OK, I'll tell.
Misnomers aside, it's been my experience that libertarians aren't for liberty as much as the libertine.
And while Obama may be enforcing the drug schedules the fact of the matter remains: progressives crave legalization. This cannot be denied. We don't have the Circus Maximus anymore so what do you think serves as the second-half of the modern day EBT bread card and circuses?
And no, there is no inherent freedom to be stoned.
I can deny a person employment, payment, legal protection, transit etc. based on whether or not they show positive on a drug test even if they are not currently intoxicated.
I've been aching for anyone to tell me which other right -- among the actual, genuine rights -- can serve as a similar basis for exclusion. Religion? Political Affiliation? Skin color?
If getting stoned is a "right" then forbidding it is beyond the reach of government. I don't appreciate being told I'm not allowed to vote for (or against) Policy X just because someone slaps the label "right" on it.
I'm over the modern political mania of deeming each pet issue a "right." It's the same inane thought process that tells DUmbasses they have a "right" to healthcare, $40/hr and a 30-hour work week. Granted, they cannot/will not make the distinction between protection and provision but no free person can be forced to legally accommodate stoners. There is no constitutional right to get stoned but there is a constitutional right to make our own laws.
Are libertine-arians tyrants?
No.
But they do seek to limit what free men can enact by means of self-governance while contributing to the mindset actual tyrants use to make the people more pliable.
This is my kind of discussion!
Let's start at the beginning.
"Libertarians aren't for liberty". As Ayn Rand said, "check your premises".
Each man owns his life and himself, and is responsible for his actions, even if those actions lead to his own destruction. This is called "self-ownership" (Murray Rothbard,
The Ethics of Liberty)
Under "natural rights theory", a right exists naturally (a priori) or because it was endowed by God, not because the government grants it to him. Libertarian and conservative philosophy on rights, which is also the Classical Liberal theory from the Enlightenment period, is that
man is free, with the limited exception of the powers delegated to the government to restrict that freedom (referred to as "negative rights"), and the modern liberal theory is that "rights" confer a claim by the individual against the assets of the state or the fruits of another man's labor, known as positive rights (F. Hayek,
The Road to Serfdom). In the United States, each man's rights are not limited to those listed in the Constitution, but rather
"The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people" (
Amendment IX, US Constitution).
The logical conclusion is that men have the natural right of autonomy over our bodies- even if that right leads to a man's self-destruction.
The second half of the "bread and circuses" is "circuses". Circuses were, and are,
cheap entertainment to distract the masses. Legalized recreational marijuana is not a "circus", as the phrase is used. How about pro football? NASCAR? WWE? UFC? Reality TV? "American Idol"? 250 channels on your TV? Netflix? Internet pron? "50 Shades of Gray"?
Those are circuses.
Free yourself from the circus. I challenge you to turn off the TV for one month and read three books: Rothbard's
The Ethics of Liberty, Hayek's
The Road to Serfdom, and Churnow's
Washington, A Life. If you have the fortitude, throw in
Atlas Shrugged for good measure.
You continue to contradict yourself with regard to legalization of marijuana and an oppressive state wishing to enslave mind-numbed sheep. Two states have legalized recreational marijuana, but the Federal government continues to enforce existing laws regarding possession and distribution. Who,
exactly, is trying to enslave you with legal marijuana? The states of Colorado and Washington? The Federal government? Preezy McChoom? Libertarians?
Last of all, what are the "actual, genuine rights" in your fifth paragraph? Please provide a comprehensive list.
Edited to add: I also want to ask, is it your contention that "Freedom = Slavery", as I infer from your second and final paragraphs?