Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
[view all posts]
[view all posts]
From Capitol Hill Blue What Price Freedom?
Police State
By DAN K. THOMASSON
May 24, 2005, 07:12
Some really scary things are happening around here these
days. Congress has become a place of great incivility and rancor,
which threaten to undermine any hope of legislative remedy to a
myriad of problems, from Social Security to soaring health-care
costs to immigration to a steadily crumbling manufacturing base
once the envy of the world. But perhaps the most frightening prospect for Americans is an
unfettered national police force with the sole discretion to
determine who can be investigated as a potential terrorist. That's
the impact of little-known proposals to greatly expand the powers
of the FBI, permitting its agents to seize business records without a
warrant and to track the mail of those in terrorist inquiries without
regard to Postal Service concerns. Because the government can label almost any group or
individual a terrorist threat, the potential for abuse by not having
to show probable cause is enormous, prompting civil libertarians to
correctly speculate
about who will guard against the guardians. Up until now the
answer was the Constitution as interpreted by the judiciary. But it
is clear that sidestepping any such restriction is the real and
present danger of the post-9-11 era. >>> A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this.>> A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this.>> A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this.> A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this.> A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this. A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this. A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this. You are innocently standing on a street corner waiting to cross
when you are approached by a complete stranger who politely, but
in a low voice, asks directions to a certain address or area. You, of
course, are utterly unaware that the person is under surveillance in
a terrorist investigation. You respond in a friendly manner. And
although the exchange takes only a few seconds, it is enough to
make those following the suspect curious about you. You are
identified and a background check reveals that you or your spouse
has a relative of Middle Eastern extraction or that you recently
traveled to a Middle Eastern country or that you contributed to a
charity bazaar sponsored by a church or group under suspicion of
passing money through to a terrorist cause. Suddenly, you are caught in a major inquiry, your personal
business records are seized and your mail is tracked. It doesn't
take long for your friends and neighbors to learn that you are
being investigated, and the result of that is predictable. You and
your family are shunned. Your business begins to dwindle and
before the nightmare has ended, which can take months, your life
is in shambles. The truth never catches up with the fiction and the
bureau, which has difficulty in saying the word "sorry," leaves you
high and dry, twisting slowly in the wind. Think it can't happen that way? Well, it does all the time. Ask
the lawyer in Oregon whom the FBI misidentified as having taken
part in the terrorist bombing of the Spanish railway. Ask any
number of persons since Sept. 11, 2001, arrested and detained for
months without charges or counsel before they were released. If that isn't enough to satisfy you about the inadvisability of
these proposals, think back to the Cold War days when the most
casual acquaintance with a group or person on J. Edgar Hoover's
anti-communist watch list could land one in water hot enough to
make life miserable for a long time _ maybe even put him or her on
one of the infamous blacklists. If you weren't around in those times, read about them. One
thing you will learn quickly is that the sole determination of who or
what had communist inclinations belonged to the FBI. Even then,
however, Congress was smart enough not to rescind the checks
and balances that protect our civil liberties. Federal law-
enforcement officers outside the FBI have complained of late about
the bureau's penchant for seizing jurisdiction over almost any
crime by relating it to terrorism. Both of these over-reactive proposals are as fearsome as the
threat of another al Qaeda attack, for they accomplish the same
thing: the intrusion on and disruption of the rights of Americans.
Like portions of the Patriot Act, which are rightly being challenged
by conservatives as well as liberals, they are medicine worse than
the cancer.
(Dan K. Thomasson is former editor of the Scripps Howard
News
Service.) © Copyright 2005 Capitol Hill Blue
Are you really unconcerned by the possibilities/probabilities?
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
From Capitol Hill Blue What Price Freedom?
Police State
By DAN K. THOMASSON
May 24, 2005, 07:12
Some really scary things are happening around here these
days. Congress has become a place of great incivility and rancor,
which threaten to undermine any hope of legislative remedy to a
myriad of problems, from Social Security to soaring health-care
costs to immigration to a steadily crumbling manufacturing base
once the envy of the world. But perhaps the most frightening prospect for Americans is an
unfettered national police force with the sole discretion to
determine who can be investigated as a potential terrorist. That's
the impact of little-known proposals to greatly expand the powers
of the FBI, permitting its agents to seize business records without a
warrant and to track the mail of those in terrorist inquiries without
regard to Postal Service concerns. Because the government can label almost any group or
individual a terrorist threat, the potential for abuse by not having
to show probable cause is enormous, prompting civil libertarians to
correctly speculate
about who will guard against the guardians. Up until now the
answer was the Constitution as interpreted by the judiciary. But it
is clear that sidestepping any such restriction is the real and
present danger of the post-9-11 era. >>> A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this.>> A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this.>> A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this.> A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this.> A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this. A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this. A wise man, the late Sen. John Williams of Delaware, once
counseled that any proposed legislation should be regarded in the
light of its worst potential consequence, particularly when it came
to laws that enhance the investigative and prosecutorial powers of
the government at the expense of civil rights. This is most likely to
occur in times of national stress, when the Constitution is always
vulnerable to assault _ i.e., the internment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. The scenario Williams warned about runs
something like this. You are innocently standing on a street corner waiting to cross
when you are approached by a complete stranger who politely, but
in a low voice, asks directions to a certain address or area. You, of
course, are utterly unaware that the person is under surveillance in
a terrorist investigation. You respond in a friendly manner. And
although the exchange takes only a few seconds, it is enough to
make those following the suspect curious about you. You are
identified and a background check reveals that you or your spouse
has a relative of Middle Eastern extraction or that you recently
traveled to a Middle Eastern country or that you contributed to a
charity bazaar sponsored by a church or group under suspicion of
passing money through to a terrorist cause. Suddenly, you are caught in a major inquiry, your personal
business records are seized and your mail is tracked. It doesn't
take long for your friends and neighbors to learn that you are
being investigated, and the result of that is predictable. You and
your family are shunned. Your business begins to dwindle and
before the nightmare has ended, which can take months, your life
is in shambles. The truth never catches up with the fiction and the
bureau, which has difficulty in saying the word "sorry," leaves you
high and dry, twisting slowly in the wind. Think it can't happen that way? Well, it does all the time. Ask
the lawyer in Oregon whom the FBI misidentified as having taken
part in the terrorist bombing of the Spanish railway. Ask any
number of persons since Sept. 11, 2001, arrested and detained for
months without charges or counsel before they were released. If that isn't enough to satisfy you about the inadvisability of
these proposals, think back to the Cold War days when the most
casual acquaintance with a group or person on J. Edgar Hoover's
anti-communist watch list could land one in water hot enough to
make life miserable for a long time _ maybe even put him or her on
one of the infamous blacklists. If you weren't around in those times, read about them. One
thing you will learn quickly is that the sole determination of who or
what had communist inclinations belonged to the FBI. Even then,
however, Congress was smart enough not to rescind the checks
and balances that protect our civil liberties. Federal law-
enforcement officers outside the FBI have complained of late about
the bureau's penchant for seizing jurisdiction over almost any
crime by relating it to terrorism. Both of these over-reactive proposals are as fearsome as the
threat of another al Qaeda attack, for they accomplish the same
thing: the intrusion on and disruption of the rights of Americans.
Like portions of the Patriot Act, which are rightly being challenged
by conservatives as well as liberals, they are medicine worse than
the cancer.
(Dan K. Thomasson is former editor of the Scripps Howard
News
Service.) © Copyright 2005 Capitol Hill Blue
Are you really unconcerned by the possibilities/probabilities?
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
