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January
16, 2006

The New Year seems to be the one time of year when almost all of us simultaneously
decide to take stock of our lives. We look at the year gone past; we make
all of the best intentioned plans for the future. We consider our successes
of the last twelve months and hope to build on them; we (hopefully) dissect
our mistakes and determine to learn from them. I'm no exception to that
annual personal review.
A few years
ago, just a few months after 9/11, I resolved to become more politically
active. That's a resolution I (obviously!) kept when I first established
Lady Liberty's Constitution Clearing House web site. Shortly thereafter,
I wrote my first editorial commentary. In those early days, I often held
something back though I didn't really realize it. But one day, as I was
preparing some news headlines, I was having a problem writing a sentence
or two offering my own take on a particular news story.
I wrote
something. Then I deleted it and wrote something else. That, too, proved
unsatisfactory, so I started again. Since I usually don't have much of
a problem thinking of something to say, I started to wonder why I was
having so much trouble with a brief comment. I looked at what I'd written
the first couple of times, and then it struck me: there wasn't anything
wrong with what I'd written. It summed up what I thought nicely, and it
said exactly what I wanted to say. But I was erasing the comments and
trying again because I was worried about repercussions!
It was
at that moment that Lady Liberty was truly born. When I realized that
I was permitting my own fears to hamper my freedom of speech, I promised
myself I'd say whatever I thought needed to be said from then on. I wouldn't
worry about what any government representative might say or do about it
until somebody actually said or did something.
Looking
back, I can see that I might have been just a little paranoid. After all,
I couldn't possibly have been important enough for anyone in government
to take notice of what I was saying let alone take any action to keep
me quiet! Three years later, I still don't think I'm all that important.
But I have a very bad feeling that the government is taking notice anyway
and making provisions to keep an eye on me - and you - wherever we go
accordingly. Absent paranoia, what on earth would make me come to that
kind of conclusion?
Well, let's
look beyond ourselves for just a moment and take a collective look back
at the year that was. In 2005:
Last
May, despite opposition from activist groups on both ends of the political
spectrum and millions of individuals, Congress
passed the REAL ID Act into law with appallingly little debate.
There are, of course, many
reasons why a national ID card is a bad idea. Perhaps the most important
reason is that, despite claims the card will make us all safer, it will
actually likely endanger us in ways ranging from the danger of identity
theft to national security. That we'll each be largely traceable at
all times may be a plus for authorities who've long salivated over such
an ability, but our own loss of liberty and privacy as a result cannot
be overstated.
A young
man in Ohio was called
a "paper terrorist" by a county prosecutor after his 'blog
criticized northern Ohio officials and he and a partner filed court
documents in connection with the allegations of corruption. He was arrested
on a secret indictment and jailed on felony charges; he says he was
told those charges would be reduced to a misdemeanor if he'd stop writing
on his 'blog. That sounds to me not only as if he's being punished for
speaking his mind, but that he'll be rewarded if he shuts up. Though
his story garnered some publicity, he remains in danger of losing his
case in the face of prosecutors who won't stop until he does.
The Washington
Post learned that the FBI
is now issuing tens of thousands of national security letters (NSLs)
every year. These letters, which don't require judicial review nor even
after-the-fact reviews by supervisory personnel, very much mimic the
legitimate warrants they're not. (The provision of the PATRIOT Act involving
NSLs is the one that librarians are fighting so hard to see stricken.)
Information gathered under these letters is typically filed by the FBI.
At one time, the data gathered on innocent Americans was destroyed.
But now, to compound the violation of privacy involved with NSLs, the
report further takes note of the recent "Executive Order 13388,
expanding access to those files for 'state, local and tribal' governments
and for 'appropriate private sector entities,' which are not defined."
News
reports in recent months accused the Pentagon
of being behind the infiltration and surveillance of activist groups
who protested the War in Iraq. An NBC News reporter claimed that
documents showed the Pentagon was putting information it gathered into
a database; The Washington Post wrote that a "little known"
Pentagon agency was also involved (the agency, Counterintelligence Field
Activity or CIFA, was formed a few yeas ago with the stated objective
of keeping domestic military bases safe). It is also stated that each
branch of the military has begun working on its own methodology and
more for domestic surveillance, something clearly forbidden it by Posse
Comitatus.
Even
as the dubious merits of the PATRIOT Act itself were debated during
the drive to make the sunsetting law permanent, there were those who
wanted to expand the measure. Among other problematic areas of expansion
was the redefining of domestic terrorism in such a way that even those
speaking out against government policy could be termed terrorists under
some circumstances. (That and other areas of potential abuse of the
PATRIOT Act are detailed in depth by the Bill of Rights Defense Committee
in a document available online as a downloadable
pdf file.)
As 2005
drew to a close, perhaps the biggest story of the year involved domestic
surveillance being conducted by the National Security Agency (NSA).
The president defended his orders for the surveillance by claiming it
was limited and that it directly involved contact with foreign nationals
overseas who were, in some manner, tied to al Qaeda. Unfortunately for
the president, it wasn't long after that that news broke claiming that
the surveillance was far
broader than acknowledged. It's certainly not just possible but
probable that any of us who wrote certain words or phrases over the
course of the last few months or years were included in the data dumps.
Lawyers
for accused terrorists are already using the possibility that evidence
against their clients was gathered illegally to see those clients
released. If the evidence is ruled to have been obtained outside the
law, the courts won't be permitted to use it. That could result in some
guilty men being released, perhaps to engage in more terror operations.
It seems to me that the president's rationale in defense of his legal
ambiguities - keeping the country safer - may actually do just the opposite!
In light of that frightening fact, it's difficult not to wonder if the
scrapping of the Fourth Amendment will prove complete by some executive
order demanding that courts not throw out evidence showing culpability
no matter how that evidence was obtained.
Adding
insult to already grievous injury, news reports now indicate that the
NSA shared the data
it gathered with other government agencies. Keeping in mind that
the Pentagon and CIA are already prohibited from domestic surveillance
via various statutes, they and other agencies are now getting massive
amounts of data that may not have been legally obtained even by the
originating agency.
There are,
of course, other things that happened in 2005 that didn't favor freedom.
(Of a total of over 3,500 news stories I highlighted during the year,
almost 2,000 of them had negative repercussions for liberty.) But these
are some of the worst of the offenders.
I said
at the beginning of this column that many of us use the New Year as an
opportunity to look back at our mistakes, and to make resolutions to do
better in the coming year. Our mistakes — re-electing politicians
who don't keep their oath, failing to protest when enough voices might
engender change or at least delay — means that freedom was grievously
wounded in 2005. If there's even the slimmest chance it can recover, we're
going to have to make — and keep — some significant resolutions
this year:
We must
demand accountability from our politicians. That includes adherence, once
and for all, to their oath to uphold the Constitution. While some in Congress
have already started making noises that the president should be impeached
over his orders instigating domestic surveillance by the NSA, it's my
contention that most of them deserve to be impeached as well for betraying
the Constitution they swore to uphold. At the very least, virtually every
incumbent in Washington should not be allowed to serve another term.
We must
demand responsibility from ourselves. When we see something happening
or about to happen that we know to be unconstitutional, we must stand
up and insist such efforts be discontinued immediately. We must speak
up even if our names do end up in databases, on "no fly" lists,
or on secret indictments. We must determine to live free and then actually
start working to do so.
Over the
course of at least the last six decades, we've been steadily losing liberty
in exchange for entitlements or perceived security. But 2005 represented
a real watershed year when it was actually acknowledged that some liberties
were being infringed, but that such was "necessary" for our
safety. 2005 was the year when some of the largest ever chunks of freedom
were actually taken in gigantic government gulps, and too many stood by
and watched it happen because it was "for your own good."
If 2006
isn't to be the year when freedom is lost all together, we're going to
need to do something dramatically different from what we did - and didn't
do - in 2005. A year from now, what do you really want to look back and
see?
Lady Liberty
is a pro-freedom activist currently residing in the Midwest. More of her
writings and other political and educational information is available
on her web site, Lady
Liberty's Constitution Clearing House. E-mail Lady Liberty at ladylibrty@ladylibrty.com.
Now available:
"Eternal Vigilance: The Best of Lady Liberty 2002-2004"
Exclusively from The Constitution
Clearing House. Visit today for news, commentary, and a patriotic
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