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The Police State Act: A Report
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Congress
passed legislation last week that reauthorizes the Patriot Act for
another 10 years, although the bill faced far more opposition than
the original Act four years ago. Im heartened that more members
of Congress are listening to their constituents, who remain deeply
skeptical about the Patriot Act and expansions of federal police
power in general. They rightfully wonder why Congress is so focused
on American citizens, while bin Laden and other terrorist leaders
still have not been captured.
The
tired arguments were hearing today are that same ones we heard
in 2001 when the Patriot Act was passed in the emotional aftermath
of the September 11th terrorist attacks. If the Patriot Act is constitutional
and badly needed, as its proponents swear, why were sunset provisions
included at all? If its unconstitutional and pernicious, why
not abolish it immediately? All of this nonsense about sunsets and
reauthorizations merely distracts us from the real issue, which
is personal liberty. America was not founded on a promise of security,
it was founded on a promise of personal liberty to pursue happiness.
One
prominent Democratic opined on national television that most
of the 170-page Patriot Act is fine, but that it needs some
fine-tuning. He then stated that he opposed the ten-year reauthorization
bill on the grounds that Americans should not have their constitutional
rights put on hold for a decade. His partys proposal, however,
was to reauthorize the Patriot Act for only four years, as though
a shorter moratorium on constitutional rights would be acceptable!
So much for the opposition party and its claim to stand for civil
liberties.
Unfortunately,
some of my congressional colleagues referenced the recent London
bombings during the debate, insinuating that opponents of the Patriot
Act somehow would be responsible for a similar act here at home.
I wont even dignify that slur with the response it deserves.
Lets remember that London is the most heavily monitored city
in the world, with surveillance cameras recording virtually all
public activity in the city center. British police officials are
not hampered by our 4th amendment nor our numerous due process requirements.
In other words, they can act without any constitutional restrictions,
just as supporters of the Patriot Act want our own police to act.
Despite this they were not able to prevent the bombings, proving
that even a wholesale surveillance society cannot be made completely
safe against determined terrorists. Congress misses the irony entirely.
The London bombings dont prove the need for the Patriot Act,
they prove the folly of it.
The
Patriot Act, like every political issue, boils down to a simple
choice: Should we expand government power, or reduce it? This is
the fundamental political question of our day, but its quickly
forgotten by politicians who once promised to stand for smaller
government. Most governments, including our own, tend to do what
they can get away with rather than what the law allows them to do.
All governments seek to increase their power over the people they
govern, whether we want to recognize it or not. The Patriot Act
is a vivid example of this. Constitutions and laws dont keep
government power in check; only a vigilant populace can do that.
July
26, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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