A Democratic Dictatorship
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
Given
all the discussion and debate about whether President Bush will
order his military forces to attack Iran, now would be a good time
to review the state of liberty in America.
No one can
deny that we now live in a country in which the ruler has the omnipotent
power to send the entire nation into war on his own initiative.
To use the presidents words, when it comes to declaring and
waging war against another country, hes the decider.
It wasnt
always that way. The Constitution brought into existence a government
in which the powers to declare war and wage war were vested in two
separate branches of the government. While the president had the
power to wage war, he was prohibited from exercising it without
a declaration of war from Congress.
The idea behind
the Constitution itself was that a free society necessarily entails
restrictions on the power of the government, especially its ruler.
Yet we now
live in a nation in which the president has the omnipotent power
to ignore all constitutional restraints on his power. That might
not be the way the president and his legal advisors put it, but
that is the practical effect of what they are saying to justify
his powers. They effectively claim that the Constitution vests the
president as military commander in chief during the war
on terrorism with such extraordinary powers that he
is able to ignore restraints on his powers imposed both by the Constitution
and by Congress.
No restraints
on declaring and waging war against other nations. No restraints
on the power to secretly record telephone conversations of the American
people. No restraints on the power to kidnap and send people into
overseas concentration camps for the purpose of torture and even
execution. No restraints on the power to take Americans into custody
as enemy combatants and punish them even torture
and execute them without due process of law and jury trials.
If all that
isnt dictatorship, what is?
But President
Bush is a good man. Hes trying to protect us. Hes waging
war against the terrorists. Hes not evil like other dictators
in history. He was elected. He can be trusted.
People who
say that are missing the point. The suggestion is not that Bush
is an evil man. The point is simply that Bush now wields the same
omnipotent, dictatorial powers that other dictators in history have
wielded. That is not a small transformation in American life when
it comes to freedom.
Well,
then, where are the mass round-ups, and where are the concentration
camps?
Again, people
who ask that type of question are missing the point. The point is
not whether Bush is exercising his omnipotent, dictatorial power
to the maximum extent. Its whether he now possesses omnipotent,
dictatorial power, power that can be exercised whenever circumstances
dictate it for example, during another major terrorist attack
on American soil, when Americans become overly frightened again.
Unless the
American people figure out a way to reverse what has happened to
their country and have the will to do something about it
they will earn the mark of shame reserved for those people
in history who voluntarily relinquished their freedom in exchange
for the aura of security. Like all others in history who have chosen
such a course, they will ultimately learn that they have lost both
their freedom and their security.
April
27, 2006
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2006 Future of Freedom Foundation
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