Guest guest Posted October 1, 2006 Report Share Posted October 1, 2006 ---------- Forwarded message ---------- T. Lassiter Jones <ljonez23 Oct 1, 2006 2:01 PM [cacklinggrackle] The day democracy died grackle <cacklinggrackle > http://www.reformer.com/editorials/ci_4422455 Sept. 28, 2006, will be a day that will live in infamy in American history. On Thursday, the Republican-controlled Senate, aided by a handful of faithless, fearful Democrats, decided it was more important to win an election than to preserve and protect the Constitution, human rights and the rule of law. The Senate voted 65-34 to scrap nearly eight centuries of legal precedent in voting for a bill that gives President Bush unimaginably broad powers regarding the detention, interrogation, prosecution and trials of terrorism suspects. How broad? For starters, suspects will not have the right to challenge their detention in a court of law. This, known as the writ of habeas corpus, was established in the Magna Carta in 1215 and has been the bedrock of the rule of law ever since. A suspect will also not be able to challenge their treatment while in detention in a court of law. The right to a speedy trial has been eliminated, as has the right of the accused to see the evidence and testimony against him. Coerced evidence is now permissible for use in a trial, if a judge considers that evidence reliable. This bill not only immunizes U.S. officials from prosecution for cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment of prisoners, it also allows the president to set the rules for interrogation and determine what constitutes cruel and inhumane treatment and what interrogation tactics it considers permissible. And there is no requirement for the American people to know any this information -- it may stay secret indefinitely. If you think all this only applies to foreign terrorists sitting in cells in Guantanamo Bay, you're wrong. The language in this bill gives the president the power to seize anyone, U.S. citizen or foreign national, who has " purposely and materially supported hostilities against the United States. " It codifies the Bush administration's definition of " unlawful enemy combatant, " a definition that previously did not exist in any law book. What does this mean? If you write to this newspaper's Letter Box criticizing President Bush, if you stand in front of the post office protesting the war in Iraq, if you send a contribution to a charity or political group that is deemed to be " aiding terrorism, " you too could be deemed an " unlawful enemy combatant " and whisked away and jailed without legal recourse. Sounds improbable? Think something like this can't happen in America? Ask the Japanese-Americans who were rounded up and detained in prison camps during World War II, guilty of no crime other than being of Japanese ancestry. There have been too many instances in our nation's history when fear has led to gross violations of civil liberties. To their credit, our senators, Patrick Leahy and James Jeffords, voted against this bill. History will not judge kindly on the 65 senators who voted to trash centuries of democratic principles and the rule of law for political gain. The Republicans claim this law needed to be enacted quickly so this nation can effectively fight the war on terror. It is a lie. The hundreds of prisoners in Guantanamo and other prisons around the world will continue to be held until the Bush administration figures out a way to handle their cases that passed legal muster. There is no need to rush. But the Republicans wanted to rush. They wanted to have a law they could use against Democrats in the November mid-term elections. And too many Democrats were afraid of the political attacks that would come if they voted against this bill. Leahy was not afraid. " Now is not the time to abandon American values, to shiver and quake, to rely on secrecy and torture, " he said. " Those are ways of repression and oppression, not the American way. " We agree. President Bush will soon sign this bill into law and talk about how the provisions it contains will make us safer. That too, is a lie. All it will do is tell the world that for all the talk of spreading freedom and democracy around the globe, the United States really stands for repression and the arbitrary abuse of power. We hope the federal courts will overturn this law, but even this is questionable. If a detainee under this legislation no longer has the right to a fair trial or to hear the evidence against him, how can he bring a legal challenge to court? This legislation even contains restrictions on judicial review of its provisions. The American ideals of life, liberty and the pursuit or happiness, of equal protection under the law, of having the freedom to say, write, think and worship as we please, of being secure in our homes and being free from illegal searches and seizures -- all this is now under attack, not by an external enemy, but an internal one. And we will only have ourselves to blame if the nightmares contained in this odious legislation become reality. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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