Wednesday, September 27, 2006

A GUEST PERSPECTIVE BY JUDAH FREED: PROGRESSIVES AND LIBERTARIANS-- UNITE NOW!

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Progressives and libertarians need to unite now to preserve our personal liberties in the face of renewed assaults by the Bush administration on our natural rights.

The latest example of the growing threat is the deal announced September 21 between the White House and three "rebel" Republican Senators over the interrogation and trial of detainees in the "War on Terror."

The fatal flaw in this compromise is that the legislation voids all habeas corpus rights for the detainees. If the bill passes, they will not be able to challenge the legality of their arrests in open court.

The proposed law would "legalize" the president's practice of declaring any foreign national anywhere on earth as an "enemy combatant" and then detaining that person indefinitely without any trial, without any evidence the detention is warranted.

Far worse, the White House has now added a provision to the Senate interrogations bill that would allow the government to detain U.S citizens as enemy combatants. The language is so vague that it may even apply to those who protest the war. By merely saying someone is a terrorist or else a supporter, the administration could toss that person into prison and throw away the key.

"Arbitrary imprisonments have been, in all ages, the favorite and most formidable instruments of tyranny," wrote Alexander Hamilton, the leading Federalist in the American Revolution. A darling of modern Republicans, Hamilton detested that King George III had declared the American colonies were not protected by England's Habeas Corpus Act of 1679 (based on the Magna Carta of 1215), which banned the same arbitrary power by the English king now being abused by the U.S. president.

As I asked in my book, Global Sense, an update of Thomas Paine's Common Sense, "Does labeling any group as evil "bad guys" give the government a right to treat them unfairly or to deny their natural rights?

When our leaders promise to 'hunt down the terrorists and kill them before they kill us,' are we willing to forfeit the presumption of innocence and to negate the right to a fair trial in open court?

"When people are secretly detained and tortured, are we willing to forego warrants based upon probable cause? Are we willing to forego habeas corpus, to let governments imprison people for years without charges, without bail, without an attorney, and without any real trial?
 
"We are told that the new 'homeland security laws' are temporary, but nowhere in any of the legislation since 9/11, including the Patriot Act, is there any guarantee that our civil rights one day will be fully restored. Why not? Is this because any secret police powers, once obtained, however obtained, are never willingly surrendered by the police?"

This is why I'm now calling for progressives, libertarians and genuine conservatives to unite our considerable forces in common cause to publicly declare that we are no longer willing to sacrifice our natural rights on the alter of homeland security, especially when that security is an illusion. (A recent National Intelligence Estimate, compiled from reports by 16 U.S. spy agencies, confirmed that the Bush administration's self-chosen war in Iraq has produced a greater threat of terrorism than before the invasion.

"Let all the kings wave their lies before the world like flags," I wrote in Global Sense, paraphrasing Paine. "Now is the time for humanity to throw off reliance on them, so we can live in peace. The misery of war ought to warn us against trusting any tyrant, whether in government or in our own unconscious minds."

And here we come down to the core issue. Too many of us tolerate abuses of power by Bush and others because of our culturally enshrined authority addiction. We dread accepting personal responsibility for making moral and ethical choices on our own. We dread standing up for what we know is right.

And yet a strong belief in our personal and social responsibility guides the activism of progressives and libertarians alike. Look at the loud outcry supporting habeas corpus, for example, at websites as diverse as TomPaine.com, CommonDreams.org, Reason.com, or Cato.org. All lovers of liberty duly feel appalled by the current trends toward despotism. 
  
To carry the point home, listen to Thomas Paine's own words: "Bring the doctrine of reconciliation [with arbitrary power] to the touch-stone of nature, and then tell me, whether you can hereafter love, honor, and faithfully serve the power that hath carried fire and sword into your land?"

Paine added, "Common sense will tell us, that the power which hath endeavored to subdue us, is of all others the most improper to defend us. Conquest may be effected under the pretense of friendship; and ourselves, after a long and brave resistance, be at last cheated into slavery."

For world peace, I contend, "government by the consent of the governed" must move from abstract theory to concrete reality.

The sooner we have enough global sense to see how we're all inter-connected, the sooner we will govern ourselves sensibly. The sooner we let go of authority addiction as our path to security, the sooner we embrace the liberating power of mindful self rule and personal democracy, the faster our highest and best human potential may be fulfilled on earth.

Paine concluded, "Like all other truths discovered by necessity, it will appear clearer and stronger every day. First. Because it will come to that, one time or other. Secondly. Because the longer it is delayed, the harder it will be to accomplish."


Judah Freed is the author of Global Sense, an update of Thomas Paine's Common Sense to renew hope in these times that try our souls, voicing more than three decades of research and thought that unite personal growth and politics. A seasoned media and politics journalist, speaker and educator based in Colorado, his  publishing credits range from local newspapers like Westword, Rocky Mountain News  and The Denver Post to national magazines like The Sun, Cablevision, and Publishers Weekly. He's spoken on four continents so far about interactive media, literacy and men's liberations issues. Judah also is the host of the weekly public affairs radio program "Metro" on KGNU in Denver. For more information, please visit his website and blog at JudahFreed.com.

1 Comments:

At 12:52 AM, Blogger Unknown said...

Howie --

Thanks for the posting from my Global Sense blog. Hope lots of people respond with comments.

FYI: The cover you show is from an out-of-print trial edition of GLOBAL SENSE. Here's the actual cover:

http://www.media-visions.com/images/gscover4.gif

Thanks and blessings!

Judah Freed
Author, Global Sense
Media Visions Press Ltd
http://MediaVisionsPress.com

"Personal democracy makes global sense."

 

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