Bearing False Witness: A New Tool for Authoritarians
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
DIGG THIS
Florida
Bill Would Make It Legal To Falsify Court Records (Winter
Patriot)
Our friend
and colleague Winter
Patriot unearths a disturbing new innovation in law enforcement
now being pushed down in JebWorld: giving public officials the authority
to create phony documents and plant them in public record. This
includes court documents and other official papers, all created
out of whole cloth in "covert ops" kept secret from other
agencies and from surely it goes without saying that
worthless gaggle of teeming rabble known as "the people."
This astounding
proposal in a bill now being dangled like so much dripping
red meat before the rightwing Florida legislature, ever ready to
embrace any authoritarian notion that comes along, including "shoot
to kill if you're feeling paranoid" laws would "convey
authority to falsify any public record to prosecutors, judges, mayors,
sheriffs, coroners and other public officers," the
Miami Herald reports.
Now, if you
read a story like this about, say, Iran or China or Venezuela or
Zimbabwe, you would probably exclaim, "My god! They're trying
to construct a police state! Give government the power to falsify
documents, and they will be able to rig up a case against anyone
they please false confessions, false witness statements, false
previous convictions, the works! No matter what excuse is offered
for such draconian authority, the risk of its wanton abuse is far
too great for any government that pretends to popular legitimacy.
Only a tyrant, or a would-be tyrant or a bunch of authoritarian
bootlickers would ever call for such a law!"
And you would
be right. But of course, it's OK to give this authority to politicos
and prosecutors in America, because we are descended directly from
the angels in heaven unlike all those other mud people around
the world with their greed, ambition, spite, jealousy, lust, fear,
extremism and other pathetic human failings that could tempt them
to abuse such powers. Right?
Really, this
kind of thing not only boggles the mind it beggars the imagination
of even the most cynical observer of the virulent authoritarianism
that is now coursing through the natural gates and alleys of our
body politic, covering the Republic, most lazar-like, with vile
and loathsome crust. Is there no encroachment of liberty that these
people won't countenance?
They now want
to use the ordinary court and police services of our communities
to run clandestine operations against our own population. ("But
only against criminals and terrorists!" they say. Yes, and
Stalin's security organs only targeted "criminals and terrorists,"
too, just like the Gestapo. It's the age-old argument of the apologists
for power: "If you are innocent, you have nothing to fear.")
This move would also, in true Bushist fashion, call into the question
the validity of any public record. As the ACLU's Randall Marshall
puts it: "How would we ever be able to trust anything in the
judicial record knowing that something could be intentionally falsified
with a judicial seal of approval?"
How indeed?
But then, such confusion is precisely the point. Those who seek
to further their agendas through crime and covert operations are
well-served by covering reality with squiddish murk. If there is
no way of discerning the real truth, if all official records (and
scientific findings and first-hand reporting and expert analysis,
etc., etc.) are "tainted" somehow by an ineradicable ambiguity,
then the depredations of the criminals and covertniks can never
be nailed down.
The prisons
of the America are already filled with people jailed on manufactured
and manipulated evidence, false testimony, strong-armed confessions
and other hugger-mugger by officials. Are we now to give legal sanction
to these rogue practices? Well, why not? After all, in JebWorld,
in GeorgeWorld just as in AdolfWorld and JosefWorld
"If you are innocent, you have nothing to fear." Right?
Right?

The illustration
above is from The
Good Citizen's Alphabet, by Bertrand Russell, with illustrations
by Franciszka Themerson. You can see a slideshow of this fine piece
of work at DesignObserver.
I found it via a
post from Nitpicker, who used an equally apposite page from
the book.
February
23, 2007
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2007 Chris Floyd
Chris
Floyd Archives
|