Obey the Law
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
It was appropriate
that the issue of government domestic spying was raised at the recent
funeral of Mrs. Coretta Scott King. Martin Luther King Jr. and his
family were victims of a vicious domestic spying program instigated
by the federal government.
The parallels
with today's domestic spy program are almost exact. It was done
in the name of national security. It was authorized by the president,
John F. Kennedy, and the attorney general, Robert Kennedy, and carried
out by the FBI. There was a war on in that case, the Vietnam
War as well as the Cold War. It was kept secret from the public.
The FBI not
only tapped King's telephones but also planted bugs in places where
he was staying. One tape, which allegedly implicated King in an
extramarital affair, was sent to Mrs. King.
Now think
about this. Here is the federal government secretly spying on an
American citizen and trying to break up his family and disrupt the
civil-rights movement. And this was not done by some right-wing
fanatic, but by two bona fide liberals, the Kennedy brothers.
The current
president says he has authorized domestic spying without warrants
only on those connected to terrorists, but he refuses to provide
even Congress with enough information for his claim to be verified.
As you can see from the King affair, even people with good intentions
can abuse government power in the heated atmosphere of war. We don't
know who is being spied upon. We would not even know spying was
going on but for a whistle-blower who tipped off The New York
Times, which sat on the story for a year before finding the
courage to publish it.
That every
tyrant who ever lived rationalized his abuse of power by claiming
to be protecting the people or the empire or the country is kindergarten
basic civics. We should know better at this point in our history.
We are a nation of laws, not an empire and not a monarchy. Our Constitution
deliberately created a weak chief executive.
The president,
for example, is not our commander in chief. He's the commander in
chief of the armed forces. As far as we civilians are concerned,
he is just the administrator of laws passed by Congress. He cannot
make laws. He cannot assume powers not given to him by the Constitution
or by Congress. He must obey all the laws just the same as you and
me.
A problem
for many Americans is that they have never lived in the free republic
created by our forefathers. We became a war state during World War
II, and the Cold War was used as an excuse to maintain a war state
and to expand it. We are spending more on defense than most of the
rest of the world combined at a time when the only threats we face
are isolated attacks by a loosely organized band of criminals. The
government in Washington has become as secretive as the old Soviet
Union.
Too many Americans
are willing to let demagoguery scare them into writing a blank check
to any politician who claims he will protect them from the boogeyman.
I, for one, will never surrender this free republic, no matter how
many enemies, real or imagined, are at the gates. What would be
the point? Our ancestors fought for freedom and independence, not
for a dictatorship. You can't be free if you give the president
unlimited powers to violate both the laws and the Constitution.
The tension
between a government of law and a government of men runs throughout
American history. What worries me is that while there seems to be
constituencies for every special interest in the world, there is
little or no constituency for liberty and the rule of law.
I
would like to see all Americans send the president a simple message:
"With all due respect, sir, obey the damned laws or resign.
Both the law and the Constitution require warrants for domestic
spying. Get them. Both the law and the Constitution require that
Congress exercise oversight. Cooperate with Congress. You are a
public servant, not a God-anointed ruler of a kingdom."
February
13, 2006
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2006 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Charley
Reese Archives
|