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Old 08-13-2012, 11:45 PM   #1
CuteOldGuy
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Default Thoughts on the Criminalization of Dissent

Another NDAA Plaintiff speaks:

I was on the 15th floor of the Southern U.S. District Court in New York in the courtroom of Judge Katherine Forrest on Tuesday. It was the final hearing in the lawsuit I brought in January against President Barack Obama and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta. I filed the suit, along with lawyers Carl J. Mayer and Bruce I. Afran, over Section 1021 of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). We were late joined by six co-plaintiffs including Noam Chomsky and Daniel Ellsberg.

This section of the NDAA, signed into law by Obama on Dec. 31, 2011, obliterates some of our most important constitutional protections. It authorizes the executive branch to order the military to seize U.S. citizens deemed to be terrorists or associated with terrorists. Those taken into custody by the military, which becomes under the NDAA a domestic law enforcement agency, can be denied due process and habeas corpus and held indefinitely in military facilities. Any activist or dissident, whose rights were once protected under the First Amendment, can be threatened under this law with indefinite incarceration in military prisons, including our offshore penal colonies. The very name of the law itself—the Homeland Battlefield Bill—suggests the totalitarian credo of endless war waged against enemies within "the homeland" as well as those abroad.
"The essential thrust of the NDAA is to create a system of justice that violates the separation of powers," Mayer told the court. "[The Obama administration has] taken detention out of the judicial branch and put it under the executive branch."

In May, Judge Forrest issued a temporary injunction invalidating Section 1021 as a violation of the First and Fifth amendments. It was a courageous decision. Forrest will decide within a couple of weeks whether she will make the injunction permanent.

In last week's proceeding, the judge, who appeared from her sharp questioning of government attorneys likely to nullify the section, cited the forced internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II as a precedent she did not want to follow. Forrest read to the courtroom a dissenting opinion by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson in Korematsu v. United States, a ruling that authorized the detention during the war of some 110,00 Japanese-Americans in government "relocation camps."

"[E]ven if they were permissible military procedures, I deny that it follows that they are constitutional," Jackson wrote in his 1944 dissent. "If, as the Court holds, it does follow, then we may as well say that any military order will be constitutional, and have done with it."

Barack Obama's administration has appealed Judge Forrest's temporary injunction and would certainly appeal a permanent injunction. It is a stunning admission by this president that he will do nothing to protect our constitutional rights. The administration's added failure to restore habeas corpus, its use of the Espionage Act six times to silence government whistle-blowers, its support of the FISA Amendment Act—which permits warrantless wiretapping, monitoring and eavesdropping on U.S. citizens—and its ordering of the assassination of U.S. citizens under the 2001 Authorization to Use Military Force, or AUMF, is a signal that for all his rhetoric Obama, like his Republican rivals, is determined to remove every impediment to the unchecked power of the security and surveillance state. I and the six other plaintiffs, who include reporters, professors and activists, will most likely have to continue this fight in an appellate court and perhaps the Supreme Court.

The language of the bill is terrifyingly vague. It defines a "covered person"—one subject to detention—as "a person who was a part of or substantially supported al-Qaeda, the Taliban, or associated forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners, including any person who has committed a belligerent act or has directly supported such hostilities in aid of such enemy forces." The bill, however, does not define the terms "substantially supported," "directly supported" or "associated forces." In defiance of more than 200 earlier laws of domestic policing, this act holds that any member of a group deemed by the state to be a terrorist organization, whether it is a Palestinian charity or a Black Bloc anarchist unit, can be seized and held by the military. Mayer stressed this point in the court Wednesday when he cited the sedition convictions of peace activists during World War I who distributed leaflets calling to end the war by halting the manufacturing of munitions. Mayer quoted Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes' dissenting 1919 opinion. We need to "be eternally vigilant against attempts to check the expression of opinions that we loathe," the justice wrote.

The Justice Department's definition of a potential terrorism suspect under the Patriot Act is already extremely broad. It includes anyone with missing fingers, someone who has weatherproof ammunition and guns, and anyone who has hoarded more than seven days of food. This would make a few of my relatives in rural Maine and their friends, if the government so decided, prime terrorism suspects.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Benjamin Torrance argued in court that the government already has the authority to strip citizens of their constitutional rights. He cited the execution of Nazi saboteur Richard Quirin during World War II, saying the case was "completely within the Constitution." He then drew a connection between that case and the AUMF, which the Obama White House argues permits the government to detain and assassinate U.S. citizens they deem to be terrorists. Torrance told the court that judicial interpretation of the AUMF made it identical to the NDAA, which led the judge to ask him why it was necessary for the government to defend the NDAA if that was indeed the case. Torrance, who fumbled for answers before the judge's questioning, added that the United States does not differentiate under which law it holds military detainees. Judge Forrest, looking incredulous, said that if this was actually true the government could be found in contempt of court for violating orders prohibiting any detention under the NDAA.

Forrest quoted to the court Alexander Hamilton, who argued that judges must place "the power of the people" over legislative will.
"Nor does this conclusion by any means suppose a superiority of the judicial to the legislative power," Hamilton, writing under the pseudonym Publius, said in Federalist No. 78. "It only supposes that the power of the people is superior to both; and that where the will of the legislature, declared in its statutes, stands in opposition to that of the people, declared in the Constitution, the judges ought to be governed by the latter rather than the former. They ought to regulate their decisions by the fundamental laws, rather than by those which are not fundamental."

Contrast this crucial debate in a federal court with the empty campaign rhetoric and chatter that saturate the airwaves. The cant of our political theater, the ridiculous obsessions over vice presidential picks or celebrity gossip that dominate the news industry, effectively masks the march toward corporate totalitarianism. The corporate state has convinced the masses, in essence, to clamor for their own enslavement. There is, in reality, no daylight between Mitt Romney and Obama about the inner workings of the corporate state. They each support this section within the NDAA and the widespread extinguishing of civil liberties. They each will continue to funnel hundreds of billions of wasted dollars to defense contractors, intelligence agencies and the military. They each intend to let Wall Street loot the U.S. Treasury with impunity. Neither will lift a finger to help the long-term unemployed and underemployed, those losing their homes to foreclosures or bank repossessions, those filing for bankruptcy because of medical bills or college students burdened by crippling debt. Listen to the anguished cries of partisans on either side of the election divide and you would think this was a battle between the forces of light and the forces of darkness. You would think voting in the rigged political theater of the corporate state actually makes a difference. The charade of junk politics is there not to offer a choice but to divert the crowd while our corporate masters move relentlessly forward, unimpeded by either party, to turn all dissent into a crime.


Here's the article, so WW can know exactly who he is calling a liar when he posts.

http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/10...lizing-dissent

FOX News, MSNBC, CNN, ABC, NBC, CBS, NPR, and none of the mainstream media will even peep about this. We'll have days of coverage over where to eat a chicken sandwich, but indefinite detention, gets no coverage. And you still trust the MSM. Sad.
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Old 08-13-2012, 11:53 PM   #2
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People criticize me for sympathizing with the Germans after what happened to them in World War I, and they had no constitutional or common law traditions.

See how the people of this country throw away their most cherished ideals just because of hysteria and fright over an issue THAT HAS KILLED LESS PEOPLE THAN BEESTINGS.

It's all theater friend.
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Old 08-13-2012, 11:59 PM   #3
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I don't agree with you on everything, tae, but you are right. This is a grand play we are watching. And I think the end has been predetermined. I just don't have a handle on which puppet the elites want to control for the next 4 years.

It's called the illusion of choice.
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Old 08-14-2012, 12:12 AM   #4
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I find it necessary to point out that George W. Bush did not find it necessary to extend the definitions of certain known terms. For all of the belly aching it took a democrat to do it and the man who wrote the Patriot Act in 1995.

A lot of things have been slowly put into place like a chess game. Will Obama go quietly after the election? That is the big question.
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Old 08-14-2012, 12:17 AM   #5
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I am a big believer in conspiracies, but I don't believe that Obama and Romney are puppets.

The Patriot Act was ready to go before 9-11, but I believe it was one in a long line of "modernizations" and "reforms" the do-gooders and social engineers are always forcing upon us. And the real agenda of it is that it makes the jobs and careers of government bureaucrats easier.

And in a horrible way it's what most of the public wants from their government.....to be ordered around and told what to do like their bosses at work, their coaches in school, their parents at home.......

Modernization is authoritarian and hierarchical unless people struggle to make it otherwise.

btw the largest architect of the Patriot Act was not even an American, but a Vietnamese immigrant named Viet Din, who now teaches law at Georgetown.

IMHO immigrants rarely share Americans' love for liberty or constitutional protections. Immigrants always have the values of the places from which they came...sorry but I'm not PC on that score.
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Old 08-14-2012, 07:26 AM   #6
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Our country seems to be going down the drain : (
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Old 08-14-2012, 07:34 AM   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by theaustinescorts View Post
People criticize me for sympathizing with the Germans after what happened to them in World War I, and they had no constitutional or common law traditions.

See how the people of this country throw away their most cherished ideals just because of hysteria and fright over an issue THAT HAS KILLED LESS PEOPLE THAN BEESTINGS.

It's all theater friend.
Bee's don't have the potential to aquire nuclear devices.
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Old 08-14-2012, 07:41 AM   #8
joe bloe
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Quote:
Originally Posted by theaustinescorts View Post
I am a big believer in conspiracies, but I don't believe that Obama and Romney are puppets.

The Patriot Act was ready to go before 9-11, but I believe it was one in a long line of "modernizations" and "reforms" the do-gooders and social engineers are always forcing upon us. And the real agenda of it is that it makes the jobs and careers of government bureaucrats easier.

And in a horrible way it's what most of the public wants from their government.....to be ordered around and told what to do like their bosses at work, their coaches in school, their parents at home.......

Modernization is authoritarian and hierarchical unless people struggle to make it otherwise.

btw the largest architect of the Patriot Act was not even an American, but a Vietnamese immigrant named Viet Din, who now teaches law at Georgetown.

IMHO immigrants rarely share Americans' love for liberty or constitutional protections. Immigrants always have the values of the places from which they came...sorry but I'm not PC on that score.

Very often immigrants embrace traditional American values and the Constitution more than we do. Cuban immigrants tend to be conservatives who hate communism. Every Vietnamese-Amercan I ever met, loved America and freedom. People that immigrate from dictatorships tend to appreciate freedom more than us; we take it for granted.
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Old 08-14-2012, 09:12 AM   #9
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Quote:
Barack Obama's administration has appealed Judge Forrest's temporary injunction and would certainly appeal a permanent injunction. It is a stunning admission by this president that he will do nothing to protect our constitutional rights. The administration's added failure to restore habeas corpus, its use of the Espionage Act six times to silence government whistle-blowers, its support of the FISA Amendment Act—which permits warrantless wiretapping, monitoring and eavesdropping on U.S. citizens—and its ordering of the assassination of U.S. citizens under the 2001 Authorization to Use Military Force, or AUMF, is a signal that for all his rhetoric Obama, like his Republican rivals, is determined to remove every impediment to the unchecked power of the security and surveillance state. I and the six other plaintiffs, who include reporters, professors and activists, will most likely have to continue this fight in an appellate court and perhaps the Supreme Court.
Sobering words.
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Old 08-14-2012, 01:54 PM   #10
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Senator Joe Biden claimed credit for the Patriot Act which he submitted to the Senate in 1995. It was passed over for consideration without comment.
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Old 08-14-2012, 04:34 PM   #11
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I have always been an opponent of the Patriot Actbecause of the infringement on our constitutional protections. The NDAA is little more than a power grab.
I have also been opposed to the banking laws that require banks to report cash deposits of 10k or more as an infringement as well as all reporting of privated cash transactions. This was instituted by Reagan I believe. One of the worst things he ever did under the guise of the so-called war on drugs. Second biggest mistake this nation has ever made next to electing Obama.
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