LOGO: Truthdig: Drilling Beneath the Headlines. A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman.
2010 Webby Award Winner for Best Political Blog
 
May 27, 2012
Log in / Register

 Choose a size
Text Size

Trending:     robert scheer     barack obama     gay marriage     chris hedges     ndaa
Most Read

Say 'Hi-Ho!' as They Strip-Search You

TED: 'A Money-Soaked Orgy of Self-Congratulatory Futurism'

I Can't Hear Myself Think

A Rare Admission That Money Trumps Everything Else

Children Slaughtered in Government Attack on Syrian Town

Most Comments
Most Emailed

Reports
Why Bain Questions Matter
OSHA Struggles When Tower Climbers Die

Ear to the Ground

A/V Booth

Arts & Culture
Better Than We Found It
The Good-Natured Dictator

Digs
Financial Meltdown 101

Truthdig Bazaar more items

 
Reports

The American Police State

Email this item Email    Print this item Print   

Posted on Oct 29, 2007
redacted constitution
Original from archives.gov

By Chris Hedges

A Dallas jury, a week ago, caused a mistrial in the government case against this country’s largest Islamic charity. The action raises a defiant fist on the sinking ship of American democracy.

If we lived in a state where due process and the rule of law could curb the despotism of the Bush administration, this mistrial might be counted a victory. But we do not. The jury may have rejected the federal government’s claim that the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development funneled millions of dollars to Middle Eastern terrorists. It may have acquitted Mohammad el-Mezain, the former chairman of the foundation, of virtually all criminal charges related to funding terrorism (the jury deadlocked on one of the 32 charges against el-Mezain), and it may have deadlocked on the charges that had been lodged against four other former leaders of the charity, but don’t be fooled. This mistrial will do nothing to impede the administration’s ongoing contempt for the rule of law. It will do nothing to stop the curtailment of our civil liberties and rights. The grim march toward a police state continues.

Constitutional rights are minor inconveniences, noisome chatter, flies to be batted away on the steady road to despotism. And no one, not the courts, not the press, not the gutless Democratic opposition, not a compliant and passive citizenry hypnotized by tawdry television spectacles and celebrity gossip, seems capable of stopping the process. Those in power know this. We, too, might as well know it. 

The Bush administration, which froze the foundation’s finances three months after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and indicted its officials three years later on charges that they provided funds for the militant group Hamas, has ensured that the foundation and all other Palestinian charities will never reopen in the United States. Any organized support for Palestinians from within the U.S. has been rendered impossible. The goal of the Israeli government and the Bush administration—despite the charade of peace negotiations to be held at Annapolis—is to grind defiant Palestinians into the dirt. Israel, which has plunged the Gaza Strip into one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, has now begun to ban fuel supplies and sever electrical service. The severe deprivation, the Israelis hope, will see the overthrow of the Hamas government in Gaza and the reinstatement of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who has become the Marshal Pétain of the Palestinian people.

The Dallas trial—like all of the major terrorism trials conducted by this administration, from the Florida case against the Palestinian activist Dr. Sami al-Arian, which also ended in a mistrial, to the recent decision by a jury in Chicago to acquit two men of charges of financing Hamas—has been a judicial failure. William Neal, a juror in the Dallas trial, told the Associated Press that the case “was strung together with macaroni noodles. There was so little evidence.”

Advertisement

Such trials, however, have been politically expedient. The accusations, true or untrue, serve the aims of the administration. A jury in Tampa, Chicago or Dallas can dismiss the government’s assaults on individual rights, but the draconian restrictions put in place because of the mendacious charges remain firmly implanted within the system. It is the charges, not the facts, which matter.

Dr. al-Arian, who was supposed to have been released and deported in April, is still in a Virginia prison because he will not testify in a separate case before a grand jury. The professor, broken by the long ordeal of his trial and unable to raise another million dollars in legal fees for a retrial, pleaded guilty to a minor charge in the hopes that his persecution would end. It has not. Or take the case of Canadian citizen Maher Arar, who in 2002 was spirited away by Homeland Security from JFK Airport to Syria, where he spent 10 months being tortured in a coffin-like cell. He was, upon his release, exonerated of terrorism. Arar testified before a House panel this month about how he was abducted by the U.S. and interrogated, stripped of his legal rights and tortured. But he couldn’t testify in person. He spoke to the House members on a video link from Canada. He is forbidden by Homeland Security to enter the United States because he allegedly poses a threat to national security.

Those accused of being involved in conspiracies and terrorism plots, as in all police states, become nonpersons. There is no rehabilitation. There is no justice.

“He was never given a hearing nor did the Canadian consulate, his lawyer, or his family know of his fate,” Amnesty International wrote of Arar. “Expulsion in such circumstances, without a fair hearing, and to a country known for regularly torturing their prisoners, violates the U.S. Government’s obligations under international law, specifically the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.”

You can almost hear Dick Cheney yawn.

The Bush administration shut down the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development six years ago and froze its assets. There was no hearing or trial. It became a crime for anyone to engage in transactions with the foundation. The administration never produced evidence to support the charges. It did not have any. In the “war on terror,” evidence is unnecessary. An executive order is enough.  The foundation sued the government in a federal court in the District of Columbia. Behind closed doors, the government presented secret evidence that the charity had no opportunity to see or rebut. The charity’s case was dismissed.

The government has closed seven Muslim charities in the United States and frozen their assets. Not one of them, or any person associated with them, has been found guilty of financing terrorism. They will remain shut. George W. Bush can tar any organization or individual, here or abroad, as being part of a terrorist conspiracy and by fiat render them powerless. He does not need to make formal charges. He does not need to wait for a trial verdict.  Secret evidence, which these court cases have exposed as a sham, is enough. The juries in Tampa, Chicago and Dallas did their duty. They spoke for the rights of citizens. They spoke for the protection of due process and the rule of law. They threw small hurdles in front of the emergent police state. But the abuse rolls on. I fear terrorism. I know it is real. I am sure terrorists will strike again on American soil. But while terrorists can wound and disrupt our democracy, only we can kill it.


New and Improved Comments

We are launching a major overhaul of our comments section.

In addition to more robust spam filtering and moderation, new features include the ability to rate other comments, sort how they are displayed and respond directly via e-mail or in a thread.

Unfortunately, commenters will lose their existing Truthdig identities. It's a pain, we know, but on the plus side you will now be able to log in with a plethora of options, including Google, Twitter, Facebook and Disqus accounts.

Before launching this system we spent months in discussion with our top commenters. We listened to the feedback and we hope you like what we've come up with.

Please direct any problems or concerns to us via our contact page.

By weather, October 29, 2007 at 7:35 am Link to this comment

Howard what’s the difference between Israel and Iran?

Iran can steal from you and so can Israel, but Israel will help you look for it.

Israel’s arrogance is only exceeded by their remakable capacity for deceit. While this is a part of their dark pathology, its infected us now too. Still stuck in the puckballs of denial? Just look around - you must be proud.

Report this

By Douglas Chalmers, October 29, 2007 at 6:52 am Link to this comment

#110223 by Leefeller on 10/29 at 6:07 am: “How does that compare to Plato’s Cave except maybe the audience did not have a choice…?”

In Indonesia, the “audience” has knowledge of truth and lies, even though it is a police state (once a military dictatorship) and an Islamic republic.

In the USA, a supposed democracy, the “audience” live in ignorance and fear. They are chained by their illusions - and delusions.

The solution - stop living metaphors and illusory allegories of Truth and Freedom and start living in the REAL WORLD!

This is not “dialectic reasoning” so much as open-minded diligence in accepting oneself (and the USA) as part of a greater whole and not the centre of the universe.

Report this

By OLIVE GROVE BOOKS, October 29, 2007 at 6:42 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Publisher’s Note:  Our author had it right back in 1987 but nobody would publish him until we did in 2004 1/2.
SAN FRANCISCO –  THE PALESTINE CONSPIRACY, a genre spy-thriller by Robert Spirko, is now in its second printing and was fourth on the best-seller list at Atlasbooks, Inc., a national book distributor.
 
Spirko, a financial and geo-political analyst who has given his advice to the National Security Council, turned his attention to the Middle East in 1987, after discovering several common elements related to the Middle East question.  He wrote down his analysis, and when he was finished, he not only had a solution to the quagmire, he had a story to tell.  THE PALESTINE CONSPIRACY foreshadowed the Persian Gulf War by three years, and the resultant Iraq War followed by the Sept. 11 attack.

Spirko states, “The chief threat in the region I see right now is the threat to Saudi Arabia by Iran and Al Qaeda.  If Al Qaeda were to overthrow the present royal family in Saudi Arabia, cutting off the oil supply to western nations including Japan and China, it would bring down entire world economies.  France and Germany would be begging us to go to war to retake those oil wells.  It would be World War III.”
“If such a scenario were to occur,” he reiterates, “France and the European economies would collapse in a matter of weeks.”

“Another looming concern is Iran which wants to develop nuclear weapons to couple with their Shahab 4, 5 & 6 missiles on the drawing boards which have a range to hit London, Israel, all of Europe, southern Russia and the United States.  Also, the Iranian government has said it initially had 300 centrifuges to enrich uranium to weapons grade material.  They have increased that to 3,000.  They will soon increase that again to 10,000 centrifuges,” Spirko says.  “They have the additional capacity to add another 20,000 centrifuges in mass production techniques that will enable them to produce at least seven nuclear bombs in about a year.  Where did they get these centrifuges?” Spirko answers that question by stating an Arab proverb, “The enemy of my enemy is my friend.”

“Simply put,” Spirko explains, “they probably got them from Saddam Hussein before the Iraq War started and were probably smuggled out of Iraq and into Iran just like he did his air force of 600 Soviet fighter planes.  In other words, he gave them to his former enemy rather than let them be destroyed on the ground.”

“Why would he have done any differently with the 30,000 centrifuges he supposedly had on a decentralized basis inside Iraq before the war?” Spirko asks.  “Isn’t it strange that Iran could come up with a nuclear weapons program in about six months to a year when it took the United States six years under the Manhattan Project with 5,000 of the world’s most brilliant scientists like Robert Oppenheimer, Niels Bohr, Seaborg, Einstein, Fermi, and others working on it?”

Another point Spirko makes on the Mideast is that, “It is time for the Israelis and Palestinians to return to the Camp David Peace Talks or some other place, resume where they left off and “freeze in place” the already-agreed-upon negotiating points,” Spirko says.

“And, it’s all related to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict which I said back in 1987 was the crux of my book.  It always has been, and always will be until it’s settled,” Spirko says.  “That linkage is exactly what Osama Bin Laden stated in a taped message aired the weekend before the election in November of 2004.  Whether you believe him or not is beside the point.  That’s what’s he told us, and we’d better take that into account.”

The novel is a mass market paperback produced by Olive Grove Publishers. THE PALESTINE CONSPIRACY can be ordered on the web at http://www.atlasbooks.com, or email orders from: .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address), or from Barnes & Nobles, Border’s, Dalton’s, efollett.com & Follett bookstores at colleges and universities, WaldenBooks, Amazon.com, Walmart.com, Target.com and bookstores.

Report this
Leefeller's avatar

By Leefeller, October 29, 2007 at 6:07 am Link to this comment

How does that compare to Plato’s Cave except maybe the audience did not have a choice?

Report this

By Conservative Yankee, October 29, 2007 at 5:54 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Funny how perspective differs. See, I feel The US colony has always been a “police state” Is it getting worse? more confining? sure, but it would have done that without GWB, Cheney and the other current goons.

Several years ago I met some East German youths who lived under the Rudi Mittig’s Stasi. In our press it appeared that this East German police force was the height of repressive totalitarianism BUT my young friends saw no difference between the way US police talked to people, and the way their native police talked to them.

You think the police State is a new development? talk to anyone who protested the 68 Democratic convention, was at Greensboro, or happened to be black, in the 60’s.

We are a police state, But have been at least through my life.  AND in reading about the Pinkertons, the Wells Fargo folks, Abe Lincoln’s treatment of “citizens”  and the way the railroads treated people who happened to be in their proposed right-of-ways, my guess is we always have been

Report this

By Douglas Chalmers, October 29, 2007 at 5:46 am Link to this comment

In Indonesia, this would all be described as a “Wayang” - a show of puppets moved behind a backlit silk screen or on a fake stage to tease and deceive and entertain the audience. http://www.indo.com/culture/wayang.html That is also they term to describe how politics is played to deceive…..

Report this
Leefeller's avatar

By Leefeller, October 29, 2007 at 5:45 am Link to this comment

The Rule of Law has become a rule of the common man.  This whole attack on the supporters of different middle eastern groups, reminds me of the Japanese internment camps.  Not a Moslem’s fan or of any religion, I still believe in the limp Constitution and the need to regain our liberties.  Watching our rights go down the drain with the support of Congress is sicking. 

History shows us that the same thing happened in Japan and Germany before world war II.  Tojo and Hitler eliminated freedoms and rights by using deception and lies, plus intimidation. 

Weather, religion is part of the problem not just Islam, simple attacks on one segment of the world smacks of ignorance.  Blame is easy, facts and truth are much harder to find, especially when you have a media and government working together in deception.

Report this

By Verne Arnold, October 29, 2007 at 5:31 am Link to this comment

Get the goddamned “Galoots” out of our government no matter who they are, before it’s too late…this is your last warning, y’all hear now?

Report this

By Howard, October 29, 2007 at 5:07 am Link to this comment

Attaboy,
  Blame Israel for anything or any movement or militancy in any religion or any gov’t or political party’s goals. Little Israel, not even the size of Rhode Island. Population the smallest in the Middle East.  Are they ganging up on their 20 neighbors again? Ah well, they’re still a good excuse.  Couldn’t be any other country. Gotta’ be them.
  What’s the diff if Israel has nothing to do with this article. Make sure to get to all the other articles on this site and blame Israel.
  You is battin’ a 100% with your fixation.  Don’t stop now.

Report this

By weather, October 29, 2007 at 4:53 am Link to this comment

Before Israel, Islam was of little concern to America.

Report this

By Tom Joad, October 29, 2007 at 4:40 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Just read on Saturday that Israel is also banning anasthetics to Palestine. That means hospitals have to cancel operations, etc.

Report this

By Bert, October 29, 2007 at 3:52 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

I don’t agree entirely, I think when you start
talking religious charity, doesn’t matter what
denomination or sect of what religion, what you’ve got is a cash vehicle, ostensibly upstanding and
proper and pious and whatnot, but more often than
once we’ve seen glaring examples of all kinds of
abuse, all in the name of some variant of God, of
course, but shady business and sanctified funny
money just the same. JUST yesterday there was a story
about some guy based in the phils but living and
preaching in the USA funneling money back to the
philippines from his religious activity. Don’t
assume that you’re not being ripped off just because
someone says they’re doing something for a charity
or a church or whatever. I care not, christian/muslim/jewish/_________name here, while
you’re busy on bended knee, keep an eye on the door
and a hand on your wallet, there…

Report this

Page 2 of 2 pages  <  1 2

Newsletter

Get Truthdig in your inbox


 
 
 
Join the Liberal Blog Advertising Network
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman.
Copyright © 2012 Truthdig, L.L.C. All rights reserved.