If politics makes strange bedfellows,
then I'm at least fluffing Bob Barr's pillows.
Bob Barr?! The far-right self-righteous congressman who led
what much of a nation saw as a vindictive impeachment of
Bill Clinton? The NRA board of directors member who believes
the Second Amendment is the one that guarantees the
protection of all the other amendments? The man who
proposed eliminating federal funding to PBS and eliminate
the National Endowment for the Arts? The author of the
Defense of Marriage Act, which defines marriage as between a
man and a woman—and yet may have committed adultery with his
future third wife while married to his second wife. The
vigorous opponent of pro-choice, who supported his second
wife's abortion? The "family values" proponent who was
photographed at what passed as a charity event licking
whipped cream off
the breasts of two women?
Yes, that Bob Barr.
But, he's also the Bob Barr who has spoken out against the
neo-conservative movement for its super-patriotic
suppression of dissent, rising beliefs in a "tax-and-spend"
bureaucracy, and unqualified support of the PATRIOT Act.
Six weeks after 9/11, about 85 percent of the House of
Representatives, including Bob Barr, and all but one
Senator, voted for the USA PATRIOT Act, a cutesy acronym for
Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate
Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act. The
Act was developed in secret by the Department of Justice,
and pushed upon a shell-shocked Congress, most of whom had
less than a day to read any of the 342-page document; most
didn't read any of it. Prior to its passage, a few members
of Congress spoke out against the Act, charging that it was
developed in haste, and there were Constitutional issues
that were swept aside by the Bush Administration and its
Department of Justice.
But most of Congress voted for it because they wanted
America to be free—and the President was flexing his
political muscle following the murders of more than 3,000
Americans. Most Americans, with almost no information to the
contrary from talk shows or the news media, believed the
PATRIOT Act was necessary and vital to securing our freedom.
But, the results of the Bush Administration's use of the
PATRIOT Act and other measures to track down and capture
terrorists have been almost non-existent, and its impact
upon Americans' Constitutional rights has been severe. And
so Bob Barr is on a nation-wide speaking tour, sponsored by
the American Civil Liberties Union (www.ACLU.org)—yes,
that civil liberties union—to let Americans know that the
PATRIOT Act, while it has many provisions to strengthen
America's defense, most of them in place long before 9/11,
also has several odious sections that threaten
Constitutional protections. With conviction honed by seven
years as a CIA lawyer and analyst, four years as U.S.
Attorney, and eight years as a congressman, most of that
time spent on the Judiciary Committee, Barr has the
credibility to go against the Bush Administration and any of
its supporters. "More than any foreign terrorist group,"
Barr tells his audiences, "provisions of the PATRIOT Act are
the greatest threat to America and to American citizens."
Barr has created Patriots to Restore Checks and Balances (www.checksbalances.org)
to energize the public against the PATRIOT Act and the Bush
Administration's misguided belief that it is possible to
sacrifice civil liberties to guarantee national security.
What many saw as necessary is now being seen as violating
six Constitutional amendments:
-
the First Amendment—freedom of
religion, speech, press, and assembly, and the right to
petition the government for a redress of grievances.
-
the Fourth Amendment -freedom from
unreasonable searches (the so-called "right to privacy"
amendment.)
-
the Fifth Amendment—right against
self-incrimination and due process.
-
the Sixth Amendment—due process,
the right to counsel, a speedy trial, and the right to a
fair and public trial by an impartial jury.
-
the Eighth Amendment—reasonable
bail and freedom from cruel and unusual punishment.
-
the Fourteenth Amendment—equal
protection guarantee for both citizens and non-citizens.
What the Bush Administration has done
to American citizens and non-combatants following 9/11 also
violates Article I, Section 9 of the Constitution which
guarantees the right to petition the courts to issue a writ
of habeas corpus to require the government to produce a
prisoner or suspect in order to determine the legality of
the detention. Only Congress may order a suspension of the
right of the writ, and then only in "Cases of Rebellion or
Invasion." Congress did not act to suspended this right;
nothing during or subsequent to the 9/11 attack indicated
either a rebellion or invasion under terms of the
Constitution.
Several federal courts and two major Supreme Court decisions
in the past year have dealt blows to the Administration's
persistence in defending the PATRIOT Act. And yet the Bush
Administration continues to build its bulwarks, and gather
and use its manifest power to look for ways to subvert the
Courts, one of the checks against unlimited executive branch
power.
As a last-ditch effort to restrain some of the PATRIOT Act
before its overwhelming passage, Congress inserted a sunset
provision for 16 sections. Unless Congress acts to suspend
the sunset provision, those sections, representing some of
the most controversial and odious parts of the Act, will
expire at the end of this year. President Bush and the
Department of Justice are resolute that not only should
those sections remain, but are pushing for even more
restrictions.
Among the organizations that have been forceful in their
attacks upon the PATRIOT Act have been the ACLU, American
Bar Association (www.abanet.org),
American Booksellers Association (www.bookweb.org),
American Library Association (www.ala.org),
Association of American Publishers (www.publishers.org),
Bill of Rights Defense Committee (www.bordsc.org),
Center for Constitutional Rights (www.ccr-ny.org),
Electronic Frontier Foundation (www.eff.org),
Electronic Privacy Information Center (www.epic.org),
Free Expression Policy Project (www.fepproject.org),
and People for the American Way (www.pfaw.org).
Among conservatives who oppose the PATRIOT Act are former
House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.), former House Majority
Leader Dick Armey (R. Texas), and Reps. James Sensenbrenner
(R-Wisc., chair of the House Judiciary committee), and C.L.
Otter (R-Idaho). Among conservative organizations that
oppose the PATRIOT Act are the American Conservative Union (www.conservative.org),
Free Congress Foundation (www.freecongress.org),
and the Second Amendment Foundation (www.saf.org).
Bob Barr's political philosophy has holes in it. But, he
isn't the ogre portrayed by many liberals and moderates, nor
is he the saint that the conservatives believe. He is just a
man who believes our Constitution must be protected and
defended against all enemies—foreign and domestic.
Walter Brasch’s latest book is
America’s Unpatriotic Acts; the Federal Government’s
Violation of Constitutional and Civil Rights. Brasch is
an award-winning columnist former newspaper and magazine
reporter and editor, and currently professor of journalism
at Bloomsburg University. You may write to him through his
website,
walterbrasch.com.