Tuesday, April 08, 2008

To be a conservative

I don't want to speculate about how many of our publicly educated young people know who John Wilkes Booth was, but I'll bet that far fewer recognize the Englishman, John Wilkes and know about the part he played, by proxy, in shaping the fourth amendment to our Constitution. Because Wilkes ran afoul of the Crown by openly criticizing a treaty signed by George III, a general warrant for his arrest led to his apprehension along with the publishers of the paper that printed his argument. Wilkes had popular support in England and in the colonies and the notion that the King could authorize upon his own authority and without challenge from Parliament or the independent judiciary, a general search or fishing expedition to seek anything they could use to squelch protest, made him a bit of a hero and martyr.

We are no longer a group of colonies. We are no longer the nation that grew out of those colonies and we have another George who insists on the right to unrestricted, unsupervised and secret investigations without court oversight or any scrutiny at all. We are no longer a nation that objects. We are no longer a nation that values individual liberty to the point where we can accept the slight risk of crime rather than the security of a police state.

We've had so many examples of warrantless wiretapping and other acts of indignity without probable cause that anyone who doesn't know, isn't someone who cares, but documents appearing in the Washington Post show how the FBI can and has been indulging in espionage of "suspects" without having to explain who they are or why they are or what they are suspected of by what evidence to any court. Only the Federal government knows for sure; a Federal government that loves secrets and fights to keep them.

That they can use whatever they find for whatever purpose they wish seems to be evident in the case of Eliot Spitzer and the use of his ATM records to show that he cheated on his wife. I'm sure nobody believes that information was obtained for such purposes and we're just too delighted by the circus to care. If we don't send to know for whom the wires are tapped, the e-mails read, the bank records examined, the mail box inspected, the credit card receipts tallied, it none the less tolls for us.

If we're good subjects, the King will be good to us and protect us. He may or may not tell us what he's protecting us from or how or why, but we can trust George or pay the cost of being adjudged, like John Wilkes, a Liberal, a traitor, an enemy of the state.

Which side are you on, Mr. conservative?

6 comments:

Intellectual Insurgent said...

Is escape from the matrix possible?

The Future Was Yesterday said...

NOT to be confused with John Wilkes BOOTH, as many perhaps will.

Capt. Fogg said...

But it's OK to confuse the town of Wilkes-Barre since it was named so in honor of him. That's how famous he was in the colonies for standing up to King George III. Too bad he's not here standing up to King George the Bush.

No, escape is not possible.

RR said...

We have sold liberty for pseudo-security...

The downfall of our civilization is well underway.

d nova said...

don' tell me u have smthing 2 hide!

don' bother 2 answer that. o course we all say things we don' want strangers hearing. either that or we have totally boring lives.

that, o course, is why the founders, in their wisdom, gave us the privacy amendment, #4.

but we'll always hav toadies (n tories) willing 2 sell their freedom, possibly 4 safety, mo likely 4 approval fro the rich n powerful they envy n fantasize joining but fro whom will mo likely get no mo than a few crumbs, if anything.

Capt. Fogg said...

If opposing the government becomes something we need to hide from them, unregulated surveillance will give us all something to fear.