Making Citizens the Enemy
Are Americans threatened more by terrorism or
by the war on terror? Democrats feel imperiled by the war on
terror. Who can forget the expressions on the faces of the New
York Democratic twosome, Hillary Clinton and Charles Schumer,
captured on national television, when the two realized that 9-11
had changed the political environment, thus allowing President
Bush to slip off the leash of a closely contested election.
Democrats were characterizing Bush as an illegitimate president
chosen over the popular vote by a Republican Supreme Court. The
national media, Democratic to the core, had already begun the
process of Bush's destruction, but 9-11 made it impossible for
Democrats to continue their assault on President Bush. Democrats
and their media allies are so frustrated that their attack on
President Bush was foiled by 9-11 that they are now alleging that
Bush knew about the event in advance and permitted it to happen
as a way to save his presidency. Power-mad Democrats aside, there
are legitimate reasons why the rest of us are imperiled by the
war on terror. The certain effect of panic, fear and war is to
erode constitutional protections and civil liberties. This is
especially the case when the enemy consists of terrorists in our
midst who are believed to have access to weapons of mass
destruction. Unable to differentiate terrorists from
non-terrorists, laws are enacted that treat loyal citizens as the
enemy. An article in a recent issue of the New England Journal of
Medicine (Vol. 346, No. 17) shows this to be the case with the
Centers for Disease Control's "State Emergency Health Powers
Act." The provisions in this act come from the assumption
that neither physicians nor citizens would cooperate with public
health officials in the event of a bioterrorism attack.
Consequently, the act grants wide police powers that permit
public health officers to override civil liberties. The act would
frustrate public health measures by undermining the public's
confidence in health officers. The sweeping police powers suggest
that public officials would be unable to provide valid and
persuasive reasons for their emergency actions and would need to
rely on coercion. By conveying broad immunity to public
officials, the act gives them arbitrary power, thus undermining
accountability and public trust. The article concludes that an
act that makes citizens the enemy cannot achieve its purpose.
Making citizens the enemy is precisely the approach taken by
airport and airline security. The security system is based on the
assumption that everyone who flies - including pilots and flight
attendants, U.S. representatives, senators, Secret Service
officers, presidential appointees, federal judges, young mothers
with children, elderly people who require assistance to board and
Marine generals awarded the Medal of Honor - is a potential
Muslim terrorist who might seize control of the airliner in order
to crash it into the White House or other target. How many
frequent flyers have ever seen a Muslim or person from the Middle
East selected for a security search? Airport "security"
is widely regarded as nothing but an opportunity for immigrant
minorities to hassle native-born citizens. None of the rules make
any sense. If an airline passenger rises from his seat within 30
minutes of arriving or departing Reagan National in D.C., the
airliner is immediately diverted to another airport. No terrorist
would be deterred by such a rule, but innocent passengers can be
needlessly inconvenienced by a forgetful elderly person in need
of a toilet or blanket from the overhead bin. Pilots, many of
whom are former military officers competent to handle complex
multimillion-dollar weapons systems, can't be trusted with a
pistol in the cockpit. But semi-trained National Guard privates
are posted in airports with automatic weapons. Heaven forbid if
pilots are armed. They might prevent a hijacking and save the
U.S. Air Force from having to shoot down a commercial airliner.
Seasoned travelers have concluded that the real purpose of U.S.
airport "security" is to establish a precedent for
unreasonable and warrantless searches. By making citizens the
enemy, the suspension of civil liberties that is imposed on air
travelers can be extended to pedestrians, motorists, and people
in their homes and hotel rooms. Terrorists can endanger some of
us, but the war on terror endangers us all. How much more can the
Constitution be diminished before it is completely replaced by
arbitrary government power?
Dr. Roberts' latest book, "The Tyranny of Good
Intentions," has published by Prima Publishers.
Copyright 2002 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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