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10 September 2010
By Bill Quigley
Since September 11, 2001,
fear has been the main engine of change in the United
States. Who would have thought that across the US,
where people boast that it is the home of the free and
the land of the brave, people would gladly surrender
their freedom and liberty because they so fear
terrorism?
Who would have thought that
the US would allow, much less pay for, the
National Security Agency to intercept
and store 1.7 billion emails, phone calls and other
communications – every single day – and pay for 30,000
people to listen in on phone conversations in the name
of fighting the fear of terrorism?
Who would have thought that
people across
New York City,
where people are proud of their diversity, would fear
construction of a mosque and community center
downtown?
Who would have thought that
people across the US, where people argue that they
helped bring down the wall that separated
East and West Germany, would so fear
their neighbors to the South that they support
construction of a
wall of separation
with
Mexico?
Who would have thought that
some of the highest lawyers in the land would write
memos illegally authorizing the torture of people in
the name of making the US safe?
Who would have thought that
Democrats would compete with Republicans to try to
keep the globally shameful Guantanamo prison open so
that people inside the US would not have to fear
having living near prisons with alleged terrorists in
them?
Who would have thought that
people in New York City, a place where people admire
their own toughness, would fear having criminal trials
of alleged terrorists in their city?
Who would have thought that
in the US, where people take pride in the
constitutional independence of the judiciary, those
judges would turn down the case of
Maher
Arar, who was captured in the US and
flown out to a Syrian prison to be tortured, because
they fear that even looking at the case would
interfere with national security?
Who would have thought that
the people of the US would fear to have Uighurs,
members of persecuted ethnic minority who struggled
for their freedoms against
China,
allowed to live even temporarily in the US?
Who would have thought that
the people of the US would so fear the possibility of
the
Taliban ruling
Afghanistan
and the false possibility of
weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq, that we would send
our sons and daughters to die by the thousands in
Iraq
and Afghanistan?
Who would have thought that
there once was a US president who said “the only thing
we have to fear is fear itself – nameless,
unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed
efforts to convert retreat into advance…”?
You tell me what happened
to the land of the free and the home of the brave
since September 11, 2001. Bill
is Legal Director of the
Center
for Constitutional Rights and
law professor at
Loyola University New Orleans. He can
be reached at
quigley77@gmail.com |