Setback for Ashcroft's Radical Agenda
Belief:
Nobel Laureate Slams the Bible, Calls It "A Catalogue of Cruelties"
Mario de Queiroz
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
As Foreclosure Nightmares Increase, Will More Homeowners Pay Off Their Bankers in Violence?
Scott Thill
DrugReporter:
Lies About Marijuana Drive People to a Much More Harmful Drug -- Booze
Steve Fox
Environment:
Why the End May Be Coming for Coal
Christine MacDonald
Food:
Despite Censorship By Beef Magnate, Michael Pollan Spreads Message About the Real Price of Cheap Food
Health and Wellness:
New York May Stop Heartless Health Insurers from Dropping Coverage When It Stops Being Profitable
William Ehart
Immigration:
NYC Marathon Raises Question of Who Is American Enough?
James E. Johnson, Jr.
Media and Technology:
Study Claims Even the Most Sophisticated Readers Can Be Manipulated
Melinda Burns
Movie Mix:
The Yes Men: Pranksters Out to Fix the World
Mark Engler
Politics:
What Michelle and Barack's Marriage Has in Common with 56 Million Other Ones
Annabelle Gurwitch
Reproductive Justice and Gender:
Fetus-Shaped Potatoes? Going Undercover Inside the Weird World of Right-Wing Abortion Foes
Ann Neumann
Rights and Liberties:
"My Kids Want to Hide Their Identity; They're Scared Someone Will Attack Us": U.S. Muslims Being Targeted
Jaisal Noor
Sex and Relationships:
Instant Sex: Has the Digital Age Destroyed Relationships or Made Them Better?
Vanessa Richmond
Take Action:
G-20 Meetings: Nothing Much Happened in the Suites, and There Was Too Much Punch in the Streets
Laura Flanders
Water:
Why Natural Gas Is Not a Clean Energy Panacea
Stan Cox
World:
With Unemployment at 40 Percent, Afghan Teens Enlist in Army, Police
Lal Aqa Sherin
Yesterday's 2nd Circuit federal appeals court ruling in Manhattan, rejecting President Bush's detention of American citizen Jose Padilla without charges or counsel as an "enemy combatant," underscores the stunningly radical nature of Bush's post-9/11 assault on civil liberties.
In the ruling -- which the government is likely to appeal either to the full circuit court or directly to the U.S. Supreme Court -- the opinions of both the two-judge majority, Judges Barrington D. Parker Jr. and Rosemary S. Pooler, and the dissenting judge, Richard C. Wesley, showed clearly the fundamental constitutional matters raised by the White House attempt to claim authority to imprison citizens like Padilla without charges.
Padilla has been held for 18 months incommunicado in a military brig in Charleston, S.C. He was arrested -- to great media fanfare -- in a plot U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft first triumphantly exposed as a well-developed Al-Qaeda plan to detonate a so-called "dirty" nuclear bomb in the heart of... uh...
Somewhere. It turns out there wasn't all that much evidence, at least much that's known publicly, other than that Padilla is a long-time Chicago area gang member, converted Muslim, and that he traveled extensively in the Middle East. Whether that made him a terrorist, an Al-Qaeda wannabe, a mid-level drug runner, or religious tourist is anyone's guess, since no court has been allowed to decide.
And that's the point.
Constitutionally, the questions in Padilla's case are very roughly twofold: first, whether the President's rights, as Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces, supercede those of Congress, which has authority to determine issues of due process; and secondly, when military matters involve a threat to national security on U.S. soil itself, whether a declaration of war or war making authority -- such as that Congress gave Bush after 9-11 -- is enough to give Bush the latitude to, for example, suspend basic constitutional rights.
Wesley, the court panel dissenter, claimed that it was -- but also noted pointedly in his opinion that "There is no well-traveled road delineating the respective constitutional powers and limitations in this regard."
For that reason, the case of Padilla -- as well as other fundamental shifts in authority embodied in post-9/11 Bush policies like the establishment of military tribunals and the detention of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay -- are likely to wind up resolved by the U.S. Supreme Court. The lack of other serious cases against suspected terrorists, either as part of or after 9/11, underscores both the over-hyping of such threats embodied in "dirty bomb" and various color-coded White House terror warnings, and the use of these few existing cases primarily to try to establish precedents for future use.
Even while Padilla's case winds upwards through the courts, the sharp erosion of civil liberties begun while Manhattan still smoldered has continued. When a proposed draft "PATRIOT II" Act was leaked and provoked enormous public outcry early this year, one of its major provisions was instead quietly attached as a rider to an intelligence appropriations bill last month. By simply redefining virtually any exchange of money in a cash economy as a "financial institution," Congress has now given the government the right to search records of almost any private business or organization without either a warrant or judicial oversight -- the sort of blatant disregard for constitutional "search and seizure" protections that also ought to wind up in the Supreme Court.
One of the other components of the previous draft PATRIOT II would have allowed the government to strip persons, accused by the Commander-in-Chief of being enemies, of U.S. citizenship -- again raising the possibility of a two-step indefinite detention as an "enemy combatant" of someone like Padilla, even if his current case succeeds.
The Padilla ruling represents yet another in a string of recent setbacks for the Bush attempts to hijack constitutional power. But every time they win one, it's a setback that could take generations to undo. And just in case anyone needs reminding, whoever controls the White House after November 2004 is likely to be picking at least two, even three new lifetime Supreme Court appointments in the next four years.
Even without such powers, over two million Americans already rest in jail in the Land of the Free. The stakes are enormous.
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Study Claims Even the Most Sophisticated Readers Can Be Manipulated Media and Technology: Revelations from a european study effort reveal that biased news can have a "time bomb" effect. By Melinda Burns, Miller-McCune.com. November 9, 2009. |
Nobel Laureate Slams the Bible, Calls It "A Catalogue of Cruelties" World: The holy book is a "manual of bad morals," according to José Saramago. By Mario de Queiroz, IPS News. November 9, 2009. |
Why the End May Be Coming for Coal Environment: Momentum is building to block new coal-fired power plants and end mountaintop removal mining. Is there enough political will to make the break? By Christine MacDonald, E Magazine. November 9, 2009. |
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