The Eroding Character of the
American People
By Paul Craig Roberts
How can the life of such a man
Be in the palm of some fool’s hand?
To see him obviously framed
Couldn’t help but make me feel ashamed to live in a land
Where justice is a game.—Bob Dylan,
“Hurricane”
July 24, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- Attorney John W. Whitehead opens
a recent posting (see below) on his
Rutherford Institute website with these words from a song by Bob
Dylan. Why don’t all of us feel ashamed? Why only Bob Dylan?
I wonder how many of Bob Dylan’s fans understand
what he is telling them. American justice has nothing to do with
innocence or guilt. It only has to do with the prosecutor’s
conviction rate, which builds his political career. Considering the
gullibility of the American people, American jurors are the last
people to whom an innocent defendant should trust his fate. The jury
will betray the innocent almost every time.
As Lawrence Stratton and I show in our book (2000,
2008) there is no justice in America. We titled our book, “How the
Law Was Lost.” It is a description of how the protective features in
law that made law a shield of the innocent was transformed over time
into a weapon in the hands of the government, a weapon used against
the people. The loss of law as a shield occurred prior to 9/11,
which “our representative government” used to construct a police
state.
The marketing department of our publisher did not
appreciate our title and instead came up with “The Tyranny of Good
Intentions.” We asked what this title meant. The marketing
department answered that we showed that the war on crime, which gave
us the abuses of RICO, the war on child abusers, which gave us show
trials of total innocents that bested Joseph Stalin’s show trials of
the heroes of the Bolshevik Revolution, and the war on drugs, which
gave “Freedom and Democracy America” broken families and by far the
highest incarceration rate in the world all resulted from good
intentions to combat crime, to combat drugs, and to combat child
abuse. The publisher’s title apparently succeeded, because 15 years
later the book is still in print. It has sold enough copies over
these years that, had the sales occurred upon publication would have
made the book a “best seller.” The book, had it been a best seller,
would have gained more attention, and perhaps law schools and bar
associations could have used it to hold the police state at bay.
Whitehead documents how hard a not guilty verdict
is to come by for an innocent defendant. Even if the falsely accused
defendant and his attorney survive the prosecutor’s pressure to
negotiate a plea bargain and arrive at a trial, they are confronted
with jurors who are unable to doubt prosecutors, police, or
witnesses paid to lie against the innocent defendant. Jurors even
convicted the few survivors of the Clinton regime’s assault on the
Branch Davidians of Waco, the few who were not gassed, shot, or
burned to death by US federal forces. This religious sect was
demonized by Washington and the presstitute media as child abusers
who were manufacturing automatic weapons while they raped children.
The charges proved to be false, like Saddam Hussein’s “weapons of
mass destruction,” and so forth, but only after all of the innocents
were dead or in prison.
The question is: why do Americans not merely sit
silently while the lives of innocents are destroyed, but actually
support the destruction of the lives of innocents? Why do Americans
believe “official sources” despite the proven fact that “official
sources” lie repeatedly and never tell the truth?
The only conclusion that one can come to is that
the American people have failed. We have failed Justice. We have
failed Mercy. We have failed the US Constitution. We have failed
Truth. We have failed Democracy and representative government. We
have failed ourselves and humanity. We have failed the confidence
that our Founding Fathers put in us. We have failed God. If we ever
had the character that we are told we had, we have obviously lost
it. Little, if anything, remains of the “American character.”
Was the American character present in the torture
prisons of Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo Bay, and hidden CIA torture
dungeons where US military and CIA personnel provided photographic
evidence of their delight in torturing and abusing prisoners?
Official reports have concluded that along with torture went rape,
sodomy, and murder. All of this was presided over by American
psychologists with Ph.D. degrees.
We see the same inhumanity in the American police
who respond to women children, the elderly, the physically and
mentally handicapped, with gratuitous violence. For no reason
whatsoever, police murder, taser, beat, and abuse US citizens. Every
day there are more reports, and despite the reports the violence
goes on and on and on. Clearly, the police enjoy inflicting pain and
death on citizens whom the police are supposed to serve and protect.
There have always been bullies in the police force, but the wanton
police violence of our time indicates a complete collapse of the
American character.
The failure of the American character has had
tremendous and disastrous consequences for ourselves and for the
world. At home Americans have a police state in which all
Constitutional protections have vanished. Abroad, Iraq and Libya,
two formerly prosperous countries, have been destroyed. Libya no
longer exists as a country. One million dead Iraqis, four million
displaced abroad, hundreds of thousands of orphans and birth defects
from the American ordinance, and continuing ongoing violence from
factions fighting over the remains. These facts are incontestable.
Yet the United States Government claims to have brought “freedom and
democracy” to Iraq. “Mission accomplished,” declared one of the mass
murderers of the 21st century, George W. Bush.
The question is: how can the US government make
such an obviously false outrageous claim without being shouted down
by the rest of the world and by its own population? Is the answer
that good character has disappeared from the world?
Or is the rest of the world too afraid to protest?
Washington can force supposedly sovereign countries to acquiesce to
its will or be cut off from the international payments mechanism
that Washington controls, and/or be sanctioned, and/or be bombed,
droned, or invaded, and/or be assassinated or overthrown in a coup.
On the entire planet Earth there are only two countries capable of
standing up to Washington, Russia and China, and neither wants to
stand up if they can avoid it.
For whatever the reasons, not only Americans but
most of the world as well accommodate Washington’s evil and are
thereby complicit in the evil. Those humans with a moral conscience
are gradually being positioned by Washington and London as “domestic
extremists” who might have to be rounded up and placed in detention
centers. Examine the recent statements by General Wesley Clark and
British Prime Minister Cameron and remember Janet Napolitano’s
statement that the Department of Homeland Security has shifted its
focus from terrorists to domestic extremists, an undefined and
open-ended term.
Americans with good character are being maneuvered
into a position of helplessness. As John Whitehead makes clear, the
American people cannot even prevent “their police,” paid by their
tax payments, from murdering 3 Americans each day, and this is only
the officially reported murders. The actual account is likely
higher.
What Whitehead describes and what I have noticed
for many years is that the American people have lost, in addition to
their own sense of truth and falsity, any sense of mercy and justice
for other peoples. Americans accept no sense of responsibility for
the millions of peoples that Washington has exterminated over the
past two decades dating back to the second term of Clinton. Every
one of the millions of deaths is based on a Washington lie.
When Clinton’s Secretary of State, Madeleine
Albright, was asked if the Clinton’s regime’s sanctions, which had
claimed the lives of 500,000 Iraqi children, were justified, she
obviously expected no outrage from the American people when she
replied in the affirmative.
Americans need to face the facts. The loss of
character means the loss of liberty and the transformation of
government into a criminal enterprise.
The American Nightmare: The Tyranny of the
Criminal Justice System
By John W. Whitehead
The Rutherford Institute
Justice in America is not all it’s cracked up to
be.
Just ask Jeffrey Deskovic, who spent 16 years in prison for a rape
and murder he did not commit. Despite the fact that Deskovic’s DNA
did not match what was found at the murder scene, he was singled out
by police as a suspect because he wept at the victim’s funeral (he
was 16 years old at the time), then badgered over the course of two
months into confessing his guilt. He was eventually paid $6.5
million in reparation.
James Bain spent 35 years in prison for the
kidnapping and rape of a 9-year-old boy, but he too was innocent of
the crime. Despite the fact that the prosecutor’s case was flimsy—it
hinged on the similarity of Bain’s first name to the rapist’s,
Bain’s ownership of a red motorcycle, and a misidentification of
Bain in a lineup by a hysterical 9-year-old boy—Bain was sentenced
to life in prison. He was finally freed after DNA testing proved his
innocence, and was paid $1.7 million.
Mark Weiner got off relatively easy when you
compare his experience to the thousands of individuals who are
spending lifetimes behind bars for crimes they did not commit.Weiner
was wrongfully arrested, convicted, and jailed for more than two
years for a crime he too did not commit. In his case, a young woman
claimed Weiner had abducted her, knocked her out and then sent
taunting text messages to her boyfriend about his plans to rape her.
Despite the fact that cell phone signals, eyewitness accounts and
expert testimony indicated the young woman had fabricated the entire
incident, the prosecutor and judge repeatedly rejected any evidence
contradicting the woman’s far-fetched account, sentencing Weiner to
eight more years in jail. Weiner was only released after his accuser
was caught selling cocaine to undercover cops.
In the meantime, Weiner lost his job, his home,
and his savings, and time with his wife and young son. As Slate
reporter journalist Dahlia Lithwick warned, “If anyone suggests that
the fact that Mark Weiner was released this week means ‘the system
works,’ I fear that I will have to punch him in the neck. Because at
every single turn, the system that should have worked to consider
proof of Weiner’s innocence failed him.”
The system that should have worked didn’t, because
the system is broken, almost beyond repair.
In courtroom thrillers like 12 Angry Men and To
Kill a Mockingbird, justice is served in the end because
someone—whether it’s Juror #8 or Atticus Finch—chooses to stand on
principle and challenge wrongdoing, and truth wins.
Unfortunately, in the real world, justice is
harder to come by, fairness is almost unheard of, and truth rarely
wins.
On paper, you may be innocent until proven guilty,
but in actuality, you’ve already been tried, found guilty and
convicted by police officers, prosecutors and judges long before you
ever appear in a courtroom. Chronic injustice has turned the
American dream into a nightmare. At every step along the way,
whether it’s encounters with the police, dealings with prosecutors,
hearings in court before judges and juries, or jail terms in one of
the nation’s many prisons, the system is riddled with corruption,
abuse and an appalling disregard for the rights of the citizenry.
Due process rights afforded to a person accused of
a crime—the right to remain silent, the right to be informed of the
charges against you, the right to representation by counsel, the
right to a fair trial, the right to a speedy trial, the right to
prove your innocence with witnesses and evidence, the right to a
reasonable bail, the right to not languish in jail before being
tried, the right to confront your accusers, etc.—mean nothing when
the government is allowed to sidestep those safeguards against abuse
whenever convenient.
It’s telling that while President Obama said all
the right things about the broken state of our criminal justice
system—that we jail too many Americans for nonviolent crimes (we
make up 5 percent of the world’s population, but our prison
population constitutes nearly 25% of the world’s prisoners), that we
spend more money on incarceration than any other nation ($80 billion
a year), that we sentence people for longer jail terms than their
crimes merit, that our criminal justice system is far from
color-blind, that the nation’s school-to-prison pipeline is
contributing to overcrowded jails, and that we need to focus on
rehabilitation of criminals rather than retribution—he failed to own
up to the government’s major role in contributing to this injustice
in America.
Indeed, while Obama placed the responsibility for
reform squarely in the hands of prosecutors, judges and police, he
failed to acknowledge that they bear the burden of our failed
justice system, along with the legislatures and corporations who
have worked with them to create an environment that is hostile to
the rights of the accused.
In such a climate, we are all the accused, the
guilty and the suspect. As I document in my book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People, we’re operating in a new
paradigm where the citizenry are presumed guilty and treated as
suspects, our movements tracked, our communications monitored, our
property seized and searched, our bodily integrity disregarded, and
our inalienable rights to “life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness” rendered insignificant when measured against the
government’s priorities.
Every American is now in jeopardy of being
targeted and punished for a crime he did not commit thanks to an
overabundance of arcane laws. Making matters worse, by allowing
government agents to operate above the law, immune from wrongdoing,
we have created a situation in which the law is one-sided and
top-down, used as a hammer to oppress the populace, while useless in
protecting us against government abuse.
Add to the mix a profit-driven system of
incarceration in which state and federal governments agree to keep
the jails full in exchange for having private corporations run the
prisons, and you will find the only word to describe such a state of
abject corruption is “evil.”
How else do you explain a system that allows
police officers to shoot first and ask questions later, without any
real consequences for their misdeeds? Despite the initial outcry
over the shootings of unarmed individuals in Ferguson and Baltimore,
the pace of police shootings has yet to slow.
For those who survive an encounter with the police
only to end up on the inside of a jail cell, waiting for a “fair and
speedy trial,” it’s often a long wait. Consider that 60 percent of
the people in the nation’s jails have yet to be convicted of a
crime. There are 2.3 million people in jails or prisons in America.
Those who can’t afford bail, “some of them innocent, most of them
nonviolent and a vast majority of them impoverished,” will spend
about four months in jail before they even get a trial.
Not even that promised “day in court” is a
guarantee that justice will be served.
As Judge Alex Kozinski of the Ninth Circuit Court
of Appeals points out, there are an endless number of factors that
can render an innocent man or woman a criminal and caged for life:
unreliable eyewitnesses, fallible forensic evidence, flawed
memories, coerced confessions, harsh interrogation tactics,
uninformed jurors, prosecutorial misconduct, falsified evidence, and
overly harsh sentences, to name just a few.
In early 2015, the Justice Department and FBI
“formally acknowledged that nearly every examiner in an elite FBI
forensic unit gave flawed testimony in almost all trials in which
they offered evidence against criminal defendants over more than a
two-decade period…. The admissions mark a watershed in one of the
country’s largest forensic scandals, highlighting the failure of the
nation’s courts for decades to keep bogus scientific information
from juries, legal analysts said.”
“How do rogue forensic scientists and other bad
cops thrive in our criminal justice system?” asks Judge Kozinski.
“The simple answer is that some prosecutors turn a blind eye to such
misconduct because they’re more interested in gaining a conviction
than achieving a just result.”
The power of prosecutors is not to be
underestimated. Increasingly, when we talk about innocent people
being jailed for crimes they did not commit, the prosecutor plays a
critical role in bringing about that injustice. As The Washington
Post reports, “Prosecutors win 95 percent of their cases, 90 percent
of them without ever having to go to trial…. Are American
prosecutors that much better? No… it is because of the plea bargain,
a system of bullying and intimidation by government lawyers for
which they ‘would be disbarred in most other serious countries….’”
This phenomenon of innocent people pleading guilty
makes a mockery of everything the criminal justice system is
supposed to stand for: fairness, equality and justice. As Judge Jed
S. Rakoff concludes, “our criminal justice system is almost
exclusively a system of plea bargaining, negotiated behind closed
doors and with no judicial oversight. The outcome is very largely
determined by the prosecutor alone.”
It’s estimated that between 2 and 8 percent of
convicted felons who have agreed to a prosecutor’s plea bargain
(remember, there are 2.3 million prisoners in America) are in prison
for crimes they did not commit.
Clearly, the Coalition for Public Safety was right
when it concluded, “You don’t need to be a criminal to have your
life destroyed by the U.S. criminal justice system.”
It wasn’t always this way. As Judge Rakoff
recounts, the Founding Fathers envisioned a criminal justice system
in which the critical element “was the jury trial, which served not
only as a truth-seeking mechanism and a means of achieving fairness,
but also as a shield against tyranny.”
That shield against tyranny has long since been
shattered, leaving Americans vulnerable to the cruelties, vanities,
errors, ambitions and greed of the government and its partners in
crime.
There is not enough money in the world to make
reparation to those whose lives have been disrupted by wrongful
convictions.
Over the past quarter century, more than 1500
Americans have been released from prison after being cleared of
crimes they did not commit. These are the fortunate ones. For every
exonerated convict who is able to prove his innocence after 10, 20
or 30 years behind bars, Judge Kozinski estimates there may be
dozens who are innocent but cannot prove it, lacking access to
lawyers, evidence, money and avenues of appeal.
For those who have yet to fully experience the
injustice of the American system of justice, it’s only a matter of
time. America no longer operates under a system of justice
characterized by due process, an assumption of innocence, probable
cause, and clear prohibitions on government overreach and police
abuse. Instead, our courts of justice have been transformed into
courts of order, advocating for the government’s interests, rather
than championing the rights of the citizenry, as enshrined in the
Constitution.
Without courts willing to uphold the
Constitution’s provisions when government officials disregard them,
and a citizenry knowledgeable enough to be outraged when those
provisions are undermined, the Constitution provides little
protection against the police state.
* * *
The day I read John Whitehead’s article (July
22), there were new reports of a number of police murders of
innocent American citizens. Sandra Bland, a black women who
protested police violence against blacks was found hanged in her
cell in a Texas jail after her false arrest.
Just a few days ago Samuel Dubose was murdered by
a police officer with a shot to his head while he sat inside his
car.
A 3o-year old asthmatic white chemical engineer
was without cause hog-tied by Mississippi police with face
positioned to prevent breathing, resulting in his death.
Americans are in more danger from police than from
terrorists. During the Iraqi war, American police murdered more
Americans than the number of US troops killed in combat.
In this age of perverted justice and
government-sanctioned tyranny, the Constitution is no safeguard
against government wrongdoing such as SWAT team raids, domestic
surveillance, police shootings of unarmed and unthreatening
citizens, indefinite detentions, asset forfeitures, prosecutorial
misconduct, etc.
Today in the United States of America citizens are
as unprotected by law as the aristocracy in England prior to the
Magna Carta. America has far more in common with the Medieval
dungeon state than it does with the Declaration of Independence.
In a country in which the citizens have no
protection from the state and can be shot down in their streets and
homes by unaccountable police, detained indefinitely without charges
or conviction, executed on suspicion alone without due process of
law, there is no freedom, no democracy, no accountability of
government to the people.
The United States of America is no longer the
hope of mankind. The USA has become the source of evil and dread.
Will America destroy the world as well as itself?
=====
Dr. Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury for Economic Policy and associate editor of the Wall
Street Journal. He was columnist for Business Week, Scripps Howard
News Service, and Creators Syndicate. He has had many university
appointments. His internet columns have attracted a worldwide
following. Roberts' latest books are
The Failure of Laissez Faire Capitalism and
Economic Dissolution of the West
and
How America Was Lost.