January 03, 2008
Now Congressional Democrats Are Attacking Free Speech
By Paul Craig Roberts
What was the greatest failure of 2007? President Bush’s
"surge" in Iraq? The decline in the value of the
US dollar?
Subprime mortgages? No. The greatest failure of 2007
was the newly sworn-in Democratic Congress.
The American people’s attempt in November 2006 to rein
in a rogue government, which has committed the US to
costly military adventures while running roughshod over
the US Constitution, failed. Replacing Republicans with
Democrats in the House and Senate
has made no difference.
The assault on the US Constitution by the Democratic
Party is as determined as the assault by the
Republicans. On October 23, 2007, the House passed a
bill sponsored by California Democratic congresswoman
Jane Harman, chairwoman of a Homeland Security
subcommittee, that overturns the constitutionally
guaranteed rights to free expression, association, and
assembly.
The bill passed the House on a vote of 404-6. In the
Senate the bill is sponsored by Maine Republican Susan
Collins and apparently faces no meaningful opposition.
Harman’s bill is called the "Violent
Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act”.
When HR 1955 becomes law, it will create a commission
tasked with identifying extremist people, groups, and
ideas. The commission will hold hearings around the
country, taking testimony and compiling a list of
dangerous people and beliefs.
The bill will, in short, create massive terrorism in the
United States. But the perpetrators of terrorism will
not be Muslim terrorists; they will be government agents
and fellow citizens.
We
are beginning to see who will be the inmates of the
detention centers being built in the US by Halliburton
under government contract.
Who will be on the "extremist beliefs" list? The
answer is: civil libertarians, critics of Israel, 9/11
skeptics, critics of the administration’s wars and
foreign policies, critics of the administration’s use of
kidnapping, rendition, torture and violation of the
Geneva Conventions, and critics of the administration’s
spying on Americans.
Anyone in the way of a powerful interest group—such as
environmentalists opposing politically-connected
developers—is also a candidate for the list.
The "Extremist Beliefs Commission" is the
mechanism for identifying Americans who pose "a
threat to domestic security" and a threat of
"homegrown terrorism" that "cannot be easily
prevented through traditional federal intelligence or
law enforcement efforts."
This bill is a boon for nasty people. That SOB who stole
your girlfriend, that hussy who stole your boyfriend,
the gun owner next door—just report them to Homeland
Security as holders of extreme beliefs. Homeland
Security needs suspects, so they are not going to check.
Under the new regime, accusation is evidence.
Moreover, "our" elected representatives will
never admit that they voted for a bill and created an
"Extremist Belief Commission" for which there is
neither need nor constitutional basis.
That boss who harasses you for coming late to work—he’s
a good candidate to be reported; so is that minority
employee that you can’t fire for any normal reason. So
is the husband of that good-looking woman you have been
unable to seduce. Every kind of quarrel and jealousy can
now be settled with a phone call to Homeland Security.
Soon Halliburton will be building more detention
centers.
Americans are so far removed from the roots of their
liberty that they just don’t get it. Most Americans
don’t know what habeas corpus is or why it is
important to them. But they know what they want, and
Jane Harman has given them a new way to settle scores
and to advance their own interests.
Even educated liberals believe that the US Constitution
is a "living document" that can be changed to
mean whatever it needs to mean in order to accommodate
some new important cause, such as abortion and
legal privileges for minorities and the
handicapped. Today it is the "war on terror"
that the Constitution must accommodate. Tomorrow it can
be the war on whomever or whatever.
Think about it. More than six years ago the World Trade
Center and Pentagon were attacked. The US government
blamed it on al Qaeda. Scant evidence has been
presented. The
9/11 Commission Report has been subjected to
devastating criticism by a large number of qualified
people—including the commission’s
chairman and co-chairman.[
Stonewalled by the C.I.A.
By
Thomas H. Kean And Lee H. Hamilton, New York Times,(Op-Ed)
January 2, 2008]
Since 9/11 there have been no terrorist attacks in the
US. The FBI has tried to orchestrate a few, but the
"terrorist plots" never got beyond talk organized
and led by FBI agents. There are no visible extremist
groups other than the
neoconservatives that control the government in
Washington. But somehow the House of Representatives
overwhelmingly sees a need to create a commission to
take testimony and search out extremist views (outside
of Washington, of course).
This search for extremist views comes after President
Bush and the Justice (sic) Department declare that the
President can ignore habeas corpus, ignore the
Geneva Conventions, seize people without evidence, hold
them indefinitely without presenting charges, torture
them until they confess to some made up crime, and take
over the government by declaring an emergency. Of
course, none of these "patriotic" views are
extremist.
The search for extremist views follows also the granting
of contracts to Halliburton to build detention centers
in the US. No member of Congress or the executive branch
ever explained the need for the detention centers or who
the detainees would be. Of course, there is nothing
extremist about building detention centers in the US for
undisclosed inmates.
Clearly the detention centers are not meant to just
stand there empty. Thanks to 2007’s greatest failure—the
Democratic Congress—there is to be an "Extremist
Beliefs Commission" to secure inmates for Bush’s
detention centers.
President Bush promises us that the wars he has launched
will cause the "untamed fire of freedom" to
"reach the darkest corners of our world." Meanwhile
in America the fire of freedom has not only been tamed
but also is being extinguished.
The light of liberty has gone out in the United States.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts
[email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration.
He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of
Policymaking in Washington;
Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and
Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy,
and is the co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts
about the recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.