“The
U.S. Supreme Court Decision … Means the Nation Has Entered a
Post-Constitutional Era” – 05.06.14
- “We Are No Longer a
Nation Ruled By Laws”
- Pulitzer prize winning
reporter Chris Hedges – along with journalist Naomi Wolf, Pentagon Papers
whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, activist Tangerine Bolen and others
– sued the government to join the NDAA’s allowance of the
indefinite detention of Americans.
- The trial judge in the
case asked the government attorneys 5 times whether journalists like Hedges could be
indefinitely detained simply for interviewing and then writing about bad guys.
- The government refused to promise that journalists
like Hedges won’t be thrown in a dungeon for the rest of their lives without
any right to talk to a judge.
- The trial
judge ruled that the indefinite detention bill was
unconstitutional, holding:
- But the court of
appeal overturned that decision, based upon the
assumptionthat limited the NDAA to non-U.S. citizens:
- The court of appeal
ignored the fact that the co-sponsors of the indefinite detention law said
it does apply to
American citizens, and that top legal scholarsagree.
- Last week, the U.S.
Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal of the case, thus
blessing and letting stand the indefinite detention law stand unchanged.
- The court of appeal’s
Orwellian reasoning may sound – at first blush – like it might be a good
thing. After all, the court said there’s no indication that the indefinite
detention provision will be applied against U.S. citizens.
- However, by refusing to
strike down the law and insist that any future laws explicitly exempt U.S.
citizens, it leaves discretion in the hands of the executive branch.
- The effect of the
decision will be to allow the U.S. government to kidnap and indefinitely
detain U.S. citizens who protest or dissent against the government … and
the courts will never
hear any legal challenge from the prisoners. The
detainee will not get to say:
- And he won’t get to
say:
- After all, prisoners
can be held under the indefinite detention bill without trial, without
being allowed to present evidence or hearing the evidence against them,
without letting the citizen consult with a lawyer, and without even
charging the citizen with any crime.
- So – if you’re thrown
into a hole somewhere – no one will even hear your story.
- Chris Hedges noted in
November:
- Constitutional attorney
John W. Whitehead agrees:
- As does constitutional
attorney William Olson:
“This is a rather remarkable shredding of the Bill of Rights,”…. he explained that the language of the act is so “loose,” that anybody can be picked up for any reason.
“The president of the United States … [has] this power to detain indefinitely without charges, without trial, without an arrest warrant, without a grand jury, just to be able to hold someone who they think might be a threat of some sort,” Olson said.
***“How are you going to challenge it when the black SUV rolls away from your house and no one even knows where you’ve been taken?”
- If you think they’re
crying wolf, just remember that the CIA director relabeled
“dissidents” as “terrorists” in 1972 so that he could continue spying
on them … and nothing has changed.
- Daniel Ellsberg notes
that Obama’s claimed power to indefinitely detain people without charges
or access to a lawyer or the courts is a power that even King George
– the guy we fought the Revolutionary War against – didn’t claim. And
former judge and adjunct professor of constitutional law Andrew Napolitano
points out that Obama’s claim that he can indefinitely detain
prisoners even after they are
acquitted of their crimes is a power that
even Hitler and Stalin didn’t claim.
- Access to justice is
already being severely curtailed in America. Even when the
prisoner is afforded
a trial, it is becoming more and more common for the government to
prosecute cases based upon “secret evidence” that they don’t
show to the defendant, his lawyer … or sometimes even the judge hearing the case. The
government uses “secret evidence” to spy on Americans,
prosecuteleaking or terrorism charges (even
against U.S. soldiers) and even to assassinate people. And
see this and this. Secret witnesses are being
used in some cases. And sometimes lawyers are not even allowed to
read their own briefs. Indeed, even the laws themselves are now starting
to be kept secret.
- But prisoners under the
indefinite detention bill have it much worse: they don’t get any trial or opportunity to
talk to a judge, any access
to a lawyer … or perhaps any information
about what they’re even accused of doing or
why they were nabbed in the first place.
- Chris
Hedges notes today:
“In declining to hear the case Hedges v. Obama and declining to review the NDAA, the Supreme Court has turned its back on precedent dating back to the Civil War era that holds that the military cannot police the streets of America,” said attorney Carl Mayer, who along with Bruce Afran devoted countless unpaid hours to the suit. “This is a major blow to civil liberties. It gives the green light to the military to detain people without trial or counsel in military installations, including secret installations abroad. There is little left of judicial review of presidential action during wartime.”
***
The law went back on the books [after the court of appeal reversed the trial judge's decision]. My lawyers and I surmised that this was because the administration was already using the law to detain U.S. citizens in black sites, most likely dual citizens with roots in countries such as Pakistan, Afghanistan, Somalia and Yemen…. Government attorneys, when asked by Judge Forrest, refused to say whether or not the government wa
***
In refusing to hear our lawsuit the courts have overturned nearly 150 years of case law that repeatedly holds that the military has no jurisdiction over civilians.
***
The goals of corporate capitalism are increasingly indistinguishable from the goals of the state. The political and economic systems are subservient to corporate profit. Debate between conventional liberals and conservatives has been replaced by empty political theater and spectacle. Corporations, no matter which politicians are in office, loot the Treasury, escape taxation, push down wages, break unions, dismantle civil society, gut regulation and legal oversight, control information, prosecute endless war and dismantle public institutions and programs that include schools, welfare and Social Security. And elected officials, enriched through our form of legalized corporate bribery, have no intention of halting the process.
The government, by ignoring the rights and needs of ordinary citizens, is jeopardizing its legitimacy. This is dangerous. When a citizenry no longer feels that it can find justice within the organs of power, when it feels that the organs of power are the enemies of freedom and economic advancement, it makes war on those organs. Those of us who are condemned as radicals, idealists and dreamers call for basic reforms that, if enacted, will make peaceful reform possible. But corporate capitalists, now unchecked by state power and dismissive of the popular will, do not see the fires they are igniting. The Supreme Court ruling on our challenge is one more signpost on the road to dystopia.
***
A ruling elite that accrues for itself this kind of total power, history has shown, eventually uses it.
- And Tangerine Bolen writes:
Under the war on terror, the United States government has trampled upon the fundamental human rights of people around the world since 9/11. The Bush administration manufactured a false war based on carefully crafted lies, false evidence and sickening manipulation. In the wake of that war, our courts prefer to continue to defer to a disingenuous national security narrative that has arisen out of the lies, paranoia, and incredible lawbreaking of our own government, including kidnapping, torturing, indefinitely imprisoning, and assassinating people with impunity – all of this against both reason and international law.
We are no longer a nation ruled by laws. [She's right.] We are nation ruled by men who have so steeped themselves in a false narrative that at the same time they are exponentially increasing the ranks of terrorists, they are destroying the rule of law itself. [Indeed, we’ve gone from a nation of laws to a nation of powerful men making one-sided laws to protect their own interests … in secret. Government folks are using laws to crush dissent. It’s gotten so bad that even U.S. Supreme Court justices are saying that we are descending into tyranny.] It is madness upon madness – the classic tale of becoming the evil you purport to fight while believing you remain righteous.
We have tried to stand up to this madness: we are outnumbered, outspent, and outgunned – a David intrepidly fighting a Goliath that spans the planet and has the power to shape our “reality” – thus shaping what the courts even see. We have sacrificed greatly to do this – and yet we would do it all again.
Source: zerohedge.com - “The U.S. Supreme Court Decision … Means the Nation Has Entered a Post-Constitutional Era”
1 comment:
David stands against Goliath, Goliath will fall once and for all.SOON.
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