http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-w-whitehead/are-you-a-homegrown-terro_b_82935\
.html
The Huffington Post. 23 January 2008.
Are You a Homegrown Terrorist?

On its face, the Act, which was approved in the U.S. House of
Representatives by a vote of 404 to 6, would establish two
government-appointed bodies (one a national 10-member
commission, the other a university-based Center for
Excellence) to study, monitor and propose ways of curbing
homegrown terrorism and extremism in the United States.
However, as journalist Jessica Lee points out, the
legislation could actually succeed in "broaden[ing] the
definition of terrorism to encompass both First Amendment
political activity and traditional forms of protest such as
nonviolent civil disobedience."
The danger is the legislation's vague definitions of violent
radicalization and homegrown terrorism and the commission's
power to label individuals and groups as possible terrorists.
Violent radicalization, for example, is defined as "the
process of adopting or promoting an extremist belief system
for the purpose of facilitating ideologically based violence
to advance political, religious, or social change." Note that
you don't actually have to commit violence to be labeled a
violent radical. You just have to adopt or promote a belief
system that differs with the government, which is easy enough
in these times of economic instability, expansive government
powers and endless wars.
The definition for homegrown terrorism is equally vague: "the
use, planned use, or threatened use, of force or violence by
a group or individual born [or] raised...within the United
States...to intimidate or coerce the United States, the
civilian population...or any segment thereof."
Would abortion protesters or anti-war organizers be accused
of using "force" to "intimidate or coerce" others? What about
people who promote immigration views that are considered
"extremist"? By Congress failing to define what an "extremist
belief" is, what would constitute "ideologically based
violence" or the use of "force," it could mean anyone who
expresses a belief contrary to that held by the occupants of
the White House.
The concern, as Lee points out, is that the law will be used
"against U.S.-based groups engaged in legal but unpopular
political activism, ranging from political Islamists to
animal-rights and environmental campaigners to radical
right-wing organizations. There is concern, too, that the
bill will undermine academic integrity and is the latest
salvo in a decade-long government grab for power at the
expense of civil liberties."
The Senate version of this legislation, which finds that
domestic threats "cannot easily be prevented through
traditional Federal intelligence or law enforcement efforts,"
requires the creation of what would essentially join federal
agents and local police together in a single paramilitary
entity.
"This sounds like part of the same continuum we've
experienced in the last seven years, which is the effort to
deputize local law enforcement to work with the FBI and
national agencies without local accountability, as we have
seen with the establishment of joint-terrorism task forces
across the country," said Hope Marston of the Bill of Rights
Defense Committee. "When you talk about working with local
law enforcement to possibly spy on groups and individuals to
try to find the so-called 'needle in the haystack,' this
definitely poses a threat to local autonomy."
To Howard Zinn, author of A People's History of the United
States, H.R. 1955, as it is referred to, is just one more in
a long series of laws passed in times of foreign policy
tensions. He points out that the Alien and Sedition Acts of
1798, for instance, sent people to jail for criticizing the
Adams administration. And "During World War I, the Espionage
Act and Sedition Act sent close to a thousand people to jail
for speaking out against the war. On the eve of World War II,
the Smith Act was passed, harmless enough title, but it
enabled the jailing of radicals -- first Trotskyists during
the war and Communist party leaders after the war, for
organizing literature, etc., interpreted as conspiring to
overthrow the government by force and violence."
The true targets of this bill may be the anti-globalists and
radical environmentalists who pose a threat to the corporate
powers. Jane Harman (D-Calif.), the congresswoman who
introduced the bill, has enjoyed a long and productive
relationship with the RAND Corporation, a California-based
think tank with close ties to the
military-industrial-intelligence complex.
"Trends in Terrorism," a 2005 study by RAND, contains a
chapter titled "Homegrown Terrorist Threats to the United
States." In that study, RAND maintains that "homegrown
terrorism" will come from anti-globalists and radical
environmentalists who "challenge the intrinsic qualities of
capitalism." RAND also claims that anti-globalists and
radical environmentalists "exist in much the same operational
environment as al Qaida" and pose "a clear threat to
private-sector corporate interests, especially large
multinational business."
Any thought, speech or action that threatens corporate
hegemony and profit under this law--however protected it
might be by the Bill of Rights--could be considered an act of
homegrown terrorism.
This is not unlike the government's Red Scare tactics used
during the 1950s McCarthy era when thousands of Americans
were accused of being communists or communist sympathizers
simply for disagreeing with the government or associating
with those who did so.
We are the descendants of a long line of dissenters dating
back to the early days of this nation, from the Pilgrims
fleeing religious persecution and our Founders standing up to
King George's acts of tyranny to civil rights activists
staging sit-ins to protest segregation and peace activists
protesting the armaments industry.
As long as there are individuals speaking out against what
they see as injustice, oppression or corruption, there will
always be those in high places attempting to silence or
suppress them. But we must not be intimidated or silenced.
Instead, we need to raise our voices even louder or our
constitutional rights will be obliterated.
Constitutional attorney and author John W. Whitehead is
founder and president of The Rutherford Institute. He can be
contacted at [EMAIL PROTECTED] Information about The
Rutherford Institute is available at www.rutherford.org.






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