Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.
Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.
Flipping Off Bush on Civil Liberties
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
I'm an American Worker and I'm Tired of Getting Screwed
Rick Kepler
Democracy and Elections:
Consensus Builds for Universal Voter Registration
Project Vote
DrugReporter:
Beaten, Tortured and Sentenced 25-to-Life for Minor Drug Offense
Randy Credico
Election 2008:
Obama's Latino Mandate
Steve Cobble, Joe Velasquez
Environment:
How the Rich Are Destroying the Earth
Herve Kempf
ForeignPolicy:
Arab Americans Should Be Worried About Rahm Emanuel
Remi Kanazi
Health and Wellness:
Meditation May Protect Your Brain
Michael Haederle
Hurricane Katrina:
From the Bayou to Baghdad: Mission Not Accomplished
Amy Goodman
Immigration:
Border Fence to Carve up Nature Reserve
Enrique Gili
Media and Technology:
Glenn Beck Wonders Why He's Resented as a Bigot
Steve Rendall
Movie Mix:
Honeytrap Lies and Women Spies
Rosie White
Reproductive Justice and Gender:
The Push to Appoint Women to Obama's Cabinet Is Threatened
Allison Stevens
Rights and Liberties:
In Stunning Ruling, D.C. Judge Orders Release of Five Gitmo Prisoners
Sex and Relationships:
Is It Wrong to Talk About Michelle Obama's Body?
Tamura Lomax
War on Iraq:
Theater of War: Portrait of a Homeland Security State [Photo Slideshow Included]
Lindsay Beyerstein
Water:
The Tide Is Changing on Bottled Water
Wendy Williams
As the election draws near, discussions of civil liberties have all but disappeared from the public discourse. Earlier questions about balancing civil liberties and national security seem to have been replaced by both candidates need to prove that they are the toughest candidate possible, regardless of the consequences for Americans precious civil liberties. But there are still important differences between the two men.
Bush and Cheney tell us that Kerry voted for the USA PATRIOT Act but now criticizes it. Kerrys defense has been that as he has acquired more information about the law, he has rethought his understanding, which may cause him to appear as if he is changing his position. That answer may be accurate, but it does not get at the heart of the problems with the administrations approach to civil liberties. If Kerry had wanted to be on the offense, rather than the defensive, he could have noted that almost every major sector of U.S. judicial, political, and civil society has flipped President Bushs laws and practices that touch on civil liberties protection.
Really, President Bushs entire record on civil liberties is a flop.
Flipping Bush in the Courts
Federal courts have taken the lead in flipping Bushs civil liberties agenda. Take, for example, Mr.Yaser Hamdi.
Hamdi was the subject of an important U.S. Supreme Court decision this past summer. There, the majority of the Justices found that the Bush administration had been unconstitutionally holding Hamdi as an enemy combatant without charging him with any crimes, and without giving him access to his court-appointed lawyer or to the U.S. judicial system to review his complaints.
The Supreme Court ruled 8-1 against the administrations arguments, completely flipping the White Houses claims that it could treat American citizens without regard to the Constitution.
Last month, Hamdi returned to Saudi Arabia. He was released in exchange for his agreeing not to bring claims against the United States for injuries suffered while imprisoned in Virginia and South Carolina.
Hamdi is but one example of a rapidly growing string of court decisions flipping the Bushs problematic policies because they violate basic constitutional rights.
As attorney Elaine Cassel has recently pointed out in her new book,The War on Civil Liberties, the Bush administration has followed a predictable and increasingly failing pattern in prosecuting alleged terrorists: it makes dramatic, highly public allegations that distort the facts. It then accepts pleas to lesser charges in exchange for prison sentences that are unusually harsh for those lesser charges. Then it claims credit for winning the war against terrorism.
The Administration tried this in Detroit, where a year ago, Attorney General John Ashcroft boasted that he had won his major court victory in the war on terror by prosecuting a suspected terrorist sleeper cell. Yet, we recently learned in the New York Times that the prosecution was no victory at all it was a farce, and one engineered by the highest levels of the Justice Department. Not only that, but in late August, the DOJ submitted a remarkable memorandum to federal judge Gerald Rosen in Detroit, admitting that its prosecution had been riddled with a pattern of mistakes and oversights.
This victory deserved to be flipped, and Judge Rosen did exactly that.
U.S. courts are even beginning to flip the almighty USA PATRIOT Act the cornerstone of Bushs civil liberties platform. For example, in January, a federal district court in California declared unconstitutional a section of the Act that prevented providing material support for groups accused of being terrorists because it was overly broad and vague and could apply to all kinds of non-terrorist groups.
More recently in fact, just before the first presidential debate a federal judge in New York struck down a major surveillance component of the PATRIOT Act that gave the FBI extraordinary power to demand information from companies without needing to obtain a court order. Frighteningly, that section also prevented recipients of the letters from ever revealing that they received the FBI demand for records. Judge Marrero wrote that such all-inclusive sweeps for information had no place in our open society.
Noah Leavitt is an attorney who writes frequently on civil liberties and human rights issues. He can be contacted at nsleavitt@hotmail.com.
Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from AlterNet! Sign up now »
| More News and Analysis: | ||
|
The Push to Appoint Women to Obama's Cabinet Is Threatened Reproductive Justice and Gender: Women's rights advocates are scrambling to make up for an unexpected shortage of cash to fund a push for female appointees to Obama's Cabinet. By Allison Stevens, Women's eNews. November 23, 2008. |
Meditation May Protect Your Brain Health and Wellness: Research is confirming the medicinal effects that advocates have long claimed for meditation. By Michael Haederle, Miller-McCune.com. November 22, 2008. |
The Dirty Secret of the Financial Crisis: Our Banking System's Broken Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: No more free money from Washington. No more masters of the universe. No more business as usual. Time for a banking holiday. By William Greider, The Nation. November 22, 2008. |