SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ecommerceman who wrote (7689)11/15/2001 1:53:45 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 93284
 
Seizing Dictatorial Power
From The New York Times
November 15, 2001

ESSAY

By WILLIAM SAFIRE

WASHINGTON -- Misadvised by a
frustrated and panic-stricken
attorney general, a president of the United
States has just assumed what amounts to
dictatorial power to jail or execute aliens.
Intimidated by terrorists and inflamed by a
passion for rough justice, we are letting
George W. Bush get away with the replacement of the American rule of law
with military kangaroo courts.

In his infamous emergency order, Bush admits to dismissing "the principles of
law and the rules of evidence" that undergird America's system of justice. He
seizes the power to circumvent the courts and set up his own drumhead
tribunals — panels of officers who will sit in judgment of non-citizens who
the president need only claim "reason to believe" are members of terrorist
organizations.

Not content with his previous decision to permit police to eavesdrop on a
suspect's conversations with an attorney, Bush now strips the alien accused
of even the limited rights afforded by a court-martial.

His kangaroo court can conceal evidence by citing national security, make up
its own rules, find a defendant guilty even if a third of the officers disagree,
and execute the alien with no review by any civilian court.

No longer does the judicial branch and an independent jury stand between
the government and the accused. In lieu of those checks and balances central
to our legal system, non-citizens face an executive that is now investigator,
prosecutor, judge, jury and jailer or executioner. In an Orwellian twist,
Bush's order calls this Soviet-style abomination "a full and fair trial."

On what legal meat does this our Caesar feed? One precedent the White
House cites is a military court after Lincoln's assassination. (During the Civil
War, Lincoln suspended habeas corpus; does our war on terror require
illegal imprisonment next?) Another is a military court's hanging, approved by
the Supreme Court, of German saboteurs landed by submarine in World
War II.

Proponents of Bush's kangaroo court say: Don't you soft-on-terror,
due-process types know there's a war on? Have you forgotten our 5,000
civilian dead? In an emergency like this, aren't extraordinary security
measures needed to save citizens' lives? If we step on a few toes, we can
apologize to the civil libertarians later.

Those are the arguments of the phony-tough. At a time when even liberals
are debating the ethics of torture of suspects — weighing the distaste for
barbarism against the need to save innocent lives — it's time for conservative
iconoclasts and card-carrying hard-liners to stand up for American values.

To meet a terrorist emergency, of course some rules should be stretched and
new laws passed. An ethnic dragnet rounding up visa-skippers or
questioning foreign students, if short-term, is borderline tolerable. Congress's
new law permitting warranted roving wiretaps is understandable.

But let's get to the target that this blunderbuss order is intended to hit. Here's
the big worry in Washington now: What do we do if Osama bin Laden gives
himself up? A proper trial like that Israel afforded Adolf Eichmann, it is
feared, would give the terrorist a global propaganda platform. Worse, it
would be likely to result in widespread hostage-taking by his followers to
protect him from the punishment he deserves.

The solution is not to corrupt our judicial tradition by making bin Laden the
star of a new Star Chamber. The solution is to turn his cave into his crypt.
When fleeing Taliban reveal his whereabouts, our bombers should promptly
bid him farewell with 15,000-pound daisy-cutters and 5,000-pound
rock-penetrators.

But what if he broadcasts his intent to surrender, and walks toward us under
a white flag? It is not in our tradition to shoot prisoners. Rather, President
Bush should now set forth a policy of "universal surrender": all of Al Qaeda
or none. Selective surrender of one or a dozen leaders — which would leave
cells in Afghanistan and elsewhere free to fight on — is unacceptable. We
should continue our bombardment of bin Laden's hideouts until he agrees to
identify and surrender his entire terrorist force.

If he does, our criminal courts can handle them expeditiously. If, as more
likely, the primary terrorist prefers what he thinks of as martyrdom, that
suicidal choice would be his — and Americans would have no need of
kangaroo courts to betray our principles of justice.

nytimes.com



To: ecommerceman who wrote (7689)11/15/2001 1:56:33 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 93284
 
If we want to maintain the idea of Democracy in this country, McCain should seriously consider the
idea of becoming a Democrat. The way things are going we are quickly losing our freedom.

Bush is breaking with constitutional law, according to many.