"Liberty Ebbs by Degrees"
Bush is twisting the Constitution into
an obstacle to defense, and no one is speaking up.
By Jonathan Turley, Jonathan Turley is a
professor at George Washington University Law School.
What would happen if you woke up living in
a quasi-police state? It is a question that seems entirely academic -- if
not absurd -- to Americans who pride themselves on being the leading voice
of liberty in the world. This status, however, is less unquestionable as
it is unquestioned. A review of administration policies at the beginning
of 2003 raises serious questions about the character of the government
formed in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks.
Major changes have come in small,
incremental steps, with each privacy right or civil liability concern
balanced in isolation against the potential of a massive attack.
In a sense, the Bush administration is a
study in public policy pointillism, the Impressionist technique of French
painter Georges-Pierre Seurat in which innumerable small dots of color are
largely meaningless until the viewer stands at a distance. Only then does
a picture emerge as a whole from the aggregation of the dots. So too the
full effect of the changes of the Bush administration is only now coming
into view.
Among the "dots":
* Holding citizens indefinitely without
access to the courts or counsel.
* Monitoring library withdrawals and
Internet communications.
* Taping attorney-client communications.
* Attempting to create a national reporting
system for citizens to monitor one another in their day-to-day activities.
* Developing a massive computer system to
monitor every purchase by every citizen, from hospital bills to gasoline.
* Establishing a huge surveillance system,
including the expansion of searches ordered by a secret court without
satisfying the probable cause standards of the Constitution.
* Claiming the right to create a military
tribunal system to try and execute suspects without applying the
Constitution or federal laws.
* Assisting private organizations in
creating the foundation for a national identification card that could
easily become a type of internal passport for citizens.
* Recommending state laws (already adopted
in many states) that give governors virtual dictatorial control after they
unilaterally declare emergencies because of "potential" health
threats.
* Expanding the use of the military in
domestic law enforcement.
* Endorsing the broad use of assassination
as an alternative to capture, including the possible assassination of
citizens.
* Refusing to apply the Geneva Convention
and then later agreeing to apply only part of it. Most recently, it was
disclosed that the U.S. created a facility in Afghanistan where suspects
reportedly had been tortured by U.S. officials or sent to surrogate
nations for more aggressive torture.
These are but a few of the changes since
the Sept. 11 attacks. In the campaign for greater government powers, the
Constitution is increasingly cited as exposing the nation to risks. In
less than two years, the Constitution has gone from an objective to be
satisfied to an obstacle to national defense. Constitutional rights and
values are portrayed as luxuries of the good old days, luxuries that are
prohibitive now that times are tough.
As these changes mount, at what point do we
become something other than a free and democratic nation? This status is
determined by a commitment to certain fundamental legal principles in good
times and bad times.
We will never know whether we could have
won without changing our fundamental beliefs or principles. It is unclear
when this "war on terror" will end. But if it does end and we
win, what will we be other than victorious?>>
Read this at: http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-turley2jan02,0,2004408