November 12, 2006
Will Democrats Turn Blind Eye to Civil Liberty?
By Paul Craig Roberts
Unless November’s new blood improves the Democratic
Party’s civil liberties pedigree, the Democrats will
have failed even before they are sworn in next January.
In its disregard for truth, public opinion, the
separation of powers, the Geneva Conventions, the US
Constitution and statutory law, the Bush administration
has been more of a regime than an administration. The
Bush/Cheney executive branch has operated independently
of all the constraints that provide accountability and
prevent despotism.
The Bush regime was able to evade these restraints,
because Republicans controlled both houses of Congress
and because Republicans wielded 9/11 as a weapon to
forestall political opposition.
With signing statements and other unilateral
declarations of presidential authority, the Bush regime
asserted executive branch powers beyond the reach of
Congress and the judiciary.
The Bush regime was a coup d’etat against the
Bill of Rights and the jurisdictions of Congress and
the courts. Unless Democrats roll back this coup,
Americans have seen the last of their civil liberties.
Judging by Democrats’ statements in the flush of
their electoral victory, Democrats have little, if any,
awareness of this critical fact. Democrats are anxious
to get on with their agendas and have shown no
recognition that the first order of business is to
repeal the legislation that permits torture, warrantless
detention and domestic spying.
If Bush threatens to veto the resurrection of US
civil liberty, the Democrats can impeach Bush as a
tyrant as well as for pushing America into an illegal
and catastrophic war on the basis of lies and deception.
Bush is the most impeachable president in American
history. However, the incoming Speaker of the House,
Nancy Pelosi, has declared impeachment to be "off
the table." Obviously, this means that Bush will
not be held accountable and that the Bill of Rights is a
casualty of the vague, undefined, and propagandistic
"war on terror."
Do Pelosi and the incoming Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid have the intellect and character to deliver
the leadership required for Americans to remain a free
people? Instead of bemoaning the damage Bush has done to
civil liberty, Democrats are up in arms over one child
in five being raised in poverty. The more important
question is whether children are being raised as a free
people protected by civil liberties from arbitrary
government power.
Do Democrats share the delusion of Bush supporters
that it is only Middle Eastern terrorists who are
deprived of the protection of the US Constitution? One
can understand the reluctance of Americans to extend
constitutional protection to terrorists who are trying
to kill Americans. However, without these protections,
there is no way of ascertaining who is a terrorist.
Currently, a "terrorist" is anyone given that
designation by any of a large number of unaccountable
government officials and military officers. No evidence
has to be provided in order to detain a designated
suspect. Moreover, designated suspects can be convicted
in
military tribunals on the basis of secret evidence
not made available to them or to any legal
representation that they might be able to secure. In
other words, you are guilty if charged.
As the case of US citizen
Jose Padilla makes clear, these Gestapo police state
proceedings apply to Americans. Padilla was declared to
be an
"enemy combatant." He was held in a US prison
for three and one-half years with
no charges and no warrant. He was kept in isolated
confinement, tortured, and denied legal representation.
In order to avoid US Supreme Court jurisdiction over
the case, the Bush regime filed charges after stealing
three and one-half years of Padilla’s life. However, the
charges have no relationship to the Bush regime’s
original allegations that Padilla, an Hispanic-American,
was an al Qaeda operative who was going to set off a
radioactive dirty bomb in an American city.
The US government no longer designates Padilla as an
"enemy combatant." The dirty bomb charge has
disappeared, and US Federal District Judge Marcia Cooke
has criticized the government’s indictment as vague with
sketchy evidence "weak on facts."
The reason that the Bush regime wants to detain
people indefinitely without evidence is that it has no
evidence. The reason the Bush regime passed torture
legislation is in order to produce the missing evidence
by torturing a suspect into self-incrimination.
"Evidence" procured by torture has been illegal in
civilized societies for centuries. But the Bush regime
has resurrected the medieval rack and substituted it for
the Bill of Rights.
If Democrats cannot bring themselves to rectify the
inhumane and barbaric practices that now pass for US
justice, then they, too, have failed the American
people.
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.