Obama “Undecided” on S. 1959
December 14, 2007 | Posted in IndyBlog | Email this articleBy Jessica Lee, The Indypendent
Senator Barack Obama is “undecided” on the Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act (S. 1959), according to a statement released from his Washington, D.C. office.
“Senator Obama has not taken a position on S. 1959. Should the bill be considered by the Homeland Security Committee, he will carefully evaluate it, as he does with all pieces of legislation,” an Obama spokesperson wrote to The Indypendent in a Dec. 13 email.
Obama’s office wanted to clarify his position on this bill after my previous Dec. 10 blog update reported that some constituents receiving email responses from Obama felt that his letter indicated support for the bill. Several people have posted Obama’s email letter on blogs, often adding in their own personal reaction.
ORIGINAL DEC. 10 BLOG UPDATE:
Obama to Support Homegrown Terrorism Bill
By Jessica Lee, The Indypendent
Democratic presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama says that he will support the Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act (S. 1959). According to the automatic email responses constituents are receiving from his office, Obama appears to be straddling the fence between preserving civil liberties and being tough on terrorism.
“The American people understand that new threats require flexible responses to keep them safe. They also insist that our responses to threats respect the constitution and do not violate the basic tenets of our democracy,” Obama’s email said. Several people who have written to Obama have posted his response on various blogs, including “Justin” who’s personal blog was picked up on diggs.com.
“I wrote Senator Obama (my senator from Illinois) about this act, which is now in a committee of his (the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs). I asked that he read the bill (not to insult his intelligence, but after the Patriot Act it appears this is a necessary request for most senators), and that he recognize the dire consequences that could result from its vague language,” Justin wrote Dec. 6 below the post of Obama’s email. “He’s quite eloquent, you’ve got to give him that. This act ‘includes provisions prohibiting the Department of Homeland Security’s efforts from violating civil rights and civil liberties of U.S. citizens.’ Didn’t we used to have something like that? What was it called? Oh right… The Constitution.”
The House version of the bill, H.R. 1955, passed Oct. 23 by a vote of 404-6 under the “suspension of the rules,” a provision that is available to quickly pass bills considered “non-controversial.”
Obama is on the 17-member Senate Committee for Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, where S. 1959 was introduced by Senator Susan Collins (R-Maine) Aug. 2. “I will keep your important comments in mind as I work with my colleagues on the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs. I will work to ensure that this legislation helps to achieve our domestic security objectives while protecting civil liberties and constitutional rights,” Obama stated in his email to Justin.
Many scholars, historians and civil liberties experts say they fear that the proposed bill will set the stage for future criminal legislation that be used against U.S.-based groups engaged in legal but unpopular political activism, ranging from political Islamists to animal-rights and environmental campaigners to radical right-wing organizations.
“This bill fits the pattern we are seeing coming out of Congress – both Republican and Democratic – of a continued campaign of fear, which gets into heads of Americans that we now need to start criminalizing ideology,” said Alejandro Queral, executive director of the Northwest Constitutional Rights Center. He said he is very concerned about the bill’s vague definitions of “violent radicalization,” “homegrown terrorism,” and the terms within the definitions including “extremist belief system,” “violence” and “force.”
“What is an extremist belief system? Who defines this?” Queral questioned. “Planes flying into the World Trade Center is an extremist belief, but are anti-abortion activists extremists? Are individuals who liberate mink extremists? These are broad definitions that encompass so much, which need to rather be very narrowly tailored. It is criminalizing thought and ideology, rather than criminal activity.”
Jules Boykoff, an assistant professor of politics and government at Pacific University and author of Beyond Bullets: The Suppression of Dissent in the United States, told The Indypendent said he is concerned about how the government is broadening the definition of terrorism.
“Section 802 of the USA PATRIOT Act is a law that created a new brand of terrorists, the ‘domestic terrorist.’ Under this definition, the civil rights work Martin Luther King, Jr. did could have been construed as an act of ‘domestic terrorism,” Boykoff said.
In a Nov. 30 Common Dreams article, ‘Homegrown’ Suppression of Dissent,’ Boykoff provided a historical-based critique of who could be included under the umbrella definition of terrorism. “Even a cursory look backward through U.S. history reveals heroic figures who could be dubbed ‘violent radicals’ or ‘homegrown terrorists’ under the proposed bill, from U.S. revolutionaries like Sam Adams to gun-toting slavery abolitionists like John Brown to militant civil-rights organizers like Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Jr.”
Kamau Franklin, an attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), also expressed concern that H.R. 1955/S. 1959 will foster a legislative momentum on criminalizing a broad range of dissident voices. “The Commission’s broad mandate can lead to the ability to turn civil disobedience, a form of protest that is centuries old, into a terrorist act,” he said. “My biggest fear is that they [the commission] will call for some new criminal penalties and federal crimes,” says Franklin. “Activists are nervous about how the broad definitions could be used for criminalizing civil disobedience and squashing the momentum of the left.”
“It’s possible that someone who would have been charged with disorderly conduct or obstruction of governmental administration may soon be charged with a federal terrorist statute,” Franklin said.
Many activists and civil liberties advocates have expressed concern across the nation on blogs and radio shows about how the bill’s use of vaguely defined terms can be seen within a historical pattern of sweeping government repression of dissenting voices throughout the history of the United States where citizens have been targeted for their political beliefs. Two generations of Americans experienced first hand the two “Red Scares” (1917-1920 and 1940-50s) and the FBI’s secret Counter Intelligence Program, nicknamed COINTELPRO, which enabled the FBI to “expose, disrupt, misdirect, discredit, or otherwise neutralize” domestic protest groups for “subversive activities” and “potential crimes.”
To many, the similarities between COINTELPRO and the bill are unsettling. The proposed legislation calls for the National Commission to “examine and report upon the facts and causes of violent radicalization, homegrown terrorism and ideologically based violence in the United States” in order to develop policy for “prevention, disruption and mitigation.” This investigation is needed, according to stated Congressional findings, due to possible threats to national security.
The secret program continued until it was discovered COINTELPRO was investigated by a U.S. Senate select committee on intelligence activities (commonly known as the Church Committee) which convened in 1975. The Church Committee found that from 1956 to 1971, “the Bureau conducted a sophisticated vigilante operation aimed squarely at preventing the exercise of First Amendment rights of speech and association, on the theory that preventing the growth of dangerous groups and the propagation of dangerous ideas would protect the national security and deter violence.”
In the last 30 years, significant evidence has surfaced about how the FBI and local law enforcement disrupted non-violent social and political movements, even “neutralizing” individuals through target assassinations. The secret program was vast, with agents monitoring and agitating people involved in the “New Left,” including anti-Vietnam War efforts, the civil rights movement, the Black Panthers, Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), the American Indian Movement, Puerto Rican independence groups, popular musicians and counter-cultural and revolutionary independent newspapers.
OTHER PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE VIEWS ON THE BILL
Democratic presidential hopeful Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) said that he believes the proposed bill is unconstitutional.
Speaking to a crowd of supporters in New York City Nov. 29, Kucinich took several questions from the audience, including my question asking why he voted against the bill. Kucinich was one of only six representatives to oppose the bill on Oct. 23.
“If you understand what his bill does, it really sets the stage for further criminalization of protest,” Kucinich said. “This is the way our democracy little, by little, by little, is being stripped away from us. This bill, I believe, is a clear violation of the first amendment.”
Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul was one of the 22 House members not present for the vote.
A small demonstration against S. 1959 took place outside Senator Hillary Clinton’s office in New York City Dec. 10. Her office did not return an Indypendent’s call for comment.
–
Read Jessica Lee’s Nov. 16 article on HR 1955:
“Bringing the War on Terrorism Home: Congress Considers How to ‘Disrupt’ Radical Movements in the United States.”
Blog Update Dec. 2 — Kucinich Opposes H.R. 1955
Blog Update Nov. 27 — Opposition to the Bill and how the Legislation would Target the Internet
Read the proposed Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act:
H.R. 1955
S. 1959
11 Responses to “Obama “Undecided” on S. 1959”
December 15th, 2007 at 2:52 am
The “freedom candidate” has already denounced this blatant infringement on constitutional rights, as reported here … http://www.newstarget.com/022308.html … and many other places.
December 15th, 2007 at 8:51 am
Ron Paul wrote a large commentary about H1955 and apologized for missing the vote. He was particularly incensed it was passed under the “non-controversial” fast-track. Do a google search and you’ll find it,
December 15th, 2007 at 4:25 pm
IMO,
The music executives that choose to mass promote, and mass distribute gangsta rap
are guilty of domestic terrorism.
Sumner Redston (Viacaom, MTV, BET), Edgar Bronfam Jr. (Warner Music Group),
Jimmy Iovine (Interscope Records) chose to mass promote violence against Americans citizens and are therefore guilty of domestic terrorism.
December 17th, 2007 at 4:22 pm
http://www.cnn.com/CNN/Programs/larry.king.live/
Who’s your pick for the Republican Presidential Nominee?
Rudy Giuliani 3% 369
Mike Huckabee 16% 1999
Duncan Hunter 0% 38
John McCain 2% 272
Ron Paul 73% 8982
Mitt Romney 4% 431
Tom Tancredo 0% 55
Fred Thompson 1% 99
Total Votes: 12245
December 20th, 2007 at 6:15 pm
MY QUESTION IS WHETHER YOU BECAME PRESIDENT OR NOT WHAT ARE YOU GOING MAKE THE CIVIL RIGHTS VOTING ACT PERMANENT
December 22nd, 2007 at 5:30 am
Obama’s ambivalence on S 1955 is troubling given the times and his ethnicity. Unlike all the other candidates running for president, he is the one most likely to be shot by a REDNECK GOP-er or Nascar Democrat.
A DEMOCRAT congered up the premise of this Act which a GOP-er could and would readily utilize to stiffle dissent. Consider this rather eerie set of facts. In early 2005, Bush got $38 MILLION from Congress to Preserve & Rehabilitate the WII Japanese Internment Camps. Four months later in ‘05, Bush got $287 MILLION for the Pentagon to plan and build ‘Civilian Labor Camps’ at US military installations. In 2006, the Dept. of Homeland Security gave KBR over $385 MILLION to build over 700 Detention Centers throughout the West & Southwest to hold persons he or other administration officials so empowered may term a ‘Terrorist’ or a potentially violent ‘Dissident’.
Now, take the data presented above and add to it the new Homegrown Terrorism Act, the existing Patriot Act and the 2001 ‘Military Order 1′ (giving the president or his designate the right and responsibility to detain anyone for any reason, as a ‘Terrorist’ - Term Undefined!). Okay, now add to the aforementioned ‘FASCIST BREW’ the new Fascist Bush Supreme Court & right-wing Appellate Court appointees. What do you have? A RECIPE FOR FASCIST TERROR ON A MOMENT’S NOTICE in the US with its Constitution, bill of Rights & Democratic traditions.
TIME TO FLY TO BRAZIL AFTER MY PORTUGESE CLASSES IN Jan., Feb & March! To protect the Republic, it’ll come down to VIOLENCE in America all too soon & I ain’t packin’ anymore!
December 31st, 2007 at 5:03 am
We’re overlooking the fact that this bill criminalizes nothing. It simply establishes a commission to investigate radicalization, rather than attempting to ban it.
It does not say that this (which, by the way, will remain legal):
“(2) VIOLENT RADICALIZATION- The term `violent radicalization’ means the process of adopting or promoting an extremist belief system for the purpose of facilitating ideologically based violence to advance political, religious, or social change.”
Is this (which has been illegal since Schenck v. U.S. in 1919):
“(3) HOMEGROWN TERRORISM- The term `homegrown terrorism’ means the use, planned use, or threatened use, of force or violence by a group or individual born, raised, or based and operating primarily within the United States or any possession of the United States to intimidate or coerce the United States government, the civilian population of the United States, or any segment thereof, in furtherance of political or social objectives.”
S 1959 only investigates radicalization, it does not criminalize it. The commission’s purposes are:
“(1) Examine and report upon the facts and causes of violent radicalization, homegrown terrorism, and ideologically based violence in the United States…
(2) The Commission shall… conduct a survey of methodologies implemented by foreign nations to prevent violent radicalization and homegrown terrorism in their respective nations.
(3) Build upon and bring together the work of other entities and avoid unnecessary duplication, by reviewing the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of…”
It is not tasked with defining new crimes or prosecuting individuals, and in fact lacks the power to do so. When it submits its report, it could recommend a ban on “thought crime”, but this seems highly unlikely. How about saving the outrage for then?
We must continue to watch our representatives vigilantly, especially during an administration with a callous disregard for our liberties. But this particular bill does no direct harm. No new crimes, and certainly no thought crimes, are codified.
January 7th, 2008 at 12:53 am
Nice observation, Colin.
Another interesting aspect of the bill is that its loose terminology allows for investigation of entrenched ideologies. If “the facts and causes of… ideologically based violence in the United States” relate to the distribution of wealth (the resources such as man-hours, goods, raw materials, prospects for empowerment and sustatinability, and the like which money symbolizes), whether protecting the current distribution or pushing for redistribution (locally, nationally, internationally), this would include not only actions of youth gangs, the KKK, but also law-enforcement agencies - certainly police suppression of speech or assembly would be ideologically based violence.
January 7th, 2008 at 1:55 pm
well done article, thanks!
This is good news, as he signaled support previously, so those calls and emails and actions got him to look into it more. M
ore pressure!
January 7th, 2008 at 3:03 pm
Center for Constitutional Rights also critiques the broad nature of the terms (terrorist, radical, violent) and the dangers such vagueness poses in future interpretations/uses of it is useful.
We must be CLEAR that an outright rejection of the bill in toto is necessary, the bill’s language can not be tweaked into acceptability. The history of COINTELPRO makes clear that, even a ‘tweaked’ bill, will likely be used by law enforcement/govt. to shape popular discourse and sow fear, confusion, and inaction among otherwise active and activating people.
The establishment of a commission is an effort to freeze speech rights of the four groups the RAND names as ‘threats’. And it threatens to do that by using the power $$ of govt. to shape public discourse by associating anarchist, anti-globalization, conservation/enviro. activists and muslims with violence. We would experience periodic announcements of the ‘findings’ of this commission and then ‘centers of excellence’ which would serve this purpose.
Why not “propose” to set up a commission to study how a few people conspired to launch an illegal war which was launched and resulted in the premature deaths of over a million people ((The Lancet medical journal), ethnic cleansing and the creation of 4 million refugees?
Collins, you should support the creation of such a commission to study a REAL problem with many killed already b/c of it. Instead of this sham.
love,
SP


"A world newspaper of conscience" alongside Le Monde Diplomatique and the U.K. Guardian. — Danny Schechter









December 15th, 2007 at 2:03 am
No doubt we’ll be reading Dr. No’s response: No.