Draconian
Lockdown Powers: It’s a Slippery Slope from
Handwashing to House Arrest
By John W.
Whitehead
“Everything can be taken from a man but one
thing: the last of the human freedoms — to
choose one’s attitude in any given set of
circumstances, to choose one’s own way.”—Viktor
Frankl
April 02,
2020 "Information
Clearing House"
- We still have choices.
Just
because we’re fighting an unseen enemy in the form
of a virus doesn’t mean we have to relinquish every
shred of our humanity, our common sense, or our
freedoms to a nanny state that thinks it can do a
better job of keeping us safe.
Whatever we
give up willingly now—whether it’s basic human
decency, the ability to manage our private affairs,
the right to have a say in how the government
navigates this crisis, or the few rights still left
to us that haven’t been disemboweled in recent years
by a power-hungry police state—we won’t get back so
easily once this crisis is past.
The
government never cedes power willingly.
Neither
should we.
Every
day brings a drastic new set of restrictions by
government bodies (most
have been delivered by way of executive orders)
at the local, state and federal level that are eager
to flex their muscles for the so-called “good” of
the populace.
This is
where we run the risk of this whole fly-by-night
operation going completely off the rails.
It’s
one thing to attempt an experiment in social
distancing in order to flatten the curve of this
virus because we can’t afford to risk overwhelming
the hospitals and exposing the most vulnerable in
the nation to unavoidable loss of life scenarios.
However, there’s a fine line between
strongly worded suggestions for citizens to
voluntarily stay at home and strong-armed house
arrest orders with
penalties in place for non-compliance.
More
than
three-quarters of all Americans have now been
ordered to stay at home
and that number is growing as more states fall in
line.
Schools have cancelled physical
classes,
many for the remainder of the academic year.
Many
of the states have
banned gatherings of more than 10 people.
At
least three states (Nevada, North Carolina, and
Pennsylvania) have
ordered non-essential businesses to close.
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In Washington, DC, residents face
90 days in jail and a $5,000 fine
if they leave their homes during the coronavirus
outbreak. Residents of Maryland, Hawaii and
Washington State also risk severe penalties of
up to a year in prison and a $5,000 fine for
violating the stay-at-home orders. Violators in
Alaska could face
jail time and up to $25,000 in fines.
Kentucky residents are
prohibited from traveling outside the state,
with a few exceptions.
New
York City, the epicenter of the COVID-19 outbreak in
the U.S., is
offering its Rikers Island prisoners $6 an hour to
help dig mass graves.
In
San Francisco,
cannabis dispensaries were included among the
essential businesses allowed to keep operating
during the city-wide lockdown.
New
Jersey’s governor
canceled gatherings of any number,
including parties, weddings and religious
ceremonies, and warned the restrictions could
continue for weeks or months. One city actually
threatened to prosecute residents who spread false
information about
the virus.
Oregon
banned all nonessential social and recreational
gatherings,
regardless of size.
Rhode
Island has
given police the go-ahead to pull over anyone with
New York license plates
to record their contact information and order them
to self-quarantine for 14 days.
South
Carolina’s police have been
empowered to break up any public gatherings of more
than three people.
Of
course, there are exceptions to all of these
stay-at-home orders
(in more than 30 states and counting), the longest
of which runs until June 10. Essential workers
(doctors, firefighters, police and grocery store
workers) can go to work. Everyone else will have to
fit themselves into a variety of exceptions in order
to leave their homes: for grocery runs, doctor
visits, to get exercise, to visit a family member,
etc.
Throughout the country,
more than 14,000 “Citizen-Soldiers” of the National
Guard have been mobilized
to support the states and the federal government in
their fight against the coronavirus. While the Guard
officials insist they have not been tasked with
martial law, they are coordinating with the
Pentagon, FEMA and the states/territories on
COVID-19 response missions.
A quick
civics lesson: Martial law is a raw exercise of
executive power that can override the other branches
of government and assume control over the
functioning of a nation, state, or smaller area
within a state. The power has been exercised by the
president, as President Lincoln did soon after the
start of the Civil War, and by governors, as was
done in Idaho to quell a miner’s strike that broke
out there in 1892.
In areas
under martial law, all power rests with the military
authority in charge. As British General Wellington
wrote, “martial law” is not law at all, but martial
rule; it abolishes all law and substitutes for it
the will of the military commander. Military
personnel are not bound by constitutional
restrictions requiring a warrant, and may enter and
search homes at without judicial authorization or
oversight. Indeed, civil courts would no longer be
functioning to hear citizen complaints or to enforce
their constitutional rights.
Thus far,
we have not breached the Constitution’s crisis
point: martial law has yet to be overtly imposed
(although an argument could be made to the contrary
given the militarized nature of the American police
state).
It’s just a
matter of time before all hell breaks loose.
If this is
not the defining point at which we cross over into
all-out totalitarianism, then it is at a minimum a
test to see how easily we will surrender.
Curiously enough, although Americans have been
generally compliant with the government’s
suggestions and orders with a few notable
exceptions, there’s been a small groundswell of
resistance within parts of the religious community
over
whether churches, synagogues and other religious
institutions that hold worship services should be
exempt from
state-wide bans on mass gatherings. While many
churches have resorted to drive-in services and
live-streamed services for its congregants, others
have refused to close their doors. One pastor of a
4,000-member church who stood his ground, claiming
that the government’s orders violate his right to
religious freedom, was
arrested after holding multiple church services
during which attendees were reportedly given hand
sanitizer and made to keep a six-foot distance
between family groups.
It’s an
interesting test of the First Amendment’s freedom of
assembly and religious freedom clauses versus the
government’s compelling state interest in
prohibiting mass gatherings in order to prevent the
spread of the virus.
Generally,
the government has to show a compelling state
interest before it can override certain critical
rights such as free speech, assembly, press, search
and seizure, etc. Most of the time, it lacks that
compelling state interest, but it still manages to
violate those rights, setting itself up for legal
battles further down the road.
These
lockdown measures—on the right of the people to
peaceably assemble, to travel, to engage in
commerce, etc.—unquestionably restrict fundamental
constitutional rights, which might pass muster for a
short period of time, but can it be sustained for
longer stretches legally?
That’s the
challenge before us, of course, if these days and
weeks potentially stretch into months-long
quarantines.
For
example, the First Amendment guarantees “the right
of the people peaceably to assemble.” While the
freedom to travel has been specifically recognized
only as in the context of interstate or
international travel, the freedom of movement is
implicit liberty given that government agents may
not stop and question or search persons unless they
have some legal justification.
As Supreme
Court Justice William Douglas once wrote:
The
right to travel is a part of the “liberty” of
which the citizen cannot be deprived without the
due process of law under the Fifth Amendment. .
. . Freedom of movement across frontiers in
either direction, and inside frontiers as well,
was a part of our heritage. Travel abroad, like
travel within the country, may be necessary for
a livelihood. It may be as close to the heart of
the individual as the choice of what he eats, or
wears, or reads. Freedom of movement is basic in
our scheme of values.
As a rule,
people are free to roam and loiter in public places
and are not required to provide police with their
identity or give an account of their purpose for
exercising their freedom.
However, as
with all constitutional rights, these freedoms, as
the Courts have ruled, are not unqualified. Even
content-based restrictions on speech are allowed
under the First Amendment if the restriction is
needed to serve a compelling government interest.
The
Supreme Court long ago “distinctly recognized the
authority of a state to enact quarantine laws and
health laws of every description[.]” Such laws are
an exercise of the state’s police power, and if
there is a rational basis for believing they are
needed to protect the public health, they will be
deemed to serve a compelling government interest.
The point
was made over 100 years ago in circumstances similar
to today’s COVID-19 outbreak when a smallpox
outbreak occurred in Cambridge, Mass., invoking a
state law allowing localities to make vaccinations
mandatory and enforceable by criminal penalties. In
upholding the law and local order against a claim
that it violated the constitutional liberty to
control one’s own body and health, the Supreme Court
declared:
The
possession and enjoyment of all rights are
subject to such reasonable conditions as may be
deemed by the governing authority of the country
essential to the safety, health, peace, good
order, and morals of the community. Even liberty
itself, the greatest of all rights, is not
unrestricted license to act according to one’s
own will.
The Court
went on to write that “[u]pon the principle of
self-defense, of paramount necessity, a community
has the right to protect itself against an epidemic
of disease which threatens the safety of its
members.”
Most states
have enacted laws that recognize the need for prompt
action in times of emergency, including epidemics,
and have delegated the authority to and executive
officer to take action to address that emergency.
For example, Tennessee law provides that the
governor is given the power to issue orders that
have the force and effect of law to address
emergencies, which include disease outbreaks and
epidemics. That state’s law similarly grants mayors
or other local chief executive officers the power to
issue orders and directives deemed necessary,
including closing public facilities, in order to
address civil emergencies.
Courts have
ruled that they will defer to the decisions of an
executive authority on the decision as to whether an
emergency exists and whether the means employed to
address the emergency are reasonable and legal,
although there could be situations where a court
would declare that the executive decision is
arbitrary and unreasonable.
When
governments act under their police power to control
plagues and epidemics, those laws are valid even
though they may restrict individuals in the exercise
of constitutional rights. As one legal scholar
recently noted, the balance between individual
rights and protection of the public “assumes that
there will be times when there are truly compelling
emergencies justifying severe measures.
A global pandemic that spreads even among those who
are asymptomatic and could exceed the capacity of
the American health care system would appear to be
just such a compelling situation.”
At the
moment, the government believes it has a compelling
interest—albeit a temporary one—in restricting
gatherings, assemblies and movement in public in
order to minimize the spread of this virus.
The key
point is this: while we may tolerate these
restrictions on our liberties in the short term, we
should never fail to be on guard lest these one-time
constraints become a slippery slope to a total
lockdown mindset.
What we
must guard against, more than ever before, is the
tendency to become so accustomed to our prison
walls—these lockdowns, authoritarian dictates, and
police state tactics justified as necessary for
national security—that we allow the government to
keep having its way in all things, without any civic
resistance or objections being raised.
Martin
Niemoller learned that particular lesson the hard
way.
A German
military officer turned theologian, Niemoller was an
early supporter of Hitler’s rise to power, having
believed his promises to protect the church and not
allow pogroms against the Jewish people. It didn’t
take long for Hitler to break those promises, but by
the time the German people realized they had been
double-crossed, it was too late.
As
Niemoller warned: “First they came for the
Socialists, and I did not speak out—Because I was
not a Socialist. Then they came for the Trade
Unionists, and I did not speak out—Because I was not
a Trade Unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I
did not speak out—Because I was not a Jew. Then they
came for me—and there was no one left to speak for
me.”
The lesson
for those of us housebound and watching from a
distance as the Fourth Reich emerges from the
shadows is this: all freedoms hang together.
Niemoller’s
warning for our modern age would probably go
something like this: First the government went after
the right to be free from unreasonable searches and
seizures, and I did not object, because I had
nothing to hide. Then they went after the right to
not be spied upon, and I did not object, because I
had done nothing wrong. Then they went after the
right to criticize the government, and I still did
not object, because I had nothing to criticize them
for. Then they went after the right to
speak—worship—and assemble freely, and I did not
object, because I had nothing to say, no one to
worship, and nowhere to congregate. By the time the
government came to lock me up, there was no one left
to set me free.
In
other words, don’t be naïve: the government will
use this crisis to expand its powers far beyond the
reach of the Constitution. The Justice Department
has already signaled its desire to
suspend parts of the Constitution indefinitely.
That’s how
it starts.
Travel too
far down that slippery slope, and there will be no
turning back.
Curiously enough, although Americans have not been
inclined to agree on anything much lately, given the
extreme polarization of the country politically, a
recent survey indicates that “people
of both parties seem rather okay with undermining
core civil liberties in order to fight the pandemic.”
This way
lies madness.
As I
make clear in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American
People, if you
wait to speak out—stand up—and resist until the
government’s lockdowns impact your freedoms
personally, it could be too late.
What would
be far worse, however, is handing over your freedoms
voluntarily—without even a semblance of protest—to a
government that cares little to nothing about your
freedoms or your lives.
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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