It Is Now Official: The US Is a Police State 


Paul Craig Roberts || February 10, 2010 


Americans have been losing the protection of law for years. In the 21st 
century the loss of legal protections accelerated with the Bush 
administration's "war on terror," which continues under the Obama 
administration and is essentially a war on the Constitution and U.S. civil 
liberties. 

The Bush regime was determined to vitiate habeas corpus in order to hold 
people indefinitely without bringing charges. The regime had acquired 
hundreds of prisoners by paying a bounty for terrorists. Afghan warlords and 
thugs responded to the financial incentive by grabbing unprotected people 
and selling them to the Americans. 

The Bush regime needed to hold the prisoners without charges because it had 
no evidence against the people and did not want to admit that the U.S. 
government had stupidly paid warlords and thugs to kidnap innocent people. 
In addition, the Bush regime needed "terrorists" prisoners in order to prove 
that there was a terrorist threat. 

As there was no evidence against the "detainees" (most have been released 
without charges after years of detention and abuse), the U.S. government 
needed a way around U.S. and international laws against torture in order 
that the government could produce evidence via self-incrimination. The Bush 
regime found inhumane and totalitarian-minded lawyers and put them to work 
at the U.S. Department of Justice (sic) to invent arguments that the Bush 
regime did not need to obey the law. 

The Bush regime created a new classification for its detainees that it used 
to justify denying legal protection and due process to the detainees. As the 
detainees were not U.S. citizens and were demonized by the regime as "the 
760 most dangerous men on earth," there was little public outcry over the 
regime's unconstitutional and inhumane actions. 

As our Founding Fathers and a long list of scholars warned, once civil 
liberties are breached, they are breached for all. Soon U.S. citizens were 
being held indefinitely in violation of their habeas corpus rights. Dr. Aafia 
Siddiqui, 
, an American citizen of Pakistani origin, might have been the first. 

Dr. Siddiqui, a scientist educated at MIT and Brandeis University, was 
seized in Pakistan for no known reason, sent to Afghanistan, and was held 
secretly for five years in the U.S. military's notorious Bagram prison in 
Afghanistan. Her three young children, one an 8-month-old baby, were with 
her at the time she was abducted. She has no idea what has become of her two 
youngest children. Her oldest child, 7 years old, was also incarcerated in 
Bagram and subjected to similar abuse and horrors. 

Siddiqui has never been charged with any terrorism-related offense. A 
British journalist, hearing her piercing screams as she was being tortured, 
disclosed her presence . An embarrassed U.S. government responded to the 
disclosure by sending Siddiqui to the U.S. for trial on the trumped-up 
charge that while a captive, she grabbed a U.S. soldier's rifle and fired 
two shots attempting to shoot him. The charge apparently originated as a 
U.S. soldier's excuse for shooting Dr. Siddiqui twice in the stomach, 
resulting in her near death. 

On Feb. 4, Dr. Siddiqui was convicted by a New York jury for attempted 
murder. The only evidence presented against her was the charge itself and an 
unsubstantiated claim that she had once taken a pistol-firing course at an 
American firing range. No evidence was presented of her fingerprints on the 
rifle that this frail and broken 100-pound woman had allegedly seized from 
an American soldier. No evidence was presented that a weapon was fired, no 
bullets, no shell casings, no bullet holes. Just an accusation. 

Wikipedia has this to say about the trial : "The trial took an unusual turn 
when an FBI official asserted that the fingerprints taken from the rifle, 
which was purportedly used by Aafia to shoot at the U.S. interrogators, did 
not match hers." 

An ignorant and bigoted American jury convicted her for being a Muslim. This 
is the kind of "justice" that always results when the state hypes fear and 
demonizes a group. 

The people who should have been on trial are the people who abducted her, 
disappeared her young children, shipped her across international borders, 
violated her civil liberties, tortured her apparently for the fun of it, 
raped her, and attempted to murder her with two gunshots to her stomach. 
Instead, the victim was put on trial and convicted. 

This is the unmistakable hallmark of a police state. And this victim is an 
American citizen. 

Anyone can be next. Indeed, on Feb. 3 Dennis Blair, director of national 
intelligence told the House Intelligence Committee that it was now “ defined 
policy ” 
that the U.S. government can murder its own citizens on the sole 
basis of someone in the government's judgment that an American is a threat. 
No arrest, no trial, no conviction, just execution on suspicion of being a 
threat. 

This shows how far the police state has advanced. A presidential appointee 
in the Obama administration tells an important committee of Congress that 
the executive branch has decided that it can murder American citizens abroad 
if it thinks they are a threat. 

I can hear readers saying the government might as well kill Americans abroad 
as it kills them at home - Waco, Ruby Ridge, the Black Panthers. 

Yes, the U.S. government has murdered its citizens, but Dennis Blair's 
"defined policy" is a bold new development. The government, of course, 
denies that it intended to kill the Branch Davidians, Randy Weaver's wife 
and child, or the Black Panthers. The government says that Waco was a 
terrible tragedy, an unintended result brought on by the Branch Davidians 
themselves. The government says that Ruby Ridge was Randy Weaver's fault for 
not appearing in court on a day that had been miscommunicated to him. The 
Black Panthers, the government says, were dangerous criminals who insisted 
on a shootout. 

In no previous death of a U.S. citizen by the hands of the U.S. government 
has the government claimed the right to kill Americans without arrest, 
trial, and conviction of a capital crime. 

In contrast, Dennis Blair has told the U.S. Congress that the executive 
branch has assumed the right to murder Americans who it deems a "threat." 

What defines "threat"? Who will make the decision? What it means is that the 
government will murder whomever it chooses. 

There is no more complete or compelling evidence of a police state than the 
government announcing that it will murder its own citizens if it views them 
as a "threat." 

Ironic, isn't it, that "the war on terror" to make us safe ends in a police 
state with the government declaring the right to murder American citizens 
whom it regards as a threat. 


http://vdare.com/roberts/100208_police_state.htm 

http://original.antiwar.com/roberts/2010/02/09/us-is-a-police-state/ 

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