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Not sure what you are talking about here. This started with a discussion of Julian Assange. His actions had very direct effects, which had little to do with property rights. The phrase "victimless crimes" seems like a euphemism to avoid the discussion of what Assange did, what its effects were, and whether the government should use the criminal law in such cases. So too with Benghazi, the Mueller investigation, and other things you mentioned.
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Regarding Assange, his actions did have dire impacts. However, so did Daniel Ellsberg's. So has every significant leak. And it really depends on who's defining the impact. If you think the govt's covert actions should be exposed, Assange is perhaps a hero. If you think the govt's covert actions are more important, you think he's a reckless person who probably caused the deaths of many.
(My opinion is Assange's leaking of names was unnecessary and reckless. I have a problem with that. That takes him out of the hero category with Ellsberg and Snowden.)
Moving beyond Assange, I used "victimless crimes" because very often, politically charged cases involve politicians or their charges violating campaign finance law, or some bizarre law on disclosures or reporting gifts, or registering as a foreign lobbyist (that ridiculous case against that Obama DOJ lawyer). There are no real victims there.
And the war on drugs is the mother of all victimless-crimes-used-to-subjugate-the-poor-and-minorities schemes. Nobody's a victim in the marijuana, mdma, hallucinogens, or even (to an extent) cocaine trade. (Heroin, PCP, crack, meth? Okay, they have victims.) Shit. Purdue Pharma has killed more people in the past 20 years than every coke dealer in the US combined. The govt has probably killed more people than every dealer in the country by forcing drugs into the unregulated black market, where they are adulterated with god only knows what.
Real crime creates real and direct harm to real people, and it involves intent, or at least substantial recklessness. Dealing weed or selling shrooms or doses at a Dead show is harmless. And on the political stuff, I still can't figure out how Benghazi would be a crime if all of the allegations were true. How would that be beyond mere negligence?
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Broken windows is not about simple deterrence, and has nothing to do (AFAIK) with Martha Stewart. But I get that you are instinctively opposed to prosecuting people for stuff.
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It's all on a continuum of prosecution designed to get maximum attention. Slightly different roads to the same end: Deterrence. That's prosecutor-as-social-engineer. Some people think that's fine. I'm not comfortable giving that kind of power to any public servant without severe oversight.
And Martha also served another purpose: Getting her prosecutors air time. That'll get a prosecutor a nice pay bump when he flips to the private sector to handle defense work. Demonstrates you can handle the attention and the media.