August 17, 2004
The Left’s War On The FBI
By
Michelle Malkin
The
New York Times, American Civil Liberties
Union,
anti-Bush protesters, and
Muslim activists are all
apoplectic over the FBI’s efforts to prevent
violence and terrorism. Agents are—gasp—knocking on
doors and asking questions. Based on these basic
intelligence-gathering actions, the civil liberties
alarmists are convinced that the constitutional sky is
falling.
On Monday, the Times
published a front-page story that painted FBI agents as
jack-booted thugs bent on scaring the pants off of
innocent, do-gooder college kids. A Tuesday Times
editorial bemoaned how "[s]ix investigators recently
descended on
Sarah Bardwell, [send her
mail]a 21-year-old intern with a
Denver antiwar group, who quite reasonably took away
the message that the government was watching her
closely." The editorialists concluded: "The knock
on the door from government investigators asking about
political activities is the stuff of totalitarian
regimes." [Interrogating
the Protesters, August 17, 2004]
Oh, give me a break. Getting
shocked with
cattle prods for practicing one’s faith is the
"stuff of totalitarian regimes." Getting locked up
in an
iron maiden for losing a
soccer match is the "stuff of totalitarian
regimes." Answering a few questions about possible
domestic terrorism is the stuff of responsible
citizenship.
Agents are not targeting every
tattooed Bush hater and handcuffing every pacifist
grandma in an insidious effort to chill free speech.
They are simply trying to be what every
hindsight hypocrite has asked them to be: proactive
and preemptive.
The fact is that many anti-war
groups have been tied to extremist guerrilla tactics and
pro-violence movements. The
Ruckus Society caused massive
rioting and
destruction in Seattle in 1999. In a militant call
to arms published last spring across left-wing Internet
sites, infamous environmental thug
Craig Rosebraugh called on his antiwar colleagues to
take
"direct actions"
against American military establishments,
urban centers, corporations, government buildings and
media outlets. In Oakland,
"peaceful" protesters exercised their "free speech"
by attempting to shut down a port involved in shipping
military supplies to soldiers during wartime. The
"Black Bloc" organization is instructing
protestors to trick bomb-sniffing dogs on New Jersey
Transit lines and New York City subways in an effort to
create "maximum disruption" and
drain police resources.
Is the FBI—which must grapple with
the prospect of another
international terrorist attack on American soil, as
well as havoc from domestic terrorists—supposed to turn
a blind eye to these past actions and future plans? By
the protesters’ own admission, federal investigators are
simply asking specific questions about whether
demonstrators headed to the Republican National
Convention in New York City are planning
violence or other disruptions and whether they have
any knowledge of such plots.
Some of those who have been
questioned by the FBI say they were "harassed"
and scared by armed agents who visited their homes. Boo
hoo. What do they want the agents to do? Would showing
up in clown suits with
squirt guns in their holsters make them feel less
frightened?
These are serious men and women
doing serious jobs in serious times. Grow up.
Similar complaints about the FBI
meanies are coming from Muslim leaders and ACLU lawyers
who are incensed that agents from the 2004 FBI Threat
Task Force are asking Muslims questions about possible
terrorist plots. "These large dragnet interviews that
really focus on people because of their ethnicity or
religion are not
productive investigative techniques," complained
Parastou Hassouri, an immigrant rights specialist
with the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey.
Where, pray tell, does Hassouri
suggest that the
FBI go to gather information about Muslim
extremists?
Madonna’s Kabbalah prayer meetings?
Bob Jones University? The Christian Science reading
room at the mall?
These same hysterical groups who
lambaste the FBI for its "aggressive" behavior now will
be the first to roast the bureau for
intelligence-gathering laxity if something catastrophic
happens before the November elections. You just can’t
win with these whiners.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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