On October 24, 2001, six weeks after the September 11 terrorist attacks, Congress passed a law "to deter and punish terrorist acts in the United States and around the world, to enhance law enforcement investigatory tools, and for other purposes." The House voted 356-to-66, and the Senate, 90-to-1, to support what has come to be called "The Patriot Act."
Quickly pulled together in an environment of fear and public concern about terrorism, the law consolidates tremendous new powers in the executive branch of government, and greatly enlarges the government's ability to conduct surveillance, detain immigrants, conduct searches and seizures, and prosecute political dissidents. Today, more than a year after the attacks and the initial fighting in Afghanistan, U.S. citizens are growing more concerned about our government's ability to suspend civil liberties and silence political dissent. Just this past week, bureaucratic power was further consolidated with the creation of the new U.S. Department for Homeland Security, and meanwhile, our government has been busily preparing for war with Iraq while simultaneously fighting a war on terrorism with nebulous boundaries and no end in sight. Other nations have pitched battles in the name of confronting terrorism as well, and individual liberties have been lost.
Why is this important? Take a walk with me on any day, anywhere in the United States. Let's go to the grocery store for beans and rice. No cash? Use the debit card. Your information is captured. We visit the doctor and pay for the lab tests. Information captured. Call a friend from a cell phone. Captured. Make a monthly payment through customer service and provide your social security number. Surf the web. Captured. Was there anything in a search that might be construed by an observer to be unpatriotic? New laws make it possible for the government to monitor calls, e-mail, and conversations in homes, offices, and cars. Our smallest movements can be known.
The FBI has created an on-line database called the Terrorist Information System that contains data on more than 200,000 individuals and over 3,000 organizations. It contains information not only on subjects of investigations, but on contacts and potential witnesses as well. In itself, this may seem like a necessary thing. But when we operate out of fear, without proper safeguards, such an information system can endanger the privacy of a whole people.
This is not the first time in this country that we have responded to fear by clamping down on individual liberties. Just as Arab Americans are being suspected of terrorist plots based on nothing other than their heritage, we also imprisoned dissidents during World War I for speaking out against the war, and we incarcerated Japanese Americans during World War II. In the 1960s and 70s, the FBI's counterintelligence program COINTELPRO was a massive operation to infiltrate, disrupt, and otherwise interfere with the lawful activities of civil rights advocates, religious bodies, and others. As history teaches us: Once the government has successfully curtailed our civil liberties, it is very difficult to roll back on these infringements.
Is it time to be afraid, or is it time to take back our rights as a people? The first step in taking back our rights is to know what they are. Knowledge is power.
All people in the United States have rights, even if they are not U.S. citizens. Regardless of our citizenship status, we do not have to answer any questions by any law enforcement agent. We do not have to sign any paper without a lawyer present. We do not have to let the police, the FBI, the INS, or anyone else come into our homes or search our offices without a warrant. We do not have to answer questions about immigration status. We are protected under the Fourth Amendment against unreasonable seizures. We have the right to advocate for changes in laws and government practices under the First Amendment.
I believe it is our duty as true patriots to act now to support the human right to privacy and peace.
A coalition of more than 30 civil liberties organizations has written to the House and Senate Judiciary Committees to urge them to review the Attorney General's guidelines on homeland security. The letter asks Congress to consider how the new law infringes upon First Amendment freedoms of political and religious organization, questions the legal basis for the changes, and asks that there be regular oversight of FBI activities to prevent abuse. The letter may be reviewed on-line through www.indefenseoffreedom.org.
For more information on defending our civil liberties, you may find the following websites to be helpful: Center for Constitutional Rights < www.ccr-ny.org> or the Public Eye <www.publiceye.org>. Or, you may want to contact the American Immigration Lawyers Association at (800) 954-0254; the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) at (202) 244-2990; the National Lawyers Guild at (212) 679-5100; or the Center for National Security Studies at (202) 994-7060. The full text of the so-called Patriot Act is available on-line through the Electronic Privacy Information Center at <www.epic.org>.
The Rev. Sala W.J. Nolan is Minister for Criminal Justice and Human Rights with the United Church of Christ's Justice and Witness Ministries based in Cleveland, Ohio.