
Apocalypse Pic-Nic (image: OVRL, flickr)
2012′s civil liberties apocalypse has already happened
by Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
January 19, 2012
In case you missed it, President Barack Obama has signed a death knell for the Bill of Rights. It’s a hell of a way to begin a year many believe will mark the end of the world.
The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) makes a mockery of our basic civil liberties. It shreds the intent of the Founders to establish a nation where essential rights are protected. It puts us all at risk for arbitrary, indefinite incarceration with no real rights to recourse.
The Act authorizes a $626 billion dollar defense budget (which does not include the CIA, special ops, various black box items, etc). Obama’s signing statement says it does address counterterrorism at home and abroad as well as Defense Department modernization, health care costs and more.
But it also includes Sections 1021 and 1022, bitterly opposed by the American Civil Liberties Union and Human Rights Watch, among many others. The New York Times urged Obama to veto the bill because of them. The UK-based Guardian said NDAA 2012 allows allows for indefinite detention of US citizens “without trial [of] American terrorism subjects arrested on U.S. soil, who could then be shipped to Guantanamo Bay.” The Kansas City Star was equally blunt, stating that the NDAA is “trampling the bill of rights in defense’s name.”
Section 1021 reasserts the President’s authority to use the military to detain any person “who was part of or substantially supported al-Qaeda, the Taliban, or associated forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners.” It also includes the military’s power to detain anyone who commits a “belligerent act” against the U.S. or its coalition allies under the law of war. Despite widespread public pressure, Obama did not veto the bill. In his signing statement he said: “I have signed this bill despite having serious reservations with certain provisions that regulate the detention, interrogation and prosecution of suspected terrorists.”
Citing the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) passed by the United States Congress on September 14, 2001, the NDAA states that those detained may be detained “without trial, until the end of the hostilities authorized by the [AUMF].” The NDAA also allows trial by military tribunal, or “transfer to the custody or control of the person’s country of origin,” or transfer to “any other foreign country or any other foreign entity.” This last practice is known as “rendition.”
It’s been been widely documented that the United States has used rendition as a way to let individuals be tortured outside of U.S. soil. “Extraordinary rendition”—used during the second Bush administration—is the kidnapping and transfer of individuals to a third country for purposes “enhanced interrogation,” otherwise known as torture.
An amendment to the NDAA offered by Senator Mark Udall forbidding the indefinite detention of U.S. citizens failed by a vote of 37-61. A compromise amendment to preserve current law concerning the detention of U.S. citizens and lawful resident aliens within the United States proposed by Senator Dianne Feinstein passed, but only sparked more controversy. Feinstein insisted the reference to current law meant that U.S. citizens could not be indefinitely detained, while Senators Carl Levin and John McCain argued that it does allow indefinite detention. Senator Levin cited the Supreme Court as stating that: “There is no bar to this nation’s holding one of its own citizens as an enemy combatant.”
Section 1022 of the NDAA deals with the “Requirement for military custody.” Section 1022 requires that all persons arrested and detained under Section 1021, including those detained on U.S. soil whether held indefinitely or not, will be in the custody of the United States Armed Forces. Thus, Section 1022 of the NDAA 2012 clearly allows the U.S. military the option to arrest and indefinitely detain U.S. citizens.
The ACLU stated that, “The statute contains a sweeping worldwide indefinite detention provision…[without] temporal or geographic limitations, and can be used by this and future Presidents to militarily detain people captured far from any battlefield.” Civil libertarians are calling for the specific repeal of Sections 1021 and 1022, asking elected officials to come out in favor of this repeal. Civil libertarian activists are also calling on local governments to pass ordinances and statutes declaring their municipalities and states “Bill of Rights Enforcement Zones” or “Rendition-free Zones.”
The ACLU believes that “the breadth of the NDAA’s detention authority violates international law because it is not limited to people captured within the context of an actual armed conflict as required by the laws of war.” Sections 1021 and 1022 pose a threat to U.S. citizens on U.S. soil who may be seized and held indefinitely because of so-called “belligerent acts.”
For a long while we have been hearing apocalyptic predictions about the end of the world through solar flares, natural disasters, invasions from outer space and the like. All that is believed to be slated for December, 2012.
But what most of the nation doesn’t realize is that the end of our basic civil liberties, in place since the December, 1791, ratification of the Bill of Rights, has already taken place.
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Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman have co-authored four books on election protection, available at www.freepress.org, along with Bob’s FITRAKIS FILES. HARVEY WASSERMAN’S HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES is at Harvey Wasserman. Originally published by http://freepress.org.



15 Comments

An act can’t amend the constitution, though some would like you to believe that for their purposes.
The constitution hasn’t been repealed yet, though under severe attack by professional liars.
A congress that impeaches the current traitors on the supreme court or they die natural deaths will change everything , again.
Bugger his ASSASSININITY!
You don’t understand; this bill is set up to make an end run around court review.
1. You’re in custody without charge, including the fact that you are denied access to a lawyer and have no right to challenge your own detention.
2. Because the government doesn’t have to charge you, they don’t have to go on record as to whether or not they have you in custody.
3. Therefore, your family can’t sue on your behalf because they can’t prove you’re in custody. (It’s a question of having standing under the law.)
Full circle.
I do understand but the constitution stands as of today and future generations may well embrace and enforce that which we let slip away.
I’m in no way saying we aren’t entering a dark period .
There is a country in South America, where Allende was offed with our help and many were disappeared but that has ended . We may go through a generation or two where we embrace this BS but it will not stand. I understand the state has embraced torture, random murder and rendition which we have let happen. It won’t last but we lack the gonads to correct the injustice. To condemn the future to these animals is easy but it will not stand in the future. The system that makes this possible is passing away with the last of the oil and so will this. Because we can’t doesn’t mean no one will ever overturn treasonous laws .
I suspect that most people do not want to think about the ndaa, if they have even allowed it to enter their minds.
“I have signed this bill despite having serious reservations with certain provisions that regulate the detention, interrogation and prosecution of suspected terrorists.” Apparently his only reservation was that it didn’t give him the power to do all of this detaining, but when he got it, he signed.
Empty bowl pipe dreams hoss, as no one is impeachin no one, and once they die, new one’s just like them are annointed, to serve the 1% corporate fascists who enable their annointments.
You fantasize much?
BP yer all over the fascist reality that you speak of.
Well done sir, it’s spot on true.
tjbs, you are IMHO quite overly optimistic in regards to future gens having anything to do with resolving the death and dearth of our nation, constitution, bill of rights, magna carta.
IMHO, you do not get what absolute fascism is all about, and that absolute fascism is here and embedded in our daily lives and controls every facet of our existence.
Our only hope is that this system is doomed to failure, as history proves. The pain is gonna be great, till then, and after then . . .
SolarT, great diary, thanks and highly rcc’d.
Don’t worry. The news out of Durban, which was reported in this country as, “There is no news out of Durban,” is that the Antarctic Ice Mass is due to come apart within the next few years, and change the sea level by 80-100 feet within a single year. A few elevations for comparison:
Washington, D.C., elev. 72′
New York City, elev. 26′
Boston, MA, elev. 13′
Miami, FL, elev. 7′
Houston, TX, elev. 52′
New Orleans, LA, elev. 3′
So there will soon be other things to worry about.
Yup. We live in a Fascist Police State now. We are in no danger of losing our freedoms. We have no freedoms. Very few people know or care. Amazing!
Post Imperial America might offer some opportunity for improvement. It would be nice if we could get from here to there without World War Three.
It didn’t matter anyway. It passed the House 283-136, the Senate 87-13. That’s known as a veto-proof majority since it surpasses 2/3 in both houses. With a signature, he gets a signing statement. We have Carl Levin’s word for it that Obama wanted the provision applied to Americans, but not why. We don’t have anyone’s word other than Lindsey Graham’s as to where the provisions originated.
We have a bunch of people at FDL’s word that it is an Executive power grab, but the Congressional record speaks otherwise. It speaks to the consistent overwhelming paranoia in the Congress among those, especially the {elderly+wealthy}+Graham, in charge of the military, intelligence, and judiciary functions since 9/11/2001 and the ensuing anthrax scare. Such provisions, once proposed, cannot be voted against, because the other members will be subject to negative campaigning by a whole host of groups, from the AIPAC and defense contracting lobbies, to the Limbaugh and other AM radio talk shows, to assorted other defamatory groups, imaginary or real. “Weak on defense”, “supports terrorists”, conjured up in these people’s minds are strong antidotes to the truth.
Congress voted in the original AUMF, it has strengthened it this time, it did the first NIMBY on Guantánamo, it did this one. Levin may be technically true on what he said, but I suspect the story is far deeper and he is far more to blame than he admits.
Obama is weak willed, his advisors are sick in the head, some of them, but on this one, Congress could and would do this totally without him. Just look at the votes.
I see it like this, we thought we were exceptional, we’re not.
All these things we fear we did to others with impunity kidnapping, torture and murder and the country went along with it because we’re exceptional. Well this proves we’re not .
It’s the karma from the 9-11 lie and the cowardness to accept the lie over the truth. What goes around comes around, in spades. Think about it ,we mock those that don’t buy the 9-11 government “Theory ” as “truthers”. Pay back will be hell no doubt but we deserve that which we have sown elsewhere. What goes around comes around and sow the wind reap the whirlwind still apply.
I’m happy that I’m closer to my death bed than the birthing room so if I’m taken in the dark of the night I won’t have long to suffer.
The NDAA is the Citizens United of 2012, as far as watershed black holes in the US Constitutional universe are concerned. Tidying up after the Bush administration is something Obama does really, really well – never mind the people he is supposed to be serving. We don’t even discuss impeachment any longer; the rot runs too deep.