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Two
weeks before President Bush signed Congressional legislation that made
permanent all but two sections of the USA PATRIOT Act, State College,
Pennsylvania, became the 397th American community to reaffirm the belief
that the Constitution and Bill of Rights take precedence over any federal
law. Not one of those resolutions should have been necessary. Nor should
the legislatures of eight states -- Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii,
Idaho, Maine, Montana, and Vermont -- have had to pass legislation
affirming the rights of all Americans. But they had to, and they did.
Encompassed by a nation in fear and a White House that was willing to
exert extraordinary pressure to enact a political agenda, Congress
overwhelmingly passed the PATRIOT Act six weeks after 9/11. Most members
didn’t read any of the 342-page bill, having been given less than 48 hours
to do so by the Republican leadership. President Bush had called the Act
necessary to defeat the terrorists; Attorney General John Ashcroft had
said that anyone not supporting the bill would be aiding the terrorists.
There was only one problem in the legislation -- it violated six
Constitutional amendments. The Act gave wide latitude to the government to
search and seize property and to probe sensitive documents, such as
medical records, without a court warrant, and to restrict defendants from
using the courts to protest the intrusion upon their rights of privacy or
even to be allowed to be brought before a court to defend themselves. To
mitigate that somewhat inconsequential unconstitutional problem,
Congressional leaders inserted a “sunset” clause, calling for 16 of the
more controversial 150 sections of the Act to terminate by Dec. 31, 2005.
About two years before the sunset -- with the U.S. mired in the Iraq
quagmire and Osama bin Laden still running al-Qaeda -- the Bush–Cheney
Administration began a massive political campaign not only to keep those
sections, but also to further restrict human rights. They claimed that
because the nation was at war, the Act was essential. While the President
falsely claimed the entire PATRIOT Act, not just 16 sections, would cease
at the end of the year -- and, thus, the terrorists would win -- and while
most of the nation’s mass media failed to point out the President was
wrong -- the American people had begun to realize that the government’s
use of the PATRIOT Act didn’t result in capturing terrorists as much as it
did upon violating Constitutional rights of the innocent.
By now, conservatives and liberals had begun forming alliances to oppose
the PATRIOT Act. Among conservatives who opposed provisions of the Act are
Newt Gingrich, former House speaker; Bob Barr, former congressman who led
impeachment proceedings against Bill Clinton; and Grover Norquist, head of
Americans for Tax Reform. Among major national organizations opposing the
Act are the ACLU, the Bill of Rights Defense Committee, the American
Library Association, the American Booksellers Association, the National
League of Cities, and the largely-conservative American Bar Association,
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and the National Association of
Manufacturers.
About one month after President Bush used his 2005 State of the Union
Address to again push for full renewal of the PATRIOT Act, Nancy Kranich
began a campaign to get her new hometown to formally oppose it. Kranich’s
term as president of the American Library Association ended three months
before 9/11, but as a Board member and then as chair of the ALA’s
Intellectual Freedom Committee, she had pushed the ALA to become one of
the first national associations to raise concern about the destruction of
individual rights under the PATRIOT Act.
By the time she began working with the national Bill of Rights Defense
Committee to pass a resolution in State College, more than 300 other
communities had passed resolutions opposing what the jingoistic President
and his Rasputin Vice-President were doing in the name of fighting
terrorism. The official response by John Ashcroft’s Department of Justice
to the community resolutions that had opposed the Act was the opposition
were “either in cities in Vermont, very small population, or in college
towns in California. It’s in a lot of the usual enclaves where you might
see nuclear free zones, or they probably passed resolutions against the
war in Iraq.” Those “very small population” cities included Atlanta,
Baltimore, Denver, Detroit, Minneapolis, New York City, Philadelphia, San
Francisco, Seattle, and Washington, D.C.
A previous attempt to pass a resolution in State College had failed.
Opposition from the mayor and borough council, as Kranich learned, was
because most of them believed this wasn’t a local issue, that they didn’t
want a resolution telling the police how to do their work and, as the
mayor said, they didn’t want “marginal groups who would come to council to
ask for [their own] resolution.”
“That’s when I knew I had to frame the campaign to deal with those issues,
while educating the people about the PATRIOT Act itself,” says Kranich.
Through national forums, the League of Women Voters found that Americans
were more likely to recognize the threats to their deeply valued civil
liberties when they learned more about the Act. Combined with an extensive
education campaign, Kranich and a growing core of volunteers attended
community events, worked with student groups at Penn State, passed out
flyers, and talked with people to “get a sense of the community.”
While Kranich and her committee were educating residents, the House of
Representatives, cowering to Presidential powers, overwhelmingly supported
making permanent the entire PATRIOT Act, including those sections that
intruded upon civil liberties. The Senate was more reluctant. 52 of the
100 senators, including eight Republicans, wrote a letter to the Senate
leadership calling for a three month extension -- later raised to six
months -- to allow for a calming period and a time to build into the
four-year-old Act new citizen safeguards. “This obstruction is
inexcusable,” a furious President Bush lashed out after learning of the
letter, and demanded the Senate follow the wishes of the House. Again
invoking the 9/11 Bunker Mentality he had constructed to explain most of
his actions, Bush raged that the “senators obstructing the Patriot Act
need to understand that the expiration of this vital law will endanger
America and will leave us in a weaker position in the fight against brutal
killers.”
With the Act mired in controversy, Kranich took a new approach. “We
appealed to their oaths of office,” says Kranich, who spent hours talking
with members of council and the police, assuring them that when they took
their oaths of office they promised to uphold the Constitution. Petitions
also helped the elected officials understand the will of the people --
more than 700 residents had signed petitions in favor of the resolution. A
petition to support the PATRIOT Act had about 50 signatures.
Nevertheless, Council members were now getting threats from residents who
supported the PATRIOT Act. Most of the letters and phone calls centered
around the fallacious argument that passing such a resolution would
undermine the ability not only of the Bush–Cheney Administration to “catch
terrorists,” but would hurt federal funding for State College.
Under a barrage of hate mail, combined with
Presidential threats and rants, the people in State College, says Kranich,
“were now getting ‘cold feet,’ and there was a lot of tension.” Her
committee increased its efforts to educate the people.
With Congress still arguing about extending suppression of civil
liberties, about 150 people packed the borough council chambers the
evening the resolution was to be introduced. Those unable to attend the
meeting could watch it on local public access cable.
Fifteen spoke in favor, five opposed it. And then Nancy Kranich spoke for
those who were silenced. She said she was speaking for those who were
afraid to sign the petitions or speak out because they feared being
watched, detained, or deported. The fear of the power of government to
chill dissent is one of the greatest fears, says Kranich, and yet, “It’s
easy to lose those rights if we don’t have the courage to speak up.”
The Council did pass the resolution, 6–0, telling the nation that it
affirms “its strong resolve to fight terrorism, but also affirm[s] that
any actions to end terrorism must not be waged at the expense of
fundamental liberties, rights, and freedoms of all people regardless of
race, culture, and ethnicity.” Mayor Bill Welch, who opposed the
Resolution from the beginning, refused to sign it.
Congress made 14 of the 16 “sunset” clauses permanent and extended the
other two sections by four years. Congress did allow citizens to challenge
the Act’s “gag order” which had forbidden anyone from disclosing they were
being investigated, removed the requirement that all suspects served with
a National Security Letter inform the FBI of what lawyers they consulted,
removed most libraries from requirements to disclose who read what book,
promised to look into the issue of civil liberties, and then claimed that
the minor cosmetic changes was a “compromise.” That “compromise” ends one
year after President Bush and Vice-President Dick Cheney are out of office
-- and several thousand other Americans will have had their civil
liberties compromised.
Walter Brasch’s
latest books are
America’s Unpatriotic Acts: The Federal Government’s Violation of
Constitutional and Civil Rights, a study of the PATRIOT Act; and
"Unacceptable": The Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina. You may
contact Dr. Brasch through his website,
www.walterbrasch.com or by
e-mail: at brasch@bloomu.edu.
Other Articles by Walter Brasch
*
This Column
Doesn’t Exist with Rosemary Brasch
* Justice
DeLayed
* The FEMA
Scheme-a; Or, The Unrepentant Consultant
* The
Scariest Costume
* “Always
There”: The Voice of a Gold Star Mother
*
“Unacceptable”: The Federal Response to Katrina
* George W.
Bush -- By the Numbers
* Uncle Sam
Wants You: The Identity Stripping of American Citizens
* ...And a
Justice For All
* Killing
Americans With Secrecy
* It’s Not
Patriotic to Violate the Constitution
* The Dutiful
Wife: More Than Just a Comedy
*
Star-Spangled America
*
Government-Approved Slaughter
*
Hollywood’s Patriots
* President
Bush’s “Appropriate” Response
* On the
Right Hand of God—the Far Right Hand
* The
“Morally Treasonable” Bush Administration
* Applauding
Only the “Right” Entertainers
* An
Uncivil Administration
* Abrogating
Their Responsibility
* A Decent
Person
* Running
the Ship-of-State Aground
* Janet
Jackson, George Bush, and No. 524: There Are No Half-Time Shows in War
* Kicking
Around a Peace Prize
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