Sep 30, 2010 - Issue 395 |
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Constitution and Bill of Rights |
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A restive general, police armed with the latest technology in “non-lethal” force, and grid locked government have been joined by an FBI that seems to have morphed into the thought police, all firing the shot across the bow of those who seek to exercise their constitutional rights and the Bill of Rights. The news of last
week’s FBI raids of the homes of anti-war activists in In the raids, FBI agents, armed with warrants, entered the homes of the activists and left with boxes filled with personal belongings: computers, cell phones, photographs, papers, various publications, and many other items. People whose homes were violated were served with summonses to appear before a grand jury and they were instructed to bring with them a list of items, presumably those things the agents could not snatch in the raid. The targeted men and women rightly called the raids a “fishing expedition” and said they had done nothing to warrant such an intrusion into their private lives. For its part, the FBI’s official statement on the raids was that there were no arrests expected at this time and that the agency was simply investigating any individuals or groups that might have been in contact with, or supportive of, groups that have been identified by the U.S. government as terrorists. It is well known how easy it is to be placed on a terror list and it’s well known what a nightmare one has to endure in getting off any such list. Possibly, though, the most ominous statement to come out of the raids was the FBI’s assertion to the general public that there is “no imminent danger” posed by the violated Americans. This, of course, implies that these people could - or would - pose a danger at some time in the future. But what the raided citizens have been doing for years is what millions of Americans have done: Worked to uphold human rights everywhere, for equality and justice, for peace and against war - and they have contacted groups and individuals who work toward the same ends in other countries. Many, if not the vast majority of them, have pacifist leanings or strong anti-war beliefs (or both) and would not look with favor on support for groups that advocate or engage in violence. So, why the raids on these citizens? The short answer seems to be that an anti-war movement that is growing will interfere with the machinations of empire and, possibly, bring an end to endless war. The raids are a warning to Americans who actively work to end the wars: You could be the next one to have your life disrupted and your possessions confiscated, as well as your personal records examined, copied, and perused by strangers. You could be the next one charged as an “enemy combatant,” if someone in government chooses to call you one. And, just this week, the Associated Press reported that the Obama Administration is seeking to make it easier to conduct Internet surveillance. That is, authorities want to more easily peruse Internet records, including your personal e-mails, whether on a computer or on a hand-held communications device. The list goes on. Recent occurrences
involving military brass contribute to the unease that citizens feel about
the direction of their country. President Obama had to fire General Stanley
McChrystal, commander in Traditionally,
moving up in the military is easier in wartime and, lately, the Some of the hostilities
are, of course, for oil, some war is for other natural resources, and
some of it is to make the world safe for low-wage factory sites or cash
crops to pay for the national debt. There are many reasons for the It remains to
be seen whether there was any reason whatsoever for the FBI to raid homes
in The Bush-Cheney Administration, to curb the impulse of the people to express themselves as provided by the First Amendment (to petition their government), invented “free speech pens,” which were chain-link fence enclosures set up away from the government officials, so said officials never had to hear or even see the protesters. There was an attitude promulgated by George W. Bush that, “if you’re not with us, you’re with the terrorists.” That kind of public attitude is what has set the stage for the kind of fishing expedition we saw last week and are likely to see more of in coming months. It isn’t just
the FBI that is ramping up threats against people who dissent from official
policy or just fail to obey. With the hysteria that was generated by the
previous administration about terrorism, it’s not surprising that authorities
are demanding that the people immediately obey every law enforcement officer
on any beat in Until then, they can send FBI agents on fishing expeditions into private homes (remember that our homes used to be our “castles”) to see if they can determine what people are thinking by analyzing their letters, their papers, the publications they read, and the e-mails that arrive via computer every day. If you oppose endless war, if you oppose the extension of the American Empire to the ends of the earth using the most powerful military the world has ever seen, if you want to see an end to the poverty, ignorance, and ill health that is all around us (caused by the bankrupting of our social programs by unlimited and growing military spending), you probably will have to make a decision soon. The decision will be whether to take a stand against policies that are eating away the substance of our stated constitutional principles, publicly and consistently, or you will have to live “under the radar,” hoping to get along, without making waves, in a world that someone else creates for you. BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
John Funiciello, is a
labor organizer and former union organizer. His union work started when
he became a local president of The Newspaper Guild in the early 1970s.
He was a reporter for 14 years for newspapers in
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