Betraying the Constitution: Who Will Protect
Us from an Unpatriotic Patriot Act?
By John W. Whitehead
“It is the responsibility of the patriot
to protect his country from its
government.”—Thomas Paine
December 11, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
- While Congress subjects the
nation to its impeachment-flavored brand of
bread-and-circus politics, our civil
liberties continue to die a slow, painful
death by a thousand cuts.
Case in point:
while Americans have been fixated on the
carefully orchestrated impeachment drama
that continues to monopolize headlines,
Congress passed and President Trump signed
into law legislation extending three key
provisions of the USA Patriot Act,
which had been set to expire on December 15,
2019.
Once again, to no one’s surprise, the
bureaucrats on both sides of the aisle—Democrats
and Republicans alike—prioritized political
grandstanding over principle and their oath
of office to protect and defend the
Constitution.
As Congressman
Thomas Massie (R-Ky.)
predicted:
Today,
while everyone is distracted by the
impeachment drama, Congress will vote to
extend warrantless data collection
provisions of the #PatriotAct, by hiding
this language on page 25 of the
Continuing Resolution (CR) that
temporarily funds the government. To
sneak this through, Congress will first
vote to suspend the rule which otherwise
gives us (and the people) 72 hours to
consider a bill. The
scam here is that Democrats are alleging
abuse of Presidential power, while
simultaneously reauthorizing warrantless
power to spy on citizens that no
President should have...
in a bill that continues to fund
EVERYTHING the President does... and
waiving their own rules to do it. I
predict Democrats will vote on a party
line to suspend the 72 hour rule. But
after the rule is suspended, I suspect
many Republicans will join most
Democrats to pass the CR with the
Patriot Act extension embedded in it.
Massie was right: Republicans and Democrats
have no problem joining forces in order to
maintain their joint stranglehold on power.
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The legislation
passed the Senate with a
bipartisan 74-to-20 vote.
It squeaked through the House of
Representatives with a
231-192 margin.
And it was
signed by President Trump—who
earlier this year
floated the idea of making the government’s
surveillance powers permanent—with
nary a protest from anyone about its impact
on the rights of the American people.
Spending bill or not, it didn’t have to
shake down this way, even with the threat of
yet another government shutdown looming.
Congress
could have voted to separate the
Patriot Act extension from the funding bill,
as
suggested by Rep. Justin Amash,
but that didn’t fly. Instead as journalist
Norman Solomon writes for Salon,
“The cave-in was
another bow to normalizing the U.S.
government’s mass surveillance powers.”
That, right there, is the key to all of
this: normalizing the U.S. government’s
mass surveillance powers.
In
the 18 years since the USA Patriot Act—a
massive 342-page wish list of expanded
powers for the FBI and CIA—was rammed
through Congress in the wake of the
so-called 9/11 terror attacks, it has
snowballed into the eradication of every
vital safeguard against government
overreach, corruption and abuse.
The
Patriot Act drove a stake through the heart
of the Bill of Rights, violating at least
six of the ten original amendments—the
First, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh and
Eighth Amendments—and possibly the
Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments, as
well.
The
Patriot Act also redefined terrorism so
broadly that many non-terrorist political
activities such as protest marches,
demonstrations and civil disobedience are
now considered potential terrorist acts,
thereby rendering anyone desiring to engage
in protected First Amendment expressive
activities as suspects of the surveillance
state.
The
Patriot Act justified broader domestic
surveillance, the logic being that if
government agents knew more about each
American, they could distinguish the
terrorists from law-abiding citizens—no
doubt a reflexive impulse shared by
small-town police and federal agents alike.
This, according to Washington Post
reporter Robert O’Harrow, Jr., was a fantasy
that “had been brewing in the law
enforcement world for a long time.” And 9/11
provided the government with the perfect
excuse for conducting far-reaching
surveillance and collecting mountains of
information on even the most law-abiding
citizen.
Federal agents and police officers are now
authorized to conduct covert black bag
“sneak-and-peak” searches of homes and
offices while you are away and confiscate
your personal property without first
notifying you of their intent or their
presence.
The
law also granted the FBI the right to come
to your place of employment, demand your
personal records and question your
supervisors and fellow employees, all
without notifying you; allowed the
government access to your medical records,
school records and practically every
personal record about you; and allowed the
government to secretly demand to see records
of books or magazines you’ve checked out in
any public library and Internet sites you’ve
visited (at least 545 libraries received
such demands in the first year following
passage of the Patriot Act).
In
the name of fighting terrorism, government
officials are now permitted to monitor
religious and political institutions with no
suspicion of criminal wrongdoing; prosecute
librarians or keepers of any other records
if they tell anyone that the government has
subpoenaed information related to a terror
investigation; monitor conversations between
attorneys and clients; search and seize
Americans’ papers and effects without
showing probable cause; and jail Americans
indefinitely without a trial, among other
things.
The
federal government also made liberal use of
its new powers, especially through the use
(and abuse) of the nefarious national
security letters, which allow the FBI to
demand personal customer records from
Internet Service Providers, financial
institutions and credit companies at the
mere say-so of the government agent in
charge of a local FBI office and without
prior court approval.
In
fact, since 9/11, we’ve been spied on by
surveillance cameras, eavesdropped on by
government agents, had our belongings
searched, our phones tapped, our mail
opened, our email monitored, our opinions
questioned, our purchases scrutinized (under
the USA Patriot Act, banks are required to
analyze your transactions for any patterns
that raise suspicion and to see if you are
connected to any objectionable people), and
our activities watched.
We’re also being subjected to invasive
patdowns and whole-body scans of our persons
and seizures of our electronic devices in
the nation’s airports. We can’t even
purchase certain cold medicines at the
pharmacy anymore without it being reported
to the government and our names being placed
on a watch list.
It’s only getting worse, folks.
Largely due to the continuous noise from
television news’ talking heads, most
Americans have been lulled into thinking
that the pressing issues are voting in the
next election, but the real issue is simply
this: the freedoms in the Bill of Rights are
being eviscerated.
The
Constitution has been steadily chipped away
at, undermined, eroded, whittled down, and
generally discarded to such an extent that
what we are left with today is but a shadow
of the robust document adopted more than two
centuries ago. Most of the damage has been
inflicted upon the Bill of Rights—the first
ten amendments to the Constitution—which
historically served as the bulwark from
government abuse.
Set
against a backdrop of government
surveillance, militarized police, SWAT team
raids, asset forfeiture, eminent domain,
overcriminalization, armed surveillance
drones, whole body scanners, stop and frisk
searches and the like—all sanctioned by
Congress, the White House and the courts—a
recitation of the Bill of Rights would
understandably sound more like a eulogy to
freedoms lost than an affirmation of rights
we truly possess.
We
can pretend that the Constitution, which was
written to hold the government accountable,
is still our governing document. However,
the reality we must come to terms with is
that in the America we live in today, the
government does whatever it wants, freedom
be damned.
What once were considered inalienable,
fundamental “rights” are now mere
privileges to be taken away on a government
bureaucrat’s say-so.
To
those who have been paying attention, this
should come as no real surprise.
As I make clear
in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the
American People,
the Constitution has been on life support
for some time now, and is drawing its final
breaths.
The
American government, never a staunch
advocate of civil liberties, has been
writing its own orders for some time now.
Indeed, as the McCarthy era and the
wiretapping of Martin Luther King Jr. and
others illustrates, the government’s
amassing of power, especially in relation to
its ability to spy on Americans, predates
the passage of the Patriot Act in 2001.
What the Patriot Act and its subsequent
incarnations did was legitimize what had
previously been covert and frowned upon as a
violation of Americans’ long-cherished
privacy rights.
After all, the history of governments is
that they inevitably overreach.
Thus, enabled by a paper tiger Congress, the
president and other agencies of the federal
government have repeatedly laid claim to a
host of powers, among them the ability to
use the military as a police force, spy on
Americans and detain individuals without
granting them access to an attorney or the
courts. And as the government’s powers have
grown, unchecked, the American people have
gradually become used to these relentless
intrusions into their lives.
In
turn, the American people have become the
proverbial boiling frogs, so desensitized to
the government’s steady encroachments on
their rights that civil liberties abuses
have become par for the course.
Yet
as long as government agencies are allowed
to make a mockery of the very laws intended
to limit their reach, curtail their
activities, and guard against the very
abuses to which we are being subjected on a
daily basis, our individual freedoms will
continue to be eviscerated so that the
government’s powers can be expanded, the
Constitution be damned.
Constitutional
attorney and author John W. Whitehead is
founder and president of The
Rutherford Institute.
His new book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People
is available at
www.amazon.com.
Whitehead can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
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