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----- Original Message -----
From: deerdanser
Sent: Wednesday, September 11, 2002 1:15 PM
Subject: [RobotsRebellion2] Things We Lost in the Fire

While the Ruins of the World Trade Center Smoldered, the Bush
Administration Launched an Assault on the Constitution
Things We Lost in the Fire
by Alisa Solomon
September 11 - 17, 2002

"Liberty is the most precious gift we offer our citizens."
Could Tom Ridge have said anything scarier or more telling as he
accepted the post of homeland security czar? Trying to strike the
bell of liberty, he sounds its death knell, depicting government not
as the agent of the people's will, but as an imperious power with the
authority to give us our democratic freedoms. Which means, of course,
that it can also take them away.

That's exactly what Ashcroft, Bush, Cheney & co. have been up to all
year as, in the attorney general's words, the government has
marshaled the might of "every available statute" to root out "the
terrorists among us." Wrapping themselves in the flag, they have
shredded the Constitution. They have sneered at, ignored, or defied
the courts and legislatures that are designed to provide checks and
balances on uninhibited executive power. They have eroded the
precious Bill of Rights protections of free speech, assembly, and
association and its assurances of privacy, due process, equal
protection, legal counsel, and a fair trial—practically everything
but the right to bear arms.

Thanks to these maneuvers in the name of combating terrorism, the
government can now freeze the release of public records, monitor
political and religious gatherings, and jail Americans indefinitely
without trial and without legal representation. As Bush and Cheney
ready the country for war against Iraq, they have established a
climate that stifles dissent—and put laws in place enabling them to
clamp down on those who ask too many questions.

First, They Came for the Immigrants . . .

If you're a citizen—and if you haven't tried to organize any major
protests lately—you might easily have missed the rupture. It's the
liberties of noncitizens that have been most severely curtailed in
the past year. In immigrant communities, the tear feels seismic.
Midwood, Brooklyn, home to some 150,000 Pakistanis, saw two
planeloads of its young men sent home in August after long detentions
by the Immigration and Naturalization Service. The annual Pakistani
festival days later drew less than half the usual crowd of 80,000,
according to Asghar Choudhri, president of the Pakistani-American
Federation of New York. "People are too afraid to come out," he
explains. "It's like a third-world country here. They come get you,
throw you in jail, and you can't say anything." Because he is a U.S.
citizen, Choudhri says his neighbors, terrified of lingering too long
in public, often ask him to pick up groceries or run other errands
for them. Local businesses have been closing in droves.

Polls have shown that at least 40 percent of Americans are willing to
give up some civil liberties for the sake of security, but as
constitutional lawyer David Cole has pointed out, so far it's not our
own freedom we've been sacrificing.

If history is any guide, that could quickly change. From the invoking
of the 1798 Enemy Alien Act during the 1941 internment of Japanese
American citizens to McCarthy's use of the tools of 1919 Palmer Raids
in the witch-hunts of the 1950s, the Feds have repeatedly sharpened
their teeth on immigrants before closing their repressive jaws on all
dissidents and undesirables. Indeed, many of the post-9-11 provisions
swept into place by Ashcroft—such as those for the tracking and
eventual punishment of would-be perpetrators of "domestic terrorism"—
focus primarily on citizens.

Balanced against security concerns at a time of war, the old dictum
holds, civil liberties spring back to full force when danger has
passed. In an endless "war on terrorism" that soon might include
attacks on Iraq, those springs could get mighty rusty.

Power Grab: Kicking Over Checks and Balances

In the fearful weeks immediately after September 11, Congress and the
American people gave the Bush administration the benefit of the
doubt, supporting a rash of new measures to get to the bottom of the
heinous attacks and to protect us from "sleeper" cells hatching plots
on our shores, as well as from enemies preparing strikes from afar.

On September 14, Congress quickly passed the Authorization for Use of
U.S. Military Force resolution, granting the president carte blanche
to wage war against anybody he deemed responsible for the hijackings.
And in October, with hardly enough time even to read the 342-page
document, much less debate it, lawmakers rushed through sweeping anti-
terrorism legislation whose very name and jingoistic acronym—the
Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools
Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (or USA Patriot) Act—
made it unassailable. Scores of state and local copycat laws soon
followed.

Meanwhile, Attorney General Ashcroft granted himself and the agencies
he oversees a spate of new powers. By decree, he suspended attorney-
client privilege. Soon after, he unilaterally removed restraints on
the FBI that had been put in place after the excesses of the 1960s
and '70s, unleashing agents to sniff around community meetings,
political gatherings, religious services, and even your e-mail
messages and Web site visits, without having any evidence, nor even a
good hunch, that anything illegal is afoot.

Not to be outdone, Bush issued a few executive orders of his own. One
called into being military tribunals in which "enemy combatants"
could be arrested, tried, convicted, and sentenced to death entirely
in secret and with no opportunity for judicial review. Another
rescinded the planned release of the papers of former presidents,
effectively closing the public record.

Civil libertarians, immigrant advocates, and human rights activists
frantically sent up warning flares, highlighting various ways the new
laws, regulations, and acts of fiat threatened various constitutional
protections. "There is no doubt that if we lived in a police state it
would be easier to catch terrorists," said Russell Feingold, who
braved the only nay vote on the USA Patriot Act in the Senate. "That
would not be America."

The Big Chill

Perhaps it wasn't America in those late months of 2001 as a
disquieting chill wafted in with the winter wind. During the past
year, thousands of immigrants were swept up and disappeared into
detention and secret trials; racial profiling turned from an
increasingly discredited and offensive means of crime-fighting into a
brazen national policy; the military tribunals were established with
no public outcry (and two American citizens tagged as "enemy
combatants" have been denied a full and fair trial); some officials
even called for using torture to get detainees to confess—or at least
recommended outsourcing interrogations to countries that aren't so
squeamish about applying physical pressure.

If you had a problem with any of that, you were advised to keep it to
yourself, as the president's spokesperson Ari Fleischer warned that
Americans should "watch what they say." And if anyone dared to point
out the totalitarian tone of this remark, or to question government
measures that paid little heed to the Bill of Rights, the attorney
general had a quick rebuke: "To those who scare peace-loving people
with phantoms of lost liberty, my message is this: Your tactics only
aid terrorists."

The frost trickled down from government into all areas of civic life—
even those most depended upon to keep debate open and vigorous.
Newspaper columnists, cartoonists, and an irreverent TV talk-show
host were fired for questioning whether the men who slammed airplanes
into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were actually cowards,
or whether the president, who hid out in some cushy compound while
the towers crumbled, was genuinely brave. The anti-multi-culti
American Council of Trustees and Alumni—with the VP's wife Lynn
Cheney and Democratic senator Joseph Lieberman in the forefront—
attacked colleges and universities as the "weak link" in America's
response to September 11, asserting in an overheated report
that "when a nation's intellectuals are unwilling to defend its
civilization, they give comfort to its adversaries" and naming more
than 40 professors for uttering such seditious statements as "We need
to understand the reasons behind the terrifying hatred directed
against the U.S. and find ways to act that will not foment more
hatred for generations to come."

At the University of South Florida, Sami Al-Arian, a tenured
associate professor of computer science—and a founder of the campus's
Islamic studies center—was fired in December for having expressed
hotheaded anti-Israel views a dozen years ago. Dredging up the old
statements, The O'Reilly Factor and local Florida shock-jocks had
recklessly denounced Al-Arian for fomenting jihad under the Tampa
palms, and he soon found himself unemployed.

College frosh A.J. Brown opened her door in Durham, North Carolina,
one October evening as she was getting ready for a date to find a
couple of local secret service officers who had been tipped off about
the "un-American" propaganda in her apartment—a poster, it turned
out, protesting the record number of executions in Texas under Bush's
governorship. Brown told The Progressive magazine that the officers
asked whether she had any pro-Taliban material. "No," she replied. "I
think the Taliban is just a bunch of assholes." That, apparently,
sufficed to show how united Brown stands: after 40 minutes in her
apartment, the officers left.

Other outlandish cases of repression and neighborly ratting crept
into national consciousness—or at least were splashed across lefty
Web sites—as the year wore on: the guy in San Francisco who got a
visit from the FBI after he'd questioned Bush's motives for the war
in a conversation at his gym; the student teacher in Maine sacked for
giving a lesson on Islamic culture in a 10th-grade world history
class; the two men in Chicago who were subjected to interrogations by
cops and a federal postal inspector because at their local post
office, they'd requested stamps that were not emblazoned with the
American flag.

Death of Due Process & Flouting the First Amendment

Our attorney general's name doesn't lend itself as readily as Joe
McCarthy's to the mellifluous abstract noun that came to define the
witch-hunts, loyalty oaths, and blacklisting of
the '50s: "Ashcroftism" is not likely to enter American parlance. But
if it did, the term would describe not only the climate of enforced
conformity, but the administration's high-handed disregard for the
most fundamental of constitutional protections: First Amendment
rights to free association and free speech and the Fifth Amendment
right to due process.

The most egregious breach has been the roundup and "preventive
detention" of thousands of Muslim, Arab, and South Asian immigrants
under an unprecedented veil of secrecy. (The exact number cannot be
known; the government stopped releasing its running tally in November
at 1147.) By now the vast majority has been deported or released
without yielding any information about or connections to Al Qaeda.

The USA Patriot Act allows the attorney general to function as
prosecutor, judge, and jury when it comes to incarcerating and
deporting noncitizens. All he has to do is say he has "reasonable
grounds to believe" that they have engaged in "terrorist" activity,
and he can throw them in the clinker for a week before issuing any
charges. Such detainees have no opportunity to mount a defense
against their classification as "terrorist"—nor even to know why the
attorney general has so branded them. What's more, the detainees
cannot be released from detention—even if they prevail in immigration
hearings—until the AG lifts the designation.

That's not so easy: The act defines terrorism broadly as the use of
a "weapon or dangerous device (other than for mere personal monetary
gain)" and expands "terrorist activity" to include providing material
or other support to a "terrorist organization," even if that support
goes to legitimate, nonviolent efforts by a political group that may
also have a military wing. Under this Orwellian twisting of
terminology, grabbing a bottle in the midst of a barroom brawl could
be deemed terrorism. So could sending schoolbooks to Afghanistan's
Northern Alliance, should the old warlords fall out of favor with the
U.S. Merely associating with activists from such groups could be
grounds for deportation.

Of course, Ashcroft has gone even further without having to invoke
the USA Patriot Act. He simply changed the regulations that govern
INS detention. By declaration, he expanded from 24 to 48 hours the
period the INS can detain someone without charges, and added that in
times of emergency, an unspecified "reasonable" period of time was
permissible, giving agents leave to incarcerate first and then dig up
minor immigration violations as justification.

The End of Privacy

A man approaches a librarian to ask for help finding a text. "These
books are no longer available," she replies, in a pinched, Peter
Lorre-like voice. "May I have your name please?" A couple of suited
thugs take the library patron away.

The scene comes from one of a series of patriotic public service
announcements produced for the Fourth of July by the Ad Council,
which feature creepy Big Brother scenarios followed by the
legend "What If America Weren't America? Freedom: Appreciate It,
Cherish It, Protect It." Trouble is, the library segment is no
fantasy.

As far as she knows, there aren't yet any goons stalking the stacks,
says Emily Sheketoff, executive director of the Washington office of
the American Library Association. But under the USA Patriot Act, law
enforcement officials can force librarians (and booksellers) to hand
over records of who checked out what books, and what Web sites they
visited without the high bar of "probable cause" required for
searches under the Fourth Amendment. Librarians, furthermore, must
not tell anyone such records have been requested—not even the patron
being investigated. If they refuse to fork over the records, they can
go to jail.

"What books you read gets very close to what thoughts you think,"
says Sheketoff. "This is very dangerous."

It's not the only way Ashcroft has found to bore into people's
privacy. The USA Patriot Act authorizes, among other intrusive
instruments, roving wiretaps and "sneak-and-peak searches"—covert
snooping in your home or office that you might not even get to know
about for 90 days. In the meantime, the FBI could plant a "Magic
Lantern" on your computer, recording all your keystrokes for your
snoop's next visit.

Meanwhile, when he unilaterally lifted restraints on the FBI,
Ashcroft reopened the door for COINTELPRO—counterintelligence program—
the massive FBI spying operation against law-abiding civil rights,
anti-war, and other activists run by J. Edgar Hoover from the
mid '50s to the early '70s. In 1976, after a year-long investigation,
the Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to
Intelligence Activities, chaired by Frank Church, blasted COINTELPRO
for methods "indisputably degrading to a free society" in "a
sophisticated vigilante operation aimed squarely at preventing the
exercise of First Amendment rights of speech and association." Though
Church promised that "never again will an agency of the government be
permitted to conduct a secret war against those citizens it considers
a threat to the established order," COINTELPRO is, for all intents
and purposes, back with a vengeance.

Quashing Dissent

Those activists old enough to remember the snitches in their midst in
the '70s have long suspected that something akin to COINTELPRO never
entirely went away. Acting in the open, they have not much
worried. "We've just always assumed they were watching us," says
Father Roy Bourgeois, 63, founder of the Schools of the Americas
Watch, which organizes a protest every November at Fort Bening, where
U.S. officers have trained death squad generals and torturers from
Latin America.

What did surprise Bourgeois was that this past November, the school
sought an injunction against the annual nonviolent demonstration of
some 10,000 protesters. "They said it was not appropriate during the
war on terrorism," Bourgeois recalls, "and people started to say that
we were siding with Al Qaeda by exercising our rights to assembly and
speech. We said, we too want to close down terrorist training camps,
and we should start with the one in our own backyard."

Some 36 demonstrators were prosecuted for a trespassing misdemeanor
in November—and 29 are about to go to federal prison, for sentences
ranging from three to six months.

Might they be tarred in the future under the Patriot Act as "domestic
terrorists"? Bourgeois shrugs off the possibility, noting that the
SOAW demos are thoroughly nonviolent. But the amorphous definition—
"acts dangerous to human life that are a violation of the criminal
laws" that "appear to be intended . . . to influence the policy of a
government by intimidation or coercion"—can describe any civil
disobedience action in which an overheated cop gets into a tussle
with a hepped-up protester.

Meanwhile, since last September, funds and technology have poured
from the Justice Department and FBI into local police departments to
help them beef up their "red squads"—cops who infiltrate political
groups and collect data on their members, even when there's no
illegal activity.

It's not lost on protesters who showed up for the Republican
convention in Philadelphia in 2000 that the Pennsylvania governor who
coordinated the FBI and local and state police to infiltrate, tap,
disrupt, and covertly snoop on demonstrators at the time was none
other than Tom Ridge, head of the new Homeland Security Department.
Under his watch, legitimate protests were broken up, their leaders
were arrested, and bail was set as high as $1 million. In the end, 95
percent of the charges against protesters were thrown out.

Ashcroft to Congress: Drop Dead

After nearly a year of unbridled expansion of executive powers, some
checks and balances are finally beginning to kick in. In recent
weeks, a series of heartening court decisions has slammed the
Ashcroft strategy of surveillance overkill and unwarranted secrecy.
Ruling late last month that the government could not close
deportation hearings against Rabih Haddad, a Muslim community leader
in Michigan, the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals asserted, "The
executive branch seeks to uproot people's lives, outside the public
eye and behind a closed door." But, wrote Judge Damon Keith, "when
government begins closing doors, it selectively controls information
that rightly belongs to the people. Selective information is
misinformation."

More surprising, the secret court that oversees the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), deciding whether information
gathered for foreign intelligence can be forwarded to criminal
prosecutors, rebuked the administration for seeking broader powers
under the USA Patriot Act. In an unprecedented public statement, the
FISA court said it had documented more than 75 cases of the FBI
misleading the court in trying to justify its need for wiretaps and
other electronic surveillance. Given this track record, the FISA
court concluded that the FBI could not be trusted with looser
policies that, it said, "are not reasonably designed" to protect the
privacy of law-abiding citizens.

Meanwhile, after a summer recess, Congress, like a creature evolving
out of the primordial ooze, is beginning to walk upright, and may
soon even develop a spine—if for no other reason than its members
being rankled by the arrogance of Ashcroft. Every time legislators
have tried to assert the oversight they are paid to exercise, the
attorney general has essentially told them to drop dead. In June the
committee on the judiciary submitted 50 questions to the attorney
general on the implementation of the USA Patriot Act. How many times
has the Department of Justice authorized the surveillance of
facilities used by American citizens and resident aliens, and what
assurances are in place to make sure such orders "are not sought
solely on the basis of activities protected by the First Amendment?"
goes one typical question. And the typical answer came back last in
July: That's classified information.

Congress won't keep pushing—especially not right before an election—
without pressure from the public.

Like any muscle, democratic freedoms atrophy if they are not
exercised. That's what Sacramento Bee publisher Janis Besler Heaphy
wanted to tell graduates at California State University when she was
invited to give a commencement address last December. "The
Constitution makes it our right to challenge government policies,"
she said. "Our culture makes it our duty. Raising issues. Asking
questions. Debating options." But the students didn't hear her. They
drowned her out and drove her from the stage with their patriotic
shouting.



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