-Caveat Lector-

Losing Our Liberty In The Name Of Fighting Terrorism

Tom DeWeese

August 8, 2003

NewsWithViews.com

America may have reached a turning point on July 22, 2003 in the battle to restore and 
protect civil liberties threatened by the Patriot Act. On that day the House of 
Representatives voted overwhelmingly to pass two amendments that restore the rule of 
law by denying the Justice Department the ability to sneak into private homes and peek 
at private records without a warrant.

The House also unanimously passed an amendment to prohibit the Justice Department from 
forcing libraries and bookstores to turn over records of books read by their patrons.

These are important victories for the forces of liberty in the battle to keep an 
all-powerful Big Brother government from invading every aspect of our private lives 
under the excuse of fighting terrorism.

However, the victory may be short lived because the Bush Administration is applying 
pressure on Senate leadership to keep the provisions intact. As a result, the Senate 
may fail to support the amendments in its version of the bill, voiding the House 
action.

To protect our liberty, Americans must understand the threat posed by the Patriot Act 
and take action to assure that the Senate also passes the amendments. The fact is, 
Americans who have blindly trusted the government to protect them from the terrorist 
threat are not safer. However using that excuse, American liberty is under serious 
threat from our own government.

No one, after 9-11, can doubt that our nation and our personal safety have been 
attacked by Islamic fanatics bent on imposing their religion via "jihad" or holy war. 
Our government has been energized to fight the terrorism that has taken more than 
3,000 lives here in America. Unlike previous conflicts, we are not dealing with a 
nation, but with a shadowy, global movement.

As free Americans, however, we must ask some serious questions. Are the tactics 
implemented here necessary? Are they effective? Are our liberties protected? Is there 
a separate agenda being pursued?

We have been told that the grandest weapon created in the war against terrorism is the 
Patriot Act. Its aim, according to the Justice Department, is to give federal law 
enforcement agencies the surveillance and investigative tools they need to prevent 
future terror attacks. Given the failure of agencies such as the FBI and CIA to detect 
and prevent 9-11 with all the laws and tools at their disposal, is it reasonable to 
say we need to now ignore the Constitution in order to provide more protection?

The quick, emotional passage of the Patriot Act only weeks after the September 11, 
2001, attacks allowed little time for scrutiny of its measures. In fact, most members 
of Congress did not read it before voting. As a result, it deprives Americans of 
protections that are the very essence of the Constitution.

The Act expands the capability to obtain warrants and conduct searches without 
disclosing them immediately. Under the Act, law enforcement can gain access to your 
home and take records without you knowing they were there. A warrant must be obtained, 
but you may never know about it. This is one of the provisions the House is now trying 
to repeal.

The Patriot Act changes the definition of terrorism, allowing even legitimate 
protestors, such as pro-life activists, to be at risk of being labeled "terrorists" if 
violence erupts at their events.

Coming in October is a new provision of the Act that requires fuller identification of 
bank customers. In the year before 9-11 more than 150,000 Americans protested these 
very provisions in a scheme by the FDIC called "Know Your Customer." Americans said 
those provisions were too invasive of their privacy, but now, special software will 
help firms in 25 finance-related industries to compare millions of customer records 
with thousands of entries on federal blacklists. Businesses such as car dealers, 
insurance companies, investment brokers, lenders and real estate firms will be 
required to file "Suspicious Activity Reports" to the Treasury Department.

Massive government data banks, camera surveillance, and national ID cards are just the 
tip of the iceberg of the schemes being cooked up behind closed doors in Washington. 
Left unanswered is whether government is protecting us from terrorists or is 
government using 9-11 as a pretext to establish a massive system of government control 
over our lives?

In February 2003 it was discovered that the Department of Justice was drafting 
legislation to radically expand the reach of the federal government into the lives of 
every American citizen. The official title of the document is the "Domestic Security 
Enhancement Act of 2003." It's been given the nickname, Patriot Act #2. The bill has 
not yet been introduced in Congress, and reportedly only a very few key government 
leaders including Vice President Cheney and House Speaker Dennis Hastert have reviewed 
it.

It is suspected that the delay in officially offering the bill to Congress is a direct 
result of public attacks on the bill by privacy advocates, and it is feared that the 
Justice Department would get very bold in rushing it through should another terrorist 
attack occur.

Here are just a few of the more frightening provisions of Patriot Act #2. By 
definition any American citizen could be arbitrarily designated a terrorist. Section 
101 of this act will officially give the executive branch the power to declare any 
American a "foreign power" and therefore not a citizen. These newly created "foreign 
powers" are exempt from the protections of the Constitution.

It is important to note that most of the surveillance provisions in the act are not 
restricted to terrorism, but to any kind of criminal investigation. Section 501 
expands the ability of the federal government to designate American citizens as "enemy 
combatants."

Section 102 makes "collecting intelligence" a terrorist crime, "regardless of whether 
it is illegal" (according to a Department of Justice analysis). This can be 
interpreted to mean that reading foreign newspapers online and saving them to your 
hard drive is a terrorist act.

Sections 103 and 122 give the executive branch the power to engage in electronic 
surveillance of Americans without a court order for up to 15 days, whenever the US is 
under a state of emergency. For the record, the United States has been under a 
continuous state of emergency since Franklin Roosevelt declared it during World War 
II. Every president since then has signed executive orders to continue it. Section 106 
exempts federal agents from liability for engaging in surveillance of suspects without 
a court order.

Section 110 removes the "sunset" provisions on some surveillance clauses in the first 
Patriot Act. Those "sunset" provisions were the guarantees that initially built 
support in Congress to pass the Patriot Act. Americans were assured that the issue was 
fighting terrorism and when that battle was over we would then restore any liberties 
that had been trampled on.

Government almost never gives back power.

Section 123 expands the time limits on wiretaps and gives judges less power to demand 
progress reports on wiretaps. Section 126 gives federal agents the power to secretly 
obtain credit reports and other consumer information. This destroys the firewall 
between private sector and government information collection and lays the groundwork 
for another invasive government snoop called Total Information Awareness.

Section 313 lifts civil liability from businesses that report "suspected terrorists" 
to the federal government, no matter how illegitimate or malicious the tip is. It 
means you lose the right to sue if someone falsely accuses you, ruins your reputation, 
costs you your job or your family or your freedom. This lays the groundwork for one of 
the most insidious ideas yet to come out of this government - TIPS - a Gestapo for 
squealers and busybodies to turn in their neighbor. Just hope nobody hates you that 
much.

This bill amounts to little more than an unofficial declaration of martial law. It is 
just short of repeal of the writ of Habeas Corpus, the very root of the rule of law 
that grants all Americans the protections of the American justice system.

Both Attorney General Ashcroft and Homeland Security Secretary Ridge have expressed 
support for repeal of the Posse Comitatus law that bans the merger of civilian police 
forces with the U.S. military. That means instead of having your home raided by the 
local S.W.A.T. team, you may expect a visit from the 101st Airborne.

We are told that there is a delicate balance between liberty and security and that we 
just have to make sacrifices to be safe. What they are asking us to sacrifice are the 
very foundations of our liberty.

We are not being protected. We are being wrapped in a cocoon of tyranny. All of the 
signs are there. We are witnessing the erosion of American liberty in the name of 
fighting the most primitive force on earth. Americans, however, must ask themselves 
who is invading their lives more, the government or the terrorists? Who is the greater 
long-term threat?

John Adams said it best when he wrote, "A constitution of government, once changed 
from freedom, can never be restored; liberty, once lost, is lost forever." Adams and 
all of the founders are watching us now and they know one truth that we must all 
relearn very quickly. The only way to make sure that government doesn't abuse its 
power is to not grant power in the first place.

That's why the U.S. Senate now must follow the lead of the House and begin to repeal 
the worst offenses in the Patriot Act.

© 2003 Tom DeWeese - All Rights Reserved
---------------------------
Tom DeWeese is the publisher/editor of The DeWeese Report and president of the 
American Policy Center, an activist, grassroots think tank headquartered in Warrenton, 
VA. The Center maintains an Internet site at www.americanpolicy.org.
--------------------------
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neither liberty nor safety."
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