The True Measure Of A Mans Character Is What He Would Do If He Believed He Would Never Be Caught
Thursday, June 20, 2013
democratic socialist's of America
Let us stipulate, as lawyers like to say, that President Obama has a deplorable record on civil liberties, one that threatens long-term damage to the country’s constitutional culture.
Why,
then, has his base of support not been eroded decisively? Why have so
many on the left fallen silent, after railing against George W. Bush’s
rights violations, as Obama has prolonged and codified most of the same
practices? And why have so few on the right, riding a groundswell of
resentment toward big government, failed to resent the biggest
governmental intrusions into personal privacy since the FBI’s domestic
spying during the Cold War?
The facts are not in dispute. While
Obama has ordered an end to CIA kidnapping and torture, he has
personally approved kill lists containing the names of American citizens
to be targeted by drones. While he has tried to move the accused
masterminds of 9/11 and others from Guantanamo to civilian courts (only
to be blocked by congressional Republicans), he has also embraced
military commissions and indefinite detention. He voiced misgivings
about a bill subjecting suspected terrorists to military arrest —
whether foreigners or Americans, whether in Afghanistan or Alabama — and
then signed it into law.
In practically every significant court
case, his administration has argued for an expansive encroachment on
individual rights, much as the Bush administration did. Obama’s Justice
Department has successfully opposed the habeas corpus petitions of
Guantanamo prisoners, persuading conservative judges to rule in one case
that sketchy, unverified intelligence reports must be presumed correct.
This absurdity has now entered case law as an erosion of the venerable
right, dating from the Magna Carta, to summon your jailer before an
impartial magistrate.
The administration has continued undermining
the Fourth Amendment. It argued in the Supreme Court, unsuccessfully,
that law enforcement should be free to attach GPS tracking devices to
vehicles without showing probable cause and getting warrants. It has
vigorously used a tool that Obama denounced in the 2008 campaign: the
administrative subpoenas known as National Security Letters, which are
issued without warrants to acquire the library, Internet, banking and
other records of individuals suspected of nothing at all. His Justice
Department has invoked state secrets, as did Bush’s, to deny wrongfully
imprisoned and tortured victims the right to sue the government. The
administration has sought broad immunity for Secret Service agents and
others in law enforcement who arrest people exercising their First
Amendment right to speech.
Obama’s
solicitor general has just made a catch-22 argument before the Supreme
Court that could exempt from constitutional challenge the law that
authorizes the interception of Americans’ international communications
without probable cause — the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act,
broadened in 2008 with Obama’s vote as senator. Because the surveillance
by the National Security Agency is secret, his administration argues,
there is no way for the lawyers, journalists and rights organizations
who suspect they are being monitored to prove that they are, in fact,
targets of surveillance, and therefore they have no standing to sue.
These
acts aren’t deal-breakers for many voters, except among a small number
of civil liberties advocates, such as Conor Friedersdorf of The
Atlantic, whose blog “Why I Refuse to Vote for Barack Obama”
deplored the left’s lack of outrage. Other liberals, seeing a
constellation of social and economic issues, don’t want to damage
Obama’s re-election chances by speaking out. He’ll probably get the
votes of most lawyers for the ACLU, which has criticized him
persistently. And his judicial nominees will be more liberal than Mitt
Romney’s. So there is no opportunity for principled voting. Without a
civil liberties candidate with a chance to win, pragmatic balloting is
unavoidable.
A symmetrical silence about Obama’s rights policies
afflicts Republicans. They worry that government is too big when it
funds programs for the poor but not when it funds wars. It is too big
when it regulates business but not when it regulates individual lives.
It can decide whom people may marry, restrict women’s control over their
pregnancies and evade the Fourth Amendment by invading Americans’
privacy. Only true libertarians seem to care.
But there is more
here than hypocrisy. Terrorism remains a threat, as the FBI repeatedly
reminds the country with sting operations that lure hapless wannabes
into dramatic plots they couldn’t execute without undercover agents.
Each arrest stokes the public’s fear. Furthermore, rights violations are
largely clandestine and invisible. Their targets are “others,” meaning
foreigners, terrorists, common criminals and various people not like
“us.”
Ten years after the 9/11 attacks, polling
by the AP and the National Opinion Research Center found that those
surveyed supported, by 65 to 21 percent, a government policy to read,
without warrants, any emails to people inside the U.S. from countries
known for terrorism. By 48 to 37 percent, respondents favored
warrantless monitoring of U.S. citizens’ Internet searches “to watch for
suspicious activities,” not further defined. In other words, I’m
willing to give up your rights for my security.
It’s not generally
understood that constitutional rights are not divisible, that those
denied to others, including suspected terrorists, are also denied to
“us.” For example, Ernesto Miranda of the Miranda warning, who secured
our right to silence during police interrogation, was not a model
citizen. He had a long record and had kidnapped and raped a mentally
defective teenager. Yet his right now belongs to us all.
A certain
appreciation of constitutional law is required to grasp what has
happened under the Bush and Obama administrations, and neither the press
nor the school system educates well on these issues. It has been widely
noted that global warming went unmentioned in the presidential debates,
but hardly anyone has observed that both poverty and civil liberties
(and the Supreme Court) were also ignored by the candidates and
moderators.
It took a comedian, Jon Stewart, to raise Bush-era surveillance policies with Obama, on The Daily Show on Oct. 18. “We have modified them,” the president said. “Now, they’re not real sexy issues.”
Stewart replied: “You don’t know what I find sexy.”
David K. Shipler's latest books are two companion volumes on
civil liberties: "The Rights of the People: How Our Search for Safety
Invades Our Liberties" and "Rights at Risk: The Limits of Liberty in
Modern America." He writes online at The Shipler Report.
More David K. Shipler.
democratic socialist's of America
http://www.dsausa.org/
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