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The following is a must
read article by
Dr. Steve Best
The
Son of Patriot Act and the Revenge on Democracy
In October 2001, one month after the 9-11 attack, the Bush administration
forced through Congress an assault on civil liberties perversely titled the “USA
Patriot Act” (a surreal acronym for “Uniting & Strengthening America Providing
Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act"). Exploiting
the new climate of fear, the Bush team claimed that a free nation must give way
to a secure nation. From the offices of a stolen Presidency, we now have
neither.
The Patriot Act violates numerous constitutional rights, such as the First
Amendment right to free speech and freedom of assembly, the Fourth Amendment
right to be secure from unreasonable search and seizures, and the Fifth and
Sixth Amendment rights to basic protections during criminal proceedings. Among
other things, the Bush administration arrogated to Executive
government the power to demand from librarians and bookstores lists of material
checked out or purchased, to undertake clandestine sneak and peek operations in
homes and workplaces, to monitor citizen communications by phone or the
Internet, and to detain foreigners indefinitely without legal counsel. In the
new Surveillance State, all government agencies can collect and share
information on anyone without judicial review, as the Executive office minimizes
the information citizens can collect on it and corporations through Freedom of
Information requests.
Perhaps most alarmingly, the Patriot Act created a new legal category of
“domestic terrorist” that is defined broadly enough to have a chilling effect on
free speech and political activity. Casting its dragnet across the land, the
Patriot Act states that the crime of “domestic terrorism” occurs when a person’s
action “appears to be intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian population
[or] to influence the policy of government by intimidation or coercion."
Interestingly, through this new form of citizen coercion the Patriot Act falls
under its own definition and by logic should annul itself. Instead, civil
disobedience and virtually any protest activity meets the definition of
“terrorism” and could easily land one on the radar screen of the state. In a
democracy, the role of citizens precisely is to influence government policy, but
now this is considered coercion and so in Bushspeak, citizen = terrorist.
In the era of the Patriot Act, the Executive branch of government usurps
ever more power, and thereby destroys the checks and balances among the three
branches of government crucial for the functioning of liberal “democracy,” such
as it is. When the Executive branch makes important legal and policy decisions,
Congress often is ignored and the courts are stripped of independent review and
decision-making power. Consequently, one can expect more state repression and
less accountability to Congress, the courts, and citizens alike. As stated by
the Center For Constitutional Rights in their “Erosion of Civil Liberties in the
Post 9/11 Era” report, “Executive Order and agency regulations violate the laws
of the U.S. Constitution, the laws of the United States, and international and
humanitarian law. As a result, the war on terror is largely being conducted by
Executive fiat and the constitutional liberties of both citizens and
non-citizens alike have been seriously compromised.”
“Shock and Awe” Attacks on Democracy
The Patriot Act set back the struggle for civil liberties by decades, but
it was only the opening volley of the Bush administration as it launches another
front in its war -- the blitzkrieg on democracy. Every bad horror movie has its
sequel, and it is no different in this case. Whereas the Patriot Act was enacted
to hurt foreigners and non-citizens the most (after 9-11, as many as 2,000
people, mostly foreigners, were rounded up and jailed for months without formal
charges and the right to legal counsel), its potential successor is designed to
come after American citizens themselves. The Son of Patriot Act authorizes
increases in domestic intelligence gathering, surveillance, and law enforcement
prerogatives that are unprecedented in U.S. history.
In February 2003, a watchdog group called the Center for Public Integrity
reported that they obtained a leaked copy of draft legislation – dated January
9, 2003 and stamped “confidential” -- the Bush administration told the Senate
Judiciary Committee did not exist. The legislation is titled the “Domestic
Security Enhancement Act of 2003,” or as it is unaffectionately known, Patriot
Act II. Like the opportunistic debut of Patriot Act I that exploited the 9-11
tragedy and widespread fears of additional terrorist attacks, Patriot Act II
reveals that the Bush administration was waiting for the next terrorist attack
or its war with Iraq to spring more booby trapped legislation on Congress
requiring emergency approval. If approved, Patriot Act II will plant dangerous
landmines in the path of every activist and nonconformist in the land. Many
members of Congress, however, are more circumspect and skeptical this time
around and are challenging further efforts to erode the Constitution.
In addition to increasing secret surveillance and requiring even less
juridical or political oversight of Executive power, Patriot Act II creates new
crimes and punishments for nonviolent activities. It calls for fifteen new death
penalty categories for “terrorism.” It authorizes secret arrests for anyone
involved with an organization deemed “terrorist” and it makes giving donations
to such a group a criminal action. As the government and sundry industries
involved in animal exploitation try to make the “terrorist” tag stick to groups
like PETA and Greenpeace, contributors to those organizations risk being
identified as “terrorists.” If Patriot Act II is passed, moreover, the
government will keep a DNA base on all “terrorists” and put their pictures and
personal information on a public Internet site. Most alarmingly, the government
could strip Americans of their citizenship and deport them if they belong or
give “material support” to a “terrorist” group.
These blood-curdling measures far transcend anything established in
Patriot Act I. They assail legal forms of protest and dissent, while threatening
to exile all the “terrorists” who belong to organizations like PETA and
Greenpeace. They subvert the very principles and logic of democracy in the name
of patriotism. With a broad brush, the state intends to paint a scarlet letter
on the forehead of every activist, who will then be treated like a common sex
offender once their picture is posted on the Internet. Laws previously created
to curb organized crime, hooliganism, and sex offenses are now being used
against animal rights and environmental activists, and these activists are being
demonized accordingly in a war of public perception.
Lobbying for Tyranny: The Texas Eco-Terrorism McBill
The assault on animal rights and environmental organizations is happening
from the top down and the bottom up, from both the federal level and from new
initiatives of individual states. The bills currently debated in various states
are the result of alliances between corporations and professional lobbying
groups, and their goal is to thwart any challenge to industry rights to
predation.
Deepening a dynamic as old as our nation, corporations are finding new
methods and resources to gain access to politicians and policy makers. Powerful
corporate lobbying organizations such as American Legislative Exchange Council
(ALEC) operate as think tanks and policy makers that charge corporate clients
thousands of dollars a year to join. Membership earns corporations privileged
access to policy meetings that invite their input in drafting new laws and that
bring them into direct contact with politicians. Corporations and trade
organizations can dictate laws and public policy while hiding their tracks
behind lobbying organizations. ALEC has been in the business of corporate policy
prostitution for 30 years and currently operates with an annual budget of nearly
six million dollars.
One key function of groups like ALEC is to draft model bills that advance
corporate interests and then float them in state legislatures across the
country. ALEC has drafted over 3,100 bills and passed 450 into law. Not
coincidentally, as they push legislation criminalizing dissent, ALEC has over a
dozen corporate clients involved in the prison industry and it has played a
crucial role in passing dozens of tough anti-crime bills such as the three
strike laws. The group has, consequently, helped to significantly increase
incarceration rates in the U.S. and it intends to add animal rights and
environmental activists to their client list.
This is obvious if one considers Texas House Bill 433, a recent draft
legislation that seeks to capitalize on federal efforts to criminalize animal
rights and environmental activism, and is being applied in Pennsylvania, Maine,
and New York, with other states to follow. Texas HB 433 involved a partnership
with ALEC and the U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance (USSA). The USSA is a militantly
anti-animal rights organization comprised of hunters, fisherman, trappers, and
“scientific wildlife management professionals.” They defend their right to kill
animals through grassroots coalition support, ballot issue campaigning, and
direct lobbying efforts. In August 2002, Rob Sexton of USSA spoke to ALEC’s Task
Force on Criminal Justice about the growing “terrorist threat” of animal rights
groups. In December 2002 the committee, headed by Representative Ray Allen
(R-Dallas), voted to accept HB 433, and in February 2003 the “Animal and
Ecological Terrorism Act” was sent to the Texas legislature.
As evidence of the interests sponsoring the bill, it singles out animal
and environmental industries alone for special legal protection. HB 433 defines
an “animal rights or ecological terrorist organization” as “two or more persons
organized for the purpose of supporting any politically motivated activity
intended to obstruct or deter any person from participating in any activity
involving animals or an activity involving natural resources.”
Like the Patriot Act and its bastard offspring, the language here is
willfully vague, but the purpose is quite specific: to cripple the animal rights
and environmental movements by kneecapping their right to dissent. With HB 433
and its numerous clones, you can be labeled a terrorist if you leaflet a circus,
protest an experimental lab, block a road to protect a forest, or potentially
impede industry profits in any fashion. Consequently, following measures that
have been attempted in Illinois and Missouri, the bill defines another
“terrorist” action to be photographing or videotaping animal abuse in a facility
such as factory farm or slaughterhouse. Thus, the terrorists are not the
monsters who club pigs to death with metal pipes, but rather the activists,
whistleblowers, or investigative reporters trying to document such sadistic
abuse. Like Patriot Act II, the Texas eco-terrorist bill aims to criminalize
donating money to any group smeared as terrorist, and requires that all guilty
individuals supply their names, addresses, and a recent photograph to post on a
public Internet database.
The USSA claims that they only seek to protect “wildlife” interests and
prevent illegal actions, and do not intend to inhibit the constitutional rights
of their critics. This lie is contradicted, first, by the fact that Texas
already has law in place to prohibit criminal actions against property and,
second, the bill unambiguously attacks basic rights. The real agenda of the USSA
clearly is not to stop actions that already are illegal, but to criminalize any
currently legal activities such as protests or demonstrations that pose threats
to their bloodletting.
After being slammed with criticism from outraged citizens and groups
including the Humane Society of the United States, the American Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the Texas Humane Legislative Network, the
Sierra Club, and the American Civil Liberties Union, Allen backed off HB 433.
But he did not disavow his mission to help his friends in industry, for he
resubmitted a similar bill, HB 1516, which aims to escalate criminal penalties
for actions against animal and natural resource industries. Clearly, animal
rights and environmental activists are becoming a threat and corporate
exploiters will go to any lengths, including shredding the Constitution, to
protect their profits. Michael Ratner, a human rights lawyer and vice-president
of the Center for Constitutional Rights, claims that the Texas bill is
unprecedented in its draconian assault on freedom. “This is unique. Even under
the definition of domestic terrorism in the Patriot Act, you have to at least do
something that arguably threatens people’s lives, The definitional sections of
this legislation are so broad that they sweep within them basically every
environmental and animal rights organization in the country.”
Creeping Fascism
As the U.S. government moves closer to tyranny, it collapses differences
between foreign and domestic-born, between violent and nonviolent protest,
between terrorist and citizen, between the Al Qaeda and PETA. Patriot Act I was
just the first incursion in the new war against democracy, and the enemy is
quickly advancing on our positions.
We are all under attack -- not just the Animal Liberation Front, but
mainstream groups too – and it is important the diverse tendencies within the
movement respect one another’s place in the struggle and stay as unified as
possible. It is absurd to blame the ALF for the new state repression. The
industries and state are responding to the strength of the movement as a whole,
and mainstream groups like HSUS enjoy the credibility they do specifically
because the ideas and actions of more radical activists make theirs seem more
moderate in comparison.
The new concept of patriotism is marketed with as much truth and logic as
the packaging of happy meals. The government talks in Orwellian doublespeak that
defines peace as war and war as peace, (corporate) criminality as principled
moral action and principled moral action as criminal behavior. But one needs to
stop expecting truth from the government and begin to see the state for what it
really is – a professional bureaucracy that monopolizes the means of violence
and exists largely as a political tool for the economic interests of ruling
elites.
Just as the CIA’s purpose abroad has been to stop democracy through any
means necessary, so the FBI’s function at home always has been to impede civil
liberties and halt all radical movements dead in their tracks. The stories of
heroes fighting to protect American democracy against gangs, the mafia, and
sundry evil types are but the fables (always encouraged and pre-approved by the
FBI) of comic books and television shows. The reality is otherwise. Since its
inception the FBI has monitored domestic radicalism and dissent, and it has
jailed, beaten, murdered, and executed radicals in this country. As evidenced by
their infamous counter-intelligence program (COINTELPRO) during the 1960s and
1970s, the FBI has infiltrated, disrupted, and destroyed radical social
organizations, using techniques ranging from surveillance and agent provocateurs
to framing and murder. To the extent the animal rights, environment, and
anti-war movements grow strong, they will do it to us too.
The current climate is one of hysteria and intense repression. National
media conservatives routinely brand anti-war protestors as traitors who should
be jailed. Neil Cavuto of the conservative Fox News channel that boasts “fair
and balanced” coverage said to critics opposing the “liberation of Iraq” that
“you were sickening then; you are sickening now." Cavato is a news anchor, not a
commentator. The yellow-ribbon-tying masses equate patriotism with blinkered
jingoism, as Paleolithic “America, Love It or Leave It” cries ring throughout
the wasteland of talk radio. The shrill attack on the Dixie Chicks (much of it
organized by conservative media giant Clear Channel Communications) for voicing
their right to a viewpoint about President Bush is a clear indicator of the
barbaric impulses stirring in the nation, irrationally oblivious to the fact
that if the troops in Iraq were fighting for anything, it was precisely for the
Dixie Chicks to have the right of dissent. In the current neo-McCarthyist
climate, blacklisting is back in Hollywood as outspoken critics of Bush’s war
against Iraq (Susan Sarandon, Tim Robbins, Martin Sheen, and others) are being
banned from events and suffer retaliation for their views. For some time now,
conservative organizations in academia have been monitoring what “liberal”
professors say about topics such as the war and the Israel-Palestine conflict.
Lynne Cheney, wife of Vice President Dick Cheney, founded a new conservative
group, the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, which blasted dozens of
professors for not showing sufficient patriotism after 9-11. Cheney considers
college and university faculty to be “the weak link in America’s response to the
attack.”
Throughout the country people have been questioned by the FBI for
expressing anti-war views. In February 2003, a man was arrested in a New York
shopping mall for refusing to remove an anti-war T-shirt he was wearing,
following earlier events in 2002 where FBI and police questioned a college
student for an anti-Bush poster hanging in her dorm room and an activist who
refused to use stamps bearing the image of the American flag. Many such
outrageous incidents result from one person reporting another to authorities. In
2002, John Ashcroft tried to implement Operation TIPS (Terrorist Information
Prevention System) whereby individuals were asked to monitor their fellow
citizens and to report suspicious behavior. The program was not approved
ultimately, but its website claimed that over 200,000 tips have been filed since
September 11. Here as abroad, police monitor and gather intelligence on anti-war
demonstrations that are violently subdued. Delta airlines is the first to
institute a new computer system that conducts background checks on all
passengers and assigns them a threat level – red, yellow, or green – to
determine if they should be subjected to increased levels of security or even
refused boarding. The newly created Transportation Security Administration has
put over 1,000 citizens on a “no-fly” list, targeting “security risks” such as
Greenpeace activists.
Increasingly, animal rights activists are being brought before grand
juries and charged with violations of the RICO – Racketeer Influenced and
Corrupt Organizations – Act of 1970 originally designed to fight organized
crime. Grand juries are nothing but repressive mechanisms of the state that try
to coerce activists to supply them with information under the penalty of 18
months in prison for non-compliance. In the wake of the controversial Fresno
State “Revolutionary Environmentalism” conference in February 2003 that featured
former representatives and spokespersons of the ALF and Earth Liberation Front,
Virginia Tech’s Board of Visitors unanimously approved a resolution to ban from
the campus any group or individual that has advocated or participated in
“illegal acts of domestic violence or terrorism.” In a March 2003 presentation
to Minnesota law enforcement officers and emergency management officials, Capt.
Bill Chandler noted that although his state harbored violent neo-Nazi and
right-wing militia groups like the Aryan Nation and Posse Comitatus, ALF and ELF
cells are the most dangerous threats and in fact are “more dangerous in
Minnesota than Al-Qaeda.”
During the same time, the FBI interrupted a University of Minnesota
meeting of the Student Organization for Animal Rights, asking for the names of
all members of the group during the past few years. On the same day in late
April 2003 the FBI raided the New Jersey office of the animal rights group Stop
Huntingdon Animal Cruelty (SHAC) and the Seattle home of ALF-supporter Josh
Harper. In the UK and New Jersey, SHAC now has to contend with new “exclusion
zone” laws that severely inhibit their controversial protest tactics. And in May
2003, the FBI successfully subpoenaed Fresno State University for the tape of
the direct action panel that addressed a public audience of over 500 people. In
May 2003, the Rocky Mountain Animal Defense group, a mainstream animal advocacy
organization in Boulder, Colorado, learned that the University of Colorado
police had been monitoring them as suspected “extremists” and forwarded
documents about group activities (such as organizing yard sales) to Denver
police. At the May 16-17 World Agricultural Forum in St. Louis, Missouri, police
raided buildings housing activists and indiscriminately harassed and arrested
people. On a local cop chat room, one officer wrote salivated over the kind of
stun gun technology he desired to deal with the protestors: "I want that 220
Volt model that blows the teeth out of their head, just before they crap their
pants.”
These are dangerous times for speaking one’s mind and for the preservation
of civil liberties. If one analyzes the key defining criteria of fascist regimes
in Italy, Germany, and elsewhere -- such as militarism, jingoism, national
security obsessions, disdain for human rights, state controlled mass media,
disdain for human rights, and bogus elections – the comparisons to the U.S.
during the reign of the Patriot Act are uncanny. A crucial element in fascist
systems of domination is the loss of privacy. Clearly we live in an advanced
surveillance society – what some call the “transparent society” -- where our
every move and word is potentially monitored by computers, cameras, recording
devices, retinal and facial recognition systems, and fingerprints. Some of these
measures protect us from assault or identity theft, but they also erode our
privacy rights and supply personal information to businesses and the government.
Bush’s Total Information Awareness System is already operating, as it develops
special data mining techniques that collect all the informational footprints an
individual leaves behind, ranging from doctor visits and travel plans to ATM
withdrawals and email correspondence. Reversing the logic of a sound justice
system, everyone is now guilty until proven innocent. In its war on Iraq,
foreigners, and U.S. citizens, the Bush administration resembles the “Pre-Crime”
strike force in the movie Minority Report, which aimed to preempt every
potentially criminal thought before it became an action.
The Patriot Act has not been around for long, but it has already changed
the political landscape. On March 24 2003, the Washington Post reported that
since 9-11, Attorney General John Ashcroft personally has signed more than 170
“emergency foreign intelligence warrants,” three times the number authorized in
the preceding 23 years. In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks, the FBI and
Justice Department have issued dozens of “national security letters” that
require business to turn over all electronic records on finances, phone calls,
emails, and other personal information. The story makes no mention of
surveillance on political activists, although from the government’s perspective
they may well fall under the vague category of “other national security threats”
Ashcroft and crew can target at will.
Congress will re-examine the Patriot Act in 2005, but by then inertia may
have ossified the new security culture and the “war on terrorism” may still be
considered the nation’s top priority. On May 8 2003, Senator Orrin Hatch,
Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, tried to pass a bill that would make
the “anti-terrorism” powers of the Patriot Act permanent, and thereby abolish
the “sunshine” review of 2005. Fortunately, Hatch was firmly checked by both
Democrats and Republicans who are increasingly are alarmed about the Bush agenda
to erode civil liberties in the name of national security. Still, a compromise
bill passed in the Senate by a vote of 90 to 4 that expands government power to
use secret surveillance against “terrorist suspects.”
Beginning with the Reagan administration in the 1980s, conservatives
labored to roll back the clock on the environmental and social gains of the
1960s, and the social welfare policies dating back to the 1930s. Indeed, Bush’s
time machine reaches back centuries, not decades, as he and his cronies try to
annul the Constitution itself. The Bush administration, corporate lobbying
groups like ALEC, and pro-violence organizations such as USSA are exploiting
fear and paranoia of terrorism for their own advantage in order to justify their
assault on freedom. They are shamelessly trying to gain from the tragedy that
took the lives of thousands of innocent civilians on 9-11 in order to advance
their agendas and protect their profits, while they shield themselves from
public scrutiny. Indeed, the current wave of tyranny is part of a larger class
war where Bush is subverting liberties, destroying social programs, and creating
tax programs to benefit the super-wealthy. Bush has quickly distinguished
himself as one of the most insane and dangerous individuals to emerge in recent
history and he is hell bent on resurrecting the glory days of the Roman Empire
to fulfill what he takes to be God’s plan for him and American imperialist
power. The differences between Osama Bin Laden’s terrorism and George W. Bush’s
terrorism are difficult to discern.
Clearly the stakes of fighting for animal rights are higher, and this
should prompt new reflection on tactics. We must not be afraid or intimidated,
but we also need to know our rights, or what is left of them, and to exercise
particularly high levels of security. Words define reality, so we must resist
being defined as violent and extremists. We must defend ourselves rhetorically
and philosophically, establishing a sharp distinction between animal liberation,
property destruction, protests, and demonstrations on one side, and bona fide
terrorism – the willful harming or taking of life for profit or a political
purpose – on the other side.
We need to spread awareness about the history and nature of state
repression, from the first Red Scare of the 1920s to COINTELPRO operations in
the 1960s and 1970s to today’s neo-McCarthyism. It is important to know what
murderous crimes the U.S. government has committed against radical individuals
and groups in the past in order to understand what it is capable of doing today.
Although the U.S. has every right to stop genuine terrorists who pose
threats to the nation and its citizens, it can and must do this without
violating the Constitution, basic human rights, and international law. The state
cannot hide its own crimes under the mantle of national security. The government
wants us to believe that security not liberty must be our overriding national
goals for the indefinite future. If we let them, they will deploy this false
dualism from now on to keep chipping away at our liberties until none are left.
There is one sign of hope, namely that across the U.S., over 100 towns and
cities have passed resolutions against the Patriot Act. Sometimes the opposition
is merely symbolic, but in some cases such as Amherst, Massachusetts, local
governments are actually resisting federal mandates.
The war on freedom does not advance the war on (real) terrorism one iota;
it only creates more terror within our own borders. Liberty is security: how
secure do you feel knowing that Big Brother might be watching you, that you
might go to jail for protesting animal abuse, that Ashcroft alone can authorize
secret warrants for wiretaps and searches on you, and that all power is being
centralized in the executive branch and an increasingly few number of
corporations? How secure do you feel as the economy teeters on disaster, as
bombs rain down on Iraq, and as the blowback against the U.S. is about to
increase?
One Struggle, One Fight
If it is not already obvious, the struggle for animal rights is intimately
connected to the struggle for human rights -- for free speech, freedom of
association, freedom from search and seizure, and so on. The animal rights
community can no longer afford to be a single-issue movement, for now in order
to fight for animal rights we have to fight for democracy. It is time once again
to recall the profound saying by Pastor Martin Niemoller about the fate of
German citizens during the Nazi genocide: “First they came for the Jews and I
did not speak out – because I was not a Jew. Then they came for the communists
and I did not speak out – because I was a not communist. Then they came for the
trade unionists and I did not speak out – because I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for me – and by then there was no one left to speak out for me.”
Attacks on foreigners are preludes to attacks on U.S. citizens, which are
overtures to assaults on the animal rights community. In the world of Bush,
Ashcroft, Powell, the FBI, and corporate conglomerates, we are all becoming
aliens, foreigners to their pre-modern barbarity by virtue of our very wish to
uphold modern liberal values and constitutional rights. The war on terrorism is
a front for the war on democracy.
It is urgent, of course, that our movement create as many vegans and
animal rights activists as possible, and it is significant that conservative
Matthew Scully’s excellent book Dominion has reached a new constituency among
the Right. But while Scully – special assistant and senior speechwriter to Bush
– goes off to write more justifications for the warmongers whose policies kill
human and nonhuman animals alike, unaware of the palpable contradiction between
his ethics and economic policies and affiliations, we ought to consider who our
real allies are.
Instead of pandering to the likes of “compassionate conservatives” the
animal rights movement should forge alliances with other peace and justice
movements. If we want to grow in strength and numbers we need to interface with
current movements opposing patriarchy, racism, war, violence, corporate
globalization, environmental destruction, exploitation, injustice, and prejudice
of any kind.
All peace and justice movements have one foe in common – capitalism and
the pernicious effects of its profit logic and inherent disregard for life. This
means that we need to position animal rights as a progressive social movement.
As the animal rights community awakens from its political slumbers, it needs to
engage in a mutual education dialogue with progressive movements. They can teach
the animal rights community a few things about capitalism and social injustice,
and the animal rights community can educate them about animal rights, the
limitations of humanism, and the need to adopt a vegan diet.
Human rights, animal rights – it truly is one struggle.
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