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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: National Security: The Last Refuge of Scoundrels If the Obama Justice Departments legal doctrine is allowed to stand, there will be absolutely no way of holding government officials civilly or criminally accountable for violating the rights of American citizens, short of a foreign power conquering the United States and putting its officials on trial. Barring a new Nuremberg trial, the officials of the United States government are above the law when it comes to National Security. Thats the necessary implication of the Justice Departments call to dismiss Jewel v. National Security Agency, a lawsuit on behalf of Americans who were subjected to warrantlessand hence illegalsurveillance by the National Security Agency. The administration, in calling for dismissal, advanced two morally repellent arguments. First, it used the state secrets argument: that any such lawsuit would compromise the sources and methods of the NSA, and in particular whether the agency had relationships with any particular telecommunications company (a disclosure, in particular, which would cause exceptional harm to national security). The claims of the plaintiffs, it said, would require or risk the disclosure of information properly protected by the DNIs assertion of the state secrets privilege. The very subject matter of the lawsuit would inherently risk or require the disclosure of state secrets. (Thanks to Glen Greenwald, by the way, for posting the document with the money quotes highlighted.) Second, the Justice Department claimed sovereign immunity for the government. The first argument is, of course, complete and utter nonsense. The NSAs technical capabilities for surveillance of domestic communications are notorious matters of fact, as is its pattern of relationships with AT&T and other telecom companies. So translated out of legalese, the argument is simply that a lawsuit would embarrass some bureaucrats. The second argument is utterly pernicious. It means, in essence, that government officials cannot legally be held accountable for violating our liberties, becausewait for it!theyre government officials. Think about that for a moment. If the government cannot be held liable for violating constitutionally defined rights, then what mechanism exists for enforcing those rights? Apparently, not muchaside from another country conquering the United States and putting its officials on trial. You know, like the Nuremberg trials. That claim, the bald assertion that the government cant be called to account for violating our rights because ITS THE GOVERNMENT, rivals Nixons claim that if the President does it, its not illegal. Such sheer executive chutzpah hasnt been matched since Charles I met writs of habeas corpus with the reply that the prisoner is being held at the Kings good pleasure. A high school civics textbook parody by Doug Kinney, published in National Lampoon back in the 1970s, mentioned that the Bill of Rights was kept around mainly as an example of good penmanship. That wasnt much of a joke, even back then. Today, things are even worse. Weve got a Bill of Rights which is unenforceable because exposing the cockroaches of the police state to the light of day might be bad for national security. Thats about as bad as the insurance policy on Monty Python, with the clause in fine print reading No claim made by you will be paid. The accretion of war powers around the office of President, over the past century or so, has resulted in legal claims resembling the prerogatives of a Stuart monarch. The Obama administration seems to have reined itself in a bit compared to Bush; it isnt matching Cheney, Yoo et al in the sheer grandiosity of claims entailed in Unitary Executive doctrine. But anyone who expected a serious scaling back of executive national security powers, comparable to what happened under the post-Watergate Church Committee, is probably in for a disappointment. There are two lessons to be drawn: First, the upward ratcheting of executive national security powers, unfortunately, is very much a bipartisan phenomenon. And second, under Democrats as well as Republicans, National Security is the last refuge of scoundrels. C4SS Research Associate Kevin Carson is a contemporary mutualist author and individualist anarchist whose written work includes Studies in Mutualist Political Economy and Organization Theory: An Individualist Anarchist Perspective, both of which are freely available online. Carson has also written for a variety of internet-based journals and blogs, including Just Things, The Art of the Possible, the P2P Foundation and his own Mutualist Blog.
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#2. To: Ada (#0)
I can't help but wonder what Robin and her buddies think about all of these articles showing Obama for what he is - a George Bush clone. They were so convinced that Barack Obama was their savior and would usher in the utopia they so desparately yearn for. But hey, we might get "free" health care right? That's all they seemed to care about. Well that and Obama ending the war LOL! What a bunch of maroons.
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