September 4, 2013
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"America no longer has a functioning democracy. This
invasion of privacy has been excessive, so bringing it to public notice
has probably been beneficial —President Jimmy Carter
Millions
of Americans will face a basic question in the coming decade: how much
loyalty do we owe a U.S. Executive Branch which extracts huge sums from
us to spy upon and lie to us, on the false grounds that doing so is
protecting us? Or do we owe our moral allegiance to the ideal of
democracy, which requires us to fight the Executive which is its enemy?
Senate Intelligence Committee member Ron Wyden recently issued an urgent
call to
"rein in this omnipresent, ever-expanding surveillance state", warning
that "if we don't do it now our generation's going to regret it
forever". Wyden and his colleague Mark Udall - who have revealed that
even as Senators they have been consistently
denied information, lied to, treated like children unable even to
take notes, and are even now muzzled from
revealing far
more massive Executive subversions of democracy than is known - have
become the canaries in the coalmine. They warn us that though still
largely odorless, colorless and invisible to most of us, poisonous
Executive power is slowly destroying what remains of a "functioning
democracy" in this country.
The meaning of an ex-U.S. President’s
astonishing statement is clear. For the Executive’s threat is not only
to "privacy" or "civil liberties" but the very structure of democracy
itself. As Wyden and Udall have demonstrated, the Executive Branch has
unilaterally seized power since 9/11, behind a curtain of secrecy, in a
way that has destroyed our constitutional system of legislative and
judicial "checks and balances" on its power.
This threat has been
ignored by many because it so counters our childhood beliefs that our
government fights for democracy against foreign enemies. But the
evidence clearly indicates that it is the U.S. Executive Branch, not
foreigners, which is today U.S. democracy’s main enemy. And it also
clear that saving our liberties will require a new pro-democracy mass
movement as unprecedented as the Executive's post-9/11 power grab.
It is our own Executive Branch, after all, not a foreign enemy which has unilaterally and
illegally stored our phone calls and emails without even informing us let alone obtaining the constitutionally-required
"consent of the governed" to do so; constantly broken the law by violating the Patriot Act, as its Republican author has
attested, and lying to the
Legislative and
Judicial branches;
illegally accessed our private data on tens of thousands of known occasions while falsely claiming they have not - with even these abuses only
"the tip of the iceberg"; attacked freedom of the press by spying on organizations like the
Associated Press,
intimidating journalists, and trying to
jail them if they do not reveal their sources; seized emails from
private companies and threatened to
jail their CEOs if they revealed it; pushed through a law giving them the right to
assassinate or jail any of us for life without a trial or other opportunity to prove our innocence; classified
trillions of pages annually,
less than 5% of which are of any conceivable use to a foreign enemy, so as to hide evidence of their massive waste, fraud, abuse and crimes;
prosecuted unprecedented numbers of whistleblowers who reveal their secret crimes and abuses;
lied continuously to the American people whenever their mistakes and crimes have been revealed; required millions of their own employees
to inform on each other, and even threatened to fire them for simply declining to spy on their colleagues; funded
SWAT teams already abusing their power, and provided
paramilitary training and equipment to police forces around the country; begun
using drones domestically; anddemanded that the Judiciary make
decisions based only on Executive assertions, as it withhold any evidence for them on the grounds of "national security."
As
millions of us come to realize the truth of Wyden’s warning over the
next decade, we will be forced to ask the most basic of questions: is
this the America we grew up believing in, or want to live in now? And,
if not, are we willing to fight for democracy before, as Wyden warns, it
is too late? It may sound over-dramatic to the comfortable, complacent,
or fearful, but he is correct. Our generation must respond to his call
to arms for democracy or it will disappear.
This nation has of course faced threats to democracy in the past, in the last century from the
Palmer raids and jailing of
Eugene V. Debs for speaking out against World War One,
McCarthyism,
FBI criminality in the 1960s and beyond, the CIA abuses catalogued by
Senator Frank Church in the mid-1970s, and
Iran-Contra in the 1980s. And, as President
Eisenhowerwarned us, the "military-industrial" complex has been slowly choking off democracy since the end of World War II.
But
the Executive's current assault on democracy is unprecedented. As a
result of previous unimaginable technologies of surveillance and
control, and the fear generated by the attacks on 9/11, the U.S.
Executive has constructed on American soil a massive apparatus of
surveillance and potential population control never before seen in our
history.
This apparatus includes the mammoth
Department of Homeland Security and intelligence-gathering and police entities located in 17,000 buildings (1) around the nation; giant
data storage and
collection centers driven by ever more powerful and intrusive software
storing all Americans' phone and Internet data; 72 police/military
intelligence
"fusion centers", which have already
begun to
target domestic dissidents; and increasingly
paramilitary-oriented police-departments,
often with secret police units. While most of this apparatus is
presently directed at potential threats from abroad, it is
already devoting an unprecedented amount of time and money surveilling
Americans at home. And it can be increasingly turned against the
American people, media, Congress and the Judiciary in the likely event
of increasing social disruption, and/or new domestic 9/11s, in the
coming decade.
And this visible threat to democracy is only part
of the problem, as the Executive Branch behaves more like an Occupying
Power ruling from above than a democratic institution controlled from
below. In the past, it waged its wars abroad and an American middle
class still prospered at home. But today its priorities are also
accelerating America's economic and social decline, as its wasted
$4-6 trillion long-term on two losing wars in the past decade alone and consumes over
$1 trillion annually, as the middle class slowly disappears.
As America's
economic health,
society,
infrastructure,
schools and
social mobility continue to decline,
the rich grow richer and the poor poorer,
automation and the continued
export of jobsleads to rising mass
underemployment, our youth are increasingly
indentured by massive student debt, millions of workers can barely survive even when
working two or three jobs, and
assaults on the safety net grow,
it is inevitable that growing numbers of Americans will protest their
conditions. And, unless we rein in the Executive, it will inevitably
respond to increased protest with increased police tactics threatening
democracy itself.
Self-Censorship: The Worst Abuse
And
putting aside the flagrant abuses that we now know about, the creation
of an Executive Branch Surveillance State already threatens to cast a
subtler and ultimately more disturbing pall over the land.
Conservative columnist Peggy Noonan has properly
written that
" a loss of the expectation of privacy in communications is a loss of
something personal and intimate, and it will have broader implications”,
and then approvingly quoted the liberal "Nat Hentoff, the great
journalist and civil libertarian," as saying that "Americans will become
careful about what they say that can be misunderstood or
misinterpreted, and then too careful about what they say that can be
understood. The inevitable end of surveillance is self-censorship."
The
little jokes so many now make along the lines of "this email is just
between you, me and the NSA" suggest that many Americans are already
nervous about expressing views, or writing words, that might trigger
government scrutiny. And self-censorship is far more pernicious than
heavy-handed government censorship. And, worse, there comes a point when
we don't even realize we are censoring ourselves anymore, when
"dangerous thoughts" are not even brought to consciousness.
Millions of our young people, forced to seek scarce government or corporate jobs to pay off
massive student loans,
are increasingly fearful of political associations or activities that
they fear might hurt their future employment prospects. Many are
careful about what they say or write to each other on the phone of in
emails and, unconsciously, even what they think.
And, as
McClatchy has
reported, millions more federal employees are now required to spy and
inform on each other at the risk of losing their jobs. They are not even
allowed to remain silent, since employees can be fired if it
is subsequently found that they could have reported a co-worker but
did not. An estimated 1.4 million public and private sector employees
have obtained their “top secret” security clearances by submitting to
intrusive and thorough “background checks”. They have done so because
such a clearance is, in Dana Priest and Bill Arkin’s words, “a passport
to prosperity for life”, offering secure, high-paying jobs. They tend to
live close to one another, in some of the wealthiest communities in
America. (2)
The result is an increasing tendency toward
"group think" and
conformity, as such individuals lose even the capacity for independent
thought outside politically prescribed limits. And those charged with
protecting our privacy can hardly be trusted to do so when they have
already given up their own.
From “Civil Rights” to a New “Democratic Rights” Movement
The
Executive’s unprecedented threat to democracy requires an unprecedented
response. The great mass movements of the postwar era have involved
issues of social, economic, gender, sexual and racial justice, war and
peace, and the environment. "Civil liberties" have largely been left to
organizations like the ACLU.
But now a new "Democratic Rights"
movement. with at least as much public support as the "Civil Rights"
movement of the 1960s, will be required for democracy to exist. And if
democracy goes, so too will social justice, the environment and peace. A
"Democratic Rights" movement is a necessary precondition for everything
else.
A New Politics, A New Hope
Until
recently it was difficult to even imagine how Executive power could be
limited, as a cowed Congress massively funded it after 9/11
while democracy burned. But on July 24, like a bolt of lightning
suddenly illuminating a dark graveyard, a surprising
Congressional vote provided the first hope for asserting democratic control over Executive power.
A unique
coalition of 111 Democrats and 94 conservatives came within only 7
switched votes of passing a bill to halt the Executive Branch's
unconstitutional collection of all Americans' phone and Internet
records.
The vote's importance was not only that it was the first
major challenge to the Executive's post-9/11 power grab. It also
significant showed there was a difference between Congress and the
Executive. Overall, Members of Congress are controlled by the economic
interests upon whose money they depend for reelection, and they have
done nothing to halt climate change, growing inequality, and Executive
drone and ground assassination abroad, etc. But this vote suggested that
there is daylight between Congress and the Executive on the issue of
surveillance and, hopefully, other issues fundamental to democracy. The
hope that Congress will create a functioning democracy in America may
prove to be naïve. But, if a grassroots movement can arise to support
this cause, it will be Americans' only hope of rolling back
authoritarian Executive Branch power.
The greatest significance
of the Conyers-Amash vote was that embodied a new politics entirely
different from the traditional liberal vs. conservative divisions that
have brought a moribund Congress to a halt.
This new politics pits
both liberal and conservative opponents of government surveillance
against an unholy and unprincipled alliance for authoritarianism that
includes Barack Obama, Paul Ryan, Nancy Pelosi, Eric Cantor, and John
Boehner. After years of gridlock, the House experienced a sudden
pushback against Executive power unlike any we have seen in our
lifetimes.
This new Congressional coalition gives new meaning to
the saying that politics makes strange bedfellows. Republican votes for
Conyers-Amash included both principled opponents of surveillance, and
those who
support surveillance
but want it done entirely by the private sector. And Democratic
supporters for the amendment included both principled progressives who
have long fought for civil liberties and peace, and more centrist types
who have rubber-stamped past Executive war-making without a peep.
It
is uncertain whether this unwieldy coalition can hold in coming months
given these differences, the gravitational pull of the old politics, and
the enormous Executive power and deception they will face. We can
safely assume that military-intelligence-police firms and the Pentagon
itself are already mercilessly pressuring pro Conyers-Amash Members back
in their districts and in D.C. Mr. Obama and Ms. Pelosi are also
strongly lobbying for mass surveillance to continue, covering up their
betrayal of democracy with meaningless promises of greater transparency.
And even if restrictions on NSA spying on innocent Americans pass the
House, they would face an uncertain future in the Senate.
But two
things are certain: only if the proto-coalition that favored the
amendment can hold and expand in coming years will there be any hope of
creating a "functioning democracy" in our nation. And second, for
this to happen there will need to be a new grassroots movement of
similarly strange bedfellows committed to fighting for democracy.
The
Amash-Conyers vote also provided dramatic evidence of how the U.S.
Executive does not represent the American people. The Executive was only
able to spy on Americans because it deceived them by denying it was
doing so. When Americans found out about the spying, however,
an Economist
poll showed
Americans opposed NSA surveillance by a 59-35 margin. Americans clearly
would not have agreed, had the Executive Branch honestly sought "the
consent of the governed," to allow it collect all their phone and
Internet records. By unilaterally, lawlessly and secretly seizing the
power to do so, and lying about it when asked, the Executive Branch has
clearly lost its moral legitimacy.
We may obey the Executive
because, like any people living under illegitimate power, we fear the
legal consequences of disobedience.
But it has clearly forfeited any claim to our moral allegiance.
An Illegitimate Executive Branch Is Endangering Not Protecting Us
The
Executive has justified its assaults on democracy, like all
authoritarian institutions before it, on the grounds that it is
protecting us. We frequently hear, for example, that we must accept less
freedom in order to have more security. In fact, under present
Executive rule, we have neither.
Executive officials insult reason
itself when they claim that to protect us they need to collect billions
of innocent Americans’ phone calls and Internet records, at a time
President Obama himself has said we face a
reduced foreign threat that can best be met by police work. Senators Wyden and Udall have
stated that
"we have not yet seen any evidence showing that the NSA's dragnet
collection of Americans' phone records has produced any uniquely
valuable intelligence."
On August 21, the Washington Post
reported that
it took a year-long Electronic Frontier Foundation lawsuit to force the
NSA to declassify a secret court ruling revealing they had been
illegally spying on American-to-American communications in violation of
every public claim they had made on the subject. The idea that this
document was classified because some "foreign enemy" could use this FISA
report to hurt us is silly. What possible interest could al-Qaeda have
in a document proving American agencies were spying on their own people?
The FISA court document, like most Executive classified material, was
obviously kept secret to hide Executive wrongdoing from Americans not
"foreign terrorists".
And not only does Executive Branch spying on
innocent Americans at home not protect us. As dozens of national
security experts have stated), its foreign drone and ground
assassination programs are in fact endangering us (please see
list of experts cited at the end of Part I of
this series). They have created exponentially more enemies than they
have killed, strengthening U.S. foes and weakening potential allies, and
increased the possibility of more domestic terrorist attacks and
nuclear materials falling into terrorist hands. A U.S. foreign policy
that turns nations like Pakistan into allies not enemies, e.g. by
bringing them electricity rather than drones, will make possible the
kind of joint police-work which alone can significantly reduce the
foreign terrorist threat to America - at a fraction of present vast
over-spending.
The Fundamental Moral Issue: Loyalty to Democracy Not the Executive Branch
Article One of the
Federal Code of Ethics adopted
by Congress in 1958 states that there is a fundamental distinction
between loyalty to country and loyalty to any government entity: "any
person in Government service should put loyalty to principles and to
country above loyalty to Government persons, party, or department."
As former Army Colonel Andrew Bacevich, who lost a son fighting in Iraq, has
put it in
the Washington Post: "to whom do Army privates and intelligence
contractors owe their loyalty? To state or to country? To the national
security apparatus that employs them or to the people that apparatus is
said to protect? What if the interests of the state do not automatically
align with those of the country? In that event, the state pursues its
own agenda. In doing so, it stealthily but inexorably accumulates power,
privilege and prerogatives."
At the start of each new Congress, members
swear to
“support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all
enemies, foreign and domestic.” This oath clearly obligates them today
to fight democracy’s chief domestic enemy today: the U.S. Executive
Branch.
And it is not only Members of Congress and Federal
Employees who have a duty to fight to preserve democracy against the
Executive.
So do we all.
Understanding Democracy's Enemy: The Problem of "True Believers"
In
speaking of the U.S. Executive Branch as the enemy of democracy it is
important not to demonize its leaders as individuals. They are like
most Americans in their off-hours. Many are patriotic and believe that
they are protecting the American people, and their patriotism deserves
respect. They presumably love their mates, children and pets in the
same proportion as does the general population, also hit Home Depot on
the weekends, and enjoy sports and "Downton Abbey" as much as any of
us. We are not talking about Nazis here.
But when they go to work
for the institution we call the Executive Branch, it is a very different
matter. They spy on us, we do not surveil them. They take and waste
enormous sums of our money, we do not take theirs. They hide their
activities from us and lie to us when they are caught - we do not do so
to them. They threaten whistleblowers and journalists, we do not. They
claim the right to murder or imprison us without trial, we make no such
claim on them. They have endangered us creating exponentially more
enemies than they kill, we do not endanger them.
The danger they
pose to democracy is not like that of previous authoritarians, who made
no secret of their contempt for democracy. On the contrary. This danger
arises from people who genuinely think they are protecting democracy
even as they destroy it. They have a deep inner need to see themselves
as does Rep. Peter King, when he
referred to "the
thousands of good men and women who every day dedicate their lives to
our country, and particularly General Alexander, who is as patriotic as
anyone I have ever met in government or anywhere."
It is the
problem of the "True Believer," one of the most dangerous of social
phenomena. Their self-righteous need to feel they are protecting us
leads them to feel justified in breaking any law and telling any lie in
pursuit of their mission. Freedom of the press, telling the American
people the truth, obeying the law, are irrelevant to true believers who
decide they have a higher calling.
It is the same
phenomenon observed during the Iran-Contra scandal after Congress
halted military aid to the Contras. Because Executive Branch officials
like James Poindexter and Oliver North were so convinced that they were
on the side of the angels they felt justified in operating secretly,
lying about their actions, and breaking just laws.
As the Executive Comes Home, Americans Can No Longer Ignore Its Illegitimate Power
For
the past 50 years many Americans, notably its
political-media-intellectual elites who have known the horrific facts,
have turned a blind eye to the Executive Branch's murder, maiming and
making homeless over 20 million non-Americans, mainly civilians. (Please
see
Part 2 of this series, "The World's Most Evil And Lawless Institution? The Executive Branch Of The U.S. Government.")
CNN commentator Jeffrey Toobin recently reflected the Washington elite's indifference to this mass murder when he
called for Private
Manning's imprisonment because the Foreign Service Officers, " who
wrote these cables have devoted their lives to making the world a better
place." Like his compatriots, he simply ignored the fact that those
Foreign Service Officers have been an integral part of the U.S.
Executive apparatus that ruined those 20 million lives, and has in many
other nations propped up savage dictatorships practicing mass murder,
assassination, torture and incarceration of the innocent.
Joshua Oppenheimer, producer of
The Act of Killing about the Indonesian army's murder of more than one million civilians in its 1965 coup, has
reported that
"you can see that the United States made it very clear that, as a
condition for future aid, the Indonesian army must go after the whole
Communist Party. And they had guys in the State Department compiling
death lists for the army—communist leaders, union leaders, intellectuals
who were left-leaning. The signal from the U.S. was clear: 'We want
these people dead.'"
But as the Executive's indifference to the
rule of law and human decency now increasingly comes home, millions of
us will no longer be able to ignore Executive wrongdoing. We will be
forced to decide whether American democracy is worth fighting for.
Executive
Branch secrecy, deception, and surveillance has reached such levels
that it has become a revolutionary act simply to insist that U.S.
Constitution be obeyed, i.e. that the Executive obtain the "consent of
the governed" for its actions - the trailblazing concept by which
America replaced the “Divine Right of Kings” with the will of the
governed as the basis for legitimate rule.
The Washington
political-media elite who call for jailing whistle-blowers for "breaking
the law" has lacked the integrity to demand similar punishment for the
far more lawless criminal behavior of such Executive Branch officials as
NSA chief Keith Alexander and Director of National Intelligence James
Clapper.
The recent FISA Court document declassified as a result of an Electronic Frontier Foundation lawsuit, for example,
stated that
"the court is troubled that the government's revelations mark the third
instance in less than three years in which the government has disclosed
a substantial misrepresentation regarding the scope of a major
collection program."
Does anything threaten democracy more than
when Executive Branch officials repeatedly deceive the Judiciary, as
well as the Legislature and American people? Should not this behavior
lead to criminal sanctions for General Alexander?
Many mass media
journalists ask who gave whistleblowers the right to release classified
information. It is a fair question. But they have not dared ask a far
more serious question: who gave Executive Branch officials the right to
secretly and unilaterally collect all Americans' phone and Internet
records?
It certainly wasn't Congress, almost all of whose members
had no idea this was going on. The Republican head of the House
Judiciary Committee, Bob Goodlatte, recently
stated on Face
The Nation that "when this was made known (by) Edward Snowden, the
Judiciary Committee conducted a briefing for all of the members of the
House. It was very clear then that many of them did not know about these
programs or how they worked, including the former chairman of the
committee Jim Sensenbrenner who was the chairman when these laws were
written and myself." Mr. Sensenbrenner, who wrote the Patriot Act has,
stated that
"as I have said numerous times, I did not know the administration was
using the Patriot Act for bulk collection, and neither did a majority of
my colleagues."
It certainly wasn't the judiciary which allowed the Executive to spy on us, as the Washington Post recently
reported:
"the leader of the secret court that is supposed to provide critical
oversight of the government's vast spying programs said that its ability
to do so is limited and that it must trust the government to report
when it improperly spies on Americans."
And it certainly wasn’t
Mr. Obama, who we now know was elected on false promises that he would
bring transparency, respect for civil liberties and a free press, and
whistleblower protection to the Oval Office. He clearly does not have
the right to unilaterally and secretly create a Surveillance State in
this country without the consent of the governed. Mr. Obama placed his
former post as a Constitutional Lecturer at the very core of his
identity. Americans certainly did not give him the right to betray them,
everything he claimed to stand for, and the constitution. His approval
of Executive spying on Americans, and constant lying about it ever
since, in no way legitimizes it.
No, the Executive Branch has
seized this power simply because it could, in a lawless power grab
without precedent in this country. And if democracy is to be preserved
here this rule of men not laws, this practice of might makes right, must
be ended.
Known Executive Abuses: Only "The Tip Of An Iceberg"
The Washington Post recently
reported on
an internal NSA audit revealing that the NSA had violated the law
"thousands of times" a year since 2008 at its Fort Meade headquarters
alone. And "a single `incident' in February 2012 involved the unlawful
retention of 3,032 files that the surveillance court had ordered the NSA
to destroy." That is, we now know the NSA had committed tens of
thousands, possibly hundreds of thousands, of individual abuses already.
It
is important to note also that this audit was kept secret from the
American people until Edward Snowden revealed it. Typically, it was not
hidden because its contents would help America's enemies. It is
laughable to imagine that Ayman al-Zawahari would be helped by knowing
that the NSA was constantly breaking American law and lying to its
citizens about it. Like the FISA Court report cited above, it was
classified secret to keep its findings of NSA abuse from the American
people.
This story also revealed that President Obama had again
liedto
the American people when he stated eight days earlier that"I am
comfortable that the program currently is not being abused". And it was
quickly followed by another bombshell. Senate Intelligence Committee
members Ron Wyden and Mark Udall, who have been muzzled from revealing
specifics,
stated that
"we have previously said that the violations of these laws and rules
were more serious than had been acknowledged”, and we believe Americans
should know that even these revelations were but the tip of an iceberg
of far greater abuses."
We now know where the most massive
Executive Branch abuses of democracy in postwar history have begun. But
we have no idea yet where they will end.
A New Movement To Meet "The Generational Challenge"
The
surprising support for the amendment forbidding NSA spying on innocent
Americans gave hope that Congress could eventually act to curb the
Executive' threat to democracy. Amazing even its own sponsors it was
only stopped because Mr. Obama and Nancy Pelosi abandoned their core
principles to muscle Democrats into opposing it.
In an article entitled "How Nancy Pelosi Saved the NSA Surveillance Program," Foreign Policy Magazine
explained how
Pelosi betrayed her own constituents, among the most pro-civil
liberties voters in the nation: "Hill sources say most of the credit for
the amendment's defeat goes to House Minority Leader Nancy
Pelosi. Pelosi privately and aggressively lobbied wayward Democrats to
torpedo the amendment". It quoted a Democratic aide as saying that
"Pelosi had meetings and made a plea to vote against the amendment and
that had a much bigger effect on swing Democratic votes against the
amendment than anything (NSA Chief Keith) Alexander had to say."
Typically, after killing the bill, the magazine reported that Pelosi
sought to cover up her misdeeds: "despite the minority leader's
instrumental role in swaying the vote, you won't find her taking credit:
She's busy protecting her left flank from liberal supporters of Amash's
amendment."
Despite Obama and Pelosi's short-term success in
beating back attempts to limit mass spying on Americans against their
will, however, the bill represented a watershed in American political
life. Providing a desperately needed fresh and cleansing wind blowing
across a sick and dying Congress, it foreshadowed a new movement aimed
at saving American democracy before it is too late.
In the
concluding section of this series we will discuss what the basic goals
of a new "Democratic Rights Movement" must be if we are to end the
Executive Branch's threat to freedom in this country.
Fred Branfman's writing
has been published in the New York Times, the Washington Post, Harper’s,
and many other publications. He is the author of Voices From the Plain
of Jars, and can be reached at
fredbranfman@aol.com.
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