These are the real reasons for opposing the nomination of Kavanaugh – the ones that are being ignored by the Deep State.
The Real Reasons to Oppose Kavanaugh for the Supreme Court
Anti-Media,
1 October, 2018
This is not the constitutionalist you’re looking for.
(FEE Op-ed) —
After two days of political theater, the Senate Judiciary
Committee agreed to delay the vote to confirm Judge Brett Kavanaugh
to the Supreme Court for a week. In that time, the FBI will conduct
an investigation surrounding the allegations made against him by
Christine Blasey Ford.
By
now, no one is a stranger to the claims of sexual assault that have
been levied against Judge Kavanaugh. In fact, the entire country has
been so wrapped up in this case, it is hard to determine what is fact
and what is simply partisan politics rearing its ugly head. And
between Cory Booker’s lengthy monologue that sounded more like a
campaign stump speech than anything else and Lindsey Graham’s
unexpected passionate rant, it is clear that both sides are putting
way too much stake on the outcome of these hearings. And the real
losers, unfortunately, are the American people, who are being
diligently distracted from Kavanaugh’s actual policy record.
To
be sure, claims of sexual misconduct should certainly be brought to
the public’s attention, especially when they involve a nominee for
a position as powerful as a Supreme Court Justice. And in the #metoo
era, failing to take these allegations seriously would be most
unwise. But losing ourselves in this political circus and the
subsequent media frenzy surrounding Kavanaugh’s sexual past glosses
over another aspect of his professional career that should concern
every single individual: his promotion of the national security
state.
The PATRIOT Act
The
years of 2001-2003 were confusing for Americans as many tried to
grapple with the fact that living in the greatest country on earth
did not make us immune to large-scale terrorist attacks. These were
also the years that Brett Kavanaugh served as associate White House
Counsel for then-President George W. Bush.
In
the aftermath of 9/11, many people began to believe that the
government not only had a right to take drastic security measures
against its own people but that our livelihoods actually depended on
it. This fear gave birth to the monstrous national security state we
live in today, where without just cause, civilians began being
treated like criminals in our own country.
One
of the most egregious acts perpetrated against the American people at
this time was the PATRIOT Act. And one of its greatest supporters was
Brett Kavanaugh.
According
to the Electronic
Privacy Information Center (EPIC),
which filed a Freedom of Information Act Request for Kavanaugh’s
official government correspondence records from this era, the Supreme
Court Justice nominee referred to the PATRIOT Act as a “measured,
careful, responsible, and constitutional approach” in an email sent
to a colleague. Anyone who knows anything about the PATRIOT Act knows
that “constitutional” and “careful” are by no means accurate
descriptions. The PATRIOT Act obliterated the Fourth and Fifth
Amendment rights to privacy and due process by giving the federal
government sweeping new powers to conduct surveillance on the
American people.
But
his support of the legislation that signaled the downfall of American
rule of law does not simply end with his favorable comments.
Kavanaugh was also one of the individuals tasked with its drafting.
He has been definitively credited with the line, “…the new law
will update laws authorizing government surveillance.” And just
this one line is rather problematic in itself. If he is the
constitutionalist he has claimed to be on several occasions, then he
would know that the Constitution already prohibits the government
from broad, warrantless searches of this nature.
This is not a
protection that can simply be “updated.” And yet, his nonchalance
over abolishing certain constitutional protections without a
discussion of adopting an actual amendment is disconcerting.
The Torture Memos
The
public’s discovery of the “torture memos” was a dark time in
modern American history. We had been riding our moral high horse
during the early years of the War on Terror, pretending that America
was the global beacon of moral and ethical treatment. But when the
memos, which were originally composed while Kavanaugh served the Bush
Administration, were released in 2004, the entire world caught a
glimpse of just how ugly military interventions really were.
The
memos told a story of members of the Bush Administration attempting
to broadly expand the legal definition of torture to justify such
horrific acts as waterboarding and sleep deprivation as permissible.
They also told of the administration’s quest to seek the authority
to label anyone of their choosing an “enemy combatant,” thus,
subjecting them to the possibility of indefinite detention in awful
facilities like Guantanamo Bay. Their publication also added fuel to
the already growing fire of animosity against George W. Bush who, at
the time of the memo’s creation, was the employer of Judge
Kavanaugh.
In
2006, when Judge Kavanaugh was being questioned by the Senate
Judiciary Committee as he waited to be confirmed to the Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, he went on the record
stating that he knew nothing of these memos before their public
release. At several points during his hearing, he denied having
anything to do with these memos specifically stating that he was “not
involved” in any conversations regarding the rules governing the
detention of combatants He also denied ever having seen the
correspondence at all. He even told Senator Leahy:
I think with respect to the legal justifications or the policies relating to the treatment of detainees, I was not aware of any issues on that or the legal memos that subsequently came out. This was not part of my docket, either in the counsel’s office or as staff secretary.
The
reason this has raised red flags for those already skeptical about
Kavanaugh is that his position at the time dictated that memos and
other written correspondence would have passed by his desk at some
point before reaching their end recipient.
Enemy Combatants
Additionally,
a year after the 2006 hearing, the Washington
Post reported
on a contentious meeting that had occurred in the White House in
2002. The conversation was centered on speculation as to whether or
not the Supreme Court would accept the Bush Administration’s
assertion that they could label an American citizen an “enemy
combatant” at their discretion, allowing the person in question to
be locked up for an indefinite amount of time.
As
per the Washington
Post’s
reporting, Judge Kavanaugh was not only present at this meeting but
was specifically summoned to weigh in on the matter since he was
himself a former clerk for swing vote judge, Justice Kennedy. At the
meeting, he voiced his concerns that Justice Kennedy and other swing
voters on the Supreme Court would never side with the
administration’s controversial decision. This meeting was brought
up again just a couple of weeks
ago,
addressing the concerns some Senators still have over Kavanaugh’s
insistence that he had no role in such conversations when it appears
that he did.
As
the New
Yorker points out:
First, attending this meeting or even just contributing a reading of Justice Kennedy’s likely view would seem to constitute taking part in a discussion on detention policies, and thus to contradict Kavanaugh’s sworn testimony.
Senator
Durbin, who sat on the Senate Judicial committee in 2006 sent
Kavanaugh a letter in which he states, “it appears that you misled
me,” but he never received a response, even after he followed up
with Kavanaugh recently after he had received the Supreme Court
nomination.
Metadata: Due Process for Me, Not for Thee
The
2013 Edward Snowden leaks were arguably one of the most significant
events to occur over the last decade. For those who thought the
government wasn’t capable of this magnitude of corruption, the
blindfold was removed and the government’s true intentions were
revealed. For those already skeptical, the leaks had confirmed
preexisting suspicions.
In
many ways, the Snowden situation drew a line in the political sand.
Those who stood for freedom believed in the people’s inherent right
to privacy and in upholding the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. But
those who supported and sustained the government’s mass
surveillance of its own people made their views on individual liberty
very clear. And Judge Kavanaugh was not on the right side of history.
At
the heart of the Snowden situation was the question of whether or not
metadata counted as government surveillance. The government,
frantically scrambling to justify its actions, insisted that it was
not actually data collection, since metadata did not technically
provide any raw data. But metadata still gives very specific
information about the type of data collected and therefore is still a
violation of constitutional protections.
However,
in a ruling in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit,
Kavanaugh ruled that “the Government’s metadata collection
program is entirely consistent with the Fourth Amendment.” He also
later stated that “that critical national security need outweighs
the impact on privacy occasioned by this program.” Again, a rather
odd conclusion for a staunch “constitutionalist” to support.
Congressman
Amash expressed his concerns with Kavanaugh’s ruling, tweeting:
Future decisions on the constitutionality of government surveillance of Americans will be huge. We can’t afford a rubber stamp for the executive branch.
This
mass surveillance of the American people not only violated the
specific statutes in the Fourth Amendment that specified how
individuals could be searched by the state, but it also violated the
right of due process— the same due process that Kavanaugh has asked
be upheld while he undergoes the confirmation process.
Due
process is a staple of our American legal system. And while the
allegations made by victims of sexual assault should be listened to
and investigated, there is more to due process than allowing Judge
Kavanaugh to have his day in court. If the government would like to
gain access to the private communications of American citizens, it
must do so by going to a judge and obtaining a warrant. This warrant
must specifically state what property is being searched and what is
being searched for, as is specified by the Fourth Amendment.
Requiring
law enforcement to go through the proper channels to secure a warrant
before violating the privacy of American citizens is part of due
process. You cannot support “some” due process while blatantly
abolishing certain safeguards that guarantee this right to Americans.
To
be sure, accusers of sexual assault deserve to be heard, but before
we pass judgment, due process needs to occur. But due process is not
meant for one class of people; it is meant for every American citizen
whether they are nominated for the Supreme Court like Kavanaugh, or
happen to have a radicalized parent like sixteen-year-old Abdulrahman
al-Awlaki, who was targeted and killed by the U.S. Military without
any semblance of due process.
What’s at Stake
Currently,
the entire country is obsessed with focusing on one very narrow
aspect of Judge Kavanaugh’s life. True, if these claims turn out to
be correct, there is a legitimate cause for alarm. But even if the
allegations prove to be false, there are still serious concerns
surrounding Kavanaugh’s confirmation on the Supreme Court that
should not be ignored.
Most
of our lives are now digital, which makes our information extremely
vulnerable to hackers both private and government-sanctioned. We
cannot afford to put ourselves at risk by empowering judicial
candidates who have a proven record of trampling on Fourth Amendment
rights.
Additionally,
if there is ever a day when it is possible for Edward Snowden to
return to the U.S. and receive a fair trial before the Supreme Court,
it is hoped that our justices will be up to the task. And given
Kavanaugh’s record of upholding the surveillance state in favor of
national security, that future is highly unlikely.
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