โBadges? We ainโt got no badges. I donโt have to show you any stinking badges!โ
โGold Hat, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
For the newly initiated, this place is reserved for the โliberally challenged.โ As such, your host is frequently assailed with letters from readers who like to think they have called me on the proverbial carpet. I like to call it the โgotchaโ syndrome. I write an opinion, they say, โAha, hereโs why youโre wrong.โ Gotcha.
With the recent flap over the NSAโs warrantless wiretapping (and the great Satan that is George W. Bush), many left-leaning types have discovered this thing called the United States Constitution. Iโm suspicious because the mention of the Constitution by anyone of the liberal camp is usually only included with the terms โliving documentโ and โright to kill a baby.โ The same people who tell me I canโt (or shouldnโt be able to) own an AR-15 or AK-47 because the Founding Fathers couldnโt have imagined such weapons would ever exist assert that the Fathers envisioned abortion as a โright”โdespite that term (unlike arms) appearing nowhere in said document.
In any event, last month, I did a piece on the fact that Democratic presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton exercised similar powers as those being asserted by the Bush administration.
One such gotcha letter was published in the Jan. 19 edition:
โI looked up executive orders 12139 and 12949, which Mr. Lafferty said show how Democrats violated civil liberties in the past. What he neglected to tell us were the last sentences of the executive orders.
โIn both executive orders, it says that the attorney general must make certifications required by section 50 U.S.C. 1801, which states that a court order is not needed for electronic surveillance or physical searches for foreign nationals only, which means that Mr. Lafferty was withholding information.
โIn reality, American citizens cannot be spied on according to these executive orders. Only non-citizens can be spied on. Mr. Lafferty, next time you want to spew your propaganda, make sure all your readers are dumb enough to believe it.โ
First, let me say that I didnโt โneglectโ or โwithholdโ anything. I have roughly 600 words to make my point and have to make decisions on whatโs relevant and what isnโt.
Second, I would ask that you look at the 5th and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. Both expressly provide in part: โNo person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.โ
In other words, and contrary to what the letter-writer said, โforeign nationals”โeven those in the country illegallyโare entitled to the same constitutional protections as U.S. citizens.
Another reader correctly pointed out that the aforementioned executive orders required the attorney general to certify such warrantless actions. This apparently is the equivalent of oversight that is acceptable to Democrats. Letโs see, the AGโa person appointed by and reporting to the Presidentโsays itโs OK. And thatโs OK?
The point here, ladies and gents, is that the feds pose less threat to your liberties than the states do: Forty-one states have laws permitting DUI โsafetyโ checkpoints. In short, you may be stopped without reasonable suspicion that you have done anything wrong.
Twenty-one states have primary seatbelt laws. That is, you may be stopped and cited for not wearing your seatbelt. This is apparently way cool because the Constitution-loving liberals were nowhere to be heard from when the laws were enacted.
But George W. Bush is drunk on power. Or something.
