Friday, November 30, 2007

Vintage Rat


Ah, Rat. At the end of this week, he encounters Andy, a watchdog in a neighboring yard, and he responds in classic Ratlike fashion. Pig, on the other hand, has been trying to accomodate Andy's delusion about going on a cruise even though poor Andy is chained to a stake in his yard. Rat gives Andy what he wants (and gives us what we need). If this is (fair & balanced) cynicism, so be it.

[x Pearls Before Swine]

Click on image to enlarge (11/26/2007)


Click on image to enlarge (11/27/2007)

Click on image to enlarge (11/30/2007)


Copyright © 2007 Stephan Pastis


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Thursday, November 29, 2007

The Liberal Media Shibboleth

"No Spin Zone" and "Truth In Broadcasting" are phrases that echo daily over the radio and through coaxial cable to television sets across the fruited plain (to quote one blowhard). A small voice confronting this onslaught of snide remarks, sneers, and cant comes from a little penguin who wears wraparound shades or retro 3-D glasses. Perhaps the eyewear enables Sparky the Wonder Penguin to see through all of the male bovine excrement that passes for "journalism" these days. If this is (fair & balanced) tit for tat, so be it.

Click on image to enlarge.
Cast in this strip:
Sparky the Wonder Penguin — Spark's first words in the strip (back in the early 1990s) were "George [H. W.] Bush is a wanker". A strong liberal advocate, Sparky briefly became a Republican after being hit on the head with a random falling toilet.

The Mindless Mullet — Everyman who listens to the bloviating voices of the EIB Network, featuring the big, fat Oxycodone addict and Faux News, featuring the Worst Person In The World.

[Dan Perkins (born 5 April 1961 in Wichita, Kansas) is an editorial cartoonist better known by the pen name "Tom Tomorrow". His weekly comic strip This Modern World, which comments on current events from a strong liberal populist perspective, appears regularly in approximately 150 papers across the U.S., as well as on Salon.com and Working for Change. The strip debuted in 1990 in SF Weekly.

Perkins, a long time resident of Brooklyn, New York, currently lives in Connecticut. He received the Robert F. Kennedy Award for Excellence in Journalism in both 1998 and 2002.

When he is not working on projects related to his comic strip, he writes a daily political weblog, also entitled This Modern World, which he began in December 2001.]

Copyright © 2007 Tom Tomorrow


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Wednesday, November 28, 2007

The Truth About Blogs And Bloggers!

Rat in "Pearl Before Swine" is the greatest cartoon character of our time. He knows the price of everything and the value of nothing. Pig, Zebra, and Goat confront his massive cynicism and are rendered speechless. This time, Rat turns his white-hot scrutiny on blogs (like this one). If this is (fair & balanced) effrontery,ao be it.

[x Pearls Before Swine]
By Stephan Pastis

Meet the cast:

Rat—Arrogant, quick-tempered, (and cynical), Rat is obsessed with fame, immortality and making a quick buck. Spends his time with Pig because it makes him feel superior and, more importantly, no one else will hang out with him.

Pig—Humble (in fact, painfully aware of his limitations), practical, kind and a little slow in the head, Pig has few aspirations in life, other than to spend his days watching TV and doing almost nothing productive. Apparently sees something redeeming in Rat, as he is willing to endure Rat's endless barbs and numerous schemes. Kicked out of the Society of Cultured Pigs because he was caught eating a BLT.

Zebra—Just trying to stay alive. In a world filled with lions, tigers and crocodiles, this is not an easy task.

Goat—The smart one. Would rather spend his time with his snout in a book than talking to any of the other odd characters in this strip.

The Fraternity of Crocodiles—Proud members of Zeeba Zeeba Eata, a fraternity dedicated to the destruction of Zebra and other prey, the crocodiles are Zebra’s next-door neighbors. Stupid, slow and barely articulate, these particular crocodiles are a disgrace to their species. Croc Larry is dumber than dirt.

Duck—Pig's loyal, but violent and unstable (guard) duck. He sits in a bunker on Pig's front lawn on guard duty, defending the property against mailmen, Girl Scouts and offensive neighbors.

Click on image to enlarge.

[Stephan Pastis was born in 1968 and raised in San Marino, California, a suburb of Los Angeles. He graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1989 with a degree in political science. Although he had always wanted to be a syndicated cartoonist, Pastis realized that the odds of syndication were slim, so he entered UCLA Law School in 1990 and became an attorney instead. He practiced law in the San Francisco Bay area from 1993 to 2002. While an attorney, he began submitting various comic strip concepts to all of the syndicates, and, like virtually all beginning cartoonists, got his fair share of rejection slips. Then, in 1997, he began drawing Pearls Before Swine, which he submitted to the syndicates in mid-1999. In December, 1999, he signed a contract with United.

Pearls Before Swine debuted in newspapers in January, 2002, and Pastis left his law practice in August of that year. Pearls Before Swine was nominated in 2003, 2004 and 2007 as "Best Newspaper Comic Strip" by the National Cartoonists Society and won the award in 2004 and 2007. Pastis lives with his family in Northern California.]

Copyright © 2007 Stephan Pastis


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If A Picture Is Worth A Thousand Words, How Much Are Two Pictures Worth?


Rudy and Hillary were going to square off in the 2000 Senate race in New York, but Rudy bailed because of prostate cancer and a messy divorce. Now, he is in remission — both with cancer and in his domestic situation — but the images from the 2000 race before his withdrawal are very revealing. The "unreal" image at a public gathering early in the 2000 campaign is belied by a later "real" image at the funeral of Francis Cardinal McIntyre. The two candidates look grim: Rudy had drawn blood with attacks on Mrs. Clinton, but Rudy had his own problems with the Roman Catholic Church over his messy divorce and adultery issues. Interestingly, the animus toward Hillary trumps adultery in the eyes of the Religious Right (Pat Robertson and Bob Jones, Jr.). If this is a (fair & balanced) choice of the lesser of evils: 9/11 Rudy versus the Other Clinton, so be it. A plague on both their houses!


"Not Real?"

"Or Real?"


Copyright © 2007 The New York Times


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Monday, November 26, 2007

TancredoCode: Illegal Immigrants? Nah, Too Many Mexicans!


The anti-immigrant rhetoric of 2007 is really anti-Mexican prejudice (long a tradition in the Southwest and West, but becoming universal throughout this land) warmed over. Ruben Navarrette is a Harvard-educated Californio who calls an espada an espada. (Tr. "espada= spade") Press 1 for English or Dos para EspaƱol . If this is (fair & balanced) truth to xenophobia, so be it.


[x San Diego Fishwrap]
Separate fact from fiction in immigration debate
By Ruben Navarrette Jr.

What can I say? Bill Richardson rocks.

While John Edwards and Barack Obama were taking shots at Hillary Clinton during the recent CNN Democratic debate in Las Vegas, the New Mexico governor was focusing on his own candidacy and delivering one of the best performances of the night.

Even those who believe that Richardson is really auditioning for a vice presidential nomination would have to concede that the audition is going well.

Just think about the novel way in which Richardson, in answering a question from the audience about the tone of the immigration debate, did something that is practically unheard of in the dizzying pander-monium of the 2008 campaign: He scolded the audience and told them that not only do we have a dysfunctional border that is being breached by illegal immigrants, a dysfunctional system that makes it too hard for people to enter legally, and a dysfunctional Congress that won't tackle the issue in an honest and productive way, but even the way we discuss these issues is dysfunctional.

For one thing, too many Americans keep falling into old habits and repeating a historically familiar depiction of immigrants — legal or illegal — as inferior to natives, defective in their culture, slow to assimilate, prone to criminal activity and devoid of any positive values. Or, as Republican presidential hopeful Tom Tancredo contends in an outrageous television commercial, terrorists in the making.

Tancredo's point was not lost on the person who asked the question during the Democratic debate. George Ambriz, a graduate student at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, noted that one thing shaping the immigration debate is the claim by some that controlling illegal immigration is linked to the war on terrorism. He then asked the Democratic candidates if they agreed that these two things should be linked.

Richardson seized on the question to make a pitch for more civility in our discourse.

"We should stop demonizing immigrants," he said. "We should stop doing that."

Amen. You don't hear that sort of thing often enough from politicians, even from liberal Democrats who like to portray themselves as more progressive on immigration policy than those retrograde Republicans. It should be clear by now that immigration is one issue that cuts across party lines and makes some Democrats sound downright Republican.

Nor would you expect to hear it from Hispanic politicians, many of whom might fear being tagged as overly sympathetic to illegal immigrants. That's the risk that Richardson faces whenever he talks about immigration.

The last time I heard something similar to what Richardson said, it came from someone who is an immigrant — California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who, like Richardson, has the advantage of living far from Washington and having the real-world perspective of a border governor.

Schwarzenegger says that Americans should channel their anger over illegal immigration toward the federal government and not toward immigrants.

I know what you're thinking — that these governors are wrong and that the angst that many Americans feel isn't over "immigrants," just "illegal immigrants."

Sure, sure. It's a lovely sound bite but one not based in fact. Anyone who believes that nonsense hasn't been paying very close attention to the immigration debate. It may have started off being about words such as "legal" and "illegal," but that lasted about 18 seconds. From there, the debate meandered into the cultural swamp. It became about the outrage that we have to "press 1 for English" and how it's bad manners to wave the Mexican flag and how cities should be able to outlaw taco trucks or dictate the number of people who can squeeze into a single-family house. It became about whether we should admit educated and skilled immigrants rather than those whose only qualifications are a strong work ethic and hope for the future. And it became about whether it is time to impose a moratorium on legal immigration to aid the assimilation process for those already here.

Once we went down that road, of course, things were going to get ugly. And, of course, the debate was going to be acrimonious. And, of course, the subtext of the discussion was going to go from anti-illegal immigration to anti-Mexican, just as it has. No surprise there.

That's why it is crucial that people speak out against this sort of thing, especially if they happen to be running for president. We ought to be grateful that at least one has.

[Ruben Navarrette Jr., a columnist and editorial board member of The San Diego Union-Tribune, is a fresh and increasingly important voice in the national political debate. His twice-weekly column offers new thinking on many of the major issues of the day, especially on thorny questions involving ethnicity and national origin. His column is syndicated worldwide by The Washington Post Writers Group.

After graduating from Harvard in 1990, Navarrette returned to his native Fresno, Calif., where he began a free-lance writing career that produced more than 200 articles in such publications as the Los Angeles Times, The Fresno Bee, the Chicago Tribune and The Arizona Republic.

In 1997 he joined the staff of The Arizona Republic, first as a reporter and then as a twice-weekly columnist, before returning to Harvard in the fall of 1999 to earn a master's in public administration from the Kennedy School of Government. He joined the editorial board of The Dallas Morning News in July 2000, and in 2005, moved to the Union-Tribune. His column has been in syndication since 2001.]

Copyright © 2007 The San Diego Union-Tribune


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Get Your Guns Up! It's You Or The Damn Feral Cat!

A sharp-eyed reader of this blog in Madison, WI passed along an item that illustrates Lone Star priorities in a time of war, $100-a-barrel oil, and global warming. A few years back, this same reader sent along an item about the feral cat problem in Cheesehead Land. Now, it seems there is a feral cat problem in Galveston County, TX. Only Texas can produce a gun-totin' bird lover, though. A gun-totin' cat lover in Wisconsin isn't possible because Wisconsin doesn't have a right-to-carry law. In Texas, there can be a shootout between cat-lovers and bird-lovers. As it turned out, the Galveston cat-lover (lacking a gun at the moment) ran the bird-lovin' cat killer off the road after giving chase. No wonder the supporters of the Texas Tech Red Raiders say: "Get your guns up!" That sure beat hell out crying "Hark!" or "Here, Kitty, Kitty!" If this is (fair & balanced) folly, so be it.



[x Wisconsin State Journal]
Cat killer is big news in Texas
By Bill Wineke

It's a matter of perspective, I guess.

While most of the world is concerned about war, rumors of war, global warming and $100-a-barrel oil, the big news in Texas is cat killing.

Killing pet cats in Texas is illegal; killing wild cats is not.

If you shoot a pet cat in Texas, you could be fined $10,000 fine and jailed for six months to two years.

But you can shoot a feral cat with impunity.

The problem for Jim Stevenson, founder of the Galveston Ornithological Society, is that he mistook Cat One for Cat Two.

On Nov. 8, Stevenson aimed a .22 caliber rifle filled with hollow point bullets and shot dead a cat near the San Luis Pass Bridge. As one of the state's most prominent birders, Stevenson has a strong dislike for outdoor cats. He thinks outdoor cats have a propensity to stalk and kill birds — most likely because all cats have a propensity to stalk and kill birds.

What Stevenson didn't know is the cat he shot had a name, Mama Cat.

Mama Cat and several other strays had taken up residence at the toll bridge because toll collector John Newland fed them and hung cat toys under the bridge to make them feel at home.

Newland was not happy at seeing his "pet" cat killed. He jumped into his vehicle and took off after Stevenson, who was driving a white van emblazoned with the name "Galveston Ornithological Society." The vehicles collided and Newland called the cops.

Stevenson was arrested and charged with cruelty to animals. A jury deliberated his fate but could not come to a conclusion, so the drama ended — for now — in a mistrial.

If all this strikes you as a little overdramatic for a cat that lived under a bridge, you don't know cat lovers.

We faced a feral cat battle in Wisconsin in 2005. The Wisconsin Conservation Congress suggested amending state laws to classify wild cats as an "unprotected species." Had that happened, people would have been free to shoot feral cats the same way they can now shoot gophers or, for that matter, feral pigs.

The reasoning was Wisconsin has an estimated 2 million feral cats and they kill — we think — lots of songbirds, as many as 139 million a year by some estimates. Or, as few as 8 million by other estimates. The fact is we don't know much about feral cats or about their birding abilities. But we do know cat lovers are more vociferous than bird lovers. The proposal never got off the ground.

That's probably a good thing. When you see what's going on in Galveston, you can be glad we don't have to force juries here to determine whether cats are feral or tame.

You do have to wonder, though, about a society that can't seem to agree on a definition of "torture" when it comes to human beings but is more than willing to go to the mat to defend bird-killing cats.

[Bill Wineke writes a personal column for the State Journal, where he has worked since 1963. He also is an ordained clergyman of the United Church of Christ.]

All contents Copyright © 2007, Capital Newspapers, Inc.


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My Mother Road


Colfax Avenue is the east-west axis of Denver, CO. West Colfax begins at the foothills of the Rockies, near Golden, CO and proceeding east to the upper end of the downtown area East Colfax Avenue continues east to the plains that are indistinguishable from western Kansas. West Colfax was the main street of my adolescence (I lived two blocks south of Colfax at 1325 Raleigh Street.) and East Colfax was the main street of my early college years. (I lived at 690 Pearl Street eight blocks south of Colfax between Pennsylvania and Washington Streets.) West Colfax Avenue was lined with used car lots, motels, and, heading further west, bars and nightclubs. East Colfax is described, as it is today, by a freelance journalist for the NY Fishwrap. Looking back, I always felt more at home on West Colfax. Neither one — to paraphrase Neil Diamond — is home anymore. If this is (fair & balanced) nostalgia, so be it.


[x NY Fishwrap]
Denver Journal: A Notorious Main Drag, in Line for Big Changes
By Dan Frosch

Click on image to enlarge

Colfax Avenue is often described as one of America’s wickedest streets. Jack Kerouac wrote of its tawdry watering holes in “On The Road.” In the movie “Every Which Way But Loose,” Clint Eastwood’s character and his pet orangutan, Clyde, came here looking for action.

The broad, bustling thoroughfare is Denver’s most famous and notorious drag — a refuge for poets, addicts, hipsters and hustlers that has been the Rocky Mountains’ answer to Haight-Ashbury in San Francisco and Greenwich Village in New York. But while those neighborhoods have become gentrified, Colfax Avenue has largely retained its hardscrabble soul.

But there are signs the avenue is changing, particularly the Capitol Hill section, where ambitious new zoning laws and increased police presence are drawing businesses and driving down crime. And some residents worry that the resurgence will sanitize Colfax Avenue’s legendary grit.

“People always say they’re trying to establish a sense of community here, as if it didn’t already exist,” said Walt Young, who has been cutting hair for 38 years at the Upper Cut, an old-time barber shop on the avenue.

The Capitol Hill slice of Colfax Avenue was a haven for the wealthy before it fell on difficult times. Today it is among the city’s most colorful and distinctly urban neighborhoods, a warren of apartment buildings where young, upwardly mobile transplants, low-income senior citizens and street-hardened addicts co-exist.

In the shadows of the Colorado Statehouse, the Roslyn Grill opens in the morning to serve beer to drunks and to delivery men fresh off the graveyard shift. At night, half-dazed homeless people stagger among college students going to see bands at Colfax Avenue venues. Drug dealers peddle heroin and crack as the young professionals who have flocked to the remodeled Victorian-era buildings nearby walk their dogs.

“The social configuration of the streets here is a reflection of the neighborhood itself,” said Mr. Young, who counts street denizens and the Colorado secretary of state, Mike Coffman, as customers.

Mr. Young fears that the dynamic could change. In September 2005, the Denver City Council approved more structured zoning regulations for Colfax Avenue, parts of which are blighted by abandoned buildings and vacant parking lots, with the intention of turning it into Denver’s Main Street.

The Capitol Hill area, where haphazard development is particularly apparent, was rezoned to encourage ground-floor businesses with residential units above them. The idea was to create a synthesis between people on the street and activity inside the storefronts, said Katherine Cornwell, the principal city planner. It is part of a long-term plan for Colfax Avenue that is meant to proceed without disrupting the neighborhood’s eccentricities, Ms. Cornwell said.

“We recognize that Colfax is one of those places where a lot of very different types of people can co-exist together with good results,” she said.

Farther east, Colfax Avenue has been galvanized by a similar renaissance, mostly with the arrival of the spacious Tattered Cover Book Store and the transition of a once seamy motel’s ground floor into one of the city’s most popular bars, Ms. Cornwell said.

Already, establishments of a new breed are springing up in Capitol Hill, like the Cheeky Monk Belgian Beer Cafe, whose expansive glass storefront allows passers-by to peer in at customers, just as city planners had envisioned.

“The more you can do from a design perspective, the more participation you get from the community, the more likely you’re going to see a decrease in crime,” said Drew O’Connor, executive director of the Capitol Hill United Neighborhoods group.

Cracking down on disorder has also been an integral part of the revitalization efforts. Last year, Mayor John W. Hickenlooper convened a task force to focus on areas overrun with criminal activity.

“This is a beautiful area, but what’s unappealing about it has been the drug trafficking and the punks that hang around here,” Mr. Hickenlooper said of Colfax Avenue. He was once a part owner of the Red Room, one of the newer, sleeker bars on the avenue.

The task force included police officers, city officials and community leaders, and it has used detailed crime data to help fight the “largest open-air drug market in the Rocky Mountain West,” said Jeremy Bronson, public safety special assistant to Mr. Hickenlooper.

The strategy seems to be working. According to city statistics, crime is down 40 percent in the area since 2005, and police calls responding to drug activity are down 34 percent.

Crime was never a worry for Sheila Keathley, who has owned a popular gay bar, the Denver Detour, on Colfax Avenue for 24 years. “People who live here understand that Colfax is just very different,” she said.

Ms. Keathley’s business will soon move because her landlord recently sold the property. But Ms. Cornwell, the city planner, pointed to the fact that the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless had bought the building as proof that the neighborhood’s social consciousness was thriving. She said the city would help pay for the Detour’s move.

Still, Phil Goodstein, a local author who leads walking tours of the Capitol Hill area, said he was skeptical whether the city’s plans would work. With a wry smile, he pointed out some of the Colfax’s more memorable landmarks, including an old optometrist’s office, now abandoned, where customers could buy eyeglasses to better see the pornographic magazines that were also on sale.

At the corner of Colfax Avenue and Pennsylvania Street, Mr. Goodstein stopped and surveyed the street. A young, smartly dressed couple walked home from work. A group of teenagers, draped in goth clothes, wandered toward the nearby Fillmore Auditorium. A haggard looking old man sat on a stoop, one hand gripping an oversized walkie-talkie, his eyes shut, mouth agape.

“Just let Colfax be Colfax,” Mr. Goodstein said.

[Dan Frosch is a freelance journalist based in New York City. He's been on staff at the San Gabriel Valley Weekly section of the Los Angeles Times, The Source magazine, the Pacific Palisades Post and most recently the Santa Fe Reporter. Dan's work has also appeared in In These Times, AlterNet, VIBE, Washington City Paper, and the New York Times.]

Copyright © 2007 The New York Times Company


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Sunday, November 25, 2007

The 7½% Solution?

With all due respect to Sherlock Holmes and the speculation that he battled substance abuse (opium), Tom Tomorrow nails the dementia of Dub's supporters. Once upon a time, I asked a True Believer, "How on earth can you respect that guy (referring to nicknames and frat-jock babble and 'New-cue-lar')?" I received a blank stare as if I spoke Klingon. If this is (fair & balanced) truth to power, so be it.


Click on image to enlarge.

[Dan Perkins (born 5 April 1961 in Wichita, Kansas), better known by the pen name “Tom Tomorrow”, is an editorial cartoonist. His weekly cartoon, This Modern World, a comic strip that comments on current events from a strong liberal populist perspective, appears regularly in approximately 150 papers across the U.S. and the online magazines Salon.com and Working for Change. The strip debuted in 1990 in SF Weekly.

Perkins, a long time resident of Brooklyn, New York, currently lives in Connecticut. He received the Robert F. Kennedy Award for Excellence in Journalism in both 1998 and 2002.

When he is not working on projects related to his comic strip, he writes a daily political weblog, also entitled This Modern World, which he began in December 2001.]

Copyright © 2007 Tom Tomorrow


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Friday, November 23, 2007

Blowin' In The Wind

Wind farms are amazing sights. The turbine blades look so graceful as they turn in the wind. However, the axiom with regard to environmental change is "There is no free lunch." Wind farms are not without environmental cost. Unfortunately, the public policy response to environmental/energy issues is driven by easy answers that seem to cost nothing. After all, the wind blows and it's a free energy source, right? There is no such thing as "free" when it comes to the environment. If this is (fair & balanced) reality, so be it.

[NY Fishwrap]
Sweden Turns to a Promising Power Source, With Flaws
By Mark Landler

Malmo, Sweden — Steadying himself on the heaving foredeck of an inspection ship recently, his face flecked by spray, Arne Floderus pronounced it a good day for his new offshore wind farm.

A 30-mile-an-hour wind was twirling the fingerlike blades of a turbine 380 feet above his head. Around him, a field of turbines rotated in a synchronized ballet that, when fully connected to an electrical grid, would generate enough power to light 60,000 nearby houses.

“We’ve created a new landmark,” said Mr. Floderus, the project manager of the $280 million wind park, one of the world’s largest, which was built by the Swedish power company Vattenfall.

The park, in a shallow sound between Sweden and Denmark, testifies to the remarkable rise of wind energy — no longer a quirky alternative favored by environmentalists in Denmark and Germany, but a mainstream power source used in 26 nations, including the United States.

Yet Sweden’s gleaming wind park is entering service at a time when wind energy is coming under sharper scrutiny, not just from hostile neighbors, who complain that the towers are a blot on the landscape, but from energy experts who question its reliability as a source of power.

For starters, the wind does not blow all the time. When it does, it does not necessarily do so during periods of high demand for electricity. That makes wind a shaky replacement for more dependable, if polluting, energy sources like oil, coal and natural gas. Moreover, to capture the best breezes, wind farms are often built far from where the demand for electricity is highest. The power they generate must then be carried over long distances on high-voltage lines, which in Germany and other countries are strained and prone to breakdowns.

In the United States, one of the areas most suited for wind turbines is the central part of the country, stretching from Texas through the northern Great Plains — far from the coastal population centers that need the most electricity.

In Denmark, which pioneered wind energy in Europe, construction of wind farms has stagnated in recent years. The Danes export much of their wind-generated electricity to Norway and Sweden because it comes in unpredictable surges that often outstrip demand.

In 2003, Ireland put a moratorium on connecting wind farms to its electricity grid because of the strains that power surges were putting on the network; it has since begun connecting them again.

In the United States, proposals to build large wind parks in the Atlantic off Long Island and off Cape Cod, Mass., have run into stiff opposition from local residents on aesthetic grounds.

As wind energy has matured as an industry, its image has changed — from a clean, even elegant, alternative to fossil fuels to a renewable energy source with advantages and drawbacks, like any other.

“The environmental benefits of wind are not as great as its champions claim,” said Euan C. Blauvelt, research director of ABS Energy Research, an independent market research firm in London. “You’ve still got to have backup sources of power, like coal-fired plants.”

Mr. Blauvelt publishes an annual report on wind energy in which he discusses its flaws. People in the industry would accuse him of propagating myths, he said. Now, the criticism is more tempered.

“One of the big problems with wind is that people tend to get hyped up about it, very emotional,” Mr. Blauvelt said. “The difference is that the arguments are becoming more rational.”

None of this is to say that wind power has peaked. On the contrary, Mr. Blauvelt figures the industry is adding capacity at a five-year compound annual growth rate of 26.3 percent. That is faster than hydroelectric power in its early days and twice the recent growth rate of nuclear energy.

The United States, which is considered a pioneer in wind, added more generating capacity in 2006 than any year on record. With 11,575 megawatts, the United States is the world’s third largest wind country, after Germany and Spain, and it is adding more capacity than any other.

Among new countries with significant wind capacity are Britain, Canada, Italy, Japan and the Netherlands.

“What we’re seeing is a second wave of countries, which are starting to invest more heavily,” said Christian Kjaer, the chief executive of the European Wind Energy Association in Brussels.

He said wind energy would benefit from two parallel trends: rising oil prices and a global push to tax carbon-dioxide emissions. “It’s very good way of hedging against volatile oil prices and potentially volatile carbon costs,” Mr. Kjaer said.

In Germany, where 20,000 wind turbines generate 5 percent of the electricity, advocates say wind will be critical to meeting the government’s goal of generating at least 20 percent of all power from renewable methods by 2020. But the industry’s growth is slowing for a variety of reasons.

Germany is running out of places to put the turbines because of restrictions on the location and height of the devices. And rising raw material prices are making wind farms more expensive to build.

“Under the current circumstances, Germany’s climate protection targets are not achievable,” said Hermann Albers, the president of the German Wind Energy Association.

Open land is not a problem in the United States, but wind parks have faced resistance, particularly in scenic locales near the shore. A private developer, Cape Wind, wants to erect 130 turbines in Nantucket Sound, off Cape Cod. It has drawn protests from some well-connected locals, including the Kennedy family.

Cape Wind said it hoped to obtain all the necessary permits by next year, which would enable it to be up and running by 2011. “It’s been a long road,” said Mark Rodgers, a spokesman for the developer.

For a socially conscious society like Sweden, wind turbines exert a fashionable appeal.

Today, they account for less than 1 percent of Sweden’s electricity generation. But the government wants to increase annual wind power production to 10 terawatt hours, or 10 trillion watt hours, by 2015 from less than 1 terawatt hour now (the park off Malmo will produce a third of a terawatt hour).

Vattenfall hopes to develop an even larger off-shore park in the Baltic Sea, between Sweden and Germany. In all, the government has identified 49 sites that are suitable for wind parks.

Sweden has historically invested little in wind projects because it has two reliable sources of energy, nuclear and hydro, which each supply roughly half its power. And because hydro is renewable, Sweden already does well on the environmental balance sheet.

But these energy sources have their vulnerabilities: hydro, to low water levels; nuclear, to technical breakdowns. The Swedish government has also pledged not to build any new nuclear power plants.

“One of the key energy priorities for Sweden is to establish a third leg of energy production,” said Anders Nyberg, political adviser in the Ministry of Enterprise, Energy and Communications.

Of course, Sweden does not need to build wind parks to get wind power. It could simply buy more surplus wind power from Denmark, which it uses, as does Norway, to pump underground water into elevated reservoirs. The water is later released during periods of peak electric demand to drive hydroelectric stations.

In this way, hydro acts as a form of storage for wind energy — addressing one of wind power’s biggest shortcomings. Sweden’s strength in hydro makes it a good candidate for greater development of wind power, according to analysts.

Sweden is subsidizing wind power through “green” certificates, which favor the use of renewable energy. The small extra cost is passed on to consumers.

While Swedes staunchly support wind energy, they are as susceptible to the not-in-my-backyard opposition as people elsewhere. For years, residents opposed the wind farm near Malmo, known as Lillgrund, particularly after the builders obtained permission to raise the height of the towers. But the campaign to block the project failed.

Still, Mr. Floderus said the process took far too long, and Vattenfall is urging the government to speed up the approvals next time.

As his inspection ship followed a zigzag course through a field of 48 turbines, Mr. Floderus pointed to Malmo’s two other landmarks, visible in the distance: Oresund Bridge, a 10-mile engineering marvel that connects Malmo with Copenhagen, and the Turning Torso, an eye-popping 54-story skyscraper designed by the Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava.

Soon, Mr. Floderus said, the whirling blades of the Lillgrund wind turbines would take their place alongside those landmarks as symbols of the modern age.

[Mark Landler (born October 26, 1965 in Stuttgart, Germany) is an American journalist who has been the European economic correspondent of The New York Times, based in Frankfurt, Germany, since July 2002. Sarah Plass, NY Times Frankfurt Bureau Manager, contributed reporting to this story.]

Copyright © 2007 The New York Times Company


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Tuesday, November 20, 2007

What Do You Call Someone Who Speaks Only One Language?


My eldest grandson is seeking to enter an "immersion school" in suburban Washington, DC. At least that this the goal of his parents. My daughter and her husband are citizens of the world, former Peace Corps Volunteers, who gained bilingual capability in their Peace Corps training and service; both speak and read Russian as well as English. They hope that my grandson will be immersed in Chinese (Standard Mandarin?) even though there are 12 different languages/dialects in China. My children are seeking immersion (Chinese-only) for my grandson at time when Know-Nothings around the land are proclaiming that English is the official language while standing at the gates to prevent bilingual (or worse) education in our schools. In a global setting, we need an army of students versed in Arabic (as well as one of the Chinese languages). The defense of English-only rules and laws is a threat to our national security. English-only helps the enemies of the United States. The jihadists who carried out the 9/11 plot were versed in English besides their own native Arabic dialects. We remain tied to English-only rules, requirements, and laws at our inevitable peril. If this is (fair & balanced) cosmopolitanism, so be it.


[x La Prensa San Diego]
Ending English Monolingualism?
By Domenico Maceri, PhD

Ambassadors from France, Germany, Italy, and Spain recently criticized the sad state of teaching foreign languages in Great Britain. According to the diplomats, British companies would not lose some contracts if their employees had strong skills in foreign languages.

Being tongue-tied seems to be a disease affecting not just the British but English-speakers in general. This is certainly true of Americans. An old joke goes like this:

—What do you call a person who speaks three languages? Trilingual.

—A person who speaks two languages? Bilingual.

—And a person who speaks only one language? American.

Given the predominance of English as the de facto world’s lingua franca, why would English speakers want to learn another language? Let the others learn English.

This strategy is, of course, a huge mistake, for in spite of the importance of English in today’s global affairs, a second, and even a third, language is crucial and in some cases indispensable.

The benefits of linguistic knowledge are evident even in a country such as the US, where English is clearly king. In Florida, Hispanic families speaking only English averaged a yearly income of $32,000, while those speaking both Spanish and English had incomes of $50,376, according to a study conducted by the University of Florida.

Big corporations in the US use Spanish because it translates into dollars. Major US and international companies advertise heavily on Spanish language television and radio as they try to attract more business.

The Japanese, whose economy depends a lot on exports, are only too familiar with the importance of languages. Asked what is the most important language in the world, Japanese businessmen responded “the customers’ language.” In essence, it’s possible to buy without knowing a language, but if you are going to sell, you better learn about your customer.

Although more than 80 per cent of websites are in English, only 43 per cent of the users are native speakers of English. That number is expected to go down to 35 per cent next year. Clearly, some companies are losing business because the information does not reach a considerable amount of the world’s population. This situation is likely to worsen, as computers become more readily available in non-English-speaking countries.

English-speaking countries can improve their success in international business by producing internationally-trained employees. Designing and marketing products all over the world requires linguistic and cultural knowledge which goes beyond English. To get these kinds of employees the educational system needs to be revised to incorporate the study of foreign languages from the early grades, continuing on to college.

The advantages of bilingualism affect the entire education of students. Students educated in more than one language develop a mental agility that monolinguals lack. One of these advantages has to do with something researchers call a “plasticity” of the brain. Bilingual children recognize that just as there are two ways to say something, there are also two ways to learn and solve problems. This mental agility is evident in learning foreign languages. Just as it’s easier for someone who knows how to play a musical instrument to learn a second and a third, thus it is also easier for someone who knows a second language to learn a third, or even a fourth.

Learning Pashto or Dari, the two major languages of Afghanistan, would be very difficult for monolingual English-speakers. For someone who knows French and Spanish in addition to English, the new language, while still a challenge, would certainly be a lot easier, and the time to achieve fluency could be cut considerably.

Standardized tests confirm the intellectual ability of bilingual versus monolingual children. According to a 14-year study by George Mason University, in Virginia, students educated in dual-language schools outperformed their peers in monolingual English schools.

Although a wind of monolingualism has been blowing in the US as some states are dropping bilingual education designed to help immigrant kids and English is declared the official language, some positive signs are beginning to occur. Dual language schools, which teach subjects in two languages, are increasing. There are more than 300 such schools in the US and the numbers, though still small, have been going up rapidly, increasing by more than two-thirds since 1992. Former Secretary of Education Richard Riley called on the nation to nearly quadruple the number of dual-language schools to 1,000 within five years.

Another sign that the linguistic situation in the US is improving is George Bush’s use of Spanish. Although the president’s Spanish is far from perfect, the fact that the President at times speaks Spanish is significant. It sends a message to all Americans about the value of bilingualism.

The events of 9-11 revealed the need for more knowledge of languages. For example, after the tragedy in New York, enrollments in Arabic courses in US colleges and universities rose dramatically.

Curing English-speakers’ monolingualism will not be easy, for people have to see that learning something is beneficial. Unfortunately, the power of the English language clouds the vision of those who learned this language as natives. Seeing the world more clearly requires more than the English lens.Curing English-speakers’ mono-lingualism will eventually have another positive effect—it will reveal the common humanity we share regardless of what language we may speak.

[Domenico Maceri, PhD, UC Santa Barbara, teaches foreign languages at Allan Hancock College in Santa Maria, CA.]

Copyright © 2002 La Prensa San Diego


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Tom Tomorrow Nails The Hypocrites!

Sex with an intern in Clinton's administration has been overtaken by torture of suspected terrorists in the administration of Bush 43. We have been on a slippery slope since 2001. Today's guide of our slippery slope is Tom Tomorrow. If this is (fair & balanced) moral indifference, so be it.

Click on image to enlarge.

[Dan Perkins (born 5 April 1961 in Wichita, Kansas), better known by the pen name “Tom Tomorrow”, is an editorial cartoonist. His weekly cartoon, This Modern World, a comic strip that comments on current events from a strong liberal populist perspective, appears regularly in approximately 150 papers across the U.S. and the online magazines Salon.com and Working for Change. The strip debuted in 1990 in SF Weekly.

Perkins, a long time resident of Brooklyn, New York, currently lives in Connecticut. He received the Robert F. Kennedy Award for Excellence in Journalism in both 1998 and 2002.

When he is not working on projects related to his comic strip, he writes a daily political weblog, also entitled This Modern World, which he began in December 2001.]


Copyright © 2007 Tom Tomorrow


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Monday, November 19, 2007

Congressman Tom Tancredo: Not Bi-Lingual, Bi-Ignorant!

Tom Tancredo has represented Colorado's 6th Congressional District since 1999; on October 28, 2007, Tancredo announced that he would not seek re-election to his Congressional seat. Instead, Tancredo is a bottom-tier candidate for the Republican presidential nomination. Along with CNN's Lou Dobbs and MSNBC's Pat Buchanan, Tancredo is one of the foremost Know-Nothings beating the anti-immigration drum today. If this is (fair (balanced) xenophobia, so be it.

[x TIME]
10 Questions for Tom Tancredo
By Carolyn Sayre

Tpm Tancredo (R-CO) speaking to a Republican wpmen's gathering.

With the media attention on the big names in the election, how do you expect to win the nomination? —Roland Green, Denver

I have to do well enough in the first primary states to command the media attention that I would otherwise have to buy. That's why we in the second tier are all fearful of these compressed primaries. We can't afford to run in 10 states at one time.

What evidence would convince you that global warming is a serious threat to the planet? —Jeff Young, Sydney, Australia

I have no doubt that global warming exists. I just question the cause and what we can do to ameliorate it. But I wonder why the Sierra Club isn't going crazy about the environmental aspects of massive immigration into the U.S. The fact is, Americans consume more energy than anyone else, so if a person moves here from another country, they automatically become bigger polluters.

If you were given a choice between catching Osama bin Laden and deporting all illegal immigrants, which would you choose? —John M. Spalding, New York City

That kind of hypothetical choice would never happen, of course, but I guess I would take Osama immediately, and then my next step would be to deport all the illegal aliens.

I refuse to learn Spanish. Should I immigrate to Canada, Australia or New Zealand? —Marjory Dutcher, Phoenix

[Laughs.] I get the gist of the question. It's true that we have, in many places, replaced English with Spanish. And I don't believe bilingual countries work very well. Because we are a diverse nation, we need something that holds us together. For us, that is the English language.

I recently found out my family came from Holland without permission in the 1600s. Should we be sent back? —James Smith, Phoenix

No. When they came, it was perfectly legal. So God bless them. You know, whenever I can, I go to the swearing-in ceremonies for new American citizens. I know when I walk in, people go, "What is Tancredo doing here?" But I speak to them and I tell them two things: "Welcome to America" and "Thanks for doing it the right way."

Why do you hate Mexicans? —Ubaldo Padilla, Oroville, Calif.

Ah, jeez. You know, even responding to that question gives it some credibility. I don't hate anyone because of their ethnicity. Nothing I've ever said, nothing I've ever done, I believe, could ever be construed in that way.

How effective would a national ID be in controlling illegals? —Ray Holbrook, SEATTLE
It probably would be effective, but I'm a little leery of a national ID, simply because the government might know more about me or you than they need to. But I think you should make a Social Security card that can't be fraudulently reproduced. That's different from making every human here have some sort of mark of the beast on them. [Laughs.]

If you are successful in barring illegal immigrants, what will happen to the economy? —Charles Horton, Beijung

You can get a lot of interesting data on each side of this. What does seem to happen is that when there's a reduction in low-wage workers, companies tend to develop technologies to compensate. Tomato farmers genetically engineered tougher skins so tomatoes could be picked by machine, for example. And citrus growers are starting to do the same things.

How would you change the Senate's current comprehensive immigration bill? —(SGT) Matthew Anderson, Baghdad

I'd take out the amnesty and guest-workers parts. And come to think of it, even the security issues are bogus. There's no part of this bill that I want.

I have a master's degree in economics and want to work in the U.S. What is your stance on aspiring legal immigrants like me? —Tarun Kumar, Bielfield, Germany

I believe we should have a moratorium on all immigration--legal or not--for at least three years. We have to have an immigration time-out, I think, in order to assimilate the people who have come here already.

As president, what would you do to help combat poverty? —Brandon Harrison, Los Angeles

I would move for an elimination of the tax code, to move from an income tax to a consumption tax. If we could do that, you would see an explosion of job opportunities and economic growth that would probably be unmatched in this nation's history.

If this Senate bill passes, I recommend that American citizens assemble at the southern border bearing arms. What do you say? —Richard D. Coburn, Denver
Assembling on the border is a fine idea. Guns are probably not necessary because, as the Minutemen were able to show, you can accomplish the same goal—reducing the flow of illegals—with cell phones, binoculars and lawn chairs.

How do you expect this nation to take you seriously as a leader and statesman after you stated at the GOP debate last month that you do not believe in evolution? —Michael Magee, San Diego, Calif.

We were asked to raise our hand in response to a question, and it's difficult to explain your beliefs like that. I actually believe that evolution exists, but I also believe that creationism is the prime mover of that evolutionary process. So if I could explain it, maybe people would understand a little more about me, then they can decide to take me seriously or not.

Do you favor changing the 14th amendment of the constitution so that the newborns of illegal aliens do not automatically become U S citizens? —Raymond Ogilvie, Santa Maria, Calif.

I have co-sponsored legislation that says that children born to illegal aliens cannot have automatic citizenship. And actually, I don't think our bill violates the 14th amendment, which dealt specifically with the children of slaves, not with illegal aliens like we have now. There's a case to be made, and I would like to have it tested in the courts.

Why is it that Republicans continue to accuse illegal immigrants, mostly starving Mexicans, Guatemalans and Salvadorenians, of "terrorism"? —Oscar Galvan Lopez, Avondale, Ariz.

I don't know that I've ever heard that kind of accusation. I have certainly never said that illegal immigrants from Mexico are in away way suspects of terrorist activities. But security at the border is a national security issue. It has nothing to do with trying to stop a particular ethnic group. It has everything to do with trying to control the flow of people into your country.

How do illegal immigrants today compare to the "huddled masses" of the early 20th Century? —Brian Walker, Kansas City, Mo.

They are coming today to a different country. Back then, you worked or you starved. Today, of course, we operate as a welfare state in many ways. It's also a very different world in which we live, one where it's too dangerous to just let anybody in.

What sets you apart from the other GOP candidates? —Anthony Brown, Omaha, Neb.

I think that the fact that I have the most consistent record on immigration, along ith the most consistent record on conservative issues in general. That is, Sen. Brownback has certainly been consistent on the life issue. But if you put everything together—fiscal along with social issues, then I would come out with the most consistently conservative background.

How do you plan to convince people that you are not a single-issue candidate? —Sarah Podenski, Plymouth, Minn.

When people accuse me of that, I always say, well, at least I have one. Secondly, the issue itself includes so many parts. It's got a health care component. And and education component, considering the impact of illegal immigation on our school system. It's got a prison component—27% of our federal prison population are criminal aliens. There are environmental issues that nobody wants to talk about but that I think are very significant. And also the culture itself. Right now we are balkanizing America and not assimilating, and there are major implications for that alone, in terms of being able to hold together as a nation.

How would you address the current cry for national health care? —Angela Thornton, Hoffman Estates, Ill.

I would look to something other than the government to provide health care, as certainly everything we've seen indicates that national health plans increase costs and decrease quality. I would expand health savings accounts, both who can get them and how much you can put into them. The goal is to get as few middlemen in the process as possible. Health saving acconts allow that to occur for a lot less money. Then I say, you reduce the number of illegal Immigrants in this country who are costing us billions by using our health care services and for the most part not paying for them.

When did your family first arrive in the United States, and how quickly were they awarded American citizenship? —Paul Green, Royal Oak, Mich.
I think the first member was my dad's father, around the turn of the 20th century. I really do not know how long it took before they were awarded citizenship. I never asked my father that.

The Senate bill is not perfect, but it is reasonable. Practically, how would you deport 12 million illegal immigrants who are now in this country? —Max McConkey, Tucson, Ariz.

Could you actually round them up and send them back? Well, yeah you could. It's possible. But it's not necessary. You can do what I call attrition through enforcement. If you enforce the laws against hiring people who are here illegally, aggressively. Not just with fines, but with jail time for folks who are found to be not just hiring but conspiring to bring people in. Believe me, you'd only have to do that a few times in high profile cases and you would see that the number of folks willing to actually take that risk go down dramatically, as would the number of folks who are illegally.

I admire your stance against abortion. That said, I would like to know what you're doing to raise awareness about gun control considering what happened at Virginia Tech? —Isaac Muchengwa, London, U.K.

My district includes Columbine High School, and I think, knowing way too much about school shootings, that all of our efforts should go into trying to identify people who should not be able to possess firearms. I'm talking about felons, people who are a danger to ourselves and others. But gun control beyond that is not effective or judicious.

Copyright © 2007 Time Inc.


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Sunday, November 18, 2007

With Apologies To Keith Olbermann, The Worst Persons In The World: Lou Dobbs/Tom Tancredo

No politician or pundit has ever gone broke by pitching to the worst instincts of the public. Fear & loathing of immigrants is as American as apple pie. So, the TV talking heads preach the risk of the brown peril (from Mexico) just as loudly and vehemently as their predecessors preached against the yellow peril or the Roman Catholic peril or the Jewish peril. "They breed like rats" is the sentiment common to all of those combatting the perils of the moment. Not a single jihadist plotter in 9/11 entered this country from Mexico. Instead, those who did not fly directly into a U. S. airport came here from a Canadian point of entry. Are we building a wall between the U. S. and Canada? No, the target is Mexico. The brown peril trumps reality. One of the most famous anti-foreign political parties in our history was the American Party (aka Know-Nothings for their oath of secrecy and pledge to deny knowledge of the anti-immigrant agenda of their party) in the 1850s. Many Republicans in the early years of that party joined cause with the Know Nothings. One notable exception was the greatest Republican of his time: Abraham Lincoln. In a letter to an old friend in Illinois (Joshua Speed), Lincoln wrote:

August 24, 1855

I am not a Know-Nothing. That is certain. How could I be? How can any one who abhors the oppression of negroes, be in favor of degrading classes of white people? Our progress in degeneracy appears to me to be pretty rapid. As a nation, we begin by declaring that "all men are created equal." We now practically read it "all men are created equal, except negroes." When the Know-Nothings get control, it will read "all men are created equal, except negroes, and foreigners, and catholics." When it comes to this I should prefer emigrating to some country where they make no pretence of loving liberty-to Russia, for instance, where despotism can be taken pure, and without the base alloy of hypocrisy.


I stand with Honest Abe. If this is (fair & balanced) repudiation of xenophobia (hatred of immigrants), so be it.



[1] David Cole On Immigrant Rights
[2] Bonnie Honig on Xenophobia (Hatred of Immigrants)

[1 — x Boston Review]
Their Liberties, Our Security: Democracy and Double Standards
By David Cole

To those who pit Americans against immigrants and citizens against non-citizens, to those who scare peace-loving people with phantoms of lost liberty, my message is this: Your tactics only aid terrorists, for they erode our national unity and diminish our resolve. They give ammunition to America’s enemies, and pause to America’s friends.
—Attorney General John Ashcroft, 6 December 2001


I. Introduction

On January 24, 2002, the United States military transported John Walker Lindh, a young American raised in Marin County, California, and captured with the Taliban on the battlefields of Afghanistan, to Alexandria, Virginia, where he was to be indicted in a civilian criminal court for conspiring to kill Americans. White House spokesman Ari Fleischer announced that “the great strength of America is he will now have his day in court.” Represented by some of the best criminal defense attorneys in the country, Lindh raised substantial constitutional challenges to his prosecution, and the government ultimately dropped its most serious charges against him in exchange for a plea agreement.

At the same time, the military was holding 158 foreign-born Taliban and al Qaeda prisoners at a military base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in eight-foot-by-eight-foot chain-link cages. A widely circulated press photo depicted the prisoners bound and shackled, with bags covering their heads and eyes, kneeling on the ground before U.S. soldiers. They were (and still are) held incommunicado, without charges, without access to lawyers, and without any judicial review. President George W. Bush announced that he categorically determined that the Guantanamo detainees were not entitled to the protections accorded prisoners of war under the Geneva Conventions, and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld dismissed concerns about their treatment with the assertion that they were “being treated vastly better than they treated anybody else over the last several years.” Two months earlier, the president had issued a military order providing that al Qaeda members and other noncitizens could be tried by military tribunals, in which the military would act as prosecutor, judge, jury, and executioner, without any appeal to a civilian court.

The difference between the treatment afforded John Walker Lindh and his fellow Taliban and al Qaeda prisoners held at Guantanamo appeared to rest on the fact that Lindh was, as the press nicknamed him, “the American Taliban.” When Attorney General John Ashcroft announced the charges against Lindh, a reporter asked why Lindh was being tried in an ordinary criminal court rather than before a military tribunal. Ashcroft explained that because Lindh was a United States citizen, he was not subject to the military tribunals created by President Bush’s order. As a purely legal matter, the president could have made U.S. citizens subject to military commissions; citizens have been tried in military tribunals before, and the Supreme Court expressly upheld such treatment as recently as World War II. But the president chose to limit his order to noncitizens. Several months later, however, military justice was extended to U.S. citizens, as the government asserted the right to hold two citizens—Yaser Hamdi, captured in Afghanistan, and JosĆ© Padilla, arrested at O’Hare Airport in May on suspicion that he might be planning to set off a radioactive “dirty bomb”—as “enemy combatants,” without charges, without counsel, without trial, and without judicial review.

Both the president’s initial choice to limit military justice to foreign nationals and his subsequent extension of that authority to U.S. citizens are emblematic of how we have responded to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. While there has been much talk about the need to sacrifice liberty for a greater sense of security, in practice we have at least initially selectively sacrificed noncitizens’ liberties while retaining basic protections for citizens. All too often, we have sought to avoid the difficult trade-offs between liberty and security by striking an illegitimate balance, sacrificing the liberties of noncitizens in furtherance of the citizenry’s purported security. Because noncitizens have no vote, and thus no direct voice in the democratic process, they are an especially vulnerable minority. And in the heat of the nationalistic and nativist fervor engendered by war, noncitizens’ interests are even less likely to weigh in the balance.

Some maintain that a “double standard” for citizens and noncitizens is perfectly justified. The attacks of September 11 were perpetrated by nineteen Arab noncitizens, and we have reason to believe that other Arab noncitizens are associated with the attackers and will seek to attack again. Citizens, it is said, are presumptively loyal; noncitizens are not. Thus, it is not irrational to focus on Arab noncitizens. Moreover, on a normative level, if citizens and noncitizens were treated identically, citizenship itself might be rendered meaningless. The very essence of war involves the drawing of lines in the sand between citizens of our nation and those against whom we are fighting. Surely in that setting it makes sense to treat noncitizens differently from citizens.

I will argue that such reasoning should be resisted on three grounds. First, it is normatively and constitutionally wrong: the basic rights at stake—political freedom, due process, and equal protection of the laws—are not limited to citizens, but apply to all “persons” subject to our laws. Second, it undermines our security interests: employing a double standard with respect to the basic rights accorded citizens and noncitizens is likely to be counterproductive at home and abroad because it compromises our legitimacy in both spheres. And third, it will pave the way for future inroads on citizens’ liberties: as the government’s treatment of Padilla and Hamdi has already illustrated, the tactic of trading immigrants’ rights for citizens’ security is misleading, for what we let our government do to immigrants creates precedents for how it treats citizens.

In short, when we balance liberty and security, we should do so in ways that respect the equal dignity and basic human rights of all persons and not succumb to the temptation of purchasing security at the expense of noncitizens’ basic rights. The true test of justice in a democratic society is not how it treats those with a political voice, but how it treats those who have no voice in the democratic process.

II. Sacrificing Their Liberty for Our Security: The Post–9/11 Response

“[S]omebody who comes into the United States of America illegally, who conducts a terrorist operation killing thousands of innocent Americans—men, women, and children—is not a lawful combatant. . . . They don’t deserve the same guarantees and safeguards that would be used for an American citizen going through the normal judicial process.” With these words Vice President Dick Cheney defended the president’s military order of November 13, 2001, which authorized trial by military commission of any noncitizen whom the president accuses of engaging in international terrorism or belonging to al Qaeda. The vice president’s view captures much of the administration’s response to the attacks of September 11. Each of its initiatives raises serious constitutional concerns, and each imposes burdens on noncitizens’ basic rights—burdens that citizens do not bear.

Secret Preventive Detention

Perhaps the most troubling feature of the government’s response to the September 11 attacks has been its campaign of mass preventive detention. The actual number detained is a mystery because in early November 2001, when the number was 1,147, the government responded to growing criticism of the number of persons it was detaining by halting its practice of issuing a running tally. Even if one assumes that arrests dropped substantially after the first seven weeks of the investigation, it is likely that somewhere between 1500 and 2000 persons have been detained in the more than twelve months that the investigation has continued. Yet not a single one of the post–9/11 detainees has been charged with involvement in the crimes under investigation. As of September 2002, only Zaccarias Moussaoui had been so charged, and he was arrested before the roundup began. Attorney General John Aschcroft has described the detainees as “suspected terrorists,” yet by the one-year anniversary of the investigation, only four detained individuals had been charged with any terrorist-related crimes. Most of the detainees have been released or deported, after being affirmatively cleared of any involvement in terrorism by the FBI.

The detentions have been carried out under an unprecedented veil of secrecy. The government has refused to release any details regarding the identity of the detainees. And the vast majority of the detainees, those held on immigration charges, have been tried in proceedings closed to the public, the press, legal observers, and even family members. On orders from John Ashcroft, Chief Immigration Judge Michael Creppy has instructed immigration judges not to list the cases on the public docket and, if asked, to refuse to confirm or deny that they even exist. All hearings must be closed, no matter how routine and whether or not any sensitive issues are discussed. If another country were to lock up and try hundreds of people in secret, we would not hesitate to call the detainees “disappeared.” Six of the eight federal judges who reviewed the government’s practice of closing the immigration proceedings have ruled the practice unconstitutional, and another federal judge has ruled that the government violated the Freedom of Information Act in refusing to disclose the detainees’ names. Yet the secrecy continues as the government appeals.

Many of those detained on immigration charges were initially held for weeks, and in some cases months, without any charges at all. More than 317 detainees were held for more than 48 hours before being charged, 36 detainees were held for more than four weeks without charges, and nine were held for more than fifty days without charges. Once charges are filed, they are generally “pretextual.” The real reason for their incarceration is not that they worked without authorization or took too few academic credits, for example, both common violations of visas. Rather, the government has used these excuses to detain them because it thinks they might have valuable information, because it suspects them but lacks sufficient evidence to make a charge, or simply because the FBI is not yet convinced that they are innocent.

Consider, for example, Ali Maqtari. A Yemeni citizen, Maqtari was picked up on September 15 when he accompanied his U.S.-citizen wife to Fort Campbell, Kentucky, where she was reporting for Army basic training. Agents interrogated him for more than twelve hours and accused him of being involved with terrorists. Maqtari took and passed a lie detector test, but he was detained on the highly technical charge that he had been in the country illegally for ten days while changing his status from tourist to permanent resident. The government never offered any evidence linking him to terrorism or crime of any kind. It merely submitted a boilerplate affidavit from an FBI agent arguing that Maqtari should be detained because the investigation of terrorism is a “mosaic,” and therefore, seemingly innocent facts might at some future time turn out to indicate culpability. Two months later, Maqtari was released without charges.

Ibrahim Turkmen, a citizen of Turkey, was arrested and detained on October 13, 2001. About two weeks later an immigration judge granted Turkmen voluntary departure, which meant he was legally free to leave the country. Two days later, a friend purchased a plane ticket for him and brought it to the INS office. Yet the INS kept Turkmen in custody for nearly four more months, not because it had probable cause that he had committed any crimes, but simply because the FBI had not yet convinced itself that he was innocent.

The Constitution does not permit detention for investigative purposes. And immigration authorities have no freestanding authority to detain; they may do so only when necessary to effectuate a noncitizen’s removal from the country. When a foreign citizen agrees to leave, there is no legitimate immigration purpose to keep him detained. Yet many noncitizens have remained in custody for months while the FBI investigates them and are allowed to leave only after the FBI clears them.

These and other cases suggest that Justice Department policy has been to lock up first, ask questions later, and presume that an alien is dangerous until the FBI has a chance to assure itself that the individual is not. The government has justified its actions with a liberal combination of the “mosaic” argument noted above and the “sleeper” theory. Under the latter, the fact that a suspicious person has done nothing illegal only underscores his dangerousness; al Qaeda is said to have “sleeper” cells around the world, groups of individuals living quiet and law-abiding lives but ready and willing to commit terrorist attacks once they get the call.

Most immigration judges apparently accepted that the absence of evidence of illegal conduct is not a reason to release a suspicious person. But when some judges declined to go along with the detentions and ordered that aliens be released on bond pending resolution of their deportation proceedings, Attorney General Ashcroft changed the rules. Under a new regulation issued October 29, 2001, even if an immigration judge rules after a custody hearing that the government has shown no basis for detention, an INS district director—in effect, the prosecutor—can keep the alien locked up simply by filing an appeal of the release order. A federal judge has also declared this rule unconstitutional.

If the New York police chief had investigated a serious violent crime by arresting hundreds of residents virtually all of one ethnicity, held and tried most of them in secret on pretextual charges, and failed after a year to charge even one of them with the crime under investigation, he would be out of a job. Yet complaints about the 9/11 detainees have been muted. I believe the fact that virtually all of them are foreign citizens has allowed the citizenry a sense of comfort; these tactics will not apply to them. Citizens, after all, are entitled to a public trial. They may be subjected to “preventive detention” in connection with pending criminal charges, but only if brought before an independent judge within 48 hours of arrest for a hearing to determine whether there is probable cause that they have committed a crime, and only if they are also shown in a fair adversarial proceeding to be a flight risk or danger to the community. They are entitled to a “speedy trial,” which means that unless they agree to an extension, preventive detention will be limited to a matter of weeks. In other words, we have imposed on foreign citizens widespread human rights deprivations that we would not tolerate if imposed on ourselves.

The USA PATRIOT Act

The targeting of noncitizens is further reflected in the USA PATRIOT Act, an omnibus antiterrorism bill enacted just six weeks after September 11. The act makes many changes to criminal, immigration, banking, and intelligence law, but it reserves its most extreme measures for noncitizens. For example, it makes noncitizens deportable for wholly innocent associational activity. Before September 11, aliens were deportable for engaging in or supporting terrorist activity, but not for mere association. Aliens could be deported for providing material support to an organization only if they knew or should reasonably have known that their activity would support the organization “in conducting a terrorist activity.” The Patriot Act eliminates that requirement. It makes aliens deportable for wholly innocent associational support of a “terrorist organization,” whether or not there is any connection between the alien’s conduct and any act of violence, much less terrorism.

Under this law, for example, a pacifist immigrant who sent a book by Gandhi to the leader of a designated terrorist group to encourage him to forego violence would be deportable as a terrorist, and would have no defense that his intentions were honorable.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that individuals cannot be penalized for their political associations absent proof that the individual specifically intended to further a group’s illegal ends, and that donations to a political group are a form of protected association. Some argue, however, that the threat from terrorist organizations abroad and the fungibility of money require adjustments to the constitutional prohibition on guilt by association. But that prohibition was forged in the crucible of a battle against a foe that seemed even more formidable at the time—the Communist Party. Congress deemed the Communist Party a foreign-dominated organization, backed by the world’s competing superpower, which used sabotage and terrorism for the purpose of overthrowing the United States by force and violence; the Supreme Court accepted that finding. If association with such an organization deserves constitutional protection, as the Supreme Court repeatedly has ruled, surely association with much less powerful groups that have merely used or threatened to use a weapon at some point deserves similar protection.

The fungibility argument also proves too much, for it would authorize guilt by association whenever any organization engages in some illegal activity. Donations to the Democratic Party, it could be argued, “free up” resources that are used to violate campaign finance laws, yet surely we could not criminalize all support to the Democratic Party simply because it sometimes violates campaign finance laws. And the fungibility argument assumes that every marginal dollar provided to a designated group will be spent on violence, but in many cases that assumption is not warranted. No one would seriously contend, for example, that every dollar given to the African National Congress in the 1980s for its lawful antiapartheid work in South Africa freed up a dollar that the ANC devoted to terrorist attacks.

The Patriot Act also resurrects ideological exclusion, the practice of denying entry to aliens purely on the basis of speech. It bars admission to aliens who “endorse or espouse terrorist activity,” who “persuade others to support terrorist activity or a terrorist organization,” or who are representatives of groups that express such views. Because of the breadth of the definitions of “terrorist activity” (virtually any act or threat of violence) and “terrorist organizations” (any group of two or more persons that engages in or threatens violence), this authority would empower the government to deny entry to any alien who advocated support for the ANC in the 1980s, for the Contras during the war against the Sandinistas, or for opposition forces in Afghanistan or even the government of Israel today.

Excluding people for their ideas is contrary to the spirit of political freedom for which the United States stands. It was for that reason that Congress removed all such grounds from the immigration laws in 1990, after years of embarrassing visa denials for political reasons. Yet we have now returned to the much-criticized ways of the McCarran-Walter Act, targeting aliens not for their acts but for their words—words that would be fully protected if uttered by United States citizens.

The Patriot Act also radically expands the government’s authority to detain immigrants. It gives the attorney general unprecedented power to detain aliens indefinitely without a hearing and without showing that they pose a threat to national security or a flight risk. He need only certify that he has “reasonable grounds to believe” that the alien is “described in” various anti-terrorism provisions of the INA, provisions so broad that they would encompass a permanent resident alien who brandished a kitchen knife in a domestic dispute with her abusive husband or an alien who donated a box of crayons to a charitable day-care center associated with a “terrorist organization.”

The Patriot Act also appears to permit detention of aliens indefinitely, even where they have prevailed in their removal proceedings. It provides that detention shall be maintained “irrespective of . . . any relief from removal granted the alien, until the attorney general determines that the alien is no longer an alien who may be certified.” Holding such a person in custody is akin to holding a convicted prisoner after he has been pardoned.

Ethnic Profiling

One of the most dramatic responses to the attack of September 11 was a swift reversal in public attitudes about racial and ethnic profiling as a law enforcement tool. Before September 11, polls found that about 80 percent of the American public considered racial profiling wrong. State legislatures, local police departments, and President Clinton had condemned the practice and ordered data collection on the racial patterns of stops and searches. The U.S. Customs Service, sued for racial profiling, had instituted measures to counter racial and ethnic profiling at the borders. A federal law prohibiting racial profiling seemed likely. Even Ashcroft had criticized the practice and pledged to end it.

After September 11, however, polls reported that nearly 60 percent of the American public favored ethnic profiling directed at Arabs and Muslims. The fact that the perpetrators of the September 11 attack were all male Arab and Muslim immigrants and that the attack was orchestrated by al Qaeda has led many to believe that it is only common sense to pay closer attention to Arab-looking men boarding airplanes and elsewhere. The high stakes make the case for profiling stronger here than in routine drug interdiction stops on highways. Stuart Taylor, a columnist for Newsweek, the National Journal, and Legal Times, and a prior critic of racial profiling, wrote shortly after the attacks in favor of ethnic profiling of Arab men on airplanes. Press accounts made clear that, whether as a matter of official policy or not, law enforcement officials and airline employees were paying much closer attention to those who appear to be Arabs and Muslims.

While the Bush Administration has spoken out against ethnic and religious stereotyping and hate crimes, its actions have sent a different message. It called in eight thousand young men for interviews in connection with the September 11 investigation, based not on their actual ties or conduct but solely on the fact that they were young immigrant men from specified countries. The countries singled out were said to be those where support for al Qaeda was believed to exist: that is, Arab nations. In January 2002, the Justice Department decided to prioritize the deportation of aliens from Arab countries, again, simply because of their origin. And in August 2002, the INS announced that it would require aliens from selected Arab countries to register and be fingerprinted. These actions only encourage others to act as if Arab or Muslim identity is a permissible basis for suspicion.

Military Tribunals

The final example of the double standard at work is President Bush’s November 2001 order creating military tribunals. As noted at the outset, the Supreme Court has interpreted the Constitution to permit any unlawful combatant to be tried in a military tribunal, irrespective of citizenship. Yet the president initially opted to limit the tribunals to noncitizens. It seems likely that this too was a politically opportunistic decision. The government’s later attempt to extend similar detention authority to U.S. citizens Yaser Hamdi and Jose Padilla generated a groundswell of criticism. Thus far the courts have rejected the government’s assertion of entirely unchecked detention authority and have required some measure of justification for any such detention of a citizen. If the tribunal order had applied more broadly to citizens, the citizenry would have had a much more immediate interest in questioning the president’s assertion of power. The military tribunals provide an extraordinary form of justice, as they do away with independent judicial review and make the determination of guilt solely a matter of military judgment by officials ultimately answerable in the chain of command to the president as Commander-in-Chief, on whose behalf the prosecution is brought. Moreover, the tribunals permit the use of classified evidence, presented ex parte and in camera, to convict suspects and do not permit access to that evidence by anyone outside the military chain of command. Such measures may or may not be justified in wartime, but the important point for current purposes is that it was politics, not law, that led the administration to restrict the tribunals to noncitizens.

Citizens’ Rights

By contrast, security proposals that would directly affect us all, such as national identity cards, airport screening measures, and the Justice Department’s Operation TIPS program, have received far more careful scrutiny than initiatives directed at immigrants. The proposal to create a national identity card has been on the table since September 12, but has gone nowhere. And when Operation TIPS came to light, in which the Justice Department plans to recruit eleven million private citizens to spy on their neighbors, to be drawn primarily from the ranks of those who have some reason to gain access to people’s homes—such as delivery personnel and meter readers—it was roundly criticized by voices on all sides of the political spectrum, from Phyllis Schlafly to the ACLU. And at House Majority Leader Dick Armey’s insistence, the Republicans’ Homeland Security Bill expressly prohibited adoption of either a national identity card or Operation TIPS.

In addition, while federal courts have ruled certain aspects of Ashcroft’s detention campaign illegal, they have principally done so at the behest of citizens, not immigrants. Several courts have ruled that U.S. citizens and the press have a First Amendment right to attend deportation hearings. Only one court has ruled that the aliens themselves have a due process right to a public trial. And the federal court that ordered disclosure of the detainees’ names did so to vindicate the rights of U.S. citizens’ right to know, not aliens’ rights not to be disappeared. The courts have refused even to hear the claims of the foreign nationals held as enemy combatants at Guantanamo, but have been more solicitous of claims on behalf of U.S. citizens. When citizens’ rights are directly at stake, in other words, the legal and political processes have proven much more rights-sensitive. When only immigrants’ rights appear to be at risk, the system hardly blinks.

III. Resisting Double Standards

As a way of striking the difficult balance between liberty and security, sacrificing foreign citizens’ liberties is undoubtedly tempting. It allows those of us who are citizens to trade someone else’s liberties for our security. We can avoid the difficult trade-offs, and have our security and our liberty, too. But doing so is wrong as a constitutional and normative matter, unlikely to make us more secure, and virtually certain to come back to haunt us.

Bill of Rights as Human Rights

As a constitutional matter, basic rights such as due process, equal protection, and the freedoms of speech and association are not limited to citizens, but apply to all “persons” within the United States or subject to U.S. authority. The Constitution does restrict the right to vote to citizens, but that restriction only underscores by contrast that the Constitution’s other rights apply to all “persons.” These are human rights, not privileges of citizenship. At the time of the framing, they were seen as divinely decreed natural rights; in today’s world, they are the core of what we understand as international human rights, owed to all persons by virtue of their personhood, irrespective of their identity or the political character of their government. The Supreme Court has stated that the First and Fifth Amendments acknowledge no distinction between citizens and foreigners residing in the United States, and as recently as 2001 the Court reaffirmed that “the Due Process Clause applies to all persons within the United States, including aliens, whether their presence here is lawful, unlawful, temporary, or permanent.” Moreover, the very fact that noncitizens lack the vote only makes it all the more essential that they receive judicial protection, as they cannot rely on the political process to consider their interests.

In addition, as the late renowned Yale law professor Alexander Bickel argued, past experience with limiting rights on the basis of citizenship should give us pause. The Supreme Court’s decision in Dred Scott v. Sanford sought to deny Dred Scott’s rights by concluding that “persons who are descendants of Africans who were imported into this country, and sold as slaves,” were not citizens and therefore could not invoke federal court jurisdiction. The Court reasoned that when the Constitution was adopted blacks were not protected by its provisions because they were “considered as a subordinate and inferior class of beings, who had been subjugated by the dominant race, and, whether emancipated or not, yet remained subject to their authority, and had no rights or privileges but such as those who held the power and the Government might choose to grant them.”

With the express intent of overruling that reasoning, Congress provided in the Civil Rights Act of 1866 that “all persons born in the United States and not subject to any foreign power, excluding Indians not taxed, are hereby declared to be citizens of the United States.” The same Congress enacted the Fourteenth Amendment, which provided that all persons born or naturalized in the United States are citizens and further guaranteed to all persons in the United States—whether citizens or not—due process of law and equal protection. As Bickel argued, Dred Scott teaches that “[a] relationship between government and the governed that turns on citizenship can always be dissolved or denied [because] [c]itizenship is a legal construct, an abstraction, a theory.” It is far more difficult to deny that a human being is a “person.”

Undermining Security

Double standards are also unlikely to make us more secure. Even granting that it is rational to assume that al Qaeda operatives are more likely to be Arab or Muslim, if we are going to identify and capture the few al Qaeda terrorists among the many millions of law-abiding Arabs and Muslims here and abroad, we need the full cooperation of those communities. The communities themselves are much better equipped to identify the terrorists residing among them than are a group of outside law enforcement officials largely unfamiliar with the language, culture, and community. But when we impose on Arabs and Muslims burdens that we would not tolerate for ourselves, we make the targeted communities far less likely to cooperate and simultaneously stoke anti-American sentiments. And when we single out citizens of Arab countries for treatment not accorded to other nationals, those countries are likely to be less eager to assist in the war on terrorism as well.

At the same time, when the government departs from individual culpability and adopts guilt by association or suspicion by ethnicity as guiding principles, it encourages sloppy policing and wasteful expenditure of resources on the innocent. The proxies of ethnicity and political or religious association are so inexact and overbroad that the vast majority of those questioned or detained are certain to be wholly innocent.

To cite one example, the federal government has now been attempting to deport a group of seven Palestinians and a Kenyan in Los Angeles for nearly sixteen years. (I have been defending the group for the same period of time). The group came to the FBI’s attention in the early 1980s in connection with counterterrorism investigations relating to the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. Most of the eight were college students at the time and were vocally supportive of Palestinian self-determination.

The FBI spent three years investigating them, including extensive video and electronic surveillance, renting a home next door to two of the individuals for six months, and frequent spells of round-the-clock surveillance. One of the things the students did was to organize annual dinners for the Palestinian community. The events were widely publicized and open to anyone. As many as a thousand people attended, including many families and children. The events featured Palestinian food, music, dancing, and speeches. In addition, at the close of the evening there was generally a charitable fundraising pitch. Suspecting that these events may be linked to an alleged terrorist group called the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), FBI agents attended one of the events and wrote the following report:

The Federal Agents observing the fund raiser did not speak or understand the Arabic language, however, from the posters of Palestinians with AK-47 assaults [sic] rifles and the general mood or tone of the speeches, the agents realized that the PFLP was not attempting to raise money for a humanitarian cause. The music and entire mood of the fund raiser from the entrance ceremony through the speeches sounded militaristic.

The fact that the FBI would not even bother to have someone attend the event who could speak Arabic is an illustration of what happens when one proceeds under a principle of guilt by association. If all one needs to prove is association, one need not do the difficult work of determining whether in fact the individuals are engaged in any criminal or terrorist activity. In the end, the FBI concluded that it had no evidence that any of the individuals had committed any criminal or terrorist activity, but nonetheless urged the INS to deport them for their political associations.

The Illusory Double Standard

As it happens, you can’t really have your cake and eat it, too. The argument that we are only targeting aliens’ rights, and therefore citizens need not worry, is in an important sense illusory, for what we do to aliens today provides a precedent for what can and will be done to citizens tomorrow. When the president introduced the concept of military justice with his military tribunal order in November, for example, he reassured Americans that it would not apply to them but only to noncitizens. Yet now the administration has crossed that line and asserted the same authority with respect to the two U.S. citizens, Hamdi and Padilla, that it asserts with respect to the foreign citizens held at Guantanamo. The military claims that simply by attaching the label “enemy combatant,” the president can authorize the indefinite, incommunicado incarceration of any U.S. citizen he chooses, without access to counsel and without judicial review. Military justice has come home to roost. This proposition is so extreme that even the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, by far the most conservative federal circuit in the country, has rejected it. Yet the Wall Street Journal reported in August that high-level administration officials have advocated even broader reliance on this power and have suggested creating a special camp to house more citizen “enemy combatants.”

The line between alien and citizen has often been crossed before. In fact, two of the most shameful episodes of our nation’s history also had their provenance in measures initially targeted at noncitizens. The McCarthy era of the 1940s and 1950s, in which thousands of Americans were tarred with guilt by association, was simply an extension to citizens of a similar campaign using similar techniques against alien radicals in the first Red Scare thirty years earlier. The earlier Red Scare, which culminated in the arrests of thousands of aliens for their political associations during the Palmer Raids, was coordinated by a young J. Edgar Hoover, then in the Alien Radical division of the Justice Department. Hoover applied what he had learned in the first Red Scare to U.S. citizens during the second Red Scare, which targeted thousands of them.

The same pattern underlies the internment of U.S. citizens of Japanese descent during World War II. Since 1798, the Enemy Aliens Act has authorized the president during wartime to arrest, detain, deport, or otherwise restrict the freedom of anyone over fourteen years old who is a citizen of the country with which we are at war, without regard to any actual evidence of disloyalty, sabotage, or danger. The justification for that law, which the Supreme Court has upheld as constitutional, is that during wartime one can presume that citizens of the enemy country are loyal to their own country, not ours, and that there is insufficient time to identify those who are actually disloyal.

In World War II we simply extended that argument to U.S. citizens through the prism of race. The Army argued that persons of Japanese descent, even if they were technically American citizens because they were born here, remained for all practical purposes “enemy aliens,” presumptively likely to be loyal to Japan. Lt. General John L. DeWitt, the driving force behind the internment orders, wrote in his report on the Japanese evacuation that “[t]he Japanese race is an enemy race and while many second and third generation Japanese, born on United States soil, possessed of United States citizenship, have become Americanized, the racial strains are undiluted.” More colloquially, General DeWitt testified in 1943 before the House Naval Affairs Committee, that “[a] Jap’s a Jap . . . It makes no difference whether he is an American citizen or not.” And so we locked up 110,000 persons solely because of their Japanese ancestry, 70,000 of them U.S. citizens.

The pattern is also evident in more recent history, much of which I have experienced first-hand as a constitutional lawyer for the Center for Constitutional Rights. When the eight Los Angeles–based Palestinian activists referred to above were arrested in January 1987, FBI Director William Webster testified in Congress that a three-year FBI investigation had found no evidence of criminal or terrorist activity, but that the individuals “were arrested because they are alleged to be members of a world-wide Communist organization which, under the McCarran Act, makes them eligible for deportation,” and that “if these individuals had been United States citizens, there would not have been a basis for their arrest.” The INS district director explained that the INS sought their deportation “at the behest of the FBI, which concluded after investigating [the eight] that it had no basis for prosecuting [them] criminally.”

Contemporaneous FBI memoranda prepared to urge the INS to deport the eight aliens confirm that they were targeted solely for lawful political associations and advocacy that would be fully protected if engaged in by U.S. citizens. The memoranda consist entirely of accounts of lawful political activity. The memos repeatedly criticize the aliens’ political views as “anti-US, anti-Israel, anti-Jordan,” and even “anti-REAGAN and anti-MABARAK [sic].” Over three hundred pages are devoted to tracking compulsively the distribution of PFLP newspapers, available in public libraries throughout the United States, as if they were illegal drugs. Agents intercepted boxes of magazines imported from abroad at the Los Angeles airport, weighed them to estimate how many magazines they contained, and then carefully tracked those who picked up and distributed the magazines.

The principal FBI report on the group admitted that the FBI’s purpose was “to identify key PFLP people in Southern California so that law enforcement agencies capable of disrupting the PFLP’s activities through legal action can do so,” even though the FBI had found no evidence of illegal activities. The FBI specifically urged deportation of the alleged “leader” of the group, Khader Hamide, not because he engaged in any criminal acts, but because he was “intelligent, aggressive, dedicated, and shows great leadership ability.”

Even though Congress in 1990 repealed the immigration law provisions that made aliens deportable for associating with groups advocating communism, the INS continued its deportation efforts, pursuing some of the eight on routine visa violation charges and charging the two who were permanent residents with having “engaged in terrorist activity” by providing material support to the PFLP. The aliens obtained an injunction against the deportation proceedings, successfully arguing that they had been singled out for deportation based on First Amendment-protected activities. In opposing the injunction, the government argued that aliens enjoyed only diminished First Amendment rights and that therefore the INS should be permitted to single out aliens for deportation based on their association with and support of a terrorist group without having to show that the conduct in any way furthered any terrorist activity.

The federal courts rejected this argument, holding that aliens in the United States are entitled to the same First Amendment rights as citizens. In 1996, however, the INS persuaded Congress to repeal federal court jurisdiction to hear cases challenging selective enforcement of the immigration law, and the Supreme Court ruled that the aliens’ challenge to their deportation should be dismissed, with a gratuitous aside suggesting that selectively targeting aliens for deportation for their associations is constitutionally acceptable. To this day, nearly sixteen years after the initial arrests, the government continues to seek the aliens’ deportation, notwithstanding its initial admission that they have engaged in no illegal or terrorist activity. From the government’s perspective, that admission is not material because any support to a “terrorist group,” even to its wholly lawful activities, should be a legally sufficient basis for deportation.

In the Los Angeles deportation case the government consistently argued that aliens were entitled to reduced First Amendment protection. But as in the World War II and McCarthy era periods, its arguments were soon extended to citizens. In the 1996 Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, Congress made it a crime, punishable by ten years in prison and a substantial fine, to provide any material support to a designated terrorist organization. Prior law had criminalized material support of terrorist activity, which required the government to show some connection between an individual’s support and the terrorist activity. Just as the Patriot Act later did with respect to immigration law, the 1996 statute dispensed with the requirement that the government prove a nexus to terrorist activity for criminal prosecutions. Under this law, like the Patriot Act, a person who supports a designated organization is liable even if he can show that his support was designed to discourage the group from engaging in violence and actually had that effect. Here again, then, a theory initially used against aliens and defended on the ground that aliens deserve less constitutional protection than citizens proved to be a precursor for a similar law directed at citizens.

One practice that one might think citizens need not worry about is the use of secret evidence to determine the outcome of legal proceedings concerning their liberty or property. The Confrontation Clause guarantees that anyone tried in a criminal court has a right to confront the evidence used against him, and the elemental due process requirement that persons be afforded a meaningful opportunity to be heard would seem to require access to the dispositive evidence used to take one’s liberty or property. Yet the government has for fifty years used secret evidence submitted in camera and ex parte in immigration proceedings and has argued that aliens are not constitutionally entitled to confront the evidence against them even when their physical liberty is at stake. Here, too, the government has maintained that aliens enjoy only diminished constitutional protections. But here, too, the government has sought to extend this practice to United States citizens.

Consider the case of Hany Kiareldeen, a Palestinian in his thirties who came to the United States on a student visa in 1990 and now lives in Newark, New Jersey. In March 1998, the INS arrested Kiareldeen, charged him with failing to maintain his student visa status, and detained him without bond, claiming that he was a threat to national security.

Kiareldeen never saw the evidence that allegedly supported his detention as a security threat because the INS submitted it to an immigration judge in camera and ex parte. The INS did give Kiareldeen an unclassified summary of the evidence, but the summary initially disclosed only that he was allegedly associated with terrorists and posed a threat to the attorney general, charges so general that Kiareldeen could not possibly rebut them.

Subsequently, the INS expanded its disclosure and ultimately revealed three allegations: 1) that Kiareldeen was associated with an unidentified “terrorist organization” and with other members and suspected members of terrorist organizations, also unidentified; 2) that about a week before the first World Trade Center bombing, Kiareldeen hosted a meeting at his residence in Nutley, New Jersey, where some individuals discussed plans to bomb the World Trade Center; and 3) that “Kiareldeen expressed a desire to murder Attorney General Janet Reno.” The summary provided no further details. It did not, for example, identify the sources for any of these allegations, nor did it explain the context or time frame for the alleged relationships and statement.

Kiareldeen was nonetheless able to rebut the government’s case in open court. He proved, for example, that he did not even live in the apartment where he supposedly hosted a meeting with World Trade Center bombers until a year and a half after the alleged meeting took place. He showed that his phone records from the time revealed no phone calls to other conspirators in the World Trade Center case, while the conspirators’ phone records showed extensive calls among themselves. And he testified that one of the sources of secret evidence against him, his ex-wife, had made numerous false allegations against him in the course of a custody battle over their child. Kiareldeen sought to examine his ex-wife in open court, but the INS vigorously opposed his attempts to do so, and she refused to testify about her discussions with the FBI.

In the end, all seven immigration judges who examined the complete record in Kiareldeen’s case, including the government’s secret evidence presentation and Kiareldeen’s open court rebuttal, rejected the government’s contention that he posed a threat to national security, and he was eventually released—but not before he spent nineteen months in jail on the basis of that secret evidence.

Kiareldeen is not alone. Since 1987 I have represented thirteen aliens against whom the government has sought to use secret evidence either to detain or to deport them. In each case the government claimed that the evidence showed the aliens to be threats to national security. Yet in each case the aliens were eventually released by court order, either because federal courts concluded that reliance on classified evidence was unconstitutional, or because once the government disclosed some of the classified evidence, the alien was able to rebut the charges in immigration court. In each case in which the charges were disclosed, they consisted of little more than guilt by association. (One of the thirteen, Mazen Al-Najjar, a Palestinian adjunct professor at University of South Florida, was subsequently rearrested and deported after September 11. The government argued that it could detain Al-Najjar without any evidence that he posed a danger or flight risk. Al-Najjar challenged that position in court, but was deported before the legal challenge to his custody concluded).

In the wake of September 11 the use of secret evidence has now been extended to domestic law affecting citizens. The Treasury Department, relying on the Patriot Act, has seized all property and blocked all bank accounts of three U.S.–based charities: Holy Land Foundation, Global Relief Foundation, Inc., and Benevolence International Foundation, Inc. In each case it did so without notice or an opportunity for a hearing. When the charities, all American corporations with U.S.–citizen board members, sued to challenge the legality of the seizures, the government argued that the organizations had no right to present evidence in their own defense. In addition, the government invoked a provision of the Patriot Act that authorizes it to present classified evidence in camera and ex parte to defend the seizures.

Nor is this the first time that the use of secret evidence has been extended from immigrants to citizens. In the Cold War the government extended the practice to citizens as well, as both the House Un-American Activities Committee and federal employment loyalty review boards required suspects to answer charges made in secret by anonymous informants and denied those accused any opportunity to confront their accusers.

History reveals that the distinction between citizen and alien has often been resorted to as a justification for liberty-infringing measures in times of crisis. In the short term, the fact that measures are limited to noncitizens appears to make them easier for the majority to accept—citizens are not asked to sacrifice their own liberty. But the same history suggests that citizens should be wary about relying on this distinction because it has often been breached before. What we are willing to do to noncitizens ultimately affects what we are willing to do to citizens. In the long run, all of our rights are at stake in the war against terrorism.

IV. Conclusion

Security is indisputably at a premium in the wake of the attacks of September 11. There may well be justification for sacrificing some of our liberties if the sacrifice will make us more secure. But many of the measures we have undertaken after September 11 follow a disturbing historical pattern, in which we, the citizenry, sacrifice not our freedoms but the freedoms of noncitizens, a minority group with no vote, in the interest of preserving citizens’ security. The post–September 11 response constitutes a reprise of some of the worst mistakes of our past. Once again, we are treating people as suspicious not for their conduct, but based on their racial, ethnic, or political identity. Once again, we are using the immigration power as a pretext for criminal law enforcement without the protections associated with the criminal process. Once again, we have undertaken a mass detention campaign directed at immigrants without probable cause that any of them are tied to the specific threats that we face. And once again, we have authorized the government to bypass procedures designed to distinguish the guilty from the innocent, holding secret hearings and authorizing executive detentions that challenge the most basic notions of fairness.

As politically tempting as the trade-off of immigrants’ liberties for our security may appear, we should resist it for reasons of principle, pragmatism, and self-interest. As a matter of principle, the rights that we have selectively denied to immigrants should not be reserved for citizens. The rights of political freedom, due process, and equal protection belong to every person subject to U.S. legal obligations, irrespective of citizenship. As a pragmatic matter, reliance on double standards reduces the legitimacy of our struggle, and that legitimacy may be our most valuable asset, both at home and abroad. To paraphrase John Ashcroft himself: “To those who pit Americans against immigrants and citizens against non-citizens . . . my message is this: Your tactics only aid terrorism.” And as a matter of self-interest, what we do to aliens today may well pave the way for what will be done to citizens tomorrow. In the end, however, it is principle that should drive us: the justice of our response should be judged by how we treat those who have no voice in the political process. Thus far, we have performed predictably, but not well.

David Cole, professor at Georgetown University Law Center, is author of No Equal Justice and Terrorism and the Constitution.

Copyright © 2003 Boston Review

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[2 — x Boston Review]
A Legacy of Xenophobia: A response to David Cole’s “Their Liberties, Our Security”
By Bonnie Honig

The detention of aliens documented by David Cole in his fine essay is merely the latest in a long history of American nativism and xenophobia. This history may seem at odds with the United States’ beloved self-image as a xenophilic nation of immigrants. But is it really? In fact, these two impulses are not contradictory, at least not in the American context. American xenophilia and xenophobia both operate in service of American nationalism.

When foreigners are celebrated in American political culture, it is because “they” make “us” better. For example, foreigners are said to bring family values to a culture that cannot sustain them due to New-World mobilities, sexualities, materialisms, and freedoms. The true entrepreneurial spirit, central to American capitalism, is more often identified with America’s newest comers than with its native-born. And communitarians see immigrant communities as one of the few sites of mutuality and care left in a liberal polity driven by individualism and self-interest. Again and again foreigners are represented symbolically as much-needed agents of national renewal. In the 1990s, many multiculturalists lobbied in favor of immigrants by deploying these xenophilic arguments.

Unfortunately, such arguments carry within them the seeds of American xenophobia. Positioned as the saviors of the nation, foreigners slide all too easily into becoming its scapegoats. Their “family values,” celebrated by some, look to others like patriarchal infringements of cherished American freedoms.1 From the perspective of the native poor, iconic hard-working immigrants, celebrated for their perseverance, put working class Americans out of jobs. Liberals see immigrant communities as ethnic enclaves that retard the development of American individualism. And so on and so on.

Americans are so used to thinking about foreigners as either a poison or a cure for the diseased national body that they are poorly prepared to think about them simply as persons. This poor preparation is captured by the dehumanizing American term for foreigners—“alien.”

Thus, it is with particular admiration and appreciation that I read David Cole’s compassionate and humane essay. Cole does better than the aforementioned multiculturalists because he eschews nationalist, xenophilic arguments. He does not recirculate the myth of an immigrant America. He does not express indignation and surprise that this nation of immigrants could treat foreigners so badly. Instead, he owns the history of American nativism and xenophobia while also calling on us to do better, appealing not to xenophilic, nationalist sentiments that might have the side effect of stoking American xenophobia, but rather to humanistic, constitutional, and moral principles, as well as to self-interest.

When Cole laments the double standard that treats citizens and aliens differently, he writes as if the pattern of xenophilia/xenophobia were not a national tradition. Yet I find little to criticize here, because he does so clearly not in the benighted belief that we have ever really been free of such a pattern but in the hope that we might one day be. Here he aims to persuade, not describe.

When Cole reminds us of the humanity of those we treat as deportable detritus on the basis of their ethnicity and in the context of our current fears, he sounds like the now-almost-forgotten Assistant Secretary of Labor Louis Post, who in 1919 and 1920 took it upon himself, acting from within the Wilson Administration, to release hundreds of aliens detained and marked for deportation by the Palmer Raids. For his actions Post was hauled before a congressional committee. He responded to charges of impeachment with a mix of humanitarianism, humor, administrative confidence, and appeals to constitutional fairness that saved him personally and contributed to Palmer’s political downfall.

As Cole correctly notes, it was a young J. Edgar Hoover, together with Attorney General Palmer, who supervised the raids that rounded up thousands of immigrants and detained them for deportation on the thinnest grounds. Cole argues that Hoover personifies his point that inroads into alien rights are followed invariably by violations of citizen rights, for was it not Hoover who went on thirty years later to engineer the persecution of American citizens suspected of Communist sympathies under McCarthyism?

The point is a powerful one, but it is also misleading. This way of casting Hoover’s career, from one snapshot in 1919–1920 to the next in 1947–1954, implies a temporal lapse and gradual emboldening that simply did not occur. Hoover was already targeting citizens, not only aliens, from the very beginning of his career. As Michael Rogin points out, Hoover blamed subversives for the 1919 race riots, charged black leaders with “being under Bolshevik influence” (thus “making blacks the perpetrators rather than the victims of the outrages”), and “investigated and tried to discredit people who opposed his actions, like the noted civil libertarian Zechariah Chafee, Jr., and Felix Frankfurter.” By the mid-1930s, “Hoover was creating a secret political police to infiltrate, influence, and punish dissenting political speech and action.”2

Hoover epitomizes a countersubversive mentality, still dominant in the United States, that has been studied at length by no one more adeptly than Rogin. That mentality casts the United States not as a political actor enmeshed in political conflicts with a concrete history, but rather as a hapless victim of alien monsters who appear inexplicably out of nowhere, who might be hiding anywhere, and whose threatening actions justify extreme, often mimetic, (re-)actions on our part. Because Rogin is recently deceased and his perspective sorely missed right now, I quote him at length:

Both the postwar Soviet Union and the radical labor movement of [the 1910s] posed genuine threats to dominant interests in American society, although the nature and extent of those threats are a matter of controversy. There were also real conflicts of interest between white Americans and peoples of color. But the countersubversive response transformed interest conflicts into psychologically based anxieties over national security and American identity. Exaggerated responses to the domestic Communist [we could now say Arab] menace narrowed the bounds of permissible political disagreement and generated a national-security state.

In extremis, the government has not historically persecuted aliens first and then citizens. Instead, American countersubversives have gone after all perceived enemies of national security and legitimated their actions by casting their foes as alien to the national body. A particularly compelling example was provided by Mississippi Congressman John Rankin, a member of HUAC who, in commenting on a petition from the Committee for the First Amendment before the House in 1947, named some of the CFA’s members’ names in a way clearly intended to “out” some apparent citizens as really, invisibly alien:

I want to read you some of these names. One of the names is June Havoc. We found . . . that her real name is June Hovick. Another one was Danny Kaye, and we found out his real name—David Daniel Kaminsky. . . . Another one is Eddie Cantor, whose real name is Edward Iskowitz. There is one who calls himself Edward Robinson. His real name is Emmanuel Goldenberg. There is another here who calls himself Melvyn Douglas, whose real name is Melvyn Hesselberg.3

In short, although we may as Cole suggests sometimes persecute people because they are foreign, the deeper truth is that we almost always make foreign those whom we persecute. Foreignness is a symbolic marker that the nation attaches to the people we want to disavow, deport, or detain because we experience them as a threat. The distinction between who is part of the nation and who is an outsider is not exhausted nor even finally defined by working papers, skin color, ethnicity, or citizenship. Indeed, it is not an empirical line at all; it is a symbolic one, used for political purposes.

Although in the current climate Cole’s intervention could not be more welcome, and although I myself hope it will be effective, his approach has some blind spots worth noting. He invokes the Constitution as if that document only checks and does not also aid the national-security state’s amassment of power. True, Louis Post used the mandates, checks, and powers of constitutionally ordered government to great effect, to defend himself against impeachment. But invoking the Constitution is no longer enough. The Constitution has an ambiguous relation to the national security state that it authorizes, tolerates, and sometimes checks. If we invoke the Constitution without interrogating the national-security state that is its current operating context, and without attending to the symbolic dimensions of politics, then the best question we can ask is Cole’s: whose liberty should be traded-off for security, and when or how are such trade-offs justified? Wouldn’t it be better to ask (or at least also to ask), as Hannah Arendt did, how security became the end of government and with what consequences for democracy and freedom?4

Rogin argues that one of the biggest consequences of the American government’s countersubversive focus on security has been the atomization of political association. He tracked the effects of three episodes of American countersubversion—the genocide of tribal Indians, the destruction of labor unions, and finally, under McCarthyism, the effort to make dangerous any sort of dissenting political affiliation (73). If Rogin is right, then state-sponsored persecution, not television, is why people bowl alone (if they do). In other words, if he is right, then there is nothing mysterious about the much-discussed decline of civic involvement in America. But once in a while people are brave and regather their energies in the face of further governmental arrogations of power. In the 1980s there was a Sanctuary Movement, prosecuted by the Justice Department for conspiracy to import illegal aliens. If we are lucky, interventions like Cole’s—and perhaps the historical example of brave counter-countersubversives, like Louis Post—will inspire a few more people to act in concert on behalf of some other people, perhaps even on behalf of those now cast as the latest threats to national security.


Bonnie Honig is professor of political science at Northwestern University and senior research fellow at the American Bar Foundation. Her most recent book is Democracy and the Foreigner.

Notes

1See, for example, Susan Okin, Is Multiculturalism Bad for Women? (Princeton University Press, 1999).
2Michael Rogin, Ronald Reagan, the Movie: and Other Episodes in American Political Demonology (University of California Press, 1987), 69.
3Quoted in Larry Ceplair and Steven Englund, The Inquisition in Hollywood: Politics in the Film Community, 1930–1960 (Anchor Press/Doubleday, 1980), 289.
4Hannah Arendt, Between Past and Future (Penguin USA, 1993). For the ideas in this paragraph, I am indebted chiefly to conversations with George Shulman and also Linda Zerilli.

Copyright © 2003 Boston Review


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