Deciphering the Democratic Code
excerpted from the book
The Twilight of Democracy
The Bush Plan for America
by Jennifer Van Bergen
Common Courage Press, 2005, paper
p4
Change comes from a degree of discomfort that allows for and spurs
thought and action.
p5
Charles A, Kupchan, The End of the American Era
America under George W. Bush appears
to be the new Rome.
p5
Caesar's troops about to cross the Rubicon River, from Marcus
Lucanus, Pharsalia
Here I abandon peace and sacred law;
fortune, it is you I follow. Farewell to treaties from now on;
now war must be our judge. Hail Caesar! We who are about to die
salute you.
p5
Bush has declared war-not on terrorism, for that was never his
intention until he was forced to do it -but on the Republic of
the United States. Since his election, viewed by many in the first
instance as illegitimate, he has curtailed civil liberties, invaded
privacies, and, indifferent to due process, detained people indefinitely.
He has disregarded treaties, human rights, and constitutional
law. He has violated international law and custom and has alienated
many of our oldest and staunchest allies. Even moderate conservative
analysts like Charles A. Kupchan realize that "American unilateralism
has been tearing away at the fabric of the international community."'
Is history repeating itself? In 49 B.C.,
the Senate of the Republic o Rome, threatened y the increasing
popularity an power of General Julius Caesar, ordered him to disband
the armies he had commanded as governor in Gaul. At the time,
Caesar was staying in the northern Italian city of Ravenna. Ancient
Roman law forbade any general from crossing the Rubicon River
(which was the frontier of his province), and entering Italy proper
with a standing army. To do so was treason. This tiny stream would
reveal Caesar's intentions and mark the point of no return. After
purportedly having a vision which prompted him forward, Caesar
cried out, 'Let us go where the omens of the Gods and the crimes
of our enemies summon us! The die is now cast!
By crossing the Rubicon, Caesar in effect
declared civil war on the Roman Republic. He marched on Rome while
the consul and most of the Senate fled to Greece. Caesar then
assumed the office of emperor for life. This was the end of the
Roman Republic and the beginning of the Roman Empire. Although
the Roman Empire lasted hundreds of years, civil rule did not
return. Caesar's opinion of the Roman Republic is captured in
his words: "The Republic is merely a name, without form or
substance."
The actions of George W. Bush, Jr. echo
Caesar's words. Bush has treated the principles of our American
Republic as words without form or substance.
p7
... if America has crossed the Rubicon, there may be no going
back, Ed Djerejian former U.S. Ambassador to Syria and Israel,
says: "The bottom has fallen out of support for the United
States around the world." Margaret Tutwiler, former Ambassador
to Morocco and presently under-secretary of State for public diplomacy,
echoed that view when she emphasized while testifying before Congress
that "it will take us many years of hard, focused work"
to restore America's standing abroad. Kupchan concludes:
America under George W. Bush appears
to be the new Rome. There is, however, an alternative view of
the long-term consequences of the U.S. war against Iraq, one that
puts the future of American primacy in a different light. Far
from opening a new American century, Washington has embarked on
a course that is precipitating the end of the American era.
***
Down the Road to Fascism
p8
Bill Schultz, Exec. Dir., Amnesty International Amnesty NOW, Summer
2003
This year we are witnessing not just a
series of brutal but fundamentally independent human rights violations
committed by disparate governments around the globe this year
we are witnessing the orchestrated destruction by the United States
of the fragile scaffolding on which international human rights
have been built, painstakingly, bit by bit by bit, since World
War II.
p8
Americans may not realize it yet, but the United States is already
more than three-quarters of the way down the road to fascism.
p10
Fascism & Empire
... fascism [is] a system of government
marked by centralization of authority under a dictator, stringent
socioeconomic controls, suppression of the opposition through
terror and censorship, and typically a policy of belligerent nationalism
and racism." Stan Goff, a retired military. officer' who
has spoken out eloquently against the invasion of Iraq, says:
I think we already have a fascist executive
branch, but that does not translate into systemic fascism yet.
Fascism is a middle class phenomenon, which means it is something
that happens in countries that have achieved a level of development.
Right now we are seeing a preparatory phase by the fascist executive
branch, putting in place the legal infrastructure to impose a
distinctly American fascism if the opportunity arrives. Guantanamo,
PATRIOT Act, the FTAA demonstrations, all of it."
Laurence W. Britt writing in Free Inquiry
Magazine, delineated fourteen "common threads" of fascism:
1. Powerful and continuing expressions
of nationalism.
2. Disdain for the importance of human rights.
3. Identification of enemies/scapegoats as a unifying cause.
4. The supremacy of the military/avid militarism.
5. Rampant sexism.
6. A controlled mass media.
7. Obsession with national security.
8. Religion and ruling elite tied together.
9. Power of corporations protected.
10. Power of labor suppressed or eliminated.
11. Disdain and suppression of intellectuals and the arts.
12. Obsession with crime and punishment.
13. Rampant cronyism and corruption.
14. Fraudulent elections.
p11
The National Security State, the PATRIOT Act, & Parallel Legal
Systems
America is not yet fully fascist. It can,
however, be characterized as something just short of fascist:
a "national security state."' National security is certainly
one of Bush's main themes, his mantra, Increasingly, the Executive
has justified itself by declaring it acts in the interests of
national security.
Under the PATRIOT Act, the term "national
security" is synonymous with "foreign intelligence."
The reason for this is that foreign intelligence is used to protect
national security. Thus, what used to be called "foreign
intelligence investigations" are now somewhat misleadingly
called "national security investigations" by the Department
of Justice. They are also sometimes called "terrorist investigations,"
for the obvious reason that such investigations are meant to protect
against terrorist attacks.
However, the mixing of the terms national
security, terrorist, and foreign intelligence has unfortunate
ramifications for people both inside and outside the U.S. Calling
an investigation a national security investigation masks the fact
that such investigations increasingly result in criminal prosecutions.
What's wrong with that? Well, a warrant to do a search or surveillance
for foreign intelligence purposes does not require probable cause
of criminal activity. When material from a foreign intelligence
investigation is gathered without probable cause and used in a
criminal trial, what happens to Fourth Amendment protections?
Suddenly you have nothing preventing the government from tapping
the phones of innocent people and using a "mosaic" of
pieces based on speculative and third-hand testimony to convict
them of crimes that are increasingly vague and broad.
The USA PATRIOT Act is the primary mechanism
that our government is using to create this dilution of constitutional
standards. It amends and combines three areas of law: (1) criminal
laws and procedures, (2) foreign intelligence law, and (3) immigration
law. Each of these types of law have valid separate uses and purposes.
In fact, immigration law and foreign intelligence law each make
up separate, parallel legal systems. They even use different courts.
But, the PATRIOT Act merges and exploits these systems.
Immigration law involves primarily the
laws that apply to the admission and removal of aliens into the
United States. These cases are heard in Immigration Courts, which
are part of the executive branch, not the judicial branch. Courts
have determined that admission and removal of aliens do not require
the same constitutional protections as suspects in a criminal
prosecution, despite the fact that aliens may be deprived of liberty
(and, under the PATRIOT Act, deprived of liberty indefinitely).
The PATRIOT Act exploits these constitutional dilutions by applying
immigration laws and definitions in criminal prosecutions. 1'
Foreign intelligence law (which falls
under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, or FISA)
involves the investigation of foreign powers and their agents.
No cases are actually brought under foreign intelligence law directly.
Only requests for foreign intelligence warrants are brought and
these are brought before a special secret federal court (the FISA
court). The purpose of such warrants is, of course, to obtain
foreign intelligence." However, the PATRIOT Act amends foreign
intelligence laws to allow them to be applied to ordinary law-abiding
persons without the constitutional privacy protections of the
Fourth Amendment. Information under foreign intelligence law may
also now be more easily used in criminal prosecutions, even when
that information was obtained without probable cause of criminal
activity.
Criminal law, of course, involves investigation
and prosecution of criminal suspects. These cases are prosecuted
in regular courts in the judicial branch, with full constitutional
protections. Criminal law is where you find the Fourth, Fifth,
Sixth and Eighth Amendment protections. It's also where you'll
find substantial Supreme Court case law about First Amendment
and Fourteenth Amendment protections.
The PATRIOT Act allows surveillance and
searches to be conducted without probable cause, by resorting
to foreign intelligence law. The Act circumvents First Amendment
protections by permitting convictions on the basis of mere association
or financial support, without any requirement of knowledge or
participation in crime.
The dilution of constitutional protections
ties back into the notion of the rise of an American national
security state, where security, not individual rights, is what
we fight for and protect. We have forgotten, then, what America
is about and what our ancestors fought and died for. Patrick Henry
said "Give me liberty, or give me death!" Fortunately,
we do not need to make the choice between liberty and death. As
the ACLU declares, we can be both safe and free.
p14
Justice Ahron Barak, the president of the Israeli Supreme Court,
wrote in 2002:
Terrorism does not justify the neglect
of accepted legal norms. This is how we distinguish ourselves
from the terrorists themselves. They act against the law, by violating
and trampling it, while in its war against terrorism, a democratic
state acts within the framework of the law and according to the
law...
p15
... the religious right is not unlike fundamentalist Islam. Both
believe that their faith must control the way the world works.
As Bernard Lewis puts it, both Christians and Muslims "shared
the conviction that there was only one true faith, theirs, which
it was their duty to bring to all humankind."" Lewis
says: "Today we in the West are engaged in what we see as
a war against terrorism, and what the terrorists present as a
war against unbelief "
p15
Zechariah Chafee, Jr., The Blessings of Liberty (1956)
We must choose between freedom and fear-we
cannot have both. If the citizens of the United States persist
in being afraid, the real rulers of this country will be the fanatics
fired with a zeal to save grown men from objectionable ideas by
putting them under the care of official nursemaids.
p23
Statutes are laws that are enacted by Congress. Regulations are
laws that are promulgated by administrative agencies. Statutes
override regulations, although in the absence of a statute, regulations
are the law (as long as they are not unconstitutional).
p26
Treaties and Customary International Law
Many people, including judges, do not
know that treaties and "the law of nations" (also known
as customary international law) are the "supreme law of the
land" of the United States. In other words, treaties and
customary international law are THE LAW, as much as constitutional,
statutory, or regularly laws are. This means that if we violate
a treaty or customary international law, we are breaking the law
of our own country.
p27
There are basically two types of international law that] apply
domestically in the United States: (1) treaties, and (2) customary
international law. Treaties are in force only once the President
signs them and the Senate ratifies them. Customary international
law, on the other hand, is operable by dint of customary international
recognition. For example, prior to the promulgation of the international
Convention Against Torture, torture was nonetheless universally
abhorred and prohibited by customary international law.
p28
... there is no universal enforcement mechanism for international
law violations, The United Nations has no enforcement power without
moment-to-moment agreement by the parties involved in a conflict.
There are a variety of permanent and ad hoc international courts
where complaints can be brought, but, again, their jurisdiction
only applies where the parties agree. The International Criminal
Court (ICC), which came into existence only recently, is the first
permanent international tribunal for war crimes, crimes against
humanity, and so on. Shortly after bush came into office, he pulled
the United States out of the enabling treaty, the Rome Statute.
p35
The portions [of the first amendment] that are most threatened
by the Bush administration are the freedoms of speech and press,
and the right to assemble. Case law has arisen abundantly over
the years in relation to every clause of the First Amendment.
Additionally, the Supreme Court has construed a "right of
association" in the First Amendment, which has come to be
viewed as an essential right and is also now under attack.
The Court has found in the First Amendment
an associational right to engage in disfavored activities, such
as membership in disfavored organizations, absent a showing of
criminal activity. For example, in the Communist Party cases of
the 1950's, the Court held unconstitutional laws that prohibited
mere membership in a political organization that advocated violence
or lawlessness. In other words, although the Court took many years
to arrive fully at this approach, mere membership cannot be a
crime, since it is protected by the First Amendment, even if that
membership is in an organization that advocates the overthrow
of the U.S. government. Any law that prohibits mere membership,
therefore, is unconstitutional. Yet, the material support and
designation provisions of the PATRIOT Act do just this."
"Subversive advocacy" is another
area the First Amendment protects. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes
wrote: "If there is any principle of the Constitution that
more imperatively calls for attachment [e.g., favor] than any
other it is the principle of free thought-not free thought for
those who agree with us but freedom for the thought that we hate.""
The Court has held that a state may not forbid "advocacy
of the use of force or of law violation [sic] except where such
advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless
action and is likely to produce such action." This is a later
development of the "clear and present danger test" ...
p36
The phrase "clear and present danger" was originally
articulated in a 1919 case by justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, who
said that the defendant, who had distributed a leaflet against
the draft, might have been within his constitutional rights to
say what he did when the country was not at war, but not in wartime,
when the words helped further a conspiracy to interfere with the
war effort. Holmes wrote for a unanimous Court that "[the]
question in every case is whether the words are used in such circumstances
and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger
that they would bring about the substantive evils that Congress
had a right to prevent."
p36
Advocacy is a form of speech. Membership is a form of expression,
parallel to speech. Publication in the pres is also a form of
speech, but it is broader than individual speech. It is sometimes
referred to as "the right of the public to know," which
moves into the area of the right of the press to have access to
Association is a form of expression. "Guilt by association"
is prohibited.
The right to peaceably assemble is "one
of the core political rights or Americans.'" Chief Justice
Hughes wrote in a 1937 landmark freedom of assembly case:
[P]eaceable assembly for lawful discussion
cannot be made a crime. The holding of meetings for peaceable
political action cannot be proscribed. Those who assist in the
conduct of such meetings cannot be branded as criminals on that
score.
p58
... under both the pre-2001 anti-terrorism law, AEDPA, as well
as under the PATRIOT Act (which removed some exclusions), in a
especially odious mixing of immigration law and criminal law,
a person can be sent to jail for the rest of his life for providing
material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization
(FTO), without the government having to prove that the person
either knew the FTO was engaged in unlawful activities or ever
participated in those unlawful activities. The material support
provision is in the criminal code. The FTO provision is in the
immigration statute. The Secretary of State is authorized to designate
the FTO and no defendant charged under the provision may challenge
the designation. Thus, the combination of these two statutes forms
a "strict liability" crime. Neither knowledge of nor
intent to participate in a crime matter. A person may be given
a life sentence if he gave baby food for humanitarian purposes
to a designated FTO.
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