With overwhelming bipartisan support, Rep. Jane Harman's "Thought Police" bill, HR 1955, passed the House 404-6 late last month and now rests in Sen. Joe Lieberman's Homeland Security Committee. Swift Senate passage appears certain. Not since the "Patriot" Act of 2001 has any bill so threatened our constitutionally guaranteed rights.
The late historian Henry Steele Commager, denouncing President John Adams' suppression of free speech in the 1790s, argued that the Bill of Rights was not written to protect government from dissenters but to provide a legal means for citizens to oppose a government they didn't trust. Thomas Jefferson's Declaration of Independence not only proclaimed the right to dissent but declared it a people's duty, under certain conditions, to alter or abolish their government.
In that vein diverse groups vigorously oppose Harman's effort to stifle dissent. Unfortunately, the mainstream press and leading presidential candidates remain silent.
On the right, the Birch Society condemns the bill, supporting critics who charge that this is a thinly veiled and dangerous attempt to criminalize dissent. David Duke's white supremacists denounce it as the work of Zionists. Texas minutemen claim that it targets the "patriot community," which probably means private militias. RIOT USA attributes the bill to advocates of a New World Order.
On the left, immigrant rights groups call the bill "insane." Some activists see it as directed against the Black Panthers. The left predicts the re-emergence of McCarthyism, which will suppress advocates of social and economic reform. HR 1955 also reminds them of the post-World War I Palmer Raids, the ouster of elected legislators in New York and the mass deportation of radicals.
California's Harman entitles her bill the "Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act." She thinks it likely that the United States will face a native brand of terrorism in the immediate future and offers a plan to deal with ideologically based violence.
But her plan is a greater danger to us than the threats she fears. Her bill tramples constitutional rights by creating a commission with sweeping investigative power and a mandate to propose laws prohibiting whatever the commission labels "homegrown terrorism."
In fact, the commission is a menace through its power to hold hearings, take testimony and administer oaths, an authority granted to even a single member of the commission–little Joe McCarthys–who will tour the country to hold their own private hearings. An aura of authority will automatically accompany this congressionally-authorized mandate to expose native terrorism.
Harman's proposal includes an absurd attack on the Internet, criticizing it for providing Americans with "access to broad and constant streams of terrorist-related propaganda," and legalizes an insidious infiltration of targeted organizations. Her commission can hire consultants and contractors like those who have been out of control in Iraq. The misnamed "Center of Excellence," which will function after the commission is disbanded in eighteen months, gives the semblance of intellectual research to what is otherwise the suppression of dissent.
While its purpose is to prevent terrorism, the bill doesn't criminalize any specific conduct nor contain penalties. But the commission's findings will be cited by those who see a terrorist under every bed and who will demand enactment of criminal penalties that further restrict free speech and other civil liberties. Action contrary to the commission's findings will be interpreted as a sign of treason at worst or a lack of patriotism at the least.
While Harman denies that her proposal creates "thought police," it defines "homegrown terrorism" as "planned" or "threatened" use of force to coerce the government or the people in the promotion of "political or social objectives." That means that no force need actually have occurred as long as the government charges that the individual or group thought about doing it.
Any social or economic reform is fair game. Have a march of 100 or 100,000 people to demand a reform–amnesty for illegals or overturning Roe v. Wade–and someone can perceive that to be a use of force to intimidate the people, the courts or government.
The bill defines "violent radicalization" as promoting an "extremist belief system." But American governments, state and national, have a long history of interpreting radical "belief systems" as inevitably leading to violence to facilitate change.
Examples of the resulting crackdowns on such protests include the conviction and execution of anarchists tied to Chicago's 1886 Haymarket Riot. Hearings conducted by the House UnAmerican Activities Committee for several decades during the Cold War and the solo hearings by a member of that committee's Senate counterpart, Joseph McCarthy, demonstrate the dangers inherent in Harman's legislation.
Harman denies that her bill is a threat to the First Amendment. It clearly states that no measure to prevent homegrown terrorism should violate "constitutional rights, civil rights or civil liberties." But the present administration has demonstrated, in its response to criticism regarding torture, that it can't be trusted to honor those rights.
Unless the public applies pressure on the Senate, which appears ready to pass this unconstitutional Orwellian throwback to another era, Harman's bill will turn the United States into a police state to protect the liberty the president tells us the terrorists hate.
R. William Robinson is the elected director of the Upper San Gabriel Valley Water District.
Ralph E. Shaffer is a professor emeritus of history at California State Polytechnic University and a writer for the History News Service.