The
Institutionalization of Tyranny
by
Paul Craig Roberts
PaulCraigRoberts.org
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Republicans
and conservative Americans are still fighting Big Government in
its welfare state form. Apparently, they have never heard of the
militarized police state form of Big Government, or, if they have,
they are comfortable with it and have no objection.
Republicans,
including those in the House and Senate, are content for big government
to initiate wars without a declaration of war or even Congress
assent, and to murder with drones citizens of countries with which
Washington is not at war. Republicans do not mind that federal security
agencies spy on American citizens without warrants and record every
email, Internet site visited, Facebook posting, cell phone call,
and credit card purchase. Republicans in Congress even voted to
fund the massive structure in Utah in which this information is
stored.
But heaven
forbid that big government should do anything for a poor person.
Republicans
have been fighting Social Security ever since President Franklin
D. Roosevelt signed it into law in the 1930s, and they have been
fighting Medicare ever since President Lyndon Johnson signed it
into law in 1965 as part of the Great Society initiatives.
Conservatives
accuse liberals of the institutionalization of compassion.
Writing in the February, 2013, issue of Chronicles, John C. Seiler,
Jr., damns Johnsons Great Society as a major force in
turning a country that still enjoyed a modicum of republican liberty
into the centralized, bureaucratized, degenerate, and bankrupt state
we endure today.
It doesnt
occur to conservatives that in Europe democracy, liberty, welfare,
rich people, and national health services all coexist, but that
somehow American liberty is so fragile that it is overturned by
a limited health program only available to the elderly.
Neither does
it occur to conservative Republicans that it is far better to institutionalize
compassion than to institutionalize tyranny.
The institutionalization
of tyranny is the achievement of the Bush/Obama regimes of the 21st
century. This, and not the Great Society, is the decisive break
from the American tradition. The Bush Republicans demolished almost
all of the constitutional protections of liberty erected by the
Founding Fathers. The Obama Democrats codified Bushs dismantling
of the Constitution and removed the protection afforded to citizens
from being murdered by the government without due process. One decade
was time enough for two presidents to make Americans the least free
people of any developed country, indeed, perhaps of any country.
In what other country or countries does the chief executive officer
have the right to murder citizens without due process?
It turns ones
stomach to listen to conservatives bemoan the destruction of liberty
by compassion while they institutionalize torture, indefinite detention
in violation of habeas corpus, murder of citizens on suspicion and
unproven accusation alone, complete and total violation of privacy,
interference with the right to travel by unaccountable no-fly
lists and highway check points, the brutalization of citizens and
those exercising their right to protest by police, frame-ups of
critics, and narrow the bounds of free speech.
In Amerika
today only the executive branch of the federal government has any
privacy. The privacy is institutional, not personal witness
the fate of CIA director Petraeus. While the executive branch destroys
the privacy of every one else, it insists on its own privilege of
privacy. National security is invoked to shield the executive branch
from its criminal actions. Federal prosecutors actually conduct
trials in which the evidence against defendants is classified and
withheld from defendants attorneys. Attorneys such as Lynne
Stewart have been imprisoned for not following orders from federal
prosecutors to violate the attorney-client privilege.
Conservatives
accept the monstrous police state that has been erected, because
they think it makes them safe from Muslim terrorism.
They havent the wits to see that they are now open to terrorism
by the government.
Consider, for
example, the case of Bradley Manning. He is accused of leaking confidential
information that reveals US government war crimes despite the fact
that it is the responsibility of every soldier to reveal war crimes.
Virtually every one of Mannings constitutional rights has
been violated by the US government. He has been tortured. In an
effort to coerce Manning into admitting trumped-up charges and implicating
WikiLeaks Julian Assange, Manning had his right to a speedy
trial violated by nearly three years of pre-trial custody and repeated
trial delays by government prosecutors. And now the judge, Col.
Denise Lind, who comes across as a member of the prosecution rather
than an impartial judge, has ruled that Manning cannot use as evidence
the governments own reports that the leaked information did
not harm national security. Lind has also thrown out the legal principle
of mens rea by ruling that Mannings motive for leaking
information about US war crimes cannot
be presented as evidence in his trial.
Mens
rea says that a crime requires criminal intent. By discarding
this legal principle, Lind has prevented Manning from showing that
his motive was to do his duty under the military code and reveal
evidence of war crimes. This allows prosecutors to turn a dutiful
act into the crime of aiding the enemy by revealing classified information.
Of course,
nothing that Manning allegedly revealed helped the enemy in any
way as the enemy, having suffered the war crimes, was already aware
of them.
Obama Democrats
are no more disturbed than conservative Republicans that a dutiful
American soldier is being prosecuted because he has a moral conscience.
In Mannings trial, the governments definition of victory
has nothing whatsoever to do with justice prevailing. For Washington,
victory means stamping out moral conscience and protecting a corrupt
government from public exposure of its war crimes.
January
21, 2013
Paul
Craig Roberts, a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
americans lost the protection of law, has been released by Random
House. Visit his website.
Copyright
© 2013 Paul
Craig Roberts
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