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New Wingnut Meme: Sedition Law Needed Booman Tribune | February 21 2006 Sedition is a word with a long, and embarrassing,
history in the United States, beginning with the "Alien and Sedition
Acts" passed by our second President, John Adams, and used to arrest
a number of newspaper publishers who supported opponents of Adams' Federalist
party. Fortunately for the country, the law expired on the last day
of Adam's first (and only) term in office. And of course, who can forget the internment of thousands of Japanese Americans by FDR during WWII, or the activities of the House Unamerican Activities Committee (HUAC) during the Cold War. All very dark and shameful pages in American history, where people were convicted for holding beliefs that the government deemed subversive (or in the case of the Japanese Americans for having the wrong ethnicity). You would like to think that such unconstitutiuonal episodes would be behind us by now. Yet, the idea of passing a new federal sedition law and prosecuting those who choose to speak out against President Bush and his administration is once again being bandied about in the right wing corner of the blogosphere, in their desire to eliminate the voice of dissent in this country. Under the banner of phony patriotism, and the flagrant misrepresentation of the views of Bush's critics, they claim the need for a new sedition act so that "enemies of the state" can be prosecuted for the traitorous assistance their spoken words give to terrorists. Enemies of the state like -- well, like Al Gore:
It is now considered bad form to criticize those who commit seditious acts against the United States. Challenging the patriotism of a traitor draws more ire than engaging in treasonable activities. Calling out those who undermine our nation creates more of a backlash than actually undermining our nation. Let us consider, however, the probable consequences of Gore's mea culpa on behalf of the "majority" of his countrymen. No doubt his words will fuel the massive tide of propaganda spewing forth from Muslim dictatorships around the globe. No doubt his words will be used to bolster the credibility of horrific disinformation like the Turkish-made, Gary-Busey-and-Billy Zane-starring monstrosity "Valley of the Wolves: Iraq," which accuses American troops of war atrocities and depicts a Jewish-American doctor (Busey) slicing organs out of Arab victims and shipping the body parts off to New York, London and Israel. No doubt Gore's speech will precipitate additional violence against Americans in Iraq and around the globe. And Gore is not alone. Much of the language of the "loyal opposition" has been anything but loyal. In September 2002, Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) called President Bush a liar on Saddam Hussein's turf, then added that Hussein's regime was worthy of American trust. On "Face the Nation" back in December, Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) stated that American troops were "going into the homes of Iraqis in the dead of night, terrorizing kids and children, you know, women, breaking sort of the customs of the -- of, of, of historical customs, religious customs …" Howard Dean, the head of the DNC, averred in December that the "idea that we're going to win the war in Iraq is an idea which is just plain wrong." At some point, opposition must be considered disloyal. At some point, the American people must say "enough." At some point, Republicans in Congress must stop delicately tiptoeing with regard to sedition and must pass legislation to prosecute such sedition. Ignore for a moment the possibility that Gore's remarks may have been misrepresented by the author of this screed (as indeed they were). Assume that everything he claims about Gore's speech is correct. Even making that generous assumption, do any of you really believe that Gore's remarks, ill-considered or otherwise, to this audience in Saudi Arabia, justify arrest and imprisonment for exercising his first amendment right to free speech? We've seen far worse from noted right wing pundits like Ann Coulter, who suggested that someone should poison a sitting associate justice of the Supreme Court. Yet Gore's comments, in their minds, deserve arrest and imprisonment? Why? Well, here's their answer to you:
During the Vietnam War, the Supreme Court repeatedly upheld the free speech rights of war opponents, whether those opponents distributed leaflets depicting the rape of the Statue of Liberty or wore jackets emblazoned with the slogan "F--- the Draft." America lost the Vietnam War. You see? When America suppresses dissent it wins its wars, and when it doesn't it loses them. In other words, patriotic Americans who want to win the grand and glorious war on that nefarious verb "TERROR" should be cool with a little government suppression of free speech, especially the speech of anyone who dares to question our Republican leader's actions in this time of war. Americans love to win, after all, so we should be willing to put up with a few arrests of prominent Democrats who dare to say speak up in opposition to this war. Could any justification be more odious? Forget for a moment the faulty logic which equates suppressing dissent with victory. Do you really want to live in a country that ditches it's most cherished values over the side of the ship of state whenever we are at war? Well, these conservatives (and I use the term ironically) do. And, of course, it's not just Gore they'd like to hang from the yardarm. They also have the hots for Congressman Jim McDermott (D - Wash), Senator John Kerry and Howard Dean:
For anyone who thinks I may be making a mountain out of a molehill, stop and consider for a moment what might happen in the event of another terrorist attack on American soil. It could happen, you know. This is the administration that failed to take warnings about Al Queda seriously before 9/11, and the one that screwed the pooch on Katrina. As dyed in the wool Bush apologist Tommy Franks warned back in 2003 in the event of another terrorist attack “... the Western world, the free world, loses what it cherishes most, and that is freedom and liberty we’ve seen for a couple of hundred years in this grand experiment that we call democracy.” Indeed he went further to add that the Constitution might very well be scrapped and a military government take over. So don't be so quick to dismiss this as just
overblown rhetoric from a right wing blowhard. The fact that conservatives
are even raising the possibility of sedition laws is profoundly disturbing
in light of our past history, and in light of the present administration's
claims to untrammeled executive authority. We need to respond vigorously
now to these audacious proposals to limit our liberty, because when
the next terrorist attack (or ginned up war) occurs it will be too late. --------------------------------------------------- Get Alex Jones and Paul Joseph Watson's books, ALL Alex's documentary films, films by other authors, audio interviews and special reports. Sign up at Prison Planet.tv - CLICK HERE. |