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America's Gulag Practices and Far-Right Supreme Court Print
Thursday, 19 December 2013 15:24

Cole writes: "The militarization of American police and humiliating practices of routine strip and cavity searches are the real culprits in the current diplomatic dispute between the United States and India."

A detail of the West Facade of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington. (photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP)
A detail of the West Facade of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington. (photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP)


America's Gulag Practices and Far-Right Supreme Court

By Juan Cole, Informed Comment

19 December 13

 

he militarization of American police and humiliating practices of routine strip and cavity searches are the real culprits in the current diplomatic dispute between the United States and India. Police not only arrested the Indian deputy consul, Devyani Khobragade, who claims diplomatic immunity, on a minor visa and domestic labor charge, they put her in the general prison population and subjected her to a strip search.

Americans think of themselves as brave rugged individualists who enjoy the liberties of an Enlightenment constitution. In fact, they most often are timid and cowed in the face of the world's most powerful government, which increasingly acts like a medieval tyrant. Americans don't seem outraged that the government is spying on them. The government has put 6 million Americans either in prison or under correctional supervision, and has the highest per capita rate of incarceration in the world– more than Cuba, nearly twice that of Russia, and more than 4 times that of Communist China! Only 8 percent of inmates in Federal penitentiaries are there for violent crimes. In many states, former prisoners are stripped of the right to vote. These extreme penal practices of course primarily target minorities and function as a racial control mechanism. (Famously, penalties in the US for using cocaine powder, a favorite in the white suburbs, are much less than for crack cocaine, mostly used by poor minorities.)

Not only does the US have an enormous number of people in jail but they subject arrestees (people not convicted of a crime) to routine strip and cavity searches. Women are often forced to be naked in front of the other inmates and to spread their labia for a policewoman.

These practices have been challenged. The ninth district federal appeals court in California decades ago found LAPD routine body cavity searches unconstitutional. But last year, our Supreme Court– the same one that thinks corporations are people, that doesn't think big money campaign donors should have to identify themselves, and thinks it is all right for traditionally discriminatory states to pass voter suppression laws against minorities– weighed in. It found constitutional routine strip searches even in minor traffic violations cases. A guy got a ticket. He paid it off, but it mistakenly stayed on his record. He bought a new house and went out with family to celebrate. He got stopped by police, who ran his registration and found the ticket. They handcuffed him in front of his family and hauled him off to six days in jail during which he was subjected to cavity searches. John Roberts thinks the whole thing perfectly reasonable. (The individual in question is an African-American).

So the strip search to which the deputy Indian consul in New York was subjected was just business as usual in the United States. She is not accused of carrying a weapon or being violent, but rather of underpaying her hired help. That charge is not frivolous, but it wouldn't obviously call for a search in her internal organs.

While police in India sometimes mistreat prisoners, they are behaving illegally when they do so. To have the official policy be to humiliate people routinely is outrageous to people outside the United States, especially where it concerns a woman diplomat who functions as a symbol of the nation. Khobragade's father said, "It is not Devyani's insult, but of the nation as she is representing the country. Devyani has been made a target, a scapegoat…. It is the outcome of tussle going on between the Ministry of External Affairs and US State department for the last two years…"

The way our government treats Americans is no longer inspiring to other peoples but rather it appalls them.

The way our government treats Americans is no longer inspiring to other peoples but rather it appalls them. German Chancellor Angela Merkel accused Barack Obama of running a STASI domestic spying operation via the NSA. (The STASI were the feared East German domestic surveillance organization, which kept files on most citizens and encouraged their neighbors to inform on them). Indian crowds are protesting over having their diplomat strip-searched. The spectacle of the humiliation of once-free Americans by an increasingly tyrannical incipient police state is causing other democracies to cringe in disgust.

On the other hand, some measures taken by the Indian government in protest have been childish. It removed the barriers in front of the US embassy in New Delhi that prevent suicide car bombers from getting close to the building. It is one thing to tell people to drop dead, it is another to arrange for them to do so. India is a postcolonial rising global power, and the combination of growing pride and confidence and memory of being kept down for two centuries by supercilious Western white Christian colonialists can sometimes make it prickly. Most countries would just have expelled a US diplomat in retaliation, not put up a sign on the US embassy saying "al-Qaeda welcome here."

NDTV has a video report on Indian retaliation against US diplomats in India

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F-Y-RrYvTbU

 

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Edward Snowden Is a Patriot Print
Thursday, 19 December 2013 15:22

Romera writes: "He has single-handedly reignited a global debate about the extent and nature of government surveillance and our most fundamental rights as individuals."

NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden. (photo: unknown)
NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden. (photo: unknown)


Edward Snowden Is a Patriot

By Anthony D. Romera, ACLU

19 December 13

 

dward Snowden is a patriot.

As a whistleblower of illegal government activity that was sanctioned and kept secret by the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government for years, he undertook great personal risk for the public good. And he has single-handedly reignited a global debate about the extent and nature of government surveillance and our most fundamental rights as individuals.

Monday's court ruling declaring the NSA surveillance program unconstitutional highlights the irony of the government's prosecution of Snowden. For more than 12 years, the ACLU has raised concerns about the massive changes occurring in our democracy: the rubber stamping of expansive surveillance powers by the judiciary, the clandestine nature of programs that invade the rights and lives of millions of Americans with virtually no oversight, and the quiet acquiescence of a public that believed that individuals had nothing to fear if they had done nothing wrong.

That was true until Snowden awakened the American people – and others across the globe – from complacent lethargy. For his actions, Snowden should be applauded, not vilified. He should be granted full immunity from prosecution. And he should be allowed to resume his life in the United States as a proud American citizen.

Let's unpack the arguments that are surely rifling through many Americans' minds as to why Edward Snowden should not be granted immunity and allowed to return home.

First, many thoughtful observers note that Snowden has revealed important facts about an otherwise clandestine program, but wonder why he took it upon himself to bring his evidence to journalists rather than to Congress or the executive branch. The simple answer is that Snowden was too smart to expect real results from the "official" channels. Since September 11, 2001, Congress and the courts have failed miserably at providing constitutional oversight. When the New York Times finally found the courage to expose the earlier NSA spying program in 2005, Congress responded by legitimizing and extending this illegal program through the FISA Amendments Act of 2008. The courts proved little more vigorous in their willingness to serve as a meaningful check on such surveillance programs. Two different lawsuits brought by the ACLU – one in Detroit and one in New York that went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court – were dismissed because it was impossible to prove that our clients were in fact targeted by these secret government surveillance programs. Absent such proof, which the government was never going to provide, no American would be in a position to challenge the government surveillance programs. As Justice Sonia Sotomayor asked Solicitor General Don Verilli in our Clapper litigation: "General, is there anybody who has standing?" In disclosing these documents Snowden took the patriotic route, knowing that nothing short of public release would get the attention of the American people, our government and our allies. He didn't turn to the normal, government channels to raise his concerns of illegal government activity because he knew that others had used those channels and failed. Fortunately, both the courts and Congress seem to have renewed vigor in looking into the constitutionality of NSA surveillance – but such vigor is a direct result of Snowden's revelations.

The second argument against immunity goes something like this: "He was employed by the government. He knew he was breaking the law. He should have stayed home and faced the music if he was truly well-intentioned." If Snowden had stayed in Hawaii after his first revelations became public, the government would have arrested him that very day. The laws that are being used against Snowden do not distinguish between patriotic whistleblowers and foreign agents. It would be a true miscarriage of justice if the government succeeded in imprisoning for life a person who revealed unconstitutional government conduct. Snowden would surely have been subjected to "special administrative measures" and would have been prevented from working with the journalists or engaging the broader public debate. Snowden knew that he couldn't stay in the U.S. and ignite the public debate that he felt was missing – so he forsook his homeland to further American democracy.

A third argument – often read in The Wall Street Journal editorial pages – questions the authenticity of his motivations by the countries in which he received refuge. If Snowden were such a true believer in democracy, he would never have traveled to China or Russia. That argument fails to recognize the massive power of the American government to lean on other governments to repossess one of its most wanted. Recall the full court press that the American government made through the efforts of President Obama and Secretary Kerry to ensure that Snowden had no other door except one to an American federal prison. Even those countries that have voiced outrage at the NSA surveillance of their leaders and citizens – Germany, Brazil, Mexico – have failed to offer political asylum to the man who uncovered it. Their hypocrisy and capitulation to American diplomatic strong-arming left Snowden with little recourse but to receive help from governments that may have their own agendas in housing someone wanted by the United States.

Edward Snowden is a great American and a true patriot. My colleagues and I at the ACLU are proud to be his legal advisors. We are committed to assisting him on legal issues he may confront.

Thank goodness for patriots like him, who are willing to endure personal sacrifice to defend truths that we hold self-evident, but which too many Americans take for granted.

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Wall Street Warns Democrats: Avoid Populism! Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=28248"><span class="small">Jim Hightower, JimHightower.com</span></a>   
Thursday, 19 December 2013 15:17

Hightower writes: "Third Way is just the same old Wall Street way. While it wears a Democratic mask, it pushes for policies that are Wall Street wet dreams, including gutting and privatizing Social Security."

Texas' progressive political curmudgeon, Jim Hightower. (photo: JimHightower.com)
Texas' progressive political curmudgeon, Jim Hightower. (photo: JimHightower.com)


Wall Street Warns Democrats: Avoid Populism!

By Jim Hightower, JimHightower.com

19 December 13

 

ere's a jarring headline: "Economic Populism Is a Dead End for Democrats."

That's the title on a recent op-ed piece written by a couple of longtime political flacks for Wall Street and published, naturally, in the Wall Street Journal. When the Barons of Big Money start rolling out such scolding screeds, it's not because they really think Populism is a loser, but because they're terrified by the fact that it has already gained mass appeal and is on the move all across grassroots America. Indeed, to put a thin veneer of legitimacy on this op-ed, they had to resort to the fiction that it is a political warning written to Democrats by Democrats – specifically by an inside-the-Beltway outfit calling itself Third Way.

But this group is to authentic Democratic Party principles what near beer is to stout – only, not as close. Third Way is just the same old Wall Street way. While it wears a Democratic mask, it pushes for policies that are Wall Street wet dreams, including gutting and privatizing Social Security.

Why would a group wanting you to believe that it has genuine Democratic genes be an advocate for further enriching Wall Street's Republican elite at the expense of America's middle class and the poor? To find out, just peek behind Third Way's organizational curtain. You'll see that its funders and governing board include no one from labor, senior citizens, consumers, environmentalists, small farmers, students, African-Americans, Latinos, and other core Democratic constituencies. Instead, of its 29 board members, 20 are Wall Street bankers, hedge fund hucksters, or venture capital vultures.

Third Way dead ends at Wall Street. So, fronting for the selfish interests of its backers, it doesn't want any party championing economic Populism. But the people do, and that's who Democrats should heed.

See Also: AFL-CIO's Richard Trumka: "Populism Works"

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FOCUS | Mass Civil Disobedience Ain't Masturbation! Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=5494"><span class="small">Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Thursday, 19 December 2013 12:56

Weissman writes: "The argument will fade away if enough of us learn how to use mass civil disobedience to change the system - and the political culture - as we go along."

Photo of December 4, 1967 draft protest, San Francisco. (photo: AP)
Photo of December 4, 1967 draft protest, San Francisco. (photo: AP)


Mass Civil Disobedience Ain't Masturbation!

By Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News

19 December 13

 

n response to my last column on the call to direct action by Daniel Ellsberg and others, one commentator - # Shorey13 - suggested that without changing the system, "our protests are just a form of political masturbation." It's an old canard and could easily be taken as an excuse to stand on the sidelines, though I do not think Shorey intended that. In practice, the argument will fade away if enough of us learn how to use mass civil disobedience to change the system - and the political culture - as we go along.

This was the pragmatic, non-ideological, post-Gandhian approach many of us took against segregation, the suppression of free speech, and the American war in Vietnam in the 1960s. We called it tactical non-violence - I even taught it in a free university course at Stanford - and it worked to bring political change in the real world.

Though we did not know it at the time, the underlying idea goes back to an aristocratic 16th century French judge, philosopher, poet, and humanist named Étienne de La Boétie. He was, as it happens, born in the medieval village of Sarlat, not far from where my wife Anna and I are now growing old in the Dordogne. Local linguistic purists pronounce his name as he probably did, [bwa'ti], while a plaque on his higgledy piggledy old house commemorates his life. But few here or anywhere else know of the political time bomb he left behind with his short, brilliantly reasoned "Discourse on Voluntary Servitude."

Writing his tract while still a law student, La Boétie raised questions that almost no one had ever bothered to think about. Why, he asked, do ordinary people obey their rulers? Why does the vast majority consent to their enslavement by a small minority? And to borrow an exquisite phrase from the right-wing American anarchist Murray Rothbard, why does the majority give the tyrant its civil obedience?

Drawing on his extensive knowledge of ancient Greece and Rome, the young Frenchman began with an insight that remains wonderfully subversive. Even absolute tyrants rely on the tacit acquiescence of their subjects. "It is the people who enslave themselves, who cut their own throats, who, when they have the choice of being either free men or slaves, give up their freedom and take up the yoke if they accept their ill, or rather pursue it," he wrote. The choice is not the tyrant's, but their own.

"Resolve no longer to be slaves and you are free. I do not want you to push him or overthrow him, but merely no longer to sustain him and, like a great colossus whose base has been pulled away, you will see him collapse of his own weight and break up."

Why the "stubborn willingness" to remain subservient? Does it come from fear, cowardice, or constraint? La Boétie thought not. Subservience prevails primarily because the mass of people grow accustomed to their lot. "It is unbelievable how people, once they are subjected, fall so quickly into such a deep forgetfulness of freedom that it is impossible for them to reawaken and regain it," he wrote.

"They serve so freely and so willingly that you would say to see them that they had not lost their liberty but won their servitude." The tyrant encourages the consent with bread and circuses, mystery and magic, religion and ideology. He presents himself as defender of the public good and surrounds himself with a hierarchy of supportive subordinates who share in the plunder and rush to defend his tyranny. But most people go along because they no longer know how to do anything different.

La Boétie never published his youthful discourse and few knew of it until the Protestant Huguenots used it to defend their rebellion against France's Catholic king in the religious wars that swept much of Europe. Anarchists of both right and left subsequently found inspiration in La Boétie's ideas, as did the historic sages of nonviolent passive resistance - Henry David Thoreau, Leo Tolstoy, and Mahatma Gandhi. What a perplexing legacy! From religious blood-letting and anarchist bomb-throwing to the liberation movements against colonial rule in India, racial segregation in the American South, and American intervention in Vietnam, the little known La Boétie has left a profound mark on a wide and contradictory range of human struggles.

Sadly, as I wrote in "How Washington Learned to Love Nonviolence," La Boétie's latest enthusiasts have now extended his influence to imperial power plays to topple Hugo Chavez in Venezuela and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Iran, tame the Arab awakening, and install pro-NATO regimes along the borders of the former Soviet Union. But we can learn from their strategies and tactics even as we oppose their Washington-backed meddling.

La Boétie framed the problem, and whistleblowers like Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden, and Daniel Ellsberg have heroically offered the beginnings of a solution. But what about the rest of us? Do we stand on the sidelines and play with ourselves? Do we stick a toe in the pond by signing petitions, sending checks, and periodically casting too often worthless votes? Or do we fully withdraw our consent and add needed muscle with massive nonviolent actions against the invasive and imperial National Security State and the Big Money groups who destroy our planet and impoverish the vast majority of us?

I would love to know where you stand.

One final note. Yes, please blow whistles at demonstrations and check out Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility at www.peer.org, all with a tip of the hat to # peterkofod in Denmark, # grandma lynn in New Hampshire, # seeuingoa, and # Secular Humanist, wherever he or she may be.



A veteran of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and the New Left monthly Ramparts, Steve Weissman lived for many years in London, working as a magazine writer and television producer. He now lives and works in France, where he is researching a new book, "Big Money: How Global Banks, Corporations, and Speculators Rule and How To Break Their Hold."

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Progressives On the Take Print
Wednesday, 18 December 2013 14:20

Scheer writes: "It is not surprising then that in [Obama's] major speech on income inequality, there was no mention of the role of the big banks in fostering this inequality."

President Obama. (photo: file)
President Obama. (photo: file)


Progressives On the Take

By Robert Scheer, TruthDig

18 December 13

 

ow can President Obama be so right and so wrong in the same moment? On the one hand, he warns us that sharply rising income inequality "is the defining challenge of our time" and pledges to reverse "a dangerous and growing inequality and lack of upward mobility. ..." But then he once again turns to the same hacks in the Democratic Party who helped create this problem to fix it.

His tough speech on income inequality earlier this month was delivered at the Center for American Progress, founded by John Podesta. As chief of staff to Bill Clinton, Podesta helped lead the charge to deregulate Wall Street, which resulted in the banking bubble that wiped out the savings of tens of millions of Americans.

But instead of chastising Podesta for the errors of his ways, Obama in 2008 appointed him to oversee his presidential transition team. That led to the appointment of Lawrence Summers and Timothy Geithner, two former Clinton officials responsible for the banking meltdown, to repair it. Just this past week, it was announced that John Podesta would be reappointed as a senior adviser to the Obama White House.

Continue Reading Progressives On the Take

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