Commentary
The vast right-wing conspiracy's relentless march toward tyranny
By Mike Whitney
Online Journal Contributing Writer


Oct 2, 2006, 00:35

When Hillary Clinton said that her husband Bill was the target of �a vast right-wing conspiracy,� her critics just laughed at her. No one is laughing now.

This week, President Bush will sign the Military Commissions Act of 2006 into law. The new legislation will repeal the central tenets of the U.S. Constitution which require the state to charge a man with a crime before putting him in jail, as well as the 8th amendment�s prohibition of �cruel and unusual� punishment. The law will allow Bush to imprison anyone he chooses and abuse them as he sees fit. It places Bush above the law, our first American monarch.

The march toward tyranny has been calculated and relentless. Hillary was right; it is a conspiracy. Prominent right-wing organizations have worked tirelessly to push the country toward authoritarian government and they are very close to succeeding. The alphabet soup of conservative think tanks and foundations have strategically aligned themselves with the major players in the corporate, media and banking establishments and removed most of the obstacles to absolute power. The Military Commissions Act just adds the final touches by eliminating habeas corpus.

The new law is designed to deprive terror suspects of internationally recognized human rights. It tiptoes around the Geneva Conventions and permits Bush to use his own judgment as to the precise meaning of �cruel, inhuman and degrading� treatment. It reinforces Bush�s interpretation of �enemy combatant,� which now includes anyone who �has purposely and materially supported hostilities against the United States.� By this definition, Bush is free to imprison American citizens who may merely disagree with his analysis of the war on terror. For example, Bush recently attacked his critics for reiterating the findings of the National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) that states that the war in Iraq is creating more terrorists. The document draws the obvious conclusion that Iraq has become a �recruiting sergeant� for violent jihad. Bush lashed out at his detractors saying that they had �selectively quoted� the NIE and were �buying into the enemy�s propaganda.� The question is: Can a citizen be arrested for �materially supporting hostilities against the United States� by professing belief in the conclusions of the NIE if the president says that it is �propaganda�?

Can that be construed as �aiding the enemy�?

Bruce Ackerman clarifies this point in an article in last week�s LA Times. He says the new legislation �authorizes the president to seize American citizens as enemy combatants, even if they have never left the United States. And, once thrown into military prison, they cannot expect a trial by their peers or any of the other normal protections of the Bill of Rights.�

Bush�s sweeping new powers have been carefully withheld from public scrutiny. In fact, in the nearly 800 articles which appeared on Google News, not one of them indicated in their headline that the new law repeals habeas corpus (although many articles on liberal web sites refer to habeas corpus in to the title) The vast majority of mainstream articles appear under the rubric of �Detainee Treatment Laws,� which is deliberately misleading and intended to minimize the grave effect the law will have on our constitutional form of government. Again, the media have shown themselves to be steadfast allies to their friends in power and enemies to basic principles of democracy.

The new bill also allows secret or coerced evidence to be used in military tribunals against terror suspects and provides legal immunity for military and CIA agents who engaged in torture before the end of 2005. (Despite the fact that retroactive law has no legal foundation)

The Military Commissions Act is the culmination of six years of vigorous attacks on the Bill of Rights. From the very beginning, administration attorneys have set about to dismantle the basic protections which limit presidential power. This has resulted in a long list of systematic violations to international law, including secret detentions, disappearances, torture, humiliating treatment, indefinite detention without charge, and criminal rendition. All of these activities are transparently illegal and beyond any conventional sense of human decency.

The pattern is unmistakable; the administration is contemptuous of our laws and will not respect any restrictions on the power of the executive. All of this is preparation for the New World Order and the end of American democracy.

The far-right fanatics in the administration correctly focussed on habeas corpus as the cornerstone of the American judicial system. If the president has the statutory authority to incarcerate citizens or non-citizens without filing charges the rest of the Bill of Rights is irrelevant. This is the primary lever of tyrannical rule and it explains why Bush has tried to undo habeas corpus since the arrest of Jose Padilla (American citizen) in May 2002. The government kept Padilla in a military brig for three and a half years without charging him with a crime in an obvious attempt to savage habeas corpus and allow the president to decide who is entitled to �inalienable rights� and who is not. Under the new legislation, �inalienable rights� will be reduced to "provisional gifts" from the president that can be arbitrarily rescinded by executive edict.

When Bush signs The Military Commissions Act of 2006 into law, America, as we know it, will cease to exist. The fundamental safeguards of due process, judicial review and the presumption of innocence will no longer be guaranteed. The heart and soul of the constitution will be eviscerated, leaving us exposed to the erratic and aggressive behavior of the state. Traditionally, the state has always been the greatest threat to personal liberty. We expect that same rule will apply here as well.

Mike Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be reached at: fergiewhitney@msn.com.

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