Via Common Dreams, the American Civil Liberties Union reports
[December 3], a three-judge panel at the 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that a 2011 Florida law mandating that all applicants for the state's Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program submit to suspicion-less drug tests violates the Constitution's protection against unreasonable government searches.
[...]The 11th Circuit panel's order rejects arguments made by attorneys for the State of Florida that government has the authority to require people to submit to invasive searches of their bodily fluids without suspicion of wrongdoing, stating "the warrantless, suspicionless urinalysis drug testing of every Florida TANF applicant as a mandatory requirement for receiving Temporary Cash Assistance offends the Fourth Amendment."
[...]A 2012 review of the TANF mandatory urinalysis program found that the state of Florida spent more money reimbursing individuals for drug tests than the state saved on screening out the extremely small percentage.
(Score: 3, Informative) by hoochiecoochieman on Friday December 05 2014, @03:33PM
What you describe exists in Norhern Europe. Here in Portugal a Socialist government tried to create a similar program in the 90s to control the damage that an out-of-control heroin epidemics was causing. All the conservatives became hysterical about it and started brainwashing all the Joes and Janes of the country.
It was really hard to bring anyone in this bandwagon. Most of the people, even the left-leaning ones, were all about: "Ugh, drugs bad" ,"Ugh no junkies shooting smack on my buck", "Uga uga".
So, it didn't happen. And the Portuguese Joes and Janes went on happily living their lives, watching the junkies shooting up in front of their children's schools, being mugged by srynge-toting junkies, watching people that can't even read driving brand new BMWs, and watching the government spend millions of their taxes in police, prisons, courts, etc. 90% of people in prison are there because of drug-related offenses. Aind't that a joy? At least, the government is not spending tax money in the so called "shooting houses". That would be too easy. Look, it could actually solve a lot of problems. We know we don't want that.
Fortunately, the epidemics slowed down and started to recede by itself. The vision of all the living corpses walking around killed any appeal that heroin had had in young people. We still have a lot of drug problems, but nothing compared to the 80s and 90s.
Conservatives live in a fantasy world. To solve things, they have to see outside of their boxes filled with prejudice, ignorance and irrational fears. They can't. And unfortunately, the conservative mumbo-jumbo is a lot more appealing to the stupid masses than any solution based on rationality.
In this particular case, it wasn't even about beliefs. The right-wing politicians that attacked the "shooting room" solution were just picking an easy subject to attack the Socialist government of the time. They knew they were being stupid, but they couldn't care less. They would cause any harm to anyone if that could bring them just a little bit of political leverage.