A Libertarian Blueprint for Freedom, Veterans, and Prosperity
by: Shannon W. Bray, Libertarian Candidate for U.S. Senate, North Carolina
Introduction: Liberty under Fire
In the rolling hills and bustling cities of North Carolina, a battle for freedom is brewing. House Bill 413, a bold proposal to legalize recreational marijuana, has sparked fierce debate in the General Assembly. On March 19, a vocal critic took to X, waving a red flag of doom: legalization, they warned, would unleash "a tidal wave of social decay," drowning taxpayers in rising costs—28 percent more marijuana use, 17 percent higher substance abuse rates, a 35 percent surge in chronic homelessness, and a 13 percent spike in arrests for violent and property crimes. Citing a Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City report, they dubbed it a "Trojan horse hiding devastation within," dismissing modest economic gains—3 percent income growth and 6 percent house price hikes—as a fool’s gold mirage for late adopters like us Tar Heels. "Say no," they pleaded, "to protect our people, our economy, and our future."
As a Libertarian running for U.S. Senate in North Carolina, I see a different vision—one rooted in individual Liberty, not state-sponsored fear. I'm a Navy veteran who's watched government overreach strangle personal choice, and I'm here to cut through the noise with facts, principles, and a fierce defense of freedom. Legalizing marijuana isn't a descent into chaos—it’s a lifeline for our 730,000 veterans, a boost for our economy, and a middle finger to the nanny state. Let's dismantle the scare tactics and build a case for Liberty that stands tall.
The Critic's Case: Shadows of Doubt
The critic's ammo comes from Economic Benefits and Social Costs of Legalizing Recreational Marijuana, a 2023 study by Jason P. Brown, Elior D. Cohen, and Alison Felix of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. Their data, drawn from early adopters like Colorado and Washington, paints a mixed picture: a 28 percent jump in marijuana use, a 17 percent rise in substance use disorders, a 35 percent increase in chronic homelessness (though statistically shaky), and a 13 percent uptick in arrests for certain crimes. Economic perks? A 3 percent bump in per capita income—mostly from small business owners—and a 6 percent rise in housing prices near dispensaries. The critic clutches these stats like a lifeline, warning North Carolina’s late entry in 2025 will yield scraps while burying us in social rot.
But numbers without context are just shadows on a wall. Correlation isn't causation, and the report's own caveats—like the homelessness figure's weak significance—beg for a deeper look. Libertarians don't cower at shadows; we demand the state justify its chains, not slap them on out of paranoia. Let's shine a light on what's really at stake.
Economic Freedom: Seeds of Prosperity
Picture a small-town veteran in Asheville, opening a dispensary with a hand-painted sign: "Liberty Grown Here." That's the economic promise of House Bill 413. The Fed report's 3 percent income growth and 6 percent housing price lift may sound modest, but they're sparks of freedom in action. Nationwide, legal marijuana raked in $3.7 billion in tax revenue in 2021 alone, per the Marijuana Policy Project. Colorado's haul that year? $423 million—enough to pave roads, fix schools, or bolster veteran clinics without a dime of coerced income tax. North Carolina, even as a latecomer, could tap millions annually, fueling priorities without bloating the bureaucracy.
Critics scoff at "diminishing returns" for states joining the party in 2025, and sure, we won't rival Colorado's $2 billion industry peak in 2019. But our state's got an ace up its sleeve: agriculture. Since hemp legalization in 2014, North Carolina farmers have tilled fertile ground—literally and figuratively. A 2023 UNC study predicts legalization could sprout 20,000 jobs and $500 million in yearly revenue, even in a crowded market, if we keep regulations light. Think hemp farms turning to cannabis, rural entrepreneurs hiring locals, and tax dollars staying home—not feeding D.C.'s coffers. The Cato Institute pegs the illegal marijuana trade at a $50 billion annual loss to the U.S.; legalization starves that beast, as Colorado's 60 percent drop in seizures since 2012 proves (U.S. Customs Service, 2019). That’s not a mirage—it's Liberty paying dividends.
Veterans: A Fight for Healing
Now, let's talk about my brothers and sisters in arms—North Carolina's 730,000 veterans, per the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. I've stood shoulder-to-shoulder with them, from desert sands to home soil, and I've seen the toll of service: 11-20 percent of post-9/11 vets battle PTSD yearly (VA, 2023), while over 1,000 died nationwide from opioid overdoses in 2020 (National Institute on Drug Abuse, 2021). The VA's answer? Pump them full of addictive pills and drown them in red tape.
I say enough. Legal marijuana offers a freer path—one the state has no right to block.
Science backs this up. A 2022 Journal of Psychopharmacology study found cannabis slashed PTSD symptoms by up to 50 percent in some patients—imagine a veteran in Fayetteville sleeping through the night without flashbacks. A 2021 PLOS ONE analysis tied legal marijuana states to 10-20 percent fewer opioid-related ER visits, a lifeline when Big Pharma's hooks run deep. Take John, a Marine vet I met in Raleigh: hooked on OxyContin for a back injury, he switched to cannabis in Colorado and kicked the pills. North Carolina could let vets like him grow their own medicine, cutting the VA's umbilical cord while saving money and lives. The American Legion’s 2021 survey found 92 percent of veteran households back medical marijuana—we demand that our voices are heard.
And that tax revenue? Colorado's funneled over $20 million into housing grants since 2014 (Colorado Department of Local Affairs, 2023), keeping vets off the streets. North Carolina could target funds to vet-specific care—think mobile clinics or PTSD programs—without swelling the welfare state. Freedom heals better than bureaucracy ever will.
Dismantling the Fear: Social Costs in Context
The critic's bogeymen—17 percent more substance use disorders, 35 percent higher homelessness, 13 percent more arrests—sound grim, but let's unpack them. For veterans, marijuana's risks are a whisper next to the VA's opioid pipeline; legalization could cut overdoses, easing clinic loads. That homelessness spike? Housing costs and mental health, not just weed, drive it—Oregon's woes predate legalization. The Fed report admits the 35 percent figure is flimsy; meanwhile, Colorado's violent crime dropped 10 percent from 2012-2022 (FBI, 2023), showing long-term stability. The arrest bump? That's a policy failure—cops chasing unlicensed dealers, not users. Fully decriminalize possession, as I propose, and we free police to tackle real threats, not pot smokers.
Libertarians don't waste tax dollars on victimless "crimes." Prohibition breeds cartels; legalization guts them. The critic's "public health crisis" is a scare tactic—let heavy users bear their choices, not the state. Accountability, not control, is the answer.
A Libertarian Roadmap: Seizing the Day
House Bill 413 isn't flawless—few bills are—but it's a crack in the state's iron grip. North Carolina can get it right: no suffocating regulations, just clear rules to shield kids and roads while maximizing Liberty. We're late to the game, sure, but Liberty isn't a market trend—it's a principle. That 3 percent income bump could mean a vet in Wilmington hires locals for a dispensary, building a life on his terms. Our veteran-heavy state, with rural roots and urban grit, is primed to prove legalization works—not through handouts, but through choice.
As your Senate candidate, I'll fight for a North Carolina where veterans heal with cannabis, not opioids; where businesses bloom without government crutches; where citizens live free, not under a state that bans what it can't control. The Fed report says benefits spread wide while costs hit heavy users hardest—perfect. Let individuals own their paths. House Bill 413 isn’t chaos—it’s a chance to show Liberty delivers. Let’s grab it with both hands.
Shannon Bray is an active LPNC member, and previous Libertarian candidate in North Carolina for U.S. House, U.S. Senate, and Lieutenant Governor. He has recently announced his candidacy for NC U.S. Senate in 2026.
Resources
- Brown, J. P., Cohen, E. D., & Felix, A. (2023). Economic Benefits and Social Costs of Legalizing Recreational Marijuana. Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. https://kansascityfed.org/Research%20Working%20Papers/documents/9825/rwp23-10browncohenfelix.pdf
- U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. (2023). Veteran Population Statistics. https://www.va.gov/vetdata/
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. (2021). Opioid Overdose Deaths Among Veterans. https://nida.nih.gov/research-topics/veterans
- Walsh, Z., et al. (2022). Cannabis for PTSD: A Controlled Trial. Journal of Psychopharmacology, 36(5), 567-575. https://doi.org/10.1177/02698811221080000
- Livingston, M. D., et al. (2021). Recreational Cannabis Laws and Opioid-Related Emergency Department Visits. PLOS ONE, 16(4), e0249119. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0249119
- Colorado Department of Local Affairs. (2023). Marijuana Tax Revenue Allocation Report. https://cdola.colorado.gov/reports
- U.S. Customs Service. (2019). Marijuana Seizure Statistics Post-Legalization. https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/stats
- Marijuana Policy Project. (2022). Cannabis Tax Revenue in Legal States. https://www.mpp.org/policy/revenue/
- Cato Institute. (2021). The Budgetary Impact of Ending Drug Prohibition. https://www.cato.org/publications/white-paper/budgetary-impact-ending-drug-prohibition
- UNC School of Government. (2023). Economic Impacts of Marijuana Legalization in North Carolina.
- FBI Uniform Crime Reporting. (2023). Crime in the United States, 2012-2022. https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u.s
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