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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: Stop using tragedies to justify unjust new laws In the wake of tragedy, calls to do something can be deafening. And since politicians never want a serious crisis to go to wasteif I can borrow the infamous phrasing of Rahm Emanuelour government is always ready and willing to respond to these calls. Trouble is, theres usually a reason these post-crisis policies were previously nonstarters: theyre not good ideas. Laws made in terror, anger, and despair appeal more to our emotions than our common sense. They tend to ride roughshod over individual rights and the limits of the Constitution. They are often unjust and ill-considered, which is (understandably) difficult to see through our tears. But once the mourning period is over, our sorrow-born policies dont die off with our grief. Were stuck, saddled with serious expansions of government power whose implications reach farther than we initially understood. This patterncrisis, reaction, injustice, regretis hardly new, but it has appeared with alarming frequency in this modern age of the war on terror. After 9/11, we saw a massive expansion of the surveillance state through the PATRIOT Act, an assault on Americans privacy that has yet to produce any significant counter-terrorism results. Though the public has expressed deep concern about Washingtons ability to keep tabs on our communications, today were left with toothless reforms and two anti-privacy presidential candidates. Our airports became and remain sites for absurd security theater, a wasteful and often counterproductive change with the permanent sticking power of federal bureaucracy. And our foreign policy exploded into a web of dangerous entanglements that cause more problems than they solve. More recently, the surveillance state has bided its time, waiting for a new terror attack to falsely claim that just a little more mass spying would have kept us safe. The legislative environment is very hostile today, wrote Robert S. Litt of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence in August, but it could turn in the event of a terrorist attack or criminal event where strong encryption can be shown to have hindered law enforcement. When another attack did occurthe Paris bombing this past fallthe intelligence community rushed to heed Litts advice. That the attack almost certainly could not have been prevented by breaking encryption didnt matter. They were determined not to let this crisis go to waste. Fortunately, the anti-encryption lobby has failedfor now. But the same cycle is repeating itself today, in the aftermath of last weeks horrifying nightclub massacre in Orlando. And because of the convoluted and controversial details of this case, in which an ISIS-allegiant mass shooter used a semiautomatic weapon to attack a gay nightclub, the political haymakers this time around are many. On the left, its all about gun control, whichin a new twist clearly intended to prey upon our fearsis now labeled a matter of national security. Being tough on terrorism, particularly the sorts of homegrown terrorism that weve seen now in Orlando and San Bernardino, President Obama said Saturday, means making it harder for people who want to kill Americans to get their hands on assault weapons. Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump, and a number of congressional Democrats have suggested the solution is to ban anyone on the federal governments secret (and notoriously error-prone) terrorist watch list from owning a gun. Due process is whats killing us, one senator hyperventilated, conveniently ignoring the ways abandoning due process has deprived Americans of life, liberty, property, and livelihood. On the right, similarly ill-conceived proposals have been more varied, from the return of the encryption debate to Trumps renewed push for a temporary ban on Muslim immigrants; from mandatory carry to excluding Muslims from the Second Amendment. There was even the bizarre suggestion that Orlando justifies police militarization. Left or right, what these ideas have in common is that theyre passed off as easy answers in times of heartache. But an unjust law is still unjust after tragedy strikes. A breach of civil liberties is still wrong even if its reassuring. And this pattern of crisis, reaction, injustice, and regret will not be derailed by wishful thinking. There may not be one right way to respond to terrorism. But there are many wrong ways, and right now perhaps our greatest task in politics is to avoid them. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
Every so called tragedy of more than 2 dozen killed, has been a made up lie or else a false flag.
All of the one with "assault-style" weapons are probably false flag. That's what the masters wish to get rid of. They really don't care about pistols or rifles.
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