emocratic presidential candidate
Senator Barack Obama says that he
will support the Violent
Radicalization and Homegrown
Terrorism Prevention Act (S. 1959).
According to the automatic email
responses constituents are receiving
from his office, Obama appears to be
straddling the fence between
preserving civil liberties and being
tough on terrorism.
“The American people understand that
new threats require flexible
responses to keep them safe. They
also insist that our responses to
threats respect the constitution and
do not violate the basic tenets of
our democracy,” Obama’s email said.
Several people who have written to
Obama have posted his response on
various blogs, including “Justin”
who’s
personal blog was picked up on
diggs.com.
“I wrote Senator Obama (my senator
from Illinois) about this act, which
is now in a committee of his (the
Senate Committee on Homeland
Security and Governmental Affairs).
I asked that he read the bill (not
to insult his intelligence, but
after the Patriot Act it appears
this is a necessary request for most
senators), and that he recognize the
dire consequences that could result
from its vague language,” Justin
wrote Dec. 6 below the post of
Obama’s email. “He’s quite eloquent,
you’ve got to give him that. This
act ‘includes provisions prohibiting
the Department of Homeland
Security’s efforts from violating
civil rights and civil liberties of
U.S. citizens.’ Didn’t we used to
have something like that? What was
it called? Oh right… The
Constitution.”
The House version of the bill, H.R.
1955, passed Oct. 23 by a vote of
404-6 under the “suspension of the
rules,” a provision that is
available to quickly pass bills
considered “non-controversial.”
Obama is on the 17-member Senate
Committee for Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs, where S. 1959
was introduced by Senator Susan
Collins (R-Maine) Aug. 2. “I will
keep your important comments in mind
as I work with my colleagues on the
Senate Committee on Homeland
Security and Government Affairs. I
will work to ensure that this
legislation helps to achieve our
domestic security objectives while
protecting civil liberties and
constitutional rights,” Obama stated
in his email to Justin.
Many scholars, historians and civil
liberties experts say they fear that
the proposed bill will set the stage
for future criminal legislation that
be used against U.S.-based groups
engaged in legal but unpopular
political activism, ranging from
political Islamists to animal-rights
and environmental campaigners to
radical right-wing organizations.
“This bill fits the pattern we are
seeing coming out of Congress – both
Republican and Democratic – of a
continued campaign of fear, which
gets into heads of Americans that we
now need to start criminalizing
ideology,” said Alejandro Queral,
executive director of the Northwest
Constitutional Rights Center. He
said he is very concerned about the
bill’s vague definitions of “violent
radicalization,” “homegrown
terrorism,” and the terms within the
definitions including “extremist
belief system,” “violence” and
“force.”
“What is an extremist belief system?
Who defines this?” Queral
questioned. “Planes flying into the
World Trade Center is an extremist
belief, but are anti-abortion
activists extremists? Are
individuals who liberate mink
extremists? These are broad
definitions that encompass so much,
which need to rather be very
narrowly tailored. It is
criminalizing thought and ideology,
rather than criminal activity.”
Jules Boykoff, an assistant
professor of politics and government
at Pacific University and author of
Beyond Bullets: The Suppression
of Dissent in the United States,
told The Indypendent said
he is concerned about how the
government is broadening the
definition of terrorism.
“Section 802 of the USA PATRIOT Act
is a law that created a new brand of
terrorists, the ‘domestic
terrorist.’ Under this definition,
the civil rights work Martin Luther
King, Jr. did could have been
construed as an act of ‘domestic
terrorism,” Boykoff said.
In a Nov. 30 Common Dreams article,
‘Homegrown’ Suppression of Dissent,’
Boykoff provided a historical-based
critique of who could be included
under the umbrella definition of
terrorism. “Even a cursory look
backward through U.S. history
reveals heroic figures who could be
dubbed ‘violent radicals’ or
‘homegrown terrorists’ under the
proposed bill, from U.S.
revolutionaries like Sam Adams to
gun-toting slavery abolitionists
like John Brown to militant
civil-rights organizers like Malcolm
X and Martin Luther King, Jr.”
Kamau Franklin, an attorney with the
Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR),
also expressed concern that H.R.
1955/S. 1959 will foster a
legislative momentum on
criminalizing a broad range of
dissident voices. “The Commission’s
broad mandate can lead to the
ability to turn civil disobedience,
a form of protest that is centuries
old, into a terrorist act,” he said.
“My biggest fear is that they [the
commission] will call for some new
criminal penalties and federal
crimes,” says Franklin. “Activists
are nervous about how the broad
definitions could be used for
criminalizing civil disobedience and
squashing the momentum of the left.”
“It’s possible that someone who
would have been charged with
disorderly conduct or obstruction of
governmental administration may soon
be charged with a federal terrorist
statute,” Franklin said.
Many activists and civil liberties
advocates have expressed concern
across the nation on blogs and radio
shows about how the bill’s use of
vaguely defined terms can be seen
within a historical pattern of
sweeping government repression of
dissenting voices throughout the
history of the United States where
citizens have been targeted for
their political beliefs. Two
generations of Americans experienced
first hand the two “Red Scares”
(1917-1920 and 1940-50s) and the
FBI’s secret Counter Intelligence
Program, nicknamed COINTELPRO, which
enabled the FBI to “expose, disrupt,
misdirect, discredit, or otherwise
neutralize” domestic protest groups
for “subversive activities” and
“potential crimes.”
To many, the similarities between
COINTELPRO and the bill are
unsettling. The proposed legislation
calls for the National Commission to
“examine and report upon the facts
and causes of violent
radicalization, homegrown terrorism
and ideologically based violence in
the United States” in order to
develop policy for “prevention,
disruption and mitigation.” This
investigation is needed, according
to stated Congressional findings,
due to possible threats to national
security.
The secret program continued until
it was discovered COINTELPRO was
investigated by a U.S. Senate select
committee on intelligence activities
(commonly known as the Church
Committee) which convened in 1975.
The Church Committee found that from
1956 to 1971, “the Bureau conducted
a sophisticated vigilante operation
aimed squarely at preventing the
exercise of First Amendment rights
of speech and association, on the
theory that preventing the growth of
dangerous groups and the propagation
of dangerous ideas would protect the
national security and deter
violence.”
In the last 30 years, significant
evidence has surfaced about how the
FBI and local law enforcement
disrupted non-violent social and
political movements, even
“neutralizing” individuals through
target assassinations. The secret
program was vast, with agents
monitoring and agitating people
involved in the “New Left,”
including anti-Vietnam War efforts,
the civil rights movement, the Black
Panthers, Students for a Democratic
Society (SDS), the American Indian
Movement, Puerto Rican independence
groups, popular musicians and
counter-cultural and revolutionary
independent newspapers.
OTHER PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE VIEWS
ON THE BILL
Democratic presidential hopeful Rep.
Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) said that he
believes the proposed bill is
unconstitutional.
Speaking to a crowd of supporters in
New York City Nov. 29, Kucinich took
several questions from the audience,
including my question asking why he
voted against the bill. Kucinich was
one of only six representatives to
oppose the bill on Oct. 23.
“If you understand what his bill
does, it really sets the stage for
further criminalization of protest,”
Kucinich said. “This is the way our
democracy little, by little, by
little, is being stripped away from
us. This bill, I believe, is a clear
violation of the first amendment.”
Republican presidential candidate
Ron Paul was one of the 22 House
members not present for the vote.
A small demonstration against S.
1959 took place outside Senator
Hillary Clinton’s office in New York
City Dec. 10. Her office did not
return an Indypendent’s
call for comment.
Read Jessica Lee’s Nov. 16 article
on HR 1955:
“Bringing the War on Terrorism Home:
Congress Considers How to ‘Disrupt’
Radical Movements in the United
States.”
Blog Update Dec. 2 —
Kucinich Opposes H.R. 1955
Blog Update Nov. 27 —
Opposition to the Bill and how the
Legislation would Target the
Internet