side is simply Free Market / Laissez Faire. So the post kind of fits if you know that about me. :)

I've often asked people "what do you think about a law that permits arrest even do you didn't harm anyone or damage any property" natural answer is that absurd!

Then I say what do you think drinking and driving is?

typical response "oh oh well I'm for that law"

I'd reply but even if no one is harmed and no damage to property?

Best response "well it's a deterrent"

What most call "deterrent" I call an OVERREACH!

It's not a popular stance but I think it is a great example of countless commercials and programming.

I do not support anyone driving when they can barely stand (I'd call them idiots really) and if they do harm or damage while intoxicated, the book should be thrown at them! Like you've stated @dwinblood there are already laws for that!

It doesn't change the fact that people get arrested and can pay hefty prices for causing no harm or damage! Also we are individuals that handle alcohol differently as well!

Always great to see others not scared to bring up unpopular subjects :)

Resteemed and well done!

You and I agree completely here it seems. :)

Very interesting my friend!

Thanks for sharing.

Upvoted and also resteemed :]

One of the rules for police to be allowed to arrest someone without "cause" is if the individual is a threat to themselves.

Based on the victimless crime theory, would suicide (assuming no one else gets hurt) be something that authorities should ignore?

Or, would the person committing the suicide be deemed the potential victim? Requiring the authorities to intervene.

Based on the victimless crime theory, would suicide (assuming no one else gets hurt) be something that authorities should ignore?

In my mind you could try to convince them not to do it, but you could not stop them if they were certain it is what they want. It should be their choice. Just like if you see a drunk person you could try to convince him not to drive and offer some alternatives. The key is you can try to help, but you cannot FORCE.

Things you do to yourself intentionally would not make you a victim.

I agree with what your saying in this post, but I have been trained/programmed to always try to prevent/reduce the chances of what might happen. There are many what-if scenarios running through my head ; but it all boils down to a use of force. Do I have the right to force someone else to do what I feel is right? No.

If someone is drunk and contemplating committing suicide and I can't convince them otherwise. Even if I strongly believe that they wouldn't do it if they'd just sober up. Do I have the right to forcibly imprison them until they sober up, then let them make the decision? The person in question is an 18 year old University student who has also taken LSD.

In 1994, I had the above scenario. I spent 4 hours alone with him in an elevator that I put on emergency stop. I'd never met him before. I had security call the police and paramedics once I had released the elevator. I convinced the police that he was a danger to himself. (Allowing them to take him to the hospital against his will).

A couple years later, some guy comes up to me and asks if I remember him. I did not. He told me that I had saved his life that day.

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 7 years ago  Reveal Comment

The @OriginalWorks bot has determined this post to be original and upvoted it.

Thanks for putting this out there. Maybe we can dismantle prison planet through common sense.

It would be nice if we could!

Ahh the famous "Move to X" argument. An idiotic one too. There is no place on the planet that does not have these problems.

Nice ad hominem lumping me with JeffBerwick and scams. I didn't realize I was asking you for money, or trying to sell you anything.

Would you like to attack me some more and show the audience you brilliance?