Enabling
Tyranny
By Paul
Craig
Roberts
14/07/08
"ICH" --- I
recently
read that Brigette
Bardot, now
in her 70s,
has been
arrested as
a hate
criminal for
complaining
that Muslims
in France
slaughter
sheep
without
first
stunning
them. The
famous
actress is
known for
her sympathy
with
animals, but
the French
government
preferred to
interpret
her remarks
as hatred
for Muslims.
Prosecutor
Anne de
Fontetts
promised to
throw the
book at
Bardot.
There are
many
incongruities
here. The
French are
persecuting
one of their
own for
taking
exception to
the
practices of
an alien
culture. But
then,
perhaps this
is just
being
broad-minded.
What really
jumps out
is: if
Bardot’s
animal
rights
position
makes her a
hate
criminal,
what does
French
President
Nicholas
Sarkozy’s
foreign
policy
position
make him?
According to
Information
Clearing
House’s
running
tally as of
July 12,
1,236,604
Iraqis have
been
slaughtered
as a result
of the
Sarkozy-supported
US invasion
and
occupation
of Iraq. If
Bardot is a
hate
criminal
under French
law for
complaining
about how
Muslims
prepare
their
mutton, why
isn’t
President
Sarkozy a
hate
criminal for
supporting
an American
policy that
has resulted
in the
deaths of
1,236,604
Muslims and
the
displacement
of 4 million
Iraqis?
Such
incongruities
are
everywhere.
It is as if
people are
no longer
capable of
thought.
Last week
the US
Congress
passed an ex
post facto
law that
legalized
the illegal
behavior of
telecommunication
companies
that enabled
the Bush
Regime to
violate US
law and to
spy on
Americans
without
warrants.
Retroactive
laws are
unconstitutional.
But, alas,
the US
Constitution
does not
make
campaign
contributions,
and
telecommunication
companies
do.
The Bush
Regime
claimed that
its illegal
behavior,
which
requires an
unconstitutional
retroactive
law to
protect
telecommunication
companies
and
President
Bush from
being held
accountable,
is necessary
to protect
us. But as
our Founding
Fathers and
every
intelligent
patriotic
person since
has
patiently
explained to
the American
public, it
is the
Constitution
that
protects us.
No safety
can be found
by fleeing
the
Constitution.
Without the
Constitution
we have no
protection.
We simply
stand naked
before
unbridled
government
power.
That’s
pretty much
how we stand
now after
7.5 years of
the Bush
Regime.
Electing a
Democratic
Congress in
2006 did not
make any
difference.
Indeed, it
was a
Democratic
majority
Congress
that last
week gave
Bush his
unconstitutional
ex post
facto law.
As Larry
Stratton and
I point out
in the new
edition of
Tyranny, the
US
Constitution
has no
friends. The
Democrats
don’t like
the Second
Amendment
(another
incongruity
in the face
of the
right-wing
police state
that Bush
has
created),
and the
Brownshirt
Republicans
regard the
rest of our
civil
liberties as
coddling
devices for
criminals
and
terrorists.
Across the
political
spectrum,
Americans
are happy to
shred the
Constitution
in behalf of
some agenda
or the
other.
The
government
is happy to
oblige,
because
shredding
the
Constitution
removes
constraints
on the
government’s
power.
It has
fallen to
the private,
member-supported
organization
known as the
American
Civil
Liberties
Union (ACLU)
to challenge
the
retroactive
law that
destroys the
privacy
rights
granted to
US citizens
by the
Constitution.
The ACLU is
regarded by
conservatives
as a Jewish
conspiracy
to destroy
Christianity,
and the
right-wing
idiots on
Fox “News”
and talk
radio will
denounce the
ACLU for
wanting to
empower
terrorists.
Conservatives
will repeat
endlessly
that
Americans
who are
doing
nothing
wrong have
nothing to
fear. If
this
argument
held any
water, there
would have
been no
point in the
Founding
Fathers
writing the
Constitution.
The position
of the US
Government
is that the
rights
granted
Americans by
the
Constitution
facilitate
terrorism.
To be safe
from
terrorists,
the argument
goes, we
must allow
the
government
to take
liberties
with the
Constitution.
This
argument
gives
government
the power to
set aside
the
Constitution,
and, thus,
enables
tyranny. As
Milton
Friedman and
many others
taught us,
rules are
the essence
of freedom,
and
discretionary
power is the
essence of
tyranny.
Bush’s “war
on terror,”
essentially
a hoax, has
transformed
the United
States into
a lawless
nation. We
are not
lawless in
the sense of
an absence
of laws. We
are lawless
in the sense
that despite
a surfeit of
laws, we no
longer have
the rule of
law.
If the
President
doesn’t like
an existing
law, he
ignores it.
If the
President
doesn’t like
new laws
passed by
Congress,
instead of
vetoing them
he prepares
a “signing
statement,”
which says
that he will
determine
what the law
means.
This
lawlessness
has spread
from the top
of the
federal
government
down to
local
governments
and
community
associations.
Recently the
state of
Georgia
passed a law
that
reaffirmed
that anyone
with a carry
permit was
entitled to
have their
concealed
weapon when
dropping off
or picking
up
passengers
at the
Atlanta
airport. The
Atlanta city
government
said it
would not
obey the
state law
and would
arrest
anyone,
including
the state
legislator
who
sponsored
the
legislation,
who carried
a permitted
weapon onto
airport
property.
A community
in which I
live has
by-laws that
forbid
members of
the board of
the property
owners
association
from serving
as general
manager of
the
designated
community.
This did not
prevent the
board from
appointing
one of their
own the
general
manager. The
POA board
regards the
by-laws
which govern
it as merely
words
without
force.
Just like
Bush regards
the US
Constitution.
Dr. Paul Craig Roberts, an assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury during the Reagan Administration, is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal and coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.
