Cherish - and Work to Protect - Our Rights

by: Chip Pitts, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Cherish - and Work to Protect - Our Rights
(Image: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: Markusnl, Constitutional Convention)

Bill of Rights Day was December 15, a time to reflect on constitutional freedoms. And as we enter the tenth year since 9/11, it's hard to be optimistic about the state of civil liberties and human rights in the United States.

The executive branch remains primarily responsible for many of our vanishing rights. While laws such as the USA Patriot Act may have emerged under the Bush administration, President Obama has flip-flopped on most major issues affecting fundamental human rights. Despite his campaign rhetoric criticizing a "false choice between liberty and security," he decided, in summer 2008, to support the Bush approach to massive warrantless surveillance, along with immunity for the telecommunications companies that had illegally cooperated with the secret program.

Since then, and contrary to campaign promises, the Obama administration has supported reauthorization of the Patriot Act; the "extraordinary rendition" program of kidnapping terrorism suspects and sending them to other nations to be tortured; continuing use of military commissions; and invocation of the "state secrets" privilege to dismiss lawsuits seeking accountability for illegal surveillance, rendition and torture. The administration has also famously failed to close Guantanamo, and expanded FBI crackdowns on peaceful activists.

Perhaps most galling, the Obama administration is also responsible for the Transportation Security Administration's (TSA) "full body scanners." These scanners don't work to detect the plastic explosives that were their main justification, but do subject the entire traveling public to the choice of a humiliating digital strip-search or a grope. In many ways these control methods go beyond even the Bush administration's approaches in scope and apparent permanence (as with the military commissions and planned indefinite detention of suspects).

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The legislature has been a willing partner in these intrusions, as politicians of all stripes have rushed to cover their flanks from the allegation that they are "soft on terrorism." Thus, US citizens have received such gifts as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Amendments Act (essentially ratifying the Bush approach to massive warrantless surveillance), the Military Commissions Act and the continued renewal of the Patriot Act (which will be up for Congressional authorization again in February 2011).

Despite a few landmark decisions from the US Supreme Court resisting executive branch excesses, such as the attempt to utterly deny meaningful habeas corpus or other legal review of the status of detainees suspected of terrorism, judges have proven only a weak shield for rights when the executive and legislative branches join forces to oppose them.

Earlier this year, a divided US Supreme Court decided in Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project to allow what were previously First Amendment-protected activities, such as legal or technical assistance to certain organizations, to be potentially deemed criminal "material support" of terrorism - even if the efforts in question aim to promote peace. Thus, activities such as the Carter Center's election monitoring or assistance with peace negotiations could be subject to prosecution if they involve dealings with political parties such as Hezbollah or Hamas (or previously, Nelson Mandela's ANC).

This recalls one often-overlooked reason to respect rights: they enable socially constructive progress among individuals and groups who may disagree - even violently - with each other, by providing a common standard or baseline beneath which no one may stoop. Widespread violations of rights, such as the undercover infiltration of law-abiding activist and religious groups, inevitably produce backlash and violence.

As an alternative to violence, rights empower individuals to be free from discrimination, to read and gather information in private, to peacefully assemble, to express themselves, to seek peaceful solutions, to have their claims heard in court and be free from arbitrary public or private power. Rights, thus, have an indispensable role to play in political disputes here at home as well as in effective counterterrorism globally.

Today, it would behoove all Americans and our leaders to remember the rights that have been so important to our national history and success, and to commit ourselves to concrete actions that will help restore them in the new year.
 

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Chip Pitts teaches law at Stanford and Oxford, and serves as an executive committee member of the Bill of Rights Defense Committee (www.bordc.org) as well as a plaintiff in a lawsuit against the TSA regarding their body scanners.


Comments

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It would behoove Americans,

It would behoove Americans, as well as this writer to remember that our founding gangster-forefathers tacked on the first 10 amendments as a symbolic gesture, not to be taken seriously, or else it would threaten their power. For example, at the executives discretion "Poof! there goes habeus corpus". You don't have many rights in this country, remember the important ones when you're arrested.



Cherish??! Fucking gag me,

Cherish??! Fucking gag me, we need *more* rights, not work the ones that we supposedly have. And we need to destroy the Patriot Act - the legislation for torture!



Why worry about stupid stuff

Why worry about stupid stuff like freedom as long as they don't take away our Monday night football and Bud Light.



Thanks for sending me the

Thanks for sending me the link to this, Chip; I am proud to call you a colleague in Get FISA Right.
To Mary, “it’s not where you start, it’s where you finish;” The Bush administration certainly started a lot of the problems after the Sept. 11 attack, but that just accelerated a prior process. Our president campaigned on promises to slow down the takeover of so much power by the executive branch, but his actions since signing an order to start closing Guantánamo (with little actual result since that event within days of inauguration) have belied his words, most recently his Christmas gift of caving in on ’Net neutrality, which, if it goes unchecked, could make free speech even harder. I am one of the enthusiasts who are disappointed that we didn’t take the July 2008 FISA vote seriously enough.



Great article Chip! Every

Great article Chip! Every word!



We need to call for

We need to call for impeachment Sally. Let's stop the party propaganda - it doesn't work any longer.

Obama deliberately preserved the executive power grabs, he dare not close our offshore gulag, will continue imperial warfare until he's told to go shoot baskets, he has succeeded in a vicious attack on social security, contines to reward the rich with a nation destroying "tax" break with U6 at nearly 20%, he does as he's told by financial titans and to look after the care and feeding of Defense Contractors - by traveling around the world as their salesman. Really, this is what the President is in the US, just a blowwhole



Right on! Wonderful article!

Right on! Wonderful article! I'm particularly impressed by how it eloquently and summarily covered everything so well in such a relatively short article. Needless to say, this is the kind of True Journalism and Truthtelling that should be in the mainstream; but because the U.S. has already completely become an authoritarian corporate-fascist police state, naturally it is never allowed to be seen and/or read by most of the populace who so direly needs it. Please keep writing, and keep publishing any way(s) you can, such great articles, Chip Pitts; and thank you for doing so!



Boy, were the Libertarian

Boy, were the Libertarian posters out in full force just before Christmas . . . Hmm. They think they were on a shopping channel when they voted in 2008, so now they want to return the current President for a refund or something . . . except they have no viable alternative. NOT once in the argument of Constitutional Rights has a Libertarian put forward a VIABLE alternative. Lots of hot air but, darn it all, I left my hot air balloon at the drycleaners!



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