| |

presents

By Thom Hartmann
Monday 10 January 2005
The Gonzales
confirmation is not just about the torture memos. It's much bigger
than that.
If Bush continues to roll back human and civil rights - and the
installation of Alberto Gonzalez as America's chief law enforcement
officer is very much a part of his campaign to do so - we may be
facing a "Pastor Niemöller moment" sooner than most of us could have
imagined.

Today is the third anniversary of the opening
of America's first concentration camp since Japanese
Americans were shamefully interred during WWII. Since the first Guantánamo camp was opened, theBush administration has built
additional concentration camps - the latest known as Camp Five - in
Cuba, and is asking Congress for $29 million to build concentration
Camp Six.
These concentration camps detain uncharged, untried, unconvicted
individuals, who may be held for the rest of their lives
because, as the UK's Guardian newspaper noted on January 5th of this
year, the Bush administration "lacks proof" that they are either
criminals or POWs.
This is one of the more visible parts of a much larger
campaign the Bush administration has embarked on to reverse not only
229 years of the American rule of law regarding the rights of
average citizens, but nearly eight centuries of human rights that go
back to an epic moment in 1215 on a meadow by the River Thames.
The modern institution of civil and human rights, and particularly
the writ of habeas corpus, began in June of 1215 when King John was
forced by the feudal lords to sign the Magna Carta at Runnymede.
Although that document mostly protected "freemen" - what were then
known as feudal lords or
barons, and today known as CEOs and millionaires - rather than the
average person, it initiated a series of events that echo to this
day.
Two of the most critical parts of the Magna Carta were articles 38
and 39, which established the foundation for what is now known as
habeas corpus laws (literally, "produce the body" from the Latin -
meaning, broadly, "let this person go free"), as well as the Fourth
through Eighth Amendments of our
Constitution and hundreds of other federal and state due process
provisions.
Articles 38 and 39 of the Magna Carta said:
38: "In
future no official shall place a man on trial upon his own
unsupported statement, without producing credible witnesses to
the truth of it.
39: "No free man shall be seized or
imprisoned, or stripped of his rights or possessions, or
outlawed or exiled, or deprived of his standing in any other
way, nor will we proceed with force against him, or send others
to do so, except by the lawful judgment of his equals or
by the law of the land."
This was radical stuff,
and over the next four hundred years average people increasingly
wanted for themselves these same protections from the abuse of the
power of government or great wealth. But from 1215 to 1628, outside
of the privileges enjoyed by the feudal lords, the average person
could be arrested and imprisoned at the whim of the king with no
recourse to the courts.
Then, in 1627, King Charles I overstepped, and the people snapped.
Charles I threw into jail five knights in a tax disagreement, and
the knights sued the King, asserting their habeas corpus right to be
free or on bail unless convicted of a crime.
King Charles I, in response, invoked his right to simply imprison
anybody he wanted (other than the rich, anytime he wanted, as he
said, per speciale Mandatum Domini Regis.
This is essentially the same argument that George W. Bush makes
today for why he has the right to detain both citizens and
non-citizens solely on his own say-so: because he's in charge. And
it's an argument supported by Alberto Gonzales.
But just as George's decree is meeting resistance, Charles' decree
wasn't well received. The result of his overt assault on the rights
of citizens led to a sort of revolt in the British Parliament,
producing the 1628 "Petition of Right" law, an early version of our
Fourth through Eighth Amendments, which restated Articles 38 and 39
of the Magna Carta and added that "writs of habeas corpus, [are]
there to undergo and receive [only] as the court should order." It
was later strengthened with the Habeas Corpus Act of 1640 and a
second Habeas Corpus Act of 1679.
Thus, the right to suspend habeas corpus no longer was held by the
King. It was exercised solely by the people's (elected and
hereditary) representatives in the Parliament.
The third George to govern the United Kingdom confronted this in
1815 when he came into possession of Napoleon Bonaparte. But the
British laws were so explicit that everybody was entitled to habeas
corpus - even people who were not British citizens - that when
Napoleon surrendered on the deck of the British flagship Bellerophon
after the battle of Waterloo in 1815, the British Parliament had to
pass a law (An Act For The More Effectually Detaining In Custody
Napoleon Bonaparte) to suspend habeas corpus so King George III
could legally continue to hold him prisoner (and then legally exile
him to a
British fortification on a distant island).
Ironically, the third George to govern the United States now says,
190 years later, that unlike England's George III, he does not need
an act of Congress to detain people or exile them to camps on a
distant island.
To facilitate this, our Third George, and his able counselor Judge
Gonzales, have brought forth new "legal" terms - enemy combatant
and terrorist - and invented a new set of law and rights (or
non-laws and non-rights) for people they label as such.
It's a virtual repeat of Charles I's doctrine that a nation's ruler
may do whatever he wants because he's the one in charge - per speciale Mandatum Domini
Regis.
Interestingly, the United States Constitution does provide for
special exceptions to the involuntary detention of persons - it is
legal to suspend habeas corpus. But the Constitution says it can
only be done by Congress, not by the President.
Article I of the Constitution outlines the powers and limits of the
Legislative Branch of government (Article 2 lays out the Executive
Branch, and Article 3 defines the Judicial Branch). In Section 9,
Clause 2 of Article I, the Constitution says of the Legislative
branch's authority: "The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus
shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or
Invasion the public Safety may require it."
Abraham Lincoln was well aware of this during the Civil War, and on was
the first president (on March 3, 1863) to successfully ask Congress
to suspend habeas corpus so he could imprison those he considered a
threat until the war was over. Congress invoked this power again
during Reconstruction when President Grant requested The Ku Klux
Klan Act of 1871 to put down a rebellion in South Carolina.
But President George W. Bush has not asked Congress for, and has not
been granted, a suspension of habeas corpus for his so-called "war
on terrorism," a "war" which he and his advisors have implied may
last well beyond our lifetimes.
Nonetheless, our President, with consent of his Counsel Mr.
Gonzales, has locked people up, per speciale Mandatum Domini
Regis. Some of their names are familiar to us - U.S. citizens Jose
Padilla and Yaser Hamdi, for example - but there are hundreds whose
names we are not even allowed to know. Perhaps thousands. It's a
state secret, after all. Per speciale Mandatum Domini Regis.
But how do we deal with people who want to kill us, to destroy our
nation, to terrorize us?
Every president from George Washington to Bill Clinton has
understood that there are two categories of people who can be
incarcerated legally - Prisoners of War and criminals. The former
have rights under both U.S. law and the Geneva Conventions, and the
latter under the U.S. Constitution.
These two categories encompass every possible actual threat to a
nation and its people, and have withstood the test of time from the
days of King John to today.
For example, when Bill Clinton was confronted with a heinous act of
terrorism within the United States - the bombing of the Federal
Building in Oklahoma City - he didn't declare a "war" on whoever the
terrorist may be, or suspend habeas corpus. Instead, he immediately
defined the perpetrators as thugs and
criminals, and brought the full weight of the American and
international criminal justice system to bear, capturing Timothy
McVeigh and using Interpol to search the world for possible McVeigh
allies. Justice was served, the victims achieved closure, and our
rights were left largely intact.
But, just as Hitler and his close advisors used the burning of the
Reichstag building to declare a perpetual "war on terrorism," and
then moved to suspend habeas corpus and other rights, so too have
George W. Bush and Alberto Gonzales.
The Founders must be turning in their graves. Clearly they never
imagined such a thing in their wildest dreams. As Alexander Hamilton
- arguably the most conservative of the Founders - wrote in
Federalist 84:
"The establishment of the writ of
habeas corpus ... are
perhaps greater securities to liberty and republicanism than any it
[the Constitution] contains. ...[T]he practice of arbitrary
imprisonments have been, in all ages, the favorite and most
formidable instruments of tyranny. The observations of the judicious
[British 18th century legal scholar] Blackstone, in reference to
the latter, are well worthy of recital:
"'To bereave a man of life,' says
he, 'or by violence to confiscate his estate, without accusation or
trial, would be so gross and notorious an act of despotism, as must
at once convey the alarm of tyranny throughout the whole nation; but
confinement of the person, by secretly hurrying him to jail, where
his sufferings are unknown or forgotten, is a less public, a less
striking, and therefore A MORE DANGEROUS ENGINE of arbitrary
government."' [Capitals all Hamilton's from the original.]
While the sexy stuff
that members of Congress and the news media want to talk about when
they question Alberto Gonzales is torture - after all, the pictures
are now iconic and have worldwide distribution - the torture of
these and other prisoners in U.S. custody is really a subset of a
larger
issue.
The bigger question here is whether George W. Bush has the right to
ignore the U.S. Constitution and international treaties, violate
human rights and civil liberties, promote "preemptive" wars, and
build concentration camps for the permanent imprisonment of untried
and unconvicted individuals - all simply because he says he can, per
speciale Mandatum Domini Regis . And whether we want the
chief law enforcement officer of the land, the man who would be
charged with prosecuting Bush or those in his administration who may
break the law, to be a man who agrees that Bush stands above the law
and the Constitution.
The question, ultimately, is whether our nation will continue to
stand for the values upon which it was founded.
Early American conservatives suggested that democracy was so
ultimately weak it couldn't withstand the assault of newspaper
editors and citizens who spoke out against it, or terrorists from
the Islamic Barbary Coast, leading John Adams to pass America's
first PATRIOT Act-like laws, the Alien and Sedition
Acts of 1798. President Thomas Jefferson rebuked those who wanted
America ruled by an iron-handed presidency that could - as Adams had
- throw people in jail for "crimes" such as speaking political
opinion, or without constitutional due process.
"I know, indeed," Jefferson
said in his first inaugural address on March 4, 1801, "that some
honest men fear that a republican government cannot be strong;
that this government is not strong enough.
"But would the honest patriot,in the full tide of successful
experiment, abandon a government which has so far kept us free
and firm, on the theoretic and visionary fear that this
government, the world's best hope, may by possibility want
energy to preserve itself? I trust not.
"I believe this, on the contrary, the strongest government on
earth. I believe it is the only one where every man, at the call
of the laws, would fly to the standard of the law, and would
meet invasions of the public order as his own personal concern."
The sum of this, Jefferson said, was found in,
"freedom of person under
the protection of the habeas corpus; and trial by juries
impartially selected. These principles form the bright
constellation which has gone before us, and guided our steps
through an age of revolution and reformation.
"The wisdom of our sages
and the blood of our heroes have been devoted to their
attainment. They should be the creed of our political faith, the
text of civil instruction, the touchstone by which to try the
services of those we trust; and should we wander from them in
moments of error or alarm, let us hasten to retrace our steps
and to regain the road which alone leads to peace, liberty, and
safety."
Modern conservatives
still revere Burke and Adams and sneer at Jefferson, but many are
nonetheless alarmed by Bush's unprecedented attack on the
Constitution. As Russell Kirk wrote in his seminal 1953 book "The
Conservative Mind" - the book which inspired a generation of
conservatives from Buckley to Goldwater - a "New Society,"
abandoning the traditional values of America, could easily come into
being if "radicals" such as Bush were to take over our government
and discard the Constitution.
This New Society, Kirk wrote in his chapter "The Promise of
Conservatism," would be dominated by "the gratification of a lust
for power and the destruction of all ancient political institutions
in the interest of the new dominant elites. The great Plan requires
that the public be kept constantly in an emotional state closely
resembling that of a nation at war; this lacking, obedience and
co-operation shrivel..." Kirk adds that "Big Brother remains to show
the donkey the stick instead of the carrot."
When I was working in Russia some years ago, a friend in Kaliningrad
told me a perhaps apocryphal story about Nikita Khrushchev, who,
following Stalin's death, gave a speech to the Politburo denouncing
Stalin's policies. A few minutes into Khrushchev's diatribe,
somebody shouted out, "Why didn't you
challenge him then, the way you are now?"
The room fell silent, as Khrushchev angrily swept the audience with
his glare. "Who said that?" he asked in a reasoned voice. Silence.
"Who said that?" Khrushchev demanded, leaning forward. Silence.
Pounding his fist on the podium to accent each word, he screamed,
"Who - said - that?" Still no answer.
Finally, after a long and strained silence, the elected politicians
in the room fearful to even cough, a corner of Khrushchev's mouth
lifted into a smile.
"Now you know," he said with a chuckle, "why I did not speak up
against Stalin when I sat where you now sit."
The question for our day is who will speak up against George W. Bush
and his Stalinist policies? Who will speak against the man who
punishes reporters and news organizations by cutting off their
access; who punishes politicians by targeting them in their home
districts; who punishes truth-tellers in the
Executive branch by character assassination that even extends to
destroying their spouse's careers?
Oddly, so far it's only been Supreme Court Justice, Antonin Scalia,
a man with whom I often strongly disagree . Scalia wrote in his
minority dissent in the case of Hamdi v. Rumsfeld that the President
does not have the power to suspend habeas corpus by executive
decree. Instead, he wrote: "If civil rights are to be curtailed
during wartime, it must be done openly and democratically, as the
Constitution requires..."
Scalia went on to quote Alexander Hamilton from Federalist Number 8,
who noted that:
"The violent destruction of
life and property incident to war; the continual effort and
alarm attendant on a state of continual danger, will compel
nations the most attached to liberty, to resort for repose and
security to institutions which have a tendency to destroy their
civil and political rights. To be more safe, they, at length,
become willing to run the risk of being less free."
"The Founders warned us about
the risk," Scalia noted in his Hamdi dissent, "and equipped us
with a Constitution designed to deal with it.
"Many think it not only
inevitable but entirely proper that liberty give way to security
in times of national crisis..." but, Scalia added, "that view
has no place in the interpretation and application of a
Constitution designed precisely to confront war and, in a
manner that accords with democratic principles, to accommodate
it."
How ironic that
Scalia was willing to stand up to George W. Bush and Alberto
Gonzales, but most of the Senate Democrats won't.
The Democrats in Congress say they're going to confirm Judge
Gonzales and "keep their powder dry" for future, larger battles like
Supreme Court nominations. But as Pastor Niemöller reminds us, the
loss of liberty is incremental, not sudden and dramatic.
One either totally stands for republican democracy, the
Constitution, and the rule of law in our republic, or one doesn't.
Gonzales has shown that he does not, both by his prevarication in
his confirmation hearings, his actions in condoning Bush's illegal
suspension of habeas corpus and
PATRIOT Act abuses of constitutionally-protected civil and human
rights, and his support of other Bush decrees implicitly per
speciale Mandatum Domini Regis.
To quote Scalia's summary in the Hamdi case, "Because the Court has
proceeded to meet the current emergency in a manner the Constitution
does not envision [by letting the President
suspend habeas corpus], I respectfully dissent."
But is dissent enough?
Or must we work for a wholesale change in our representatives,
demanding that they either stand up for the principles for which so
many Americans have fought and died, or leave the political arena
altogether?
Where are the true democrats among the Democrats? (Or, for that
matter, the true republicans among the Republicans?) Have they all
lost their voices?
First Bush and Gonzales came for the terrorists, but I was not a
terrorist, so I did not speak out. Then they came for the enemy
combatants, but I was not a combatant, so I did not object. Then
they came for the protestors resisting "free speech zones" near Bush
campaign rallies, but I was not a protestor and so I only voiced my
unease.
If we - and our elected representatives - do not speak out now,
loudly and forcefully, it may not be long before they come for the
rest of us.
Thom Hartmann is a Project Censored
Award-winning best-selling author and host of a nationally
syndicated daily talk show
www.thomhartmann.com.
His most recent books include The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight,
The Prophet's Way, Unequal Protection, We The
People, The Edison Gene, and
What Would Jefferson Do? |