The Rule of Law Has Been Lost
What is the greatest human achievement? Many would
answer in terms of some architectural or engineering
feat: The Great Pyramids, skyscrapers, a bridge span, or
sending
men to the moon.
Others might say the subduing of some deadly disease or
Einstein's theory of relativity.
The greatest human achievement is the subordination of
government to law. This was an English achievement that
required
eight centuries of struggle,
beginning in the ninth century when King Alfred the
Great codified the common law, moving forward with the
Magna Carta
in the thirteenth century and culminating with the
Glorious Revolution
in the late seventeenth century.
The success of this long struggle made law a shield of
the people. As an
English colony, America inherited
this unique achievement that made English-speaking
peoples the most free in the world.
In the first decade of the twenty-first century, this
achievement was lost in the United States and, perhaps,
in England as well.
As Lawrence Stratton and I show in our book The Tyranny of Good Intentions,
(2000), the protective features of law in the U.S. were
eroded in the twentieth century
by prosecutorial abuse and by setting aside law in order
to better pursue criminals. By the time of our second
edition (2008), law as a shield of the people no longer
existed. Respect for the Constitution and rule of law
had given way to executive branch claims that during
time of war government is not constrained by law or
Constitution.
Government lawyers told President Bush that he did not
have to obey the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act,
which prohibits the government from spying on citizens
without a warrant, thus destroying the right to privacy.
The U.S. Department of Justice ruled that the President
did not have to obey U.S. law prohibiting torture or the
Geneva Conventions.
Habeas corpus protection, a Constitutional right, was stripped from
U.S. citizens. Medieval dungeons, torture, and the
windowless cells of Stalin's Lubyanka Prison reappeared
under American government auspices.
The American people's elected representatives in
Congress endorsed the executive branch's overthrow of
the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Law schools and
bar associations were essentially silent in the face of
this overthrow of mankind's greatest achievement. Some
parts of the federal judiciary voted with the executive
branch; other parts made a feeble resistance. Today in
the name of "the
war on terror," the executive branch does whatever
it wants. There is no accountability.
The First Amendment has been abridged and may soon be
criminalized. Protests against, and criticisms of, the
U.S. government's illegal invasions of Muslim countries
and war crimes against civilian populations have been
construed by executive branch officials as
"giving aid and
comfort to the enemy." As American citizens have
been imprisoned for giving aid to Muslim charities that
the executive branch has decreed, without proof in a
court of law, to be under the control of
"terrorists,"
any form of opposition to the government's wars and
criminal actions can also be construed as aiding
terrorists and be cause for arrest and indefinite
detention.
One Obama appointee, Harvard law professor Cass
Sunstein,
advocates
that the U.S. government create a cadre of covert agents
to infiltrate anti-war groups and groups opposed to U.S.
government policies in order to provoke them into
actions or statements for which they can be discredited
and even arrested.
Sunstein defines those who criticize the government's
increasingly lawless behavior as
"extremists,"
which, to the general public, sounds much like
"terrorists."
In essence, Sunstein wants to generalize the F.B.I.'s
practice of infiltrating dissidents and organizing them
around a
"terrorist plot" in order to arrest them. That this
proposal comes from a Harvard Law School professor
demonstrates the collapse of respect for law among
American law professors themselves, ranging from John
Yoo at Berkeley, the advocate of torture, to Sunstein at
Harvard, a totalitarian who advocates war on the First
Amendment.
The U.S. Department of State has taken up Sunstein's
idea. Last month Eva Golinger
reported in the Swiss newspaper,
Zeit-Fragen,
that the State Department plans to organize youth in
"Twitter
Revolutions" to destabilize countries and bring
about regime change in order to achieve more American
puppet states, such as the ones in Egypt, Jordan, Japan,
South Korea, Taiwan, Canada, Mexico, Colombia, Ukraine,
Georgia, the Baltic states, Britain and Western and
Eastern Europe.
The First Amendment is being closed down. Its place is
being taken by propaganda in behalf of whatever
government does. As Stratton and I wrote in the second
edition of our book documenting the destruction of law
in the United States:
"Never in its history have the American people faced
such danger to their constitutional protections as they
face today from those in the government who hold the
reins of power and from elements of the legal profession
and the federal judiciary that support
'energy in the executive.'
An assertive executive backed by an aggressive U.S.
Department of Justice (sic)
and unobstructed by a supine Congress and an intimidated
corporate media has demonstrated an ability to ignore
statutory law and public opinion. The precedents that
have been set during the opening years of the
twenty-first century bode ill for the future of American
liberty."
Similar assaults on the rule of law can be observed in
England. However, the British have not completely given
up on government accountability. The
Chilcot Inquiry
is looking into how Britain was deceived into
participating in the illegal U.S. invasion of Iraq.
President Obama, of course, has blocked any inquiry into
how the U.S. was deceived into attacking Iraq in
violation of law.
Much damning information has come out about Blair's
deception of the British government and people. Sir
David Manning, foreign policy advisor to Blair, told the
Chilcot Inquiry that Blair had promised Bush support for
the invasion almost a year in advance. Blair had told
his country that it was a last minute call based on
proof of Iraq's possession of weapons of mass
destruction.
Sir William Patey
told the inquiry
that President Bush began talking about invading Iraq
six or seven months prior to September 11, 2001. A
devastating official memo has
come to light
from Lord Goldsmith, Prime Minister Blair's top law
official, advising Blair that an invasion of Iraq would
be in breach of international law.
Now a secret and personal letter to Prime Minister Blair
from his Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, has surfaced. In
the letter, the Foreign Secretary warned the Prime
Minister that his case for military invasion of Iraq was
of dubious legality and was likely as false as the
argument that removing Saddam Hussein would bring Iraqis
a better life.
Blair himself must now testify. He has the reputation,
whether deserved or not, as one of the slickest liars in
the world. But some accountability seems to be heading
his way. The
Sunday Times (London)
reported
on Jan. 17 that the latest poll indicates that 52
percent of the British people believe that Blair
deliberately misled his country in order to take Britain
to war for the Americans. About one quarter of the
British people think Blair should be put on trial as a
war criminal.
Unlike the U.S., where government takes care to keep
itself unaccountable to law, Britain is a member of the
International Criminal Court, so Blair does stand some
risk of being held accountable for the war crimes of
President George W. Bush's regime and the U.S. Congress.
In contrast,
insouciant Americans
are content for their government to behave illegally. A
majority supports torture despite its illegality, and a
McClatchy-Ipsos poll found that 51 percent of Americans
agree that
"it is necessary to give up some civil liberties in
order to make the country safe from terrorism."
As our Founding Fathers
warned, fools who give up liberty for security will have
neither.
Paul Craig Roberts [email him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President Reagan's first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal. He has held numerous academic appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University, and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was awarded the Legion of Honor by French President Francois Mitterrand. He is the author of Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for Peter Brimelow's Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.