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Aint Nobody's business if you do
Everything used in this book is from public sources. The stuff that's available publicly is far more frightening than a lot of people realize.
TOM CLANCY
- McWilliams marshals a vast army of anecdotes, quotes, statistics and assertions to argue
that America would be a lot better off if we stopped using the force of law to save each
other from drugs, alcohol, gambling, pornography, suicide and sex in its more exotic
flavors. —New York Times
- Peter McWilliams has come up with a "reinvention" of government that would
bring us closer to the ideals of the Founding Fathers, increase our personal liberties and
save an impressive amount of money in the process. —USA TODAY
- There's a huge difference between crime and sin—and the government has no business
making the former out of the latter. At least, not in America. —New York Newsday
- It might inspire a song if I can match your mix of humor and seriousness. Brilliant!
—Sting
- The forces arrayed against McWilliams are many and powerful, from the legions of the
religious right to the political establishment. McWilliams' book brims with facts
delivered with a gentle sense of humor and spiced with pithy quotations from sources as
diverse as Thomas Jefferson and Joni Mitchell. —Cleveland Plain Dealer
- Here is a controversial book that contains so much logical thought, it is destined to be
roundly ignored by policy makers. —Gannett News Service
- Just as bootleggers were forced out of business in 1933 when Prohibition was repealed,
making the sale of liquor legal (thus eliminating racketeering), the legalization of drugs
would put drug dealers out of business. It would also guarantee government-approved
quality, and the tax on drugs would provide an ongoing source of revenue for
drug-education programs. An added plus: there would be far less crowding in our prisons
due to drug-related crimes. It's something to consider. —Abigail Van Buren
- Recently there crossed my desk (delicate way of saying "free") a book
sufficiently intriguing that, breaking the habits of a lifetime, I bought another copy.
The book is Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do by Peter McWilliams. —Newhouse News
Service
- Don't miss the point: In our "free country" over 750,000 people are now in
jail for consensual crimes. You should also know that another 2 million are now on parole
or probation; over 4 million more will be arrested this year; we will spend $50 billion
this year punishing people who have been convicted of consensual crimes; and we will lose
$150 billion this year in tax revenue. It's your money. You're paying for it. —Phil
Donahue
- If you want to stop this madness, you may want to begin by reading Peter McWilliams'
book. A highly readable and entertaining work, "Ain't Nobody's Business If You
Do." —Hugh Downs
- Why don't we reconsider the criminalization of consensual activities by adults? Why is
the option considered so far beyond the pale that hundreds of timid elected officials who
know all this and privately agree are convinced that to question consensual crimes is
political suicide? —Orange County Register
- Using his trademark clear logic and simple language, McWilliams points out that freeing
the police, courts and prisons from prosecuting consensual criminals will make available
whole armies of fighters against consumer fraud, terrorism, murder and rape. —Dayton
Ohio News
- What's the difference between a crime that hurts a fellow citizen and a crime that only
hurts the fool who commits it? All the difference in the world, according to Peter
McWilliams. —Rocky Mountain News
- In witty, well-researched pages, McWilliams gives a series of compelling arguments to
back up his contention that it's morally wrong to prosecute people for victimless crimes
against morality. —Detroit News
- One more reason to buy this book is for the boxed quotes on almost every page. One of
the greatest collections of funny, hilarious, unusual and trenchant remarks ever.
—Liz Smith
- So you have your rapist, your strong-arm robber, your mugger being released early to
make room for somebody who took money for sex or smoked dope in what he thought was
private, but turned out to be not quite. That doesn't look like much of a trade from here.
However much you're repelled by, say, prostitution, wouldn't you rather meet a hooker than
a mugger coming down an alley? —Reno Gazette–Journal
- McWilliams is a New York Times best-selling author. Since 1967, he has published more
than 30 books. He is a man well acquainted with controversy and shows no fear in rushing
in where angels fear to tread. Well-written and fabulously interesting. —Tulsa World
- McWilliams makes a strong argument for the elimination of such crimes, providing a
history of consensual crimes and their absurdity. The blend of first-person observation,
research, and argument makes for a fine and revealing title. —Bookwatch
- I don't expect anyone to agree with all of McWilliams' assertions. Even he admits that.
But there is one point you should not overlook. What starts with control of narcotics and
sexual activity can spread wherever a majority (or powerful minority), often powered by
religious zeal, decide it knows what's best for you. —Philadelphia News Gleaner
- How truly revolutionary, libertarian, frightening and funny this book is. Grand in scope
and scale. The book is interesting and meticulously researched. —Little Rock Free
Press
- Peter McWilliams has written a book for our times—the quintessential book on the
subject of consensual crimes. With public sympathy geared toward harsher sentences for
those who commit felonies, McWilliams demonstrates the absurdity of prosecuting those
guilty of "victimless" crimes. —Newport News Press
- Imposing criminal sanctions on human conduct which is wholly consensual and does not
harm another person or his or her property is a misplaced and counterproductive act . . .
we violate the premise upon which America was founded. —New Orleans
Times—Picayune
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Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do was nominated for the H. L. Mencken Award.
While this book is relatively heavy to lift, it isn't heavy reading. It's broken into dozens of short chapters and is more suited to browsing than to reading cover-to-cover.
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| —Seattle Times | This book is about a single idea—consenting adults should not be put in jail
unless they physically harm the person or property of a nonconsenting other.
This idea is explored in the chapter "An Overview." After
reading "An Overview," please feel free to skip around, reading what you find
interesting, ignoring what you don't. It is my fond hope, of course, that you will
eventually find your way to Part V, "What to Do?"
If nothing else, the boxed quotes on each page (the part of the book written by other
people) are worth turning the page for. (By the way, the most controversial quote—but
an absolutely accurate one—is found in the box on page 9.)
Thank you for reading.
Peter McWilliams
Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do

CONTENTS

|
Front |
|
AUTHOR'S NOTES |
| PART I |
THE BASIC PREMISE |
|
An Overview |
|
What Are Consensual Crimes? |
|
Separation of Society and State |
|
Personal Morality Versus
Governmental Morality |
|
Relationship |
| PART II |
WHY LAWS AGAINST CONSENSUAL
ACTIVITIES ARE NOT A GOOD IDEA |
|
It's Un-American |
|
Laws against Consensual Activities
Are Unconstitutional |
|
Laws against Consensual Activities Violate
the Separation of Church and State,
Threatening the Freedom of and from Religion |
|
Laws against Consensual Activities Are Opposed
to the Principles of Private Property,
Free Enterprise, Capitalism, and the Open Market |
|
Enforcing Laws against Consensual Activities
is Very Expensive |
|
Enforcing Laws against Consensual Activities
Destroys People's Lives |
|
Intermission to Part II |
|
Consensual Crimes Encourage Real Crimes |
|
Consensual Crimes Corrupt Law Enforcement |
|
The Cops Can't Catch 'Em; the Courts Can't
Handle 'Em; the Prisons Can't Hold 'Em |
|
Consensual Crimes Promote Organized Crime |
|
Consensual Crimes Corrupt the
Freedom of the Press |
|
Laws against Consensual Activities
Teach Irresponsibility |
|
Laws against Consensual Activities Are
Too Randomly Enforced to Be Either
a Deterrent or Fair |
|
Laws against Consensual Activities
Discriminate against the Poor, Minorities, and Women |
|
Problems Sometimes Associated with
Consensual Activities Cannot Be Solved
While They Are Crimes |
|
Laws against Consensual Activities Create
a Society of Fear, Hatred, Bigotry, Oppression,
and Conformity; a Culture Opposed to
Personal Expression, Diversity, Freedom,
Choice and Growth |
| PART III |
A CLOSER LOOK AT THE CONSENSUAL CRIMES |
|
A Closer Look at the Consensual Crimes |
|
Gambling |
|
Drugs
How and Why Drugs Became Illegal
Opiates
Cocaine, Crack, Amphetamines
Psychedelics
Marijuana |
|
Religious and Psychologically Therapeutic
Use of Drugs |
|
Regenerative Use of Drugs and
Other Unorthodox Medical Practices |
|
Prostitution |
|
Pornography, Obscenity, Etc.
The Problem with Pornography
The Problem with Violence
The Problem with Censorship
The F-WORD |
|
Violations of Marriage; Adultry, Fornication
Cohabitation, Bigamy, and Polygamy |
|
Homosexuality |
|
Unconventional Religious Practices |
|
Unpopular Religious Practices |
|
Suicide and Assisted Suicide |
|
The Titanic Laws: Public Drunkenness, Loitering,
Vagrancy, Seat Belts, Motorcycle Helmets,
Public Nudity, Transvestism |
| PART IV |
SIX CHAPTERS IN SEARCH OF A SHORTER BOOK |
|
The Enlightenment or We Wer So Much Older Then;
We're Younger Than That Now |
|
Prohibition: A Lesson in the Futility
(and Danger) of Prohibiting |
|
What Jesus and the Bible Really Said about Consensual Crimes
Old Testament Admonitions
Jesus of Nazareth and Consensual Crime
Jesus on Sex and Marriage
Jesus and the Separation of Church and State
His Master's Voice?
Jerry & Pat |
|
Traditional Family Values |
|
Putting the "Problem" in Perspective |
|
Hypocrites |
| PART V |
WHAT TO DO? |
|
Education, Not Legislation |
|
A Call to My Media Brethren |
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Protective Technology |
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Hemp for Victory |
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A State-By-State Look at Consensual Crime |
|
We Must All Hang Together |
|
The Politics of Change |
Copyright © 1996 Peter
McWilliams & Prelude Press
Last Revision: December 2, 1996
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