Op-Ed:
Why Scalia’s remarks on U.S. internment camps should terrify you
5
February, 2014
DSU Special Collections & ArchivesBarracks
at a Japanese internment facility in the United States
Honolulu -
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia told law students in Hawaii that
they should expect the court to issue a ruling similar to the one
that allowed U.S. citizens of Japanese descent to be interned without
trial during a future conflict.
Justice
Scalia quoted Marcus
Tullius Cicero when he said that laws are silent in times of war
(inter
arma silent leges).
Scalia was asked by a law student his thoughts on the Korematsu
v. United States case,
in which two men were convicted of refusing to comply with an order
to report to a prison camp even though the men had committed no
crime. Scalia said the court was wrong for upholding the convictions,
however he followed with:
But
you are kidding yourself if you think the same thing will not happen
again.
This
statement should strike every single American with fear for two
reasons. First, the longest-serving Justice on the Supreme Court has
openly stated that the court does not adhere to the Constitution of
the United States, but rather allows laws to wither in times of war.
The highest court in the land will gladly send you to a prison camp
out of fear, knowing that it is wrong.During World War II, when
Japanese internment was taking place, it was easy to determine who
the probable enemy was. Today, the United States no longer fights
conventional wars where the enemy is a single nationality. Instead
the U.S. declares wars on concepts such as the “War on Terrorism.”
The reason this is troubling, is that it allows the government to
define probable enemies in any way it chooses and incarcerate them
without trial for the purposes of national security.
Who
is already considered a potential terrorist according to government
documents?
There
are dozens of documents put out by government agencies that already
establish the signs of suspected terrorists. What can be used to
classify an American as a potential terrorist will surprise most.
In
2011, an unclassified Tactical
Reference Guide on
violent extremism was released. As signals of potential violent
extremism, it cautioned about someone who:
- complains about bias
- believes in government conspiracies to point of paranoia
- is frustrated with mainstream ideologies
- lacks positive identity with country, unit, family, or friends
- is sympathetic to radical groups
- visits extremist websites or blogs
- attends rallies for extremist causes
- associates with known radicals
The
guide lists many other indicators. The most disturbing factor in all
of the reasons one might become a suspected extremist, is that they
are all terrifyingly vague. The Tea
Party and evangelical
Christians have
been labeled extremists, as have supporters of Ron
Paul.
Another
point that should be noted in detail is that all of these actions are
legal, and in some cases protected by the United States Constitution;
though Scalia did make it clear that the Constitution was no
hindrance to government action. They all relate to what a person
thinks, rather than any illegal activity they may or may not be
involved in. It seems very likely that Orwellian thoughtcrime is on
its way to the United States.
The
all-encompassing terminology and vague statutes make any American
that disagrees with the government a potential terrorist.
Justice
Scalia may have not been advocating this action with his words in
Hawaii. In all likelihood, he was trying to slip a warning out to the
American people. In 2004, Scalia used the same Cicero quote when he
slammed a decision in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld which allowed the detention
of an U.S. citizen without charge. At the time, he said
Many
think it not only inevitable but entirely proper that liberty give
way to security in times of national crisis that, at the extremes of
military exigency, inter arma silent leges. Whatever the general
merits of the view that war silences law or modulates its voice, that
view has no place in the interpretation and application of a
Constitution designed precisely to confront war and, in a manner that
accords with democratic principles, to accommodate it.
His
2004 statement pierces straight to the heart of the argument for
America’s erosion of rights in the name of national security. A
free nation cannot remain free when it allows itself to destroy the
very freedoms the society treasures. It is past time for the American
people to stop waiving their rights every time a politician waves a
flag.
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