Congress spent just a few
short hours last week voting to create the biggest new federal
bureaucracy since World War II, not that the media or even most
members of Congress paid much attention to the process. Yet our
most basic freedoms as Americans privacy in our homes,
persons, and possessions; confidentiality in our financial and
medical affairs; openness in our conversations, telephone, and
Internet use; unfettered travel; indeed the basic freedom not
to be monitored as we go through our daily lives have been
dramatically changed.
The last time Congress
attempted a similarly ambitious reorganization of the government
was with the creation of the Department of Defense in 1947. Back
then, congressional hearings on the matter lasted two years
before President Truman finally signed legislation. Even after
this lengthy deliberation, however, organizational problems with
the new department lasted more than 40 years! What do we expect
from a huge bureaucracy conceived virtually overnight, by a Congress
that didn’t even read the bill that creates it? Surely more deliberation
was appropriate before establishing a giant new federal agency
with 170,000 employees!
When the Homeland Security
department first was conceived, some congressional leaders and
administration officials outrageously told a credulous rank-and-file
Congress that the new department would be "budget neutral."
The agency simply would be a reorganization of existing federal
employees, we were told, and would not increase the federal budget.
In fact, the agency was touted as increasing efficiency, rather
than expanding federal power. Of course the original 32-page proposal
sent over by the White House quickly grew to 282 pages in House
committees, ending up at more than 500 pages in the final version
voted on last week with a $3 billion price tag just for
starters. The sheer magnitude of the bill, and the technical complexity
of it, makes it impossible for anyone to understand completely.
Rest assured that the new department represents a huge increase
in the size and scope of the federal government that will mostly
serve to spy on the American people. Can anyone, even the most
partisan Republican, honestly say with a straight face that the
Department of Homeland Security does not expand the federal government?
The
list of dangerous and unconstitutional powers granted to the new
Homeland Security department is lengthy. Warrantless searches,
forced vaccinations of whole communities, federal neighborhood
snitch programs, federal information databases, and a sinister
new "Information Awareness Office" at the Pentagon that
uses military intelligence to spy on domestic citizens are just
a few of the troubling aspects of the new legislation. To better
understand the potential damage to our liberties, I strongly recommend
a November 14th New York Times op-ed piece by William Safire
entitled "You
Are A Suspect." The article provides a devastating critique
of the new Homeland Security bureaucracy and a chilling warning
of what the agency could become. The article can be read on my
website, under the section entitled "Speeches."
November
19, 2002