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Ask
Auntie Pinko
December
13, 2001
Dear Auntie Pinko,
Why do progressive democrats like us stand for the government
suspending the constitution to ostensibly protect us from
terrorists and wackos?
Charles,
Clarkridge, AR
Dear Charles,
You're on shaky ground, here. Auntie Pinko has heard a great
deal of this kind of rhetoric from liberal friends lately,
and while I completely sympathize with the feelings behind
it, I want to point out why it is so destructive to liberal
ideals.
Please do not misunderstand me. I am not in any way condoning
the (at the very least) dubious actions of the Justice Department
and the (almost certainly) unconstitutional assumption of
powers by the Executive Branch. I sincerely doubt that my
outrage at this self-serving prioritization of "security"
over the true security of the rule of constitutional law is
substantially less than yours.
It's not the very justified anger we feel that has the power
to hurt us, Charles. Indeed, if we can harness that anger
to productive ends (like communicating vigorously with our
elected representatives, and working hard to elect new
representatives, in '02 and '04,) Mr. Bush's administration
will have done we liberals a very great service, indeed.
But overblown rhetoric describing the situation in emotional
and inaccurate terms is like building a Maginot Line to defend
part of our frontier, when the real threat will materialize
from a different direction altogether. Mr. Bush's government
has not implemented any blanket suspension of the entire constitution.
Accusing them, loudly and repeatedly, of doing so, is a form
of wolf-crying that gets us written off as alarmists, extremists,
or merely whiners.
And while in defense of liberty it may be a virtue, extremism
(particularly from us lefties, at the moment,) carries little
clout when the issues are as complex as those we face now.
Worse, it distracts attention from the very real threats to
liberty posed by the current Administration's opportunistic
grab to consolidate Executive power and curry public favor
with quick-fix, end-justifies-the-means strategies.
The slow nibbling away at constitutional rights carries a
danger far more insidious than a wholesale suspension of the
constitution itself. By mislabeling the actions of Mr. Bush
and his government, we enable them to write off our objections.
We can have far more effect with a few thoughtful, well-reasoned
letters to the editors of magazines, local newspapers, and
our elected representatives themselves, describing briefly
and accurately the precise actions that worry and anger us.
I can guarantee, Charles, that if every single person who
page views this web site in one week wrote just three or four
such letters, our representatives would sit up and
take notice.
You can go further. Congress and the Senate will recess for
the holidays. Make an appointment for yourself and three or
four friends to spend fifteen minutes meeting with your Senator
and Congressional representative in person. Bring a copy of
your letter. Let them know that this concerns you deeply and
that you will be paying attention to how they address these
issues. Be pleasant, be polite, be firm, be brief. If enough
constituents take the trouble to do this, again and again,
each time they come home (even more so if you're in Washington
and you can schedule a visit,) they will begin acting.
And thank you for writing to Auntie Pinko!
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