Files
kfitz.info/content/blog/2003-09-14-look-out-phillip-morris.md
Kathleen Fitzpatrick 655ad0ded8 upgrade to 3.0
2024-10-14 19:27:15 -04:00

17 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

---
title: 'Look Out, Phillip Morris'
date: '2003-09-14T22:13:05-04:00'
permalink: /look-out-phillip-morris/
tags:
- politics
---
Via [MetaFilter](http://www.metafilter.com/mefi/28300) comes news that wont really shock anybody, at this point, but ought to horrify all of us: the USA PATRIOT Act and a slew of related state legislation are being [used](http://www.salon.com/news/wire/2003/09/14/patriot/ "Salon.com -- subscription or ad-viewing required") to investigate and prosecute a whole range of domestic, non-terror-related crimes, including drug dealing, bookmaking, and confidence schemes. Most notably, a North Carolina prosecutor has charged the alleged operator of a methamphetamine lab with manufacturing chemical weapons. This is possible in part because the law “defines chemical weapons of mass destruction as any substance that is designed or has the capability to cause death or serious injury and contains toxic chemicals.”
The MeFi discussion contains a series of links to useful sites, including Howard Deans [Stop Ashcroft](http://www.deanforamerica.com/site/PageServer?pagename=stopashcroft) petition, and a [Daily Trojan article](http://www.dailytrojan.com/article.do?issue=/V150/N12&id=09-ash.12c.html) that reports a recent anti-Ashcroft protest that I really hope achieves meme-status. The discussion also highlights all the too-apparent reasons to be afraid of this alarming and unabated expansion of the Justice Departments powers of surveillance, seizure of assets, and indefinite detainment of suspects without attorneys.
But Im thinking… has North Carolina inadvertently created a way to do in the tobacco industry once and for all? Surely the states attorney general will begin wholesale prosecutions against the executives of these companies, right? After all, Id be hard-pressed to come up with another substance that more perfectly meets the criteria of “any substance that is designed or has the capability to cause death or serious injury and contains toxic chemicals.” I mean, these laws are being applied even-handedly and without regard to lobbying power and campaign contributions, right?
Right?