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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NV: OPED: Government, Not Terrorism, Poses Greatest Risk To
Title:US NV: OPED: Government, Not Terrorism, Poses Greatest Risk To
Published On:2002-09-11
Source:Pahrump Valley Times (NV)
Fetched On:2008-01-22 02:03:28
GOVERNMENT, NOT TERRORISM, POSES GREATEST RISK TO FREEDOM

As we mark the first anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, it's important to
challenge the conventional wisdom that terrorism poses the greatest threat
to our lives and liberty.

Speaking bluntly - it doesn't. Yes, terrorists took over 3,000 lives a year
ago. And eventually there may be more terrorist attacks, and more innocent
lives may be lost. But we need to remind ourselves that far more lives are
lost every year due to the misguided policies of our own government.

Americans die because government denies them the right to carry a weapon.
Americans die because violent felons are released from jail to make room
for non-violent drug users serving federally mandated sentences. Americans
die because the FDA denies them access to new life-saving medicines.
Americans die because they are prevented from using medical marijuana to
control the nausea produced by chemotherapy and AIDS medications.

And, while would-be terrorists can threaten our lives, they can't threaten
our liberty. Only politicians overreacting to the threat of terrorism can
accomplish that.

As columnist Walter Williams recently wrote, "It's Washington, not Osama
bin Laden, that represents the greatest threat to both liberty and security."

Government officials promise that if we give up more of our liberty,
they'll give us safety in return. But when have they ever kept up their end
of the bargain? Legislation passed after the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing
gave the government more police powers to "protect us" from terrorists. Yet
surrendering those liberties didn't result in safety on September 11.

Now the USA Patriot Act is the law of the land. National ID cards are
coming. President George Bush and Attorney General John Ashcroft even
proposed creating a massive network of citizen informants and spies - the
TIPS program - that would have seemed right at home in Communist East
Germany. TIPS has been blocked for the moment, but it will be back. And if
there's another terrorist attack, it will probably pass.

Random roadblocks are occurring more frequently, and for ever more
ridiculous reasons. Unbelievably, Florida state troopers were recently
pulling drivers over to take a mass transit survey. And Americans are
putting up with it.

Every time you think that airport security measures can't get any more
absurd, you read about a situation like 9-year-old Ryan Scott, whose 2-inch
G.I. Joe rifle and tiny toy pistols were confiscated at a Wisconsin airport
as federally prohibited items. When Ryan's mom and her fiance questioned
the measure, the security personnel responded by searching her and
threatening to destroy the toys. It sounds too absurd to be real - but it's
happening. And Americans are putting up with it.

American citizens have even been detained without being charged with a
crime and without being permitted to see an attorney because they are
suspected of being involved with terrorists. And far too many Americans
seem to think that's OK. They don't understand that once you give
government that kind of power, it is inevitable that it will be turned
against the innocent as well as the guilty.

And it gets worse.

The war drums are beating for a pre-emptive attack on Iraq. Launched by
presidential decree. Not in response to an attack, and without a
congressional declaration of war, as required by the Constitution.

In turn, we're hearing more and more politicians suggest that we need to
bring back the draft.

I'm old enough to remember Vietnam - the young Americans killed and maimed,
the lives and families destroyed. The draft makes it easier for governments
to launch senseless wars, and thus makes them more likely. It's tough to
come up with a greater threat to the lives and liberty of our children than
a resumption of the draft.

Some Republican leaders may quietly bemoan the expansion of government
power in the name of fighting terrorism, but they aren't likely to stand up
and oppose their president. Some Democratic leaders may be dismayed at the
loss of civil liberties in the name of fighting terrorism, but they are too
afraid of being branded as unpatriotic to take a stand.

At a time like this, it's time for ordinary Americans to stand up for
freedom. We can best honor those who perished at the hands of terrorists by
ensuring that our precious liberties don't perish at the hands of politicians.
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