I know it's old hat, but....
We've seen this before.
The NYTimes has a "News Analysis" of the expansive executive powers the administration is claiming. Yoo, Addington, Gunatanamo, torture, military tribunals, renditions, NSA spying all stem from a questionable legal finding by the White House. Basically, according to the White House, in a time of war, the president's power is unlimited. That level of unfettered power has been claimed before.
This is a little long, and it was written as an intentional parallel, but it's Saturday, so a little looser rules. (Thom Hartmann - Common Dreams - March 16, 2003)
And now you know the rest of the story.
The NYTimes has a "News Analysis" of the expansive executive powers the administration is claiming. Yoo, Addington, Gunatanamo, torture, military tribunals, renditions, NSA spying all stem from a questionable legal finding by the White House. Basically, according to the White House, in a time of war, the president's power is unlimited. That level of unfettered power has been claimed before.
This is a little long, and it was written as an intentional parallel, but it's Saturday, so a little looser rules. (Thom Hartmann - Common Dreams - March 16, 2003)
Within four weeks of the terrorist attack, the nation's now-popular leader had pushed through legislation - in the name of combating terrorism and fighting the philosophy he said spawned it - that suspended constitutional guarantees of free speech, privacy, and habeas corpus. Police could now intercept mail and wiretap phones; suspected terrorists could be imprisoned without specific charges and without access to their lawyers; police could sneak into people's homes without warrants if the cases involved terrorism.
To get his patriotic "Decree on the Protection of People and State" passed over the objections of concerned legislators and civil libertarians, he agreed to put a 4-year sunset provision on it: if the national emergency provoked by the terrorist attack was over by then, the freedoms and rights would be returned to the people, and the police agencies would be re-restrained. Legislators would later say they hadn't had time to read the bill before voting on it.
Immediately after passage of the anti-terrorism act, his federal police agencies stepped up their program of arresting suspicious persons and holding them without access to lawyers or courts. In the first year only a few hundred were interred, and those who objected were largely ignored by the mainstream press, which was afraid to offend and thus lose access to a leader with such high popularity ratings. Citizens who protested the leader in public - and there were many - quickly found themselves confronting the newly empowered police's batons, gas, and jail cells, or fenced off in protest zones safely out of earshot of the leader's public speeches.
Within the first months after that terrorist attack, at the suggestion of a political advisor, he brought a formerly obscure word into common usage. He wanted to stir a "racial pride" among his countrymen, so, instead of referring to the nation by its name, he began to refer to it as "The Homeland," a phrase publicly promoted in the introduction to a 1934 speech recorded in Leni Riefenstahl's famous propaganda movie "Triumph Of The Will." As hoped, people's hearts swelled with pride, and the beginning of an us-versus-them mentality was sewn. Our land was "the" homeland, citizens thought: all others were simply foreign lands. We are the "true people," he suggested, the only ones worthy of our nation's concern; if bombs fall on others, or human rights are violated in other nations and it makes our lives better, it's of little concern to us.
Playing on this new nationalism, and exploiting a disagreement with the French over his increasing militarism, he argued that any international body that didn't act first and foremost in the best interest of his own nation was neither relevant nor useful.
And now you know the rest of the story.
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