<SPAN name="chap06"></SPAN>
<h2>CHAPTER VI </h2>
<h2>THE LAW ENFORCERS AND THE LAW </h2>
<p>DAY after day, month after month, a distressing, a disgusting spectacle
is presented to the American people in connection with the enforcement
of the national Prohibition law. No day passes without newspaper headlines
which "feature" some phase of the contest going on between the
Government on the one hand and millions of citizens on the other; citizens
who belong not to the criminal or semi-criminal classes, nor yet to the
ranks of those who are indifferent or disloyal to the principles of our
institutions, but who are typical Americans, decent, industrious, patriotic,
law-abiding. It is true that the individuals whom the Government hunts
down by its spies, its arrests, its prosecutions, are men who make a business
of breaking the Prohibition law, and most of whom would probably just as
readily break other laws if money was to be made by it. But none the less
the real struggle is not with the thousands who furnish liquor but with
the hundreds of thousands, or millions, to whom they purvey it. Every time
we read of a spectacular raid or a sensational capture, we are really reading
of a war that is being waged by a vast multitude of good normal American
citizens against the enforcement of a law which they regard as a gross
invasion of their rights and a violation of the first principles of American
government. The state of things thus arising was admirably and compactly
characterized by Justice Clarke, of the United States Supreme Court, in
a single sentence of his recent address before the Alumni of the New York
University Law School, as follows:</p>
<BLOCKQUOTE>
<p>The Eighteenth Amendment required millions of men and women to abruptly
give up habits and customs of life which they thought not immoral or wrong,
but which, on the contrary, they believed to be necessary to their reasonable
comfort and happiness, and thereby, as we all now see, respect not only
for that law, but for all law, has been put to an unprecedented and demoralizing
strain in our country, the end of which it is difficult to see.</p>
</BLOCKQUOTE>
<p>Upon all this, however, as concerned with the conduct of the people at
large, perhaps enough has been said in previous chapters. What I wish to
dwell upon at this point is the conduct of those who, either in the Government
itself, or in the power behind the Government--the Anti-Saloon League--are
carrying on the enforcement of the Prohibition law. They are not carrying
it on in the way in which the enforcement of other laws is carried on.
In the case of a normal criminal law--and it must always be remembered
that the Volstead act is a criminal law, just like the laws against burglary,
or forgery, or arson--those who are responsible for its enforcement regard
themselves as administrators of the law, neither more nor less. But the
enforcement of the Prohibition law is something quite different: it is
not a work of administration but of strategy; not a question of seeing
that the law is obeyed by everybody, but of carrying on a campaign against
the defiers of the law just as one would carry on a campaign against a
foreign enemy. The generals in charge of the campaign decide whether they
shall or shall not attack a particular body of the enemy; and their decision
is controlled by the same kind of calculation as that made by the generals
in a war of arms--a calculation of the chances of victory. Where the enemy
is too numerous, or too strongly entrenched, or too widely scattered, they
leave him alone; where they can drive him into a corner and capture him,
they attack. To realize how thoroughly this policy is recognized as a simple
fact, one can hardly do better than quote these perfectly naive and sincere
remarks in an editorial entitled "Government Bootlegging," in
the New York Tribune, a paper that has never been unfriendly to the Eighteenth
Amendment:</p>
<p>That American ships had wine lists was no news to the astute Wayne B. Wheeler,
generalissimo of the Prohibition forces. He was fully informed before Mr.
Gallivan spoke, and by silence gave consent to them. He was complaisant,
it may be assumed, because he did not wish to furnish another argument
to those who would repeal or modify the Volstead act. He has made no fuss
over home brew and has allowed ruralists to make cider of high alcoholic
voltage. He saw it would be difficult, if not impossible, to stop home
manufacture and did not wish to swell the number of anti-Volsteaders. He
was looking to securing results rather than to being gloriously but futilely
consistent. Similarly the practical Mr. Wheeler foresaw that if American
ships were bone-dry the bibulous would book on foreign ships and the total
consumption of beverages would not be materially diminished. For a barren
victory he did not care to have Volsteadism carry the blame of driving
American passenger ships from the sea. Prohibitionists who have not put
their brains in storage may judge whether or not his tactics are good and
contribute to the end he seeks.</p>
<p>Now from the standpoint of pure calculation directed to the attainment
of a strategic end, in a warfare between the power of a Government and
the forces of a very large proportion of the population over which it holds
sway, the Tribune may be entirely right. But what is left of the idea of
respect for law? With what effectiveness can either President Angell or
President Harding appeal to that sentiment when it is openly admitted that
the Government not only deliberately overlooks violations of the law by
millions of private individuals, but actually directs that the law shall
be violated on its own ships, for fear that the commercial loss entailed
by doing otherwise would further excite popular resentment against the
law? It has only to be added that since the date of that editorial (June
18, 1922) the Anti-Saloon League has come out strongly against the selling
of liquor on Governmentowned ships--a change which only emphasizes the
point I am making. For, in spite of the Tribune's shrewd observations,
it soon became clear that the Volstead act was being so terribly discredited
by the preposterous spectacle of the Government selling liquor on its own
ships that something had to be done about it; and it was only under the
pressure of this situation that a new line of strategy was adopted by the
Anti-Saloon League. What it will do if it finds that it cannot put through
its plan of excluding liquor from all ships, American and foreign, remains
to be seen. Now it may be replied to all this that a certain amount of
laxity is to be found in the execution of all laws; that the resources
at the disposal of government not being sufficient to secure the hunting
down and punishment of all offenders, our executive and prosecuting officers
and police and courts apply their powers in such directions and in such
ways as to accomplish the nearest approach possible to a complete enforcement
of the law. But the reply is worthless. Because the enforcement of all
laws is in some degree imperfect, it does not follow that there is no disgrace
and no mischief in the spectacle of a law enforced with spectacular vigor,
and even violence, in a thousand cases where such enforcement cannot be
successfully resisted, and deliberately treated as a dead letter in a hundred
thousand cases where its enforcement would show how widespread and intense
is the people's disapproval of the law. There are many instances in which
a law has become a dead letter; where this is generally recognized no appreciable
harm is done, since universal custom operates as a virtual repeal. But
here is a case of a law enforced with militant energy where it suits the
officers of the Government to enforce it, systematically ignored in millions
of cases by the same officers because it suits them to do that, and cynically
violated by the direct orders of the Government itself when this course
seems recommended by a cold-blooded calculation of policy ! If the laws
against larceny, or arson, or burglary, or murder, were executed in this
fashion, what standing would the law have in anybody's mind? Yet in the
case of these crimes, the law only makes effective the moral code which
substantially the whole of the community respects as a fundamental part
of its ethical creed; and accordingly even if the law were administered
in any such outrageous fashion as is the case with Prohibition, it would
still retain in large measure its moral authority.</p>
<p>But in the case of the Prohibition law, an enormous minority, and very
possibly a majority, of the people regard the thing it forbids as perfectly
innocent and, within proper limits, eminently desirable; the only moral
sanction that it has in their minds is that of its being on the statute
books. What can that moral sanction possibly amount to when the administration
of the law itself furnishes the most notorious of all examples of disrespect
for its commands? There is another aspect of the enforcement of the law
which invites comment, but upon which I shall say only a few words. I refer
to the many invasions of privacy, unwarranted searches, etc., that have
taken place in the execution of the law. I f this went on upon a much larger
scale than has actually been the case, it would justly be the occasion
for perhaps the most severe of all the indictments against the Volstead
act; for it would mean that Americans are being habituated to indifference
in regard to the violation of one of their most ancient and most essential
rights.</p>
<p>But in fact the danger of public resentment over such a course has been
the chief cause of the sagacious strategy which has characterized the policy
of the Government; or perhaps one should rather say, the Anti-Saloon League,
for it is the League, and not the Government, that is the predominant partner
in this matter. For the present, the League has been "lying low"
in the matter of search and seizure; but if it should ever feel strong
enough to undertake the suppression of home brew, there is not the faintest
question but that it will press forward the most stringent conceivable
measures of search and seizure. Accordingly, there opens up before the
eyes of the American people this pleasing prospect: If the present struggle
of the League (or the Government) with bootleggers and moonshiners and
smugglers is brought to a successful conclusion, there will naturally be
a greater resort than ever to home manufacture; and equally naturally,
it will then be necessary for the League (or the Government) to undertake
to stamp out that practice. But obviously this cannot be done without inaugurating
a sweeping and determined policy of search and seizure in private houses;
a beautiful prospect for "the land of the free," for the inheritors
of the English tradition of individual liberty and of the American spirit
of '76-- sight for gods and men to weep over or laugh at!<br/>
<br/></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />