This is simply one of the best speeches defending
Constitutional Liberties that I have ever read.
Below is the Transcript of Senator’s Rand Paul speech opposing the
implementation of Marshall Law by the President without Congressional approval,
and the loss of our Sixth Amendment right to trial by jury, if an American is
deemed to be a “terrorist.” I’ve testified twice before the Nevada Legislature
that under the current federal definition of a “terrorist” in the PATRIOT Act
that I “qualify” as a terrorist. It is likely that you do too.
Don’t forget the report that Homeland Security put out a couple of years ago
identifying people who supported the Second Amendment, were pro-lifers, opposed
illegal immigration, opposed NAFTA & GATT, were returning Veterans, store food,
believe it’s the last days and believe in the second coming, etc. are all
potential “domestic terrorists”. We are being encircled with unconstitutional
laws which destroy the bill of rights hence our liberties including the PATRIOT
Act and sections of this new Defense Authorization Act.
The Defense Authorization Act which passed the U.S. Senate & House at the end of
November 2011 now goes to a Conference Committee to work out the differences
between the two versions.
Senator Rand Paul Defends Constitutional Liberties
(Transcript of Sen. Paul’s 11/29/11 remarks)
James Madison, father of the Constitution, warned, “The means of defense against
foreign danger historically have become instruments of tyranny at home.”
Abraham Lincoln had similar thoughts, saying “America will never be destroyed
from the outside. If we falter, and lose our freedoms, it will be because we
destroyed ourselves.”
During war there has always been a struggle to preserve Constitutional
liberties. During the Civil War the right of habeas corpus was suspended.
Newspapers were closed down. Fortunately, these rights were restored after the
war.
The discussion now to suspend certain rights to due process is especially
worrisome given that we are engaged in a war that appears to have no end. Rights
given up now cannot be expected to be returned. So, we do well to contemplate
the diminishment of due process, knowing that the rights we lose now may never
be restored.
My well-intentioned colleagues ignore these admonitions in defending provisions
of the Defense bill pertaining to detaining suspected terrorists.
Their legislation would arm the military with the authority to detain
indefinitely – without due process or trial – SUSPECTED al-Qaida sympathizers,
including American citizens apprehended on American soil.
I want to repeat that. We are talking about people who are merely SUSPECTED of a
crime. And we are talking about American citizens.
If these provisions pass, we could see American citizens being sent to
Guantanamo Bay.
This should be alarming to everyone watching this proceeding today. Because it
puts every single American citizen at risk.
There is one thing and one thing only protecting innocent Americans from being
detained at will at the hands of a too-powerful state – our constitution, and
the checks we put on government power. Should we err today and remove some of
the most important checks on state power in the name of fighting terrorism,
well, then the terrorists have won.
Detaining citizens without a court trial is not American. In fact, this alarming
arbitrary power is reminiscent of Egypt’s “permanent” Emergency Law authorizing
preventive indefinite detention, a law that provoked ordinary Egyptians to tear
their country apart last spring and risk their lives to fight.
Recently, Justice Scalia affirmed this idea in his dissent in the Hamdi case,
saying: “Where the Government accuses a citizen of waging war against it, our
constitutional tradition has been to prosecute him in federal court for treason
or some other crime.”
He concluded: “The very core of liberty secured by our Anglo-Saxon system of
separated powers has been freedom from indefinite imprisonment at the will of
the Executive."
Justice Scalia was, as he often does, following the wisdom of our founding
fathers.
As Franklin wisely warned against, we should not attempt to trade liberty for
security, if we do we may end up with neither. And really, what security does
this indefinite detention of Americans give us?
The first and flawed premise, both here and in the badly misname patriot act, is
that our pre-911 police powers were insufficient to combat international
terrorism.
This is simply not borne out by the facts.
Congress long ago made it a crime to provide, or to conspire to provide,
material assistance to al-Qaida or other listed foreign terrorist organizations.
Material assistance includes virtually anything of value – including legal or
political advice, education, books, newspapers, lodging or otherwise. The
Supreme Court sustained the constitutionality of the sweeping prohibition.
And this is not simply about catching terrorists after the fact, as others may
insinuate. The material assistance law is in fact forward-looking and
preventive, not backward-looking and reactive.
Al-Qaida adherents may be detained, prosecuted and convicted for conspiring to
violate the material assistance prohibition before any injury to an American.
Jose Padilla, for instance, was convicted and sentenced to 17 years in prison
for conspiring to provide material assistance to al-Qaida. The criminal law does
not require dead bodies on the sidewalk before it strikes at international
terrorism.
Indeed, conspiracy law and prosecutions in civilian courts have been routinely
invoked after 9/11, to thwart embryonic international terrorism.
Michael Chertoff, then head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and
later Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, testified shortly after
9/11 to the Senate Judiciary Committee. He underscored that, “the history of
this government in prosecuting terrorists in domestic courts has been one of
unmitigated success and one in which the judges have done a superb job of
managing the courtroom and not compromising our concerns about security and our
concerns about classified information.”
Moreover, there is no evidence that criminal justice procedures have frustrated
intelligence collection about international terrorism. Suspected terrorists have
repeatedly waived both the right to an attorney and the right to silence.
Additionally, Miranda warnings are not required at all when the purpose of
interrogation is public safety.
The authors of this bill errantly maintain that the bill would not enlarge the
universe of detainees eligible for indefinite detention in military custody.
This is simply not the case.
The current Authorization for Use of Military Force confines the universe to
persons implicated in the 9/11 attacks or who harbored those who were.
The detainee provision would expand the universe to include any person said to
be “part of” or “substantially” supportive of al-Qaida or Taliban.
These terms are dangerously vague. More than a decade after 9/11, the military
has been unable to define the earmarks of membership in or affiliation to either
organization.
Some say that to prevent another 9/11 attack we must fight terrorism with a war
mentality and not treat potential attackers as criminals. For combatants
captured on the battlefield, I tend to agree.
But 9/11 didn’t succeed because we granted the terrorists due process. 9/11
attacks did not succeed because al-Qaida was so formidable, but because of human
error. The Defense Department withheld intelligence from the FBI. No warrants
were denied. The warrants weren’t requested. The FBI failed to act on repeated
pleas from its field agents, agents who were in possession of laptop with
information that might have prevented 9/11.
These are not failures of laws. They are not failures of procedures. They are
failures of imperfect men and women in bloated bureaucracies. No amount of
liberty sacrificed on the altar of the state will ever change that.
A full accounting of our human failures by 9/11 Commission would have proven
that enhanced cooperation between law enforcement and the intelligence
community, not military action or vandalizing liberty at home, is the key to
thwarting international terrorism.
We should not have to sacrifice our Liberty to be safe. We cannot allow the
rules to change to fit the whims of those in power. The rules, the binding
chains of our constitution were written so that it didn’t MATTER who was in
power. In fact, they were written to protect us and our rights, from those who
hold power without good intentions. We are not governed by saints or angels. Our
constitution allows for that. This bill does not.
Finally, the detainee provisions of the defense authorization bill do another
grave harm to freedom: they imply perpetual war for the first time in the
history of the United States.
No benchmarks are established that would ever terminate the conflict with
al-Qaida, Taliban, or other foreign terrorist organizations. In fact, this bill
explicitly states that no part of this bill is to imply any restriction on the
authorization to use force. No congressional review is allowed or imagined. No
victory is defined. No peace is possible if victory is made impossible by
definition.
To disavow the idea that the exclusive congressional power to declare war
somehow allows the President to continue war forever at whim, I will also be
offering an amendment this week to de-authorize the Iraq War.
Use of military force must begin in congress with its authorization. And it
should end in congress with its termination. Congress should not be ignored or
an afterthought in these matters, and must reclaim its constitutional duties.
The detainee provisions ask us to give up consist rights as an emergency or
exigency but make no room for expiration. Perhaps the Emergency Law in Egypt
began with good intentions in 1958 but somehow it came to be hated, to be
despised with such vigor that protesters chose to burn themselves alive rather
allow continuation of indefinite detention.
Today, someone must stand up for the rights of the American people to be free.
We must stand up to tyranny disguised as security. I urge my colleagues to
reject the language on detainees in this bill, and to support amendments to
strip these provisions from the defense bill. End
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