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View Full Version : Hollow Justice and Courts of Order in an Age of Government-Sanctioned Tyranny



Ares
23rd October 2014, 06:02 AM
By John W. Whitehead
October 21, 2014

“The Constitution is not neutral. It was designed to take the government off the backs of the people.”—Justice William O. Douglas

Justice in America makes less sense with each passing day.

A Michigan couple that has been raising chickens in their backyard as a source of healthy food for their family could get up to 90 days in jail for violating a local ban on backyard hens. A Kentucky prison guard who was charged with 25 counts of sexual abuse against female inmates, trafficking controlled substances, and 50 counts of official misconduct walks away with no jail time and seven years’ probation. A 53-year-old Virginia man is facing 20 years in jail for kidnapping, despite the fact that key evidence shows him to be innocent and his accuser a liar, yet the courts claim they’re unable to do anything about it. Meanwhile, thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent refusal to hear the case of Jones v. U.S., judges can now punish individuals for crimes of which they may never have been convicted or even charged.

With every ruling handed down, it becomes more apparent that we live in an age of hollow justice, with government courts, largely lacking in vision and scope, rendering narrow rulings focused on the letter of the law. This is true at all levels of the judiciary, but especially so in the highest court of the land, the U.S. Supreme Court, which is seemingly more concerned with establishing order and protecting government agents than with upholding the rights enshrined in the Constitution.

Given the turbulence of our age, with its police overreach, military training drills on American soil, domestic surveillance, SWAT team raids, asset forfeiture, wrongful convictions, and corporate corruption, the need for a guardian of the people’s rights has never been greater.

Yet when presented with an opportunity to weigh in on these issues, what does our current Supreme Court usually do? It ducks. Prevaricates. Remains silent. Speaks to the narrowest possible concern. More often than not, it gives the government and its corporate sponsors the benefit of the doubt. Rarely do the concerns of the populace prevail.

In this way, preoccupied with their personal politics, cocooned in a priggish world of privilege, partial to those with power, money and influence, and narrowly focused on a shrinking docket (the court accepts on average 80 cases out of 8,000 each year), the justices of the current Supreme Court rarely venture beyond their rarefied comfort zones.

Every so often the justices toss a bone to those who fear they have abdicated their allegiance to the Constitution. In Riley v. California, for instance, a unanimous Court ruled that police need warrants in order to physically search the cellphones of people they arrest. Even in that instance the victory rang hollow to those who understand that government agents, equipped with military-grade surveillance equipment, don’t need physical access to our phones in order to know who we’ve been talking to or texting and what we’ve been saying.

Too often, however, as I document in A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State, the Supreme Court tends to march in lockstep with the police state.

In recent years, for example, the Court has ruled that police officers can use lethal force in car chases without fear of lawsuits; police officers can stop cars based only on “anonymous” tips; Secret Service agents are not accountable for their actions, as long as they’re done in the name of security; citizens only have a right to remain silent if they assert it; police have free reign to use drug-sniffing dogs as “search warrants on leashes,” justifying any and all police searches of vehicles stopped on the roadside; police can forcibly take your DNA, whether or not you’ve been convicted of a crime; police can stop, search, question and profile citizens and non-citizens alike; police can subject Americans to virtual strip searches, no matter the “offense”; police can break into homes without a warrant, even if it’s the wrong home; and it’s a crime to not identify yourself when a policeman asks your name.

The cases the Supreme Court refuses to hear, allowing lower court judgments to stand, are almost as critical as the ones they rule on. Some of these cases have delivered devastating blows to the rights enshrined in the Constitution. By remaining silent, the Court has affirmed that: legally owning a firearm is enough to justify a no-knock raid by police; the military can arrest and detain American citizens; students can be subjected to random lockdowns and mass searches at school; and police officers who don’t know their actions violate the law aren’t guilty of breaking the law.

What a difference nine people can make.

Contrast the Roberts Supreme Court and its occupants’ preoccupation with personal politics, its cocooned, priggish world of privilege, its partiality to those with power, money and influence, and its narrowly focused on a shrinking docket (the court accepts on average 80 cases out of 8,000 each year) with the Warren Court (1953-1969), when Earl Warren served as Chief Justice, alongside such luminaries as William J. Brennan, Jr., William O. Douglas, Hugo Black, Felix Frankfurter and Thurgood Marshall.

The Roberts Court’s decisions in recent years, characterized most often by an abject deference to government authority, military and corporate interests, have run the gamut from suppressing free speech activities and justifying suspicionless strip searches and warrantless home invasions to conferring constitutional rights on corporations, while denying them to citizens.

The Warren Court, on the other hand, handed down rulings that were instrumental in shoring up critical legal safeguards against government abuse and discrimination. Without the Warren Court, there would be no Miranda warnings, no desegregation of the schools and no civil rights protections for indigents. Yet more than any single ruling, what Warren and his colleagues did best was embody what the Supreme Court should always be—an institution established to intervene and protect the people against the government and its agents when they overstep their bounds.

Justice Douglas, who served on the Supreme Court for 36 years, was particularly vocal in his belief that Americans have a right to be left alone (“The right to be let alone is indeed the beginning of all freedom”).

Considered the most “committed civil libertarian ever to sit on the court,” Douglas was frequently controversial and far from perfect (he was part of a 6-3 majority in Korematsu vs. United States that supported the government’s internment of American citizens of Japanese descent during World War II.)

Even so, his warnings against a domineering, suspicious, totalitarian, police-driven surveillance state resonate still today. They stand as a potent reminder that while the technology and social concerns of Douglas’ day have undergone dramatic transformations in our time, the rights we are struggling to safeguard remain the same, as do the threats posed by the government.

Then, as now, government surveillance was invasive and unregulated. As Douglas observed:

We are rapidly entering the age of no privacy, where everyone is open to surveillance at all times; where there are no secrets from government. The aggressive breaches of privacy by the Government increase by geometric proportions. Wiretapping and “bugging” run rampant, without effective judicial or legislative control. Secret observation booths in government offices and closed television circuits in industry, extending even to rest rooms, are common. Offices, conference rooms, hotel rooms, and even bedrooms are “bugged” for the convenience of government.

Although the Roberts Court has so far remained silent on the NSA’s domestic surveillance program, Douglas had plenty to say about “the privacy of our citizens and the breach of that privacy by government agents”:

Once electronic surveillance … is added to the techniques of snooping which this sophisticated age has developed, we face the stark reality that the walls of privacy have broken down and all the tools of the police state are handed over to our bureaucracy on a constitutional platter… The dangers posed by wiretapping and electronic surveillance strike at the very heart of the democratic philosophy. A free society is based on the premise that there are large zones of privacy into which the Government may not intrude except in unusual circumstances…

Here’s Douglas on the dangers posed by electronic surveillance:

[W]iretapping and electronic “bugging” invariably … lay down a dragnet which indiscriminately sweeps in all conversations within its scope, without regard to the nature of the conversations, or the participants. A warrant authorizing such devices is no different from the general warrants the Fourth Amendment was intended to prohibit… Such practices can only have a damaging effect on our society.

Douglas on the ramifications of indiscriminate government surveillance:

Once sanctioned, there is every indication that their use will indiscriminately spread. The time may come when no one can be sure whether his words are being recorded for use at some future time; when everyone will fear that his most secret thoughts are no longer his own, but belong to the Government; when the most confidential and intimate conversations are always open to eager, prying ears. When that time comes, privacy, and with it liberty, will be gone. If a man's privacy can be invaded at will, who can say he is free? If his every word is taken down and evaluated, or if he is afraid every word may be, who can say he enjoys freedom of speech? If his every association is known and recorded, if the conversations with his associates are purloined, who can say he enjoys freedom of association? When such conditions obtain, our citizens will be afraid to utter any but the safest and most orthodox thoughts; afraid to associate with any but the most acceptable people. Freedom as the Constitution envisages it will have vanished.

Douglas would undoubtedly have had a lot to say about the NSA’s efforts to get the country’s “biggest spy center” in Bluffdale, Utah, fully operational, as well as government data collecting programs such as MAINWAY. Here’s his take on government data repositories on citizens:

The dossiers on all citizens mount in number and increase in size. Now they are being put on computers so that by pressing one button all the miserable, the sick, the suspect, the unpopular, the offbeat people of the Nation can be instantly identified. These examples and many others demonstrate an alarming trend whereby the privacy and dignity of our citizens is being whittled away by sometimes imperceptible steps. Taken individually, each step may be of little consequence. But when viewed as a whole, there begins to emerge a society quite unlike any we have seen—a society in which government may intrude into the secret regions of man's life at will.

Perhaps the greatest difference between Justice Douglas and his contemporaries and those who occupy the bench today can be found in his answer to a government that refuses to listen to its citizen or abide by the rule of law. “We must realize that today’s Establishment is the New George III,” noted Douglas. “Whether it will continue to adhere to his tactics, we do not know. If it does, the redress, honored in tradition, is also revolution.”

https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/john_whiteheads_commentary/hollow_justice_and_courts_of_order_in_an_age_of_go vernment_sanctioned_tyran

Twisted Titan
23rd October 2014, 08:52 AM
When injustice becomes The Law.

Rebellion becomes Your Duty.

Act Accordingly

Ponce
23rd October 2014, 09:06 AM
Now days there is no justice unless there is tyranny.

V

palani
23rd October 2014, 09:37 AM
You might feel better about the justice system if

1) judicial retirement funds didn't come from fines collected.
2) bonds were not created to fund the incarceration of the guilty (that would be practically anyone charged)
3) you knew that your consent is required for the system to proceed with any action against you.
4) you knew that the person charged is a creation of the state by the birth certificate.
5) if fined you have no means to pay off the fine ... money having been outlawed in 1933.
6) you knew that pro se means "I represent myself" which takes away your status as a principal and reduces you to an agent.
7) you understand that when the judicial actor asks you if you understand the charges he means "do you agree to be found liable for these charges?" Best is to ask him "Do YOU understand the charges?" and when he doesn't then ask the prosecutor "do YOU understand these charges?" and when he turns pale and faints you then demand the charges be dismissed because nobody understands them.
8) ultimately your participation in the social security system provides you with the benefit of incarceration they are offering you.

crimethink
23rd October 2014, 02:03 PM
"Case law" needs to be swept into the trash bin...along with most of the "judges" who decreed it.

palani
23rd October 2014, 02:15 PM
Not so much case law as the concept of bill of attainder (or bill of pains and punishments). Courts act in administrative law. Admin law is the fourth branch of government. Yet there are only three branches of government. The cop who assigns a hearing date for you cannot do so if he is executive or judicial branches.

Hatha Sunahara
23rd October 2014, 02:25 PM
It was once called 'The Criminal Justice System'. I now call it 'The Gratuitous Punishment Industry'.

You are mosly right in your characterization of it Palani. However, you assume that the system is concerned with maintaining legitimacy. The system is concerned with maintaining power, legitimate or not. It's greatest tool in achieving this goal is, as you infer, the ignorance of the masses.

I saw the movie 12 Years A Slave recently. That movie portrays a legal tyranny called slavery. Things are not too different today. The only two things that have changed are the faces of the slaves and their owners. The owners used to be Plantation owners. Today it is Corporate employers--including governments at all levels. The slaves used to be black people from Africa. Today they are everybody but the owners, i. e. the 99.9%. Watch that movie if you want to get a good close look at tyranny on a personal level.


Hatha

crimethink
23rd October 2014, 06:24 PM
It was once called 'The Criminal Justice System'. I now call it 'The Gratuitous Punishment Industry'.

You are mosly right in your characterization of it Palani. However, you assume that the system is concerned with maintaining legitimacy. The system is concerned with maintaining power, legitimate or not. It's greatest tool in achieving this goal is, as you infer, the ignorance of the masses.

I saw the movie 12 Years A Slave recently. That movie portrays a legal tyranny called slavery. Things are not too different today. The only two things that have changed are the faces of the slaves and their owners. The owners used to be Plantation owners. Today it is Corporate employers--including governments at all levels. The slaves used to be black people from Africa. Today they are everybody but the owners, i. e. the 99.9%. Watch that movie if you want to get a good close look at tyranny on a personal level.


Hatha

I'm not fond of "Black culture" but it is sad how the Blacks have simply exchanged one master for another, and moved from the cotton plantation to the DNC plantation.

But yes, the rest of us are in permanent servitude, as well.

crimethink
23rd October 2014, 06:28 PM
Not so much case law as the concept of bill of attainder (or bill of pains and punishments). Courts act in administrative law. Admin law is the fourth branch of government. Yet there are only three branches of government. The cop who assigns a hearing date for you cannot do so if he is executive or judicial branches.

I classify everything not Constitutional or plainly-written, statutory law as "case law." Perhaps semantically incorrect, but not really relevant.

The power of the Cult of the Bar must be broken by any means necessary, and "judges" must become mere secretaries to fully-informed, fully-empowered juries.

And yes, cops who "administer justice" is abominable to a free, just society as well. Many if not most infractions are now "judged" by a pig administrator, not even an elected judge.

palani
23rd October 2014, 07:27 PM
I classify everything not Constitutional or plainly-written, statutory law as "case law."

Case law is the law of the case. It becomes the law of the case because it is accepted. It is the law of THAT case and no other. Common law is unwritten law. Lawyers will tell you this means judge-made law but then judges are forbidden from making law. That (in the present form of government) is reserved for legislature. But then legislature law is termed 'statute law' and while written still requires the law to be 'voiced' for it to become active. Unwritten law is custom or it is also considered natural law.

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