Long winter ahead for American dissent Providence Journal By Michael Shaw December 27, 2001
ATTY. GEN. JOHN Ashcroft's recent statement that critics of the administration's crackdown on civil liberties are "aiding terrorists" does not bode well for the future of healthy dissent in our democracy.
Since the founding of this country, citizen activists have served as catalysts for furthering American democracy. The abolition, suffragist, and civil-rights movements all started small, but grew to transform America for the better, steering society towards more democratic and humane ways. But reduced civil liberties, suspicion, and sweeping anti-terrorist legislation could muzzle this vital and unique tradition of American political life.
Many grassroots groups that my organization, Haymarket People's Fund, works with in Rhode Island and across New England are already feeling the pinch.
The American Friends Service Committee, a pacifist Quaker organization with branches throughout New England, has received phony "anthrax" letters and death threats in response to its peace activities. In Hartford, anti-war activists were stunned by the virulence of the police reaction to their Oct. 25 rally, and the out-of-proportion penalties that 18 of the protesters received. Last month, hundreds of pro-choice groups and clinics nationwide received letters filled with white powder. Though they were hoaxes, the effects have been destructive, the message ominous.
Nowhere has the impact been more devastating than among immigrant groups and communities. Mario Bueno of Providence-based Progreso Latino notes that "there is a generalized fear, an expectation that it's going to be tougher." News of over 1,100 people detained with no legal recourse (the largest such act since the 1920 Palmer Raids), new secret military tribunals, and plans for a new INS police to hunt down immigrants is sending shock waves through most immigrant communities. The new requirement that non-citizens carry identification documentation at all times strangely parallels the similar requirement made of Jews, gays, lesbians and Gypsies in 1933 in Nazi Germany.
Community groups across New England report that immigrants in general must grapple with much higher levels of intimidation and uncertainty. In the current atmosphere, the simple act of going outside, let alone confronting abuse, entails the prospect of being physically or verbally assaulted. Somali girls were attacked last month in a Boston high school because they were wearing Muslim headdresses. Latino youth are afraid of being mistakenly rounded up in a police dragnet operation because they look "Arabic." With immigrants already struggling with labor exploitation, racial harassment, and civil rights violations, this new situation only sets the stage for increased abuse and tragedy. As one Hartford-based Cambodian war refugee grimly noted, "This doesn't look like America any more."
The ripple effects of this new situation are spreading beyond immigrant communities. The USA Patriot Act, which allows wiretaps, surveillance, "sneak-and-peak" house searches, and preventative arrests, raises up the specter of past abuses of ordinary American citizens. Four decades ago, under the guise of protecting national security, the FBI resorted to wiretapping, surveillance, threats and media manipulation to destabilize the civil rights, gay-lesbian, and peace movements. Many community organizers worry that the Patriot Act could similarly pave the way for the harassment of any group that incurs the wrath of the political establishment.
At a time of job layoffs and budget slashing, poor communities, contingent workers and women who no longer have welfare benefits will be the first to feel the brunt of the economic and political crisis. More than ever, they need to organize to defend their rights, and they need strong community groups to organize with them. Yet, as moves toward crackdowns evolve from predictions to reality, these same groups are rightly becoming concerned about what the future may hold for them.
Dr. Martin Luther King once said "We're at a terrible stage when we confuse dissent with disloyalty, and we view every protester as a traitor." Community activists are an important part of our democracy. Without them, we wouldn't have abolished slavery, and women wouldn't be able to vote. But if intimidation, fear, and war end up muzzling this vital form of dissent, then our society will be the big loser. Community activism and dissent must be supported.
Michael Shaw is chair of the Rhode Island board of Haymarket People's Fund, a foundation for social change. |