"Security versus Freedom"
Sydney M. Williams
Thought of the Day
“Security versus
Freedom”
September 15, 2014
A challenge
facing America
is deciding the right balance between safety from those who would harm us and
security provided by government agencies like the NSA, which under the Patriot
Act have the right to scrutinize personal e-mails and phone messages. Everyone
wants to be safe from another 9/11, yet no one wants some government bureaucrat
reading his or her personal e-mails or listening in on calls. The freedoms we
cherish will be lost if it means always living under the omnipresent eye of
“big brother.” But if one is killed in a terrorist attack because of an absence
of vigilance, then all that freedom would have come to naught. A life lived
freely but subject to an attack, may be good for the mind, but not the body;
while a fully secured life may save the body, but entrap the mind.
The
debate is as old as democracy, but remains crucial. Cicero wrote, “In time of war, the laws are
silent.” Benjamin Franklin admonished: “If we give up freedom to gain security,
we lose both.” While there is Cicero ’s statement,
Franklin ’s is
too absolute. It ignores the likelihood that such laws do, at times, catch
enemies before inflicting damage. Additionally, his statement overlooks the
fact that in the past when rights have been suspended during time of war, they
have been reinstated upon the arrival of peace. In a democracy, life is lived along
a spectrum between anarchy and totalitarianism. That exact spot changes,
depending on circumstances. While I would prefer erring on the side of freedom,
I don’t want to live foolishly.
However,
before attempting to determine the proper balance, the first questions that
must be answered are: Are we at war? Is our homeland threatened? If the answers
are ‘no’ then acts such as the Patriot Act have no place. According to David
Stockman, writing on his blog on Friday, individuals from the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) testified on Capitol Hill just hours before the President spoke
on Wednesday evening. They stated that the closest they could come to a
credible threat of ISIS planning an attack on the U.S. was chatter on Twitter. If
that is true, the Patriot Act should be repealed.
But
the DHS’s response begs a larger question: Is Islamic fundamentalism at war
with the West, and particularly with the United States ? Keep in mind, as a
free people we culturally and morally represent everything Islamists hate –
from our legal system, to or politics of inclusion, to our support for women’s
and minority rights.
From
the attack on 9/11, to the shooting at Fort
Hood , to the attack on our consulate
in Benghazi to the Boston marathon bombing, to the recent
beheadings of two American journalists it is hard to believe we are not at war.
However, last week Secretary of State John Kerry denied we were, instead describing
the air attacks in Iraq
as a “major counterterrorism operation.” Words matter. No matter how one felt
about his policies, President Bush was always clear as to the enemy, the fight
in which we had to engage and how long the war would take. Mr. Obama is
reluctant to acknowledge his error in underestimating the enemy and in his
refusal to admit that the acts of terror to which we have been witness are Islamic
in origin. ISIS may not be a current threat to
our homeland, but that does not mean that an attack is not part of their longer
term plans. And the enemy is more than ISIS [1].
It is all Islamists who choose to impose Sharia law and who use terrorism as
their means.
As
a Senator and candidate, Mr. Obama had warned about abuses of the Patriot Act,
yet as President, while denying we were at war, in February 2011 he signed a
bill extending its expiring provisions for another four years. Later that year,
he used the Act to justify the Drone-killing of Anwar al-Awlaki, an American
terrorist and member of al Qaeda in Yemen . Since the White House has
belatedly indicated they are comfortable with the word “war,” as least as it
applies to Islamic State, presumably they are okay the privacy restrictions
imposed by the Patriot Act.
Over
the decades, civil rights have been abrogated by Presidents in times of war. In
general, people have understood the need to do so and have accepted the
consequences. In the early months of the Civil War, after the firing on Fort Sumter
in April 1861 and before Congress reconvened in July, newly inaugurated
President Lincoln declared martial law. He called forth the militia to suppress
and disperse anti-government demonstrators; he increased the size of the Army
and Navy; he instituted a blockade and suspended the writ of habeas corpus. He
did all this on his own, without Congressional approval. He did this, as he
later explained, not to fight a civil war, but to suppress rebellion. While
there were those who argued that Lincoln had become a tyrant – and, in truth,
no President has done so much to remove the rights of citizens’ – Mr. Lincoln
is today considered to be at the apex of our pantheon of Presidents, testament
to the righteousness of his decisions – as undemocratic as they were at the
time.
Woodrow
Wilson once wrote: “The history of liberty is a history of resistance. The
history of liberty is a history of the limitations of government power, not the
increase of it.” Yet, as President, in 1917, Mr. Wilson implicitly allowed
government to search the U.S.
mail, looking for any material urging treason or forcible resistance to any
law. In 1919 after the war, his Attorney General, Mitchell Palmer had agents
seize 249 resident aliens and shipped them to the Soviet
Union and certain death. Idealism is never a bed-partner of power.
“If
the fires of freedom and civil liberties burn low in other lands, they must
burn brighter in our own,” said Franklin Roosevelt in 1938. Four years later, in
early 1942, Mr. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, which allowed the
government to ship 110,000 persons of Japanese ancestry to ten internment camps
in seven states. Two-thirds of those incarcerated were American citizens who
had been forced to sell their homes and businesses at rock-bottom prices.
The
deprivation of certain civil liberties, during time of war, has a history in
the United States .
Some of it has been justifiable, some of it not. A remarkable characteristic of
our nation is how temporary anti-privacy laws have been. They have been
instituted during time of war, and then usually lifted when war was over.
Excluding the current war on terror, the three Presidents who did the most to
curtail civil liberties are today generally ranked among America ’s top
ten, with Lincoln and FDR usually in the top five. Does that suggest they were
right to do so? Or does it say something to the effect that we, the people,
don’t care?
The
internet and social media are both a blessing and a curse in this regard. On the one hand, it has become simpler for
people to reach out, connect and to express opinions. On the other hand, it is
easier for government to read, listen in on and watch everything we write, say
and do. The standard argument goes: what you do with your cell phone or I do
with mine, or even what Anthony Weiner does with his, is not the business of
government (though some might disagree about Weiner, as his salary was paid
from the public purse), but what Lois Lerner does with hers when she is at work
at the IRS is the business of the people. I agree.
Some
people take comfort in the knowledge that, as big as government is, it is not
so large that it can listen in on every call or read every e-mail. We
understand that algorithms have been devised that allow computers to search out
certain words and phrases. Most of us are comfortable knowing that such methods
can help nab Islamic terrorists, but what makes us uncomfortable is when
similar calculations are used to ferret out special interest groups by the IRS,
or the Justice Department.
Knowing
what is the right balance between freedom and security is difficult in this
morass that represents our technologically proficient present, because we know
there are people intent on killing us and destroying our culture. While I do
believe our government should do what it can to seek out and destroy the bad
guys, I also feel it imperative that any such Act that allows such activity should
have yearly sunset provisions, meaning that they must be annually reauthorized
by Congress. It is a question – who will watch the watchers?
[1] It
is curious that Mr. Obama insists on using the acronym ISIL, rather than ISIS . The difference is that the last ‘S’ in ISIS refers
to Syria , while the ‘L’ in
ISIL refers to the Levant . While it is
generally assumed that Mr. Obama does not use ISIS because of the reference to Syria , The Levant refers to a much larger area,
including Syria , which
stretches from southern Turkey
to Egypt , along the
Mediterranean and bordered on the east by parts of western Iraq . Besides Syria , the Levant includes Jordan , Lebanon ,
Palestine and Israel .
Labels: TOTD
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