It's
been that way ever since 9/11 with both sides of the
aisle complicit with the administration. This article
looks back at the record, and year end is a good time to
review it. It's hard imagining another as bad with a
President defiling the law and once telling Republican
colleagues the Constitution is "just a goddamned piece
of paper."
He
didn't just say it. He governs by it, gets away with it,
and former Defense Department analyst Daniel Ellsberg,
of Pentagon Papers fame, says "a coup has occurred (with
another to come from) the next 9/11....that completes
the first (that's) seen a steady assault on every
fundamental (aspect) of our Constitution (to create) an
executive government (to) rule by decree" no different
from a police state.
Author
Naomi Wolf spells it out in her April, 2007 Guardian
article - "Fascist America, In 10 Easy Steps." In it,
she argues the Bush administration is following the same
script any "would-be dictator must take to destroy
constitutional freedoms," and she lists them. They range
from "invoking a terrifying internal and external enemy"
to "creat(ing) a gulag" to spying on everyone to
harassing opposition to controlling the media to calling
dissent treason to "suspend(ing) the rule of law." She
also notes how much "simpler" it is to shut down
democracy than "to create and sustain" it, and that's
today's threat.
It's not
with jackboots in the streets but by a steady "process
of erosion" with the public largely unaware and
distracted by media mind manipulators. It's happening
today, and Wolf sounds the alarm with the words of James
Madison saying "The accumulation of all powers,
legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same
hands....is the definition of tyranny," and that's the
condition now in America. This article reviews the
record for the past seven years. It's not pretty.
Even the
Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, (unlike every
Pope in memory) condemned it in a wide-ranging UK Muslim
magazine interview. It was quoted in a November 25
Sunday Times column headlined "US is 'worst'
imperialist" and wields its power more reprehensibly
than Britain ever did in its heyday. He explained that
American overseas adventurism led to "the worst of all
worlds" and expressed pessimism about the current state
of western civilization and Washington's own misguided
sense of mission.
He
critiqued the "war on terror" and stated America lost
the moral high ground post-9/11 and needs to launch a
"generous and intelligent programme of aid to the
(nations it) ravaged;....check (its) economic
exploitation of defeated territories" and demilitarize
them. He called the West fundamentally adrift and our
"definition of humanity (isn't) working." He denounced
America's violence and belief it can solve problems left
for "other people (to clean up and) put....back together
- Iraq, for example." Another is the condition at home.
Since
taking office in January, 2001, George Bush signed a
blizzard of Executive Orders and attached dozens of
"signing statements" to hundreds of law provisions even
though nothing in the Constitution allows this practice,
and the Supreme Court banned line-item vetos. He
continues to do it while Congress and the courts condone
his claiming unconstitutional "unitary executive"
authority to ignore the law and do as he pleases in the
name of "national security" on his say alone.
It began
on 9/11 when George Bush addressed the nation and
declared a "war on terrorism," asked for world support
to win it, and began what became "our government's
emergency (preventive war strategy) response plans." The
scheme was to ignore the law, go to war, and destroy our
civil liberties to keep us safe from "rogue states, 'bad
guys,' and evil-doers" throughout an "arc of
instability" from the South American Andean region
(mainly Colombia) to North Africa through the Middle
East to the Philippines, Indonesia and elsewhere in
Asia. Congress as well acted right out of the box with
two audacious resolutions that surrendered its authority
to the executive, allowed him to proceed, and signaled
what would come.
The
first one came September 18, 2001 in a joint
"House-Senate Authorization for Use of Military Force
(AUMF)" that authorized "the use of United States Armed
Forces against those responsible for the recent attacks
launched against the United States." A second followed
in the October, 2002 "Joint Resolution to Authorize the
Use of the United States Armed Forces Against Iraq," and
the rest is history. This article reviews other key
congressional legislation to the present along with
George Bush's blatant abuse of presidential power.
His
first action came November 13, 2001 when he issued
Military Order Number 1 that one analyst called a "coup
d'etat," and "watershed moment in (the) country," that
was a hint of what would follow. This order violated the
spirit and letter of a civil society under
constitutional law with a firewall separating it from
the military. No longer, and it got worse later on when
its provisions resurfaced by act of Congress. That's
discussed below. First, Military Order Number 1 and
what's in it:
-- it
let the President usurp authority to capture, kidnap or
otherwise arrest any non-citizens (and later citizens as
well) anywhere in the world if he claims they're
involved in international terrorism and to hold them
indefinitely without charge, evidence or allowing them
due process in a court of law.
--
however, IF trials are allowed, they would be by special
ad hoc "military commissions," not civil courts and in
secret, with evidence obtained by torture allowed, those
found guilty given no right of appeal, and they can be
secretly executed.
-- no
civil court has authority in these cases even if victims
are identified and legal counsel wishes to represent
them.
Few knew
then that on November 13, 2001 US citizens lost their
civil liberties, but that would come out later on. It's
still ongoing with Congress and the courts complicit in
the willful destruction of our democracy that was
already on life support. Today, it's gone.
Use of
National Security ((NSPDs) and Homeland Security
Presidential Directives (HSPDs)
In the
Bush administration, NSPDs replaced the Presidential
Decision and Review Directives under Bill Clinton and
others under different names since the Kennedy
administration began the practice. Earlier ones remain
in force unless superseded. They're much like Executive
Orders (EOs) with the "full force and effect of law,"
relate to national security, and for that reason remain
classified unless or until made public. In seven years,
George Bush issued dozens of NSPD's that are too many to
review as well as over 20 Homeland Security Presidential
Directives (HSPDs). A few key ones are discussed below.
The
October 25, 2001 NSPD-9 deserves special note and was
titled "Defeating the Terrorist Threat to the United
States." On March 23, 2004, Donald Rumsfeld gave this
explanation of its classified contents to the 9/11
Commission:
-- "To
eliminate the Al Queda network;
-- To
use all elements of national power to do so --
diplomatic, military, economic, intelligence,
information and law enforcement;
-- To
eliminate sanctuaries for Al Queda and related terrorist
networks -- and if diplomatic efforts to do so failed,
to consider additional measures."
On April
1, 2004, the White House released this statement on the
directive:
The NSPD
called on the Secretary of Defense to plan for military
options "against Taliban targets in Afghanistan,
including leadership, command-control, air and air
defense, ground forces, and logistics (along with
similar efforts) against Al Queda and associated
terrorist facilities in Afghanistan."
Here's
the problem. The administration adopted these measures
on September 4, 2001, seven days before 9/11. George
Bush then signed them into binding law in NSPD-9 on
October 25, 2001 to conceal when they originated.
Other
important NSPDs relate to:
--
combatting WMDs;
--
developing and deploying an anti-ballistic missile
defense that's for offense, not defense;
--
biodefense;
--
deploying nuclear weapons and domestic nuclear
detection;
-- the
Iraq war;
-- a
national space policy as part of the goal for "full
spectrum dominance" over all land, surface and
sub-surface sea, air, space, electromagnetic spectrum
and information systems to deter any domestic or foreign
threat or challenge to our global hegemony; and,
There's
one other crucially important combined NSPD-HSPD:
NSPD-51/HSPD-20 on April 4, 2007 - National Security and
Homeland Security Presidential Directive
This is
a combined directive from the White House and Department
of Homeland Security (DHS) to establish "Continuity of
Government (COG)" procedures under a "Castastrophic
Emergency" defined as follows:
"any
incident (such as a terrorist attack), regardless of
location, that results in extraordinary levels of mass
casualties, damage, or disruption severely affecting the
US population, infrastructure, environment, economy, or
government functions."
COG is
then defined as:
''a
coordinated effort within the Federal Government's
executive branch to ensure that National Essential
Functions continue to be performed during a Catastrophic
Emergency."
Crucial
to understand is that this combined directive gives the
President and DHS unprecendented powers free from
constitutional constraints. Under NSPD-51, the President
can declare a "national emergency" and declare martial
law without congressional approval. It allows him to
create a de facto militarized police state with him as
dictator and DHS as a national Gestapo to an even
greater degree than it is already. It also empowers the
Vice-President to implement the directives' provisions
as part of the "Continuity of Government" plan that in
the case of Dick Cheney gives him even more power than
George Bush the way this administration operates. This
combined directive alone is the face of "police state
America" in real time if it's implemented, and it wasn't
likely enacted as window dressing. But there's lots more
besides.
Other
HSPDs relate to:
--
combatting "immigrant terrorism;"
-- a
national response plan to domestic incidents;
--
critical infrastructure identification, prioritization,
and protection;
--
national preparedness;
--
comprehensive terrorist-related screening procedures;
--
domestic nuclear detection; and others.
Congressional Legislation After 9/11
Post-9/11, Congress acted in lockstep with the President
and continues to pass laws any despot would love.
Written, on the shelf, and ready to go long before 9/11,
the USA Patriot Act was passed and signed by the
president 45 days later on October 26, 2001. The
legislative process capitalized on a window of hysteria
to grant unchecked powers to the executive but created
three grave civil liberties threats in the process:
-- the
erosion of Fifth and Fourteen Amendment due process
rights by permitting indefinite detentions of
undocumented immigrants that can now apply to anyone
anywhere in the world; more on that below;
-- the
First Amendment loss of freedom of association that the
Supreme Court considers an essential part of free
expression; now anyone may be charged and prosecuted
because of his or her claimed association with an
"undesirable group;" and
-- loss
of the Fourth Amendment right to be free from
unreasonable searches and seizures, and as a
consequence, the loss of privacy; the Act grants the
administration unchecked surveillance powers to access
personal records; monitor financial transactions;
student records; conduct "sneak and peak" searches
through "delayed notice" warrants; authorize roving
wiretaps; track emails, internet and cell phone use; use
secret evidence in prosecutions; deny immigrants the
right to counsel if they're unable to get their own; and
ends built-in safeguards to let domestic criminal and
foreign intelligence operations share information so CIA
can now spy domestically.
The Act
also creates the federal crime of "domestic terrorism"
that broadens the definition and applies to US citizens
as well as aliens. It states criminal law violations are
considered domestic terrorist acts if they aim to
"influence (government policy) by intimidation or
coercion (or) intimidate or coerce a civilian
population." By this definition, anti-war or global
justice demonstrations, environmental activism, civil
disobedience and dissent of any kind may be called
"domestic terrorism." The Patriot Act was just for
starters. Much more was ahead with a bipartisan Congress
acting like a gift that keeps on giving and the
President loving it.
The
Homeland Security Act (HSA) of November 25, 2002
followed as a sweeping new anti-terrorism bill, and like
the Patriot Act, was planned long before 9/11. It
created the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) by
combining previously separate government agencies under
this new authority to prepare for, prevent and respond
to domestic emergencies and give the federal government
broad new powers to protect the nation within and
outside our borders. In March, 2003, its largest
investigative and enforcement arm was then established -
the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE).
It was charged with protecting public safety by
identifying and targeting "criminal" and "terrorist"
threats to the country who in most cases are NAFTA and
globalized trade victims here out of need, not choice,
and who aren't terrorists.
DHS is
part of the administration's plan to centralize
unprecedented military and law enforcement power in the
executive branch that aims for greater global dominance
- to rule the world unchallenged including repressively
at home by suppressing civil liberties in the name of
"national security." DHS and USA Patriot Act are two
frightening measures to do it.
DHS is
insidious. It encroaches on local authority by
"mandat(ing) federal supervision, funding, and
coordination of 'local first responders.' " This refers
to police and "emergency personnel" comprising local law
enforcement. The Homeland Security Act (HSA) doesn't
mandate local control. Instead, it provides coordination
and guidance as a first step measure with more to come.
That's why US Northern Command (USNORTHCOM) was
established in October, 2002 as an unprecedented move to
militarize the mainland plus Alaska, Canada, Mexico,
Gulf of Mexico and Straits of Florida and, for the first
time ever, allow troops to be deployed on US streets to
counter drugs, an "insurrection" loosely defined, and
combat crimes with nuclear, chemical or biological
weapons. In other words, the President may now deploy
military forces on US streets in the interest of
"national security." This power is unprecedented and
dangerous.
So is
another affecting everyone. It's largely below the radar
since it was was scheduled to be fully operational in
late September, 2006. It's the Pentagon's New Offensive
Strike Plan called the Joint Functional Component
Command for Global Strike and Integration - or simply
Global Strike Command. It grew out of the 2002 Nuclear
Posture Review (NPR) that was updated more belligerently
in early 2006. NPR is a declaration of preventive war on
any nation, group or force anywhere on earth the
administration calls a "national security" threat and
could be used by NORTHCOM against US-based targets along
with a HSA crackdown if martial law is declared.
HSA goes
further still by creating a sweeping domestic
intelligence agency called the Directorate of
Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection. It's
to create and maintain an all-inclusive intrusive public
and private information data base on everyone. It can
include virtually everything - financial transactions
and records, medical ones, emails, phone calls,
purchases, books and publications read, organization
memberships, and any other personal habit or pattern.
USA
Patriot Act and HSA end the distinction between foreign
and domestic intelligence gathering and, up to now, the
sacrosanct firewall between them. They also no longer
allow "critical infrastructure information" from a
federal agency to be disclosed through a FOIA request as
part of an official policy of secrecy characteristic of
police states. There's much more in both Acts as well
that's frightening, dangerous and unknown to the public.
In sum, they end constitutional protections whenever the
executive suspends the law in the name of "national
security." That's how "police state America" works
that's hidden from public view.
The
Detainee Treatment Act of 2005
Torture
is official state policy for the Bush administration as
its preferred means of intimidation, retribution and
social control. The McCain Detainee (anti-torture)
Amendment in October, 2005 was a futile effort to deter
it. It was passed and weakened by the Graham-Levin
Amendment, became the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005,
and was attached to the 2006 Defense Department's
Appropriations Act. George Bush signed the legislation
after which he gutted its provisions relating to
detainees in one of his notorious "signing statements."
Its language gave himself the right (irrespective of the
law) to "protect the American people from further
terrorist attacks" using all his self-given powers as a
"unitary executive" that places him above the law,
Congress, the courts, the people, and world public
opinion.
The
legislation's final form went further as well. It denied
detainees habeas rights, let US forces use any cruel,
abusive, inhumane or degrading treatment in the
interests of "national security," prohibited detainees
from bringing suits as a result, and allowed statements
gotten coercively to be used as evidence against them.
It also followed previous policies as far back as
September 17, 2001 when George Bush signed a secret
"finding" authorizing CIA to kill, capture and detain
"Al Qaeda" members anywhere in the world, rendition them
to black site torture-prisons for interrogation, and
obtain it by any means. From then to now, torture and
abuse of anyone have been standard operating procedures
for the Bush administration with complicity from
Congress and the courts.
Other Repressive Legislation and More
The
107th, 108th, 109th and 110th Congresses will be
remembered for likely having done more than all others
before them to defile the rule of law and our
constitutional protections. They conspired with a rogue
administration, wrecked the republic, and for the 109th
Congress, October 17, 2006 stands out shamelessly as a
day that will live in infamy.
The
Military Commissions Act
In a
White House ceremony, George Bush signed the Military
Commissions Act (MCA) now known as "the torture
authorization act," but it's more far-reaching than
that. It grants the administration extraordinary
unconstitutional powers to detain, interrogate and
prosecute alleged terror suspects and anyone claimed to
be their supporters. It also lets the President call
anyone anywhere in the world an "unlawful enemy
combatant" and empowers him to arrest and incarcerate
those accused indefinitely in military prisons without
needing corroborating evidence proving guilt. The law
states for persons detained that "no court, justice, or
judge shall have jurisdiction to hear or consider any
claim or cause for action whatsoever.... relating to the
prosecution, trial, or judgment of a military
commission....including challenges to the lawfulness of
procedures of military commissions."
MCA
further scraps habeas protection (dating back to 1215 in
the Magna Carta) for domestic and foreign enemies of the
state, citizens and non-citizens alike, and says "Any
person is punishable... who....aids, abets, counsels,
commands, or procures" and in so doing helps a foreign
enemy, provides "material support" to alleged terrorist
groups, engages in spying, or commits other offenses
previously handled in civil courts.
Other
key elements of the act include:
--
legalizing torture against anyone and lets the President
decide what procedures can be used on his own authority;
--
denying detainees international law protection and lets
the executive interpret it;
--
empowering the President to convene "military
commissions" to try anyone he designates an "unlawful
enemy combatant," and hold them in secret detention
indefinitely;
--denying speedy trials or any at all;
--
allowing evidence obtained by torture or coerced
testimony to be used against detainees in trial
proceedings;
--
permitting hearsay and secret evidence to be used; and
--
denying due process, destroying human dignity, mocking
the rule of law, and establishing the principle of
kangaroo court justice for anyone the executive targets.
Revising
the 1807 Insurrection Act and Ending 1878 Posse
Comitatus Protection
Also on
October 17, 2006, the president privately signed into
law a hidden provision in Sections 1076 and 333 of the
John Warner National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2007. It amended the Insurrection Act of
1807 and Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 that prohibit using
federal and National Guard troops for law enforcement
inside the country except as constitutionally allowed or
expressly authorized by Congress in times of a national
emergency like an insurrection. The executive can now
claim a public emergency, effectively declare martial
law, suspend the Constitution for "national security,"
and deploy federal and National Guard troops on the
nation's streets to suppress whatever he calls disorder.
That means First Amendment-guaranteed peaceful public
demonstrations and all organized acts of dissent are no
longer constitutionally protected. Neither is the
republic in "police state America."
The new
law also authorizes the Pentagon to transfer
state-of-the-art crowd control weapons and technology to
state and local responders. It's to militarize them and
blur the distinction between federal and local law
enforcement agencies as an operational police state
tactic.
The Real ID Act of 2005
Congress
passed the Act that threatens personal privacy, it's
scheduled to become effective in May, 2008, and it will
require states to meet federal ID standards if in takes
effect next spring. That's now in question as two dozen
or more states passed laws prohibiting its use and
refused to fund it.
The
federal law mandates that every US citizen and legal
resident have a national identity card that in most
cases will be a driver's license. It requires that it
contain an individual's personal information and means
this ID will be needed to open a bank account, board an
airplane, be able to vote, or conduct virtually any
other essential type business.
In the
future, the law may also require that the card contain a
radio frequency identification (RFID) technology
computer chip that will be able to track all movements,
activities and transactions of everyone, everywhere, at
all times. In other words, with this technology
embedded, the card will become an empowered police state
dream (and an Orwellian nightmare) to be able to monitor
everyone having one all the time wherever they are.
However,
growing state opposition to the law puts its status in
doubt. It's because it's costly to establish and
administer and will create a bureaucratic nightmare
besides. It thus looks likely it won't be adopted in its
current form, but it may be revised and reintroduced, so
don't yet count this one out as some are ready to do. As
of now, measures have been introduced in the House and
Senate to repeal it by adopting national ID standards in
other legislation and increase federal funding for it.
So going forward, the issue of mandating national ID
measures is very much alive. It looks like something on
it will emerge as federal law going forward, but the
cure may be worse than the disease if states adopt it to
give "police state America" another repressive tool.
Pervasive Spying on Americans
Under
George Bush, spying is a national pastime, but it's no
joke. The New York Times reported on December 16, 2005
that his administration had been secretly spying on
Americans without warrants since late 2001. He
authorized the National Security Agency (NSA) to
intercept international communications of US citizens
with known links to Al Queda, related "terrorist"
organizations, or for any other reasons at its
discretion. The operation was called the "Terrorism
Surveillance Program."
It made
no difference to the administration that wiretapping
without probable cause or judicial oversight violates
Fourth Amendment protections and the 1978 Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). In the current
atmosphere, the rule of law is out the window, Congress
and the courts condone it, and that's the problem.
It
surfaced again when Congress passed the Protect America
Act of 2007 that amends FISA with doublespeak language
Orwell would love. It supposedly aims to close
"communication gaps" but will allow virtual unrestricted
mass data-mining monitoring and intercept of domestic
and foreign internet, cell phones and other new
technology as well as transit international phone call
traffic and emails. The Act claims to restrict
surveillance to foreign nationals "reasonably believed
to be outside the United States" and must be renewed. In
fact, the law targets everyone including US citizens
inside the country if the Attorney General or Director
of National Intelligence claim they pose a potential
terrorist or "national security" threat, but no evidence
is needed to prove it.
This law
allows virtual unrestricted warrantless spying of anyone
for any claimed "national security" reason. It thus
renders the notion of illegal searches and privacy
rights null and void. But that already went on earlier
post-9/11 through other unconstitutional speech-related
monitoring activities. One was the short-lived Operation
TIPS that was dropped when civilian informers refused to
be spies. Then, there was the Pentagon's Total
Information Awareness (TIA), later renamed Terrorism
Information Awareness, that was also ended under
pressure but resurfaced in new form so illegal military
spying continues. The Threat and Local Observation
Notice (TALON) program was part of it to collect
domestic intelligence through a huge database focused on
"terrorism" that means everyone legally opposing Bush
administration practices is targeted.
MATRIX
is another new data mining tool that stands for the
Multistate Anti-Terrorism Exchange Program. It violates
our privacy by mass monitoring the lives and activities
of ordinary people on the pretext of learning whether
they may be engaging in any type terrorist or criminal
activity.
Privacy
isn't mentioned in the Constitution, but Supreme Court
decisions affirmed it as a fundamental human right. In
addition, it's protected under the Ninth Amendment, the
Third prohibiting quartering troops in homes, the Fourth
prohibiting unreasonable searches and seizures, and the
Fifth safeguarding against self-incrimination. MATRIX
and other intrusive laws violate the letter and spirit
of the law and permits Patriot and HSA justice in
"police state America."
Executive Orders Issued by George Bush
George
Bush loves big numbers. They show up in budgets and
spending, in his number of signing statements to
congressional legislation, and in over 250 Executive
Orders (EOs) in almost seven years. A key one is
reviewed below.
July 17,
2007 Executive Order (EO): Blocking Property of Certain
Persons Who Threaten Stabilization Efforts in Iraq
The US
Constitution has no provision that gives a President
power to make new law through one-man executive order
decrees. That never deterred others in the past from
issuing them, but none ever abused this practice more
than George Bush who's issued over 250 of them thus far
with more sure to come.
This one
on July 17 is especially egregious but right in
character for a President who disdains the law and shows
it. It starts off: The President's power stems from "the
authority vested in me as President by the Constitution
and the laws of the United States of America" as well as
the International Economic Powers Act he also invokes.
The
order continues: "....due to the unusual and
extraordinary threat to the national security and
foreign policy of the United States posed by acts of
violence threatening the peace and stability of Iraq and
undermining efforts to promote economic reconstruction
and political reform in Iraq and to provide humanitarian
assistance to the Iraqi people," George Bush, in fact,
unconstitutionally usurped authority to criminalize the
anti-war movement, make the First Amendment right to
protest it illegal, and empower himself to seize the
assets of persons violating this decree.
By this
action, the President again, on his own authority,
violated the Constitution, criminalized dissent, and
moved the nation another step closer to tyranny in
"police state America."
Secrecy As Policy under George Bush
In
November 1, 2001, George Bush signed Executive Order
13233: Further Implementation of the Presidential
Records Act. In so doing, he established an official
administration policy of secrecy in violation of the
1978 Presidential Records Act, the 1974 Freedom of
Information Act, and James Madison's 1822 warning that
"A popular Government, without popular information, or
the means of acquiring it, is but a Prologue to a Farce
or a Tragedy; or perhaps both." He also violated the
Supreme Court's 1977 decision in Nixon v. Administrator
of General Services that ruled "executive privilege" is
subject to "erosion over time" after a president leaves
office, and Congress decided that little or none of an
executive's communications with his advisors should
remain secret after 12 years.
Secrecy
threatens democracy because it avoids accountability and
empowers an imperial president way beyond issues of
national security that are justifiable. On his own
authority, George Bush placed limits on presidential
records, the Freedom of Information Act, and a free and
open society by giving himself the power to classify
information for national security and create a whole new
array of categories called "sensitive" information that
includes anything he so designates. The result is that
classified information doubled since 2001 and efforts to
declassify material was stopped by invoking the "State
Secrets" privilege to avoid court challenge. These
actions characterize police states and represent another
threat to a free and open society under an
administration that disdains the law and operates freely
without constraint.
The Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act (AETA)
On
November 27, 2006, George Bush signed AETA into law to
amend the Animal Enterprise Protection Act of 1992. The
new Act has broad and vague language to criminalize
First Amendment activities advocating for animal rights
like peaceful protests, leafleting, undercover
investigations, whisleblowing and boycotts. It shows how
out of hand things have gotten with animal protection
advocacy now a crime.
Under
the old law, anyone convicted of a physical disruption
causing $10,000 in damages to an animal enterprise was
subject to a $10,000 fine or 10 years to life
imprisonment. The new AETA is even harsher with
penalties far exceeding comparable offenses under other
laws. It expands the original Act by changing activity
"for the purpose of causing physical disruption" to
actions "for the purpose of damaging or disrupting" an
animal enterprise. In this case, "disruptive" means any
activity that results in "losses and increased losses"
over $10,000 by peaceful protests for consumers
boycotts, advocating harmful practice reforms, or a
whisleblower doing the same things.
The Act
also goes further. It allows for expanded surveillance
of animal rights organizations to include criminal
wiretapping and makes it easier for a court to find
probable cause for the vague crime of economic damage or
disruption than for one requiring hard evidence a person
or group plans to commit these acts.
The bill
exempts "lawful public, governmental or business
reaction to the disclosure of information about an
animal enterprise," but that provision only applies to
economic disruption claims, not damage and makes it hard
to distinguish between the two. In addition, AETA:
--
expands the kinds of facilities covered by adding ones
that use or sell animals or animal products;
-- it
covers any person, entity or organization with a
connection to an animal enterprise;
-- it
applies to any form of advocacy;
-- it
criminalizes threatening conduct and protected speech as
well as communication with individuals who engage in
these practices; and
-- it
potentially includes any form of communication such as
emailing across state lines to boycott abusive animal
activities;
-- it
protects corporate animal abusers with a vested interest
in silencing dissent; and
-- it
effectively singles out any form of civil disobedience
or protest activity and brands animal advocates as
terrorists even when nothing they do causes physical
harm; even worse, the bill's language is so broad and
vague it's hard to know the difference between legal and
illegal behavior; this Act is another nail in the coffin
of free expression, the rule of law in a free society,
and the right of everyone to be protected by law, not
targeted by it.
The
Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism
Prevention Act of 2007 (HR 1955)
The
House overwhelmingly passed this measure on October 23
that some observers call "the thought crime prevention
bill." It's now in the Senate (S 1959) where if passed
and signed by George Bush will establish a commission
and Center for Excellence to study and take action
against "thought criminals." The commission will be
empowered to subpoena and investigate anyone that will
automatically create a perception of guilt that may be
highlighted in the media for added emphasis.
This Act
is a direct assault on democratic freedoms in the
current atmosphere with both parties and a President
determined to end them. The bill's language hides its
possible intent as "violent radicalization" and
"homegrown terrorism" may be whatever the administration
says they are. "Violent radicalization" is defined as
"adopting or promoting an extremist belief system (to
facilitate) ideologically based violence to advance
political, religious or social change." "Homegrown
terrorism" is used to mean "the use, planned use, or
threatened use, of force or violence by a group or
individual born, raised, or based and operating
primarily within the United States or any (US)
possession to intimidate or coerce the (US) government,
the civilian population....or any segment thereof (to
further) political or social objectives."
This and
other repressive laws may be used against any individual
or group with unpopular views - those that differ from
established state policy, even illegal ones, and
historian Howard Zinn is concerned. He says: "This is
the most recent of a long series of laws passed in times
of foreign policy tensions, starting with the Alien and
Sedition Acts of 1798, which sent people to jail for
criticizing the Adams administration." Under Woodrow
Wilson in WW I, "the Espionage (and) Sedition Act(s)
(jailed) close to a thousand people (who spoke) out
against the war." From HR 1955 and other post-9/11 laws,
authorities now have the same power to target anti-war
protesters or anyone expressing views this Act alone
calls "terrorist-related propaganda." Persons charged
and convicted face stiff penalties in an effort to deter
others. This measure is still another step toward
full-blown tyranny in "police state America."
Sections
1615 and 1622 of the 2008 Defense Authorization Act
These
provisions authorize DOD to militarize the country under
martial law by merging the military with state and local
law enforcement during a national emergency described as
"an incident of national significance or a catastrophic
incident." It also gives the Defense Secretary
extraordinary power to determine what military
capabilities are needed, to provide them to "active
(and) reserve components of the armed forces for
homeland defense missions, domestic emergency responses,
and (to provide) military support to civil authorities
(for) at least five years."
The Act
designates the Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman to review
NORTHCOM civilian, reservist and military positions and
increase their number in preparation for a potential
catastrophic event requiring "homeland defense missions,
domestic emergency response, (and the need for) military
support to civil authorities."
Section
1622 then establishes a Council of Governors to advise
the Secretaries of Defense and Homeland Security and the
White House "on matters related to the National Guard
and civil support missions."
The Act
is more proof of "police state America." It establishes
a martial law apparatus to be used in case of a
"catastrophic event" of any kind and empowers the
President or Vice-President under NSPD-51 to implement
it in a "national emergency" without congressional
approval.
Operation FALCON - Police State America in Real Time
Mike
Whitney won a 2008 Project Censored Award for his
February, 2007 article titled "Operation FALCON and the
Looming Police State." In it, he reported that the Bush
administration "carried out three massive sweeps in the
last two years, rolling up more than 30,000 minor crooks
and criminals" that he calls a "blueprint for removing
dissidents and political rivals" reminiscent of Nazi
Germany or any other repressive police state. Those
chickens now reside at home, but the public is largely
unaware and unconcerned. We all should be as Whitney
raises a "red flag for anyone who cares at all about
human rights, civil liberties, or simply saving his own
skin."
Operation FALCON stands for "Federal and Local Cops
Organized Nationally" and came out of the Bush Justice
Department and right-wing think tanks "where fantasies
of autocratic government have a long history" and are
now playing out in real time. The scheme centralizes
power in Washington and uses resources of local
authorities for its own purposes.
Whitney
traces its short history starting in the week of April 4
- 10, 2005 when over 10,000 criminal suspects were
arrested in "the largest criminal sweep in the nation's
history" in a "single initiative." Its aim was
"quantity," not "quality," but Whitney asked why did the
Feds get involved in local police work and suggested
something more sinister was involved "than just ensuring
public safety." His answer - "to enhance the powers of
the 'unitary' executive" by giving Washington power over
local law enforcement, and that makes perfect sense
under an administration obsessed with wanting
unchallengeable control.
Operation FALCON II followed a week later from April 17
- 23 and swept up another 9037 "alleged fugitives." The
final FALCON III came from October 22 - 28, 2006 with
10,773 more arrests. Each sweep was the same and
concentrated on alleged criminal types out of character
for a federal operation, so clearly another motive was
involved. Further, no one arrested was charged with a
terrorist-related crime, and that alone looks fishy.
Whitney thought so and called FALCON "new drills for a
new world order" that's waging permanent war, defiles
the law, ignores checks and balances, condones torture,
repealed habeas, and illegally spies on everyone.
Muslim
and US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE)
Sweeps
As
FALCON targeted petty crooks and criminals, Muslims are
the administration's main "war on terrorism" victims.
Post-9/11, thousands were mercilessly harassed and
persecuted through mass witch-hunt roundups, detentions,
prosecutions and deportations. Their assets were frozen,
and legal immigrants among them were subjected to secret
federal immigration court status hearings where those
found guilty of minor past infractions were illegally
held or returned to their countries of origin where they
faced possible arrest and torture.
Others
fared even worse and became political prisoners.
Professor Sami Al-Arian was one of them because of his
faith, beliefs and activism. Palestinian refugee,
scholar, academic, community leader, civic activist, and
freedom and justice advocate for his people made him a
Bush administration target. His ordeal began when he was
arrested in February, 2003 and unjustly charged with
supporting terrorism, conspiracy to commit murder,
racketeering, giving material support to an outlawed
group, extortion, perjury and other offenses proved
spurious in his subsequent trial in which he was
exonerated. Yet he remains imprisoned under harsh
conditions as the Bush Justice Department finds ways to
hold him.
Another
victim was Dr. Rafil Dhafir, a Muslim American of Iraqi
descent and practicing oncologist until his license was
suspended. He was convicted in a shameless kangaroo
court trial of 59 of 60 trumped up charges of violating
the Iraqi Sanctions Regulations (IEEPA) for using his
own funds and what he could raise through his Help the
Needy charity to bring desperately needed essential to
life humanitarian aid to Iraqis under sanctions. He's
now serving a 22 year sentence in a special Terre Haute,
IN "Communications Management Unit" (CMU) for Muslims
and Arabs for his "crime of compassion" (see
dhafirtrial.net, Katherine Hughes) where he, like Sami
Al-Arian, is a Bush administration "trophy" prisoner in
the "war on terrorism."
Undocumented Latino immigrants have also been targeted
with ICE shock troops mandated to do it. The agency was
established in March, 2003 as the largest DHS
investigative and enforcement arm and charged with
protecting the public safety by identifying and
targeting "criminal" and "terrorist" threats to the
country. In most cases, they're innocent victims of
NAFTA and globalized trade coming north to survive. ICE
heads them off at the border, hunts them down ruthlessly
once they're here, and boasts how well their
multi-billion dollar budget lets them conduct a reign of
terror against vulnerable people.
Workplace assaults continue, and on October 3, ICE said
it swept up and deported (or will deport) more than 1300
"criminal aliens, immigrations fugitives, and
immigration violators" in the "largest-ever" operation
of its kind in the Los Angeles area. Most were Mexican
nationals, but some were from 30 other countries, and
ICE called them "immigration violators." They're Bush
administration targets in its "war on terrorism" that
soon may come for us.
Police State America Preparations
Today,
dissent is an endangered species, and preparations are
underway for mass detentions in the "war on terrorism"
targeting anyone seen as a threat. Halliburton is the
beneficiary with a DHS contingency contract worth nearly
$400 million to build US-based camps for "detention and
processing" in case of an "emergency influx of
immigrants....or to support the rapid development of new
programs (for planned) expansion facilities (for anyone
with capacity for 5000 or more persons)."
This
language is cover for planned US-based concentration
camps for anyone labeled an enemy of the state or threat
to "national security." The plan is clear - to have
facilities in place if martial law is declared with
plenty of reasons to fear it's coming. Why else these
camps and why all the repressive laws, EOs, NSPDs, and
HSPDs put in place if they weren't for a purpose.
The
Pentagon is also ready with a DOD action plan called
"Strategy for Homeland Defense and Civil Support." It
envisions an "active, layered defense" both within and
outside the country that pledges to "transform US
military forces to execute homeland defense missions in
the....US homeland." It lays out a strategy for
increased reconnaissance and surveillance to "defeat
potential challengers before they threaten the United
States." It also "maximizes threat awareness and seizes
the initiative from those who would harm us."
These
are ominous developments that suggest a likely real or
contrived homeland terror attack severe enough to
warrant suspending the Constitution and declaring
martial law with the public acquiescing out of fear. If
it comes, anyone may be targeted as a "national
security" threat, indefinitely detained in a camp, and
no evidence is needed for proof. The state and military
will be empowered by law to act preventively through
mass roundups and detentions that appears the reason for
three test-run FALCON operations.
Full-scale militarization of the country is already
lawful under the 1988 Reagan administration's "national
security emergency" EO 12656. It was meant for "Any
occurrence, including natural disaster, military attack,
technological or other emergency, that seriously
degrades or seriously threatens the national security of
the United States." "Police state America" has been in
the works a long time, and it now may be near the
boiling point.
The Role of Blackwater USA in Police State America
Most
people know about Blackwater but not how it operates. We
better learn because it's coming to a neighborhood near
you, and that means trouble. Author Jeremy Scahill wrote
the book on the company he calls "the world's most
powerful mercenary army" and describes it as a "shadowy
mercenary company (employing) some of the most feared
professional killers in the world accustomed to
operating without worry of legal consequences (and)
largely off the congressional radar." It has friends in
high places who give it "remarkable power and protection
within the US war apparatus" with unaccountable license
to practice street violence with impunity to include
cold-blooded murder wherever their paramilitaries are
deployed.
For now,
that's mostly abroad, and controversy surfaced about the
company after its mercenaries killed two dozen or more
Iraqis and wounded dozens more in al-Nisour on September
16. It was the latest incident involving a company with
a disturbing history of unprovoked violence and then
claiming self-defense. Blackwater is contracted to
provide security services for US diplomats, officials
and others that once was assigned to the military at
one-sixth or less what the company charges under an
administration that believes anything government can do
private business does better, so let it whatever the
cost.
Using
Blackwater and other paramilitaries is part of the
scheme to militarize America, and New Orleans is its
first test case. Scahill wrote that "about 150 heavily
armed Blackwater troops dressed in full battle gear"
arrived in the Crescent City right after Katrina hit and
spread out into the city's chaos. Others came later.
Their cover was to provide hurricane relief, but that
was a ruse as local residents still around in the wrong
places soon discovered. They patrolled like Gestapo in
SUVs with tinted windows and their logo on the back.
Others used unmarked cars with no license plates, and
relief wasn't their mandate. They came to secure
neighborhoods from their legal residents and treat those
wanting to return like criminals. They wore flak
jackets, carried automatic weapons and had extra guns
strapped to their legs. They weren't for show.
Instead
of helping hurricane victims, they came as vigilantes to
terrorize them and be empowered by federal, state and
local authorities to do it. Blackwater USA is the face
of paramilitarism on US streets as the "war on
terrorism" comes to a neighborhood near you with New
Orleans the first test case to see if the company can
operate here the way it does in Iraq and get away with
it. It's doing it.
More
than two years after Katrina, New Orleans is still a
disaster zone, and many thousands of its residents are
still without homes. Instead of helping them rebuild and
restore their lives, federal funds instead go to private
mercenaries to protect the privileged from desperate
people needing help. Blackwater is another element in
place in "police state America" where the streets of
Boston, Boise or Buffalo may one day resemble Baghdad
and bring the "war on terror" to the homeland with
chilling implications of what that means.
A Look Ahead in Police State America
This
article began and will end with the same chilling
thought. It past is prologue, the outlook isn't good in
"police state America" under neocon rule that won't
appreciably change when the White House has a new
occupant in 2009. The nation is at war and laws are in
place that end constitutional protections, militarize
the country, repress dissent, and our government is
empowered to crush freedom and defend privilege from
beneficial social change it won't tolerate. It's the
price of imperial arrogance we the people are paying,
and that won't end until the spirit of resistance gets
aroused enough to stop it in our own self-defense. We
better hope that happens in time with potentially little
of it left.
Stephen Lendman
lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net .
Also
visit his blog site at
sjlendman.blogspot.com
and listen to The Steve Lendman News and
Information Hour on TheMicroEffect.com Mondays at noon
US Central time.