Bush’s
Defeated Foe: US Civil Liberty
By Paul Craig Roberts
11/22/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- --- George Orwell
warned us, but what American would have expected that in the
opening years of the 21st century the United States would
become a country in which lies and deception by the
President and Vice President were the basis for a foreign
policy of war and aggression, and in which indefinite
detention without charges, torture, and spying on citizens
without warrants have displaced the Bill of Rights and the
US Constitution?
If anyone had predicted that the election of George W. Bush
to the presidency would result in an American police state
and illegal wars of aggression, he would have been dismissed
as a lunatic.
What American ever would have thought that any US president
and attorney general would defend torture or that a
Republican Congress would pass a bill legalizing torture by
the executive branch and exempting the executive branch from
the Geneva Conventions?
What American ever would have expected the US Congress to
accept the president’s claim that he is above the law?
What American could have imagined that if such crimes and
travesties occurred, nothing would be done about them and
that the media and opposition party would be largely silent?
Except for a few columnists, who are denounced by
“conservatives” as traitors for defending the Bill of
Rights, the defense of US civil liberty has been limited to
the American Civil Liberties Union, Amnesty International,
and Human Rights Watch. The few federal judges who have
refused to genuflect before the Bush police state are
denounced by attorney general Alberto Gonzales as a “grave
threat” to US security. Vice president Richard Cheney called
a federal judge’s ruling against the Bush regime’s illegal
and unconstitutional warrantless surveillance program “an
indefensible act of judicial overreaching.”
Brainwashed “conservatives” are so accustomed to denouncing
federal judges for “judicial activism” that Cheney’s charge
of overreach goes down smoothly. Vast percentages of the
American public are simply unconcerned that their liberty
can be revoked at the discretion of a police or military
officer and that they can be held without evidence, trial or
access to attorney and tortured until they confess to
whatever charge their torturers wish to impose.
Americans believe that such things can only happen to “real
terrorists,” despite the overwhelming evidence that most of
the Bush regime’s detainees have no connections to
terrorism.
When these points are made to fellow citizens, the reply is
usually that “I’m doing nothing wrong. I have nothing to
fear.”
Why, then, did the Founding Fathers write the Constitution
and the Bill of Rights?
American liberties are the result of an 800 year struggle by
the English people to make law a shield of the people
instead of a weapon in the hands of government. For
centuries English speaking peoples have understood that
governments cannot be trusted with unaccountable power. If
the Founding Fathers believed it was necessary to tie down a
very weak and limited central government with the
Constitution and Bill of Rights, these protections are
certainly more necessary now that our government has grown
in size, scope and power beyond the imagination of the
Founding Fathers.
But, alas, “law and order conservatives” have been
brainwashed for decades that civil liberties are unnecessary
interferences with the ability of police to protect us from
criminals. Americans have forgot that we need protection
from government more than we need protection from criminals.
Once we cut down civil liberty so that police may better
pursue criminals and terrorists, where do we stand when
government turns on us?
This is the famous question asked by Sir Thomas More in the
play, A Man for All Seasons. The answer is that we stand
naked, unprotected by law. It is an act of the utmost
ignorance and stupidity to assume that only criminals and
terrorists will stand unprotected.
Americans should be roused to fury that attorney general
Alberto Gonzales and vice president Cheney have condemned
the defense of American civil liberty as “a grave threat to
US security.” This blatant use of an orchestrated and
propagandistic fear to create a “national security” wedge
against the Bill of Rights is an impeachable offense.
Mark my words, the future of civil liberty in the US depends
on the impeachment and conviction of Bush, Cheney, and
Gonzales.
Paul
Craig Roberts , 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
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