You are here: Home » Politics » Civil Liberties and President Barack W. Bush?

Civil Liberties and President Barack W. Bush?

by Lawrence on July 3, 2009

2009 Five Presidents George W. Bush, President...
Image by BL1961 via Flickr

This is an enlightening report by Cato@Liberty. The report is both enlightening and sickening. Read on.

Posted by Doug Bandow

It’s fair to say that civil liberties and limited government were not high on President George W. Bush‘s priorities list.  Indeed, they probably weren’t even on the list.  Candidate Barack Obama promised “change” when he took office, and change we have gotten.  The name of the president is different.

Alas, the policies are much the same.  While it is true that President Obama has not made the same claims of unreviewable monarchical power for the chief executive-an important distinction-he has continued to sacrifice civil liberties for dubious security gains.

Reports the New York Times:

Civil libertarians recently accused President Obama of acting like former President George W. Bush, citing reports about Mr. Obama’s plans to detain terrorism suspects without trials on domestic soil after he closes the Guantánamo prison.

It was only the latest instance in which critics have argued that Mr. Obama has failed to live up to his campaign pledge “to restore our Constitution and the rule of law” and raised a pointed question: Has he, on issues related to fighting terrorism, turned out to be little different from his predecessor?

The answer depends on what it means to act like Mr. Bush.

As they move toward completing a review of their options for dealing with the detainees, Obama administration officials insist that there is a fundamental difference between Mr. Bush’s approach and theirs. While Mr. Bush claimed to wield sweeping powers as commander in chief that allowed him to bypass legal constraints when fighting terrorism, they say, Mr. Obama respects checks and balances by relying on—and obeying—Congressional statutes.

“While the administration is considering a series of options, a range of options, none relies on legal theories that we have the inherent authority to detain people,” Robert Gibbs, the White House press secretary, said this week in response to questions about the preventive detention report. “And this will not be pursued in that manner.”

But Mr. Obama’s critics say that whether statutory authorization exists for his counterterrorism policies is just a legalistic point. The core problem with Mr. Bush’s approach, they argue, was that it trammeled individual rights. And they say Mr. Obama’s policies have not changed that.

“President Obama may mouth very different rhetoric,” said Anthony D. Romero, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union. “He may have a more complicated process with members of Congress. But in the end, there is no substantive break from the policies of the Bush administration.”

The primary beneficiaries of constitutional liberties are not terrorist suspects, but the rest of us.  The necessary trade-offs are not always easy, but the president and legislators must never forget that it is a free society they are supposed to be defending.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
Bookmark and Share

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Elizabeth September 15, 2009 at 04:05

Dare I mention that FDR did the same kinds of things GWB did, and for the same reasons after Pearl Harbor? And the rights that were “taken away” were restored to the citizens after the war was over.

I’m willing to lay money down that had we completed the tasks that needed to be completed during GWB’s terms, we would have seen the rights restored.

There are some things that have to be done for the sake of security during war times. Similar things were done during WWI and the Spanish-American War and (dare I say it?) the Civil War. Not identical, because technology was at a different level, but similar.

For those of us who believe that there is imminent danger in the form of terrorists, globally, saying nothing incriminating on my cellphone or in my e-mail is not a problem. During WWI and WWII, there was censorship – major censorship – of mail to and from the war zones – as in words blacked out or even cut out of letters.

There were some complaints, but people generally seemed to understand what was going on and what needed to be done. Loose lips sink ships. Telling what area one was being sent to could have alerted the enemy to troop movements.

Why is it so many people are unable to translate that to today’s world and technology? In WWII, our e-mails would have been censored! Our cell-phone as well as land-line conversations would have been listened in on and any possible breaches of security would have brought the Feds down on us like a duck on a June bug.

I’m willing to wait for the hostilities to be over before I start screaming about my “rights” to privacy.

Reply

Lawrence September 16, 2009 at 20:23

Elizabeth,

I agree that your comments have some merit.

I believe the last paragraph in this post, covers my thoughts on this matter pretty well. Too often in recent times we have found our civil liberties being sacrificed for dubious security gains. Too often in recent times we have found our American government acting like the very enemies they are supposedly defending us against in the methods they advocate in protecting our country from those enemies.

The price of freedom can be very high in a free society, however, that price must never include the very freedom that is being defended. The idea of taking freedom away to save it puts me in mind of an economic tactic we are hearing bandied about today by the Obama administration; that of our nation spending its way into prosperity.

“The president and legislators must never forget that it is a free society they are supposed to be defending.”

Reply

Leave a Comment

CommentLuv Enabled

Previous post:

Next post:

Google Analytics Code MPIDirect.com