Drug dogs sniffing out loss of personal liberty
- Share via
Jay B. Litvak
The following is a circuitous commentary on the recent discussions
regarding drug-sniffing dogs on school campuses.
When I attended Van Nuys High School in the mid-1970s, there were
random student and locker searches: There was no need for probable
cause.
Van Nuys High not only had the usual problems with drugs, although
nearby schools were known to have more significant drug issues, but
it was well known for its violence.
These searches were meant to protect the greater percentage of
students at the expense of constitutional ideals. I say ideals
because constitutional principles are more easily subverted in
schools than in the general population. But examples of authorities
usurping personal liberties become more prevalent, and more
widespread, as the problems become more intractable.
In the 1950s we went from the post-World War II (i.e. Cold War),
covert “investigation” of U. S. citizens to the displacement of these
citizens within their own country. In Vietnam we esca- lated from
search-and-rescue to search- and-destroy missions as our political
and military goals became ineffective: These escalated into free-fire
zones.
Today, the USA Patriot Act, or, at least portions of it, is
removing individual rights for the “greater good.” To use a
Vietnam-era oxymoron, we have to destroy it in order to save it. All
of these examples have something in common: They are all reactions to
situations in which we have lost control of something.
Drug- and, perhaps, explosives- sniffing dogs in public schools
are just another response to additional failed endeavors: the War on
Drugs and the War on (Violent) Crime. Now, these, especially the
latter, are the ultimate oxymorons.
When I was in high school, I wasn’t paying much attention to these
ideas. It is interesting that, when I may have had something to hide,
I cared less than I do today when I have nothing to fear from an
unethical search.
In conclusion, I wish to emphasize two points. First, whether I
have anything to hide ought not to influence my willingness to give
up any of my rights as a U. S. citizen. Second, we ought to remember
that when we are asked to relinquish some of our rights, it is a sign
of failed policy, and it sets a dangerous precedent.
* JAY B. LITVAK is a Costa Mesa resident.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.