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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: laura_bush who wrote (28153)9/19/2003 2:43:17 PM
From: Karen Lawrence  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
SAN FRANCISCO - May 1 -

Who: National Lawyers Guild, Law Students and Legal Workers

When/Where: Thursday, May 1, Noon- SF Federal Building
Thursday, May 15, Noon- Oakland Federal Building
The National Lawyers Guild, together with concerned lawyers, law students and legal workers from throughout the Bay Area, will assemble at San Francisco's Federal Building (450 Golden Gate Avenue) on May1st and Oakland Federal Building, May 15th, 2003, at noon, to protest President Bush's unwarranted invasion and occupation of Iraq, and his administration*s unprecedented assault on the Bill of Rights and the protections afforded by our constitution and laws. May 1, an international day of labor solidarity, is also celebrated as "Law Day" in the United States. As lawyers committed to the rule of law in a free and democratic society, we claim this occasion to demand an end to the administration's brutal policies of aggression and repression at home and abroad.

Contrary to the propaganda disseminated by the Bush administration and promoted by a compliant corporate media, the United States had no right to wage a preemptive war against Iraq, a nation that had not attacked the United States and had no capacity to do so. Under international law, a preemptive war under these circumstances is an unjustified war of aggression, specifically made illegal by the United Nations Charter. Having unlawfully invaded, at the cost of great suffering among the population, a poor country weakened by years of debilitating sanctions, the United States clearly has no legal right to occupy that country under military rule, while plundering the rich oil reserves that lie beneath its soil. We demand that the United States respect the rule of law, end the occupation and bring the troops home. Let the United Nations assume its historic peacekeeping role.

Here at home, the domestic policies of the Bush administrators have been equally violent and repressive. In addition to relentless war against poor and working people, education, health care and our natural environment, our civil liberties- the very bedrock of our civilization- are under attack as seldom before in our nation's history. John Ashcroft's Justice Department has unleashed what amounts to a domestic war of aggression against the basic rights of the people, assaulting their privacy, snooping on their constitutionally protected associations and communications, and even monitoring the information they access on the internet and the books they withdraw from the library.

Constitutional protections against warrantless searches and electronic surveillance have been gutted and plans are afoot for a vast new storehouse of data filled with personal information on all of us, much of it constructed from rumor, gossip and lies, as well as from secret informers encouraged by the new security apparatus. People from Arab or predominately Muslim countries are being subjected to forced registration, unexplained detentions, summary deportations and other terror tactics. Emboldened by a largely acquiescent and intimidated judiciary, the government has even spirited U.S. citizens away, to confine them in secret facilities without access to legal counsel or contact with their families. Based on the President's virtually unreviewable designation of these citizens as "enemy combatants," the government is holding them incommunicado, blatantly violating their constitutional right to counsel, while they are "interrogated" by police agents.

As always in repressive times, the State has taken special aim at the independence of the criminal defense bar, the right to counsel and the confidentiality of Attorney-Client communications. In New York the Justice Department has gone so far as to indict Lynne Stewart, a highly respected and ethical defense attorney who, under the established facts, did nothing more than vigorously and honestly represent her client, accused by the government of terrorist activities.

The limits to this encroaching totalitarian expansion of Executive power have been hard to find. Cowed by often-spurious claims of "National Security," the courts have failed shamefully to curb these abuses and protect the Constitution. On this first day of May, this Law Day, we call on lawyers, law students, legal workers and all persons devoted to the rule of law, to demand that the government honor its asserted commitment to constitutional democracy under the law by taking these concrete actions:

1. End the illegal occupations -- Abandon this ill-conceived new imperialism and leave the Middle East

2. Bring the troops home now -- Support them by removing them from the great hazards of war and occupation

3. Defend the Constitution

4. Repeal the USA Patriot Act

5. Defeat Patriot Act II

6. Protect the Right to Protest -- The First Amendment has stood the test of time and is essential to liberty.

7. Preserve the Attorney Client Privilege, and the sanctity of confidential communications -- Without these our legal system- arguably the best in the world- cannot survive.