Perhaps I need to clarify a couple points?
The vehicle check-point I am referring to is about 100 miles north of the Mexican border. You WILL be stopped. Every vehicle is stopped. A Border Patrol agent asks you a question or two while another walks a dog around your vehicle. There is a similar check-point between Arizona and New Mexico. Another as you come into California (not from Mexico). Ask any local police officer if they have ever set up a roadblock/check point.
When a CG officer asks if you have any weapons onboard, answering yes does not make you a bad guy. They want to know where the weapon is located, and they want to put someone between you and the weapon. Think that's a "police state"? Just a few years ago, Mexican drug lords put out a BOUNTY on USCG, Border Patrol, Sheriff, and Police officers! No, this is not a rumor or urban legend. The idea was to put fear into these people so they wouldn't check boats, cars, trucks. Thwart the bad guys, pay the ultimate price. These people are the military that keeps our border from complete chaos. Think there isn't a continuous assault on our southern border? Ask any of the good guys.
There are requirements to be met for boat equipment. If you have the proper equipment, in working order, proper registration, then what is the problem with being boarded? It is a formality. We've never had a problem. In fact, when sailing, they don't even require that we drop the sails... they pull alongside, match speed, and put people onboard.
Your state may have a vehicle inspection, requiring you to have working emissions equipment, lights, mirrors, etc. Same thing with boats. If someone is getting a ticket, then some law has been violated. Again, I don't see that situation as a "police state." As a non-current commercial pilot, I can guarantee you that the FAA could demand a "ramp check" of any plane at any time. These are not erosions of our freedom (IMHO), they are enforcement of existing laws. Don't like it? Take it up with your elected officials - they make the laws (supposedly for the good of the people).
Any of you who know me know that I do not blindly follow. I don't live in fear, nor hope that the government will take care of me. I do, however, live with my eyes open and see what goes on in our world - good and bad. Someone checking my boat to see that I have proper required equipment onboard is not taking away my freedom. Know the rules, comply with the rules, and you won't have a problem.
Again, these are my opinions. This is not an attempt to change anyone's mind, and it will be my last post regarding this topic. Who here has traveled on their boat more than the Blonde and me in the past 15 months? We've not run into any intolerable law enforcement, but have certainly seen plenty of bad, rude, illegal, and downright dangerous boating going on out there. I don't see that an idiot without any boating knowledge should have the "freedom" to run us down because he doesn't know the Rules of the Road.
Again, this is one of those topics that many of us feel strongly about. In a perfect world, we'd all know the rules, have the proper equipment, and follow the Golden Rule. We'd be polite. No one would try to steal Tom's radar. Big ships/ferries would slow enough to not hammer us with wake. Bad guys wouldn't use small boats to bring in nasty stuff to poison our kids. People wouldn't die trying to get into this country illegally. I don't live in that fairy-tale world. There are lots of bad people out there. Even more stupid folks. I'm glad that there is a line of defense to help.
And in the words of the great philosopher Forrest Gump: and that's all I got to say about that.
Best wishes,
Jim B.