[Mb-civic] ramifications
IHHS at aol.com
IHHS at aol.com
Thu Jul 28 17:54:13 PDT 2005
62 year old woman found guilty of assaulting a federal
aviation security staff member
http://www.thenewamerican.com/artman/publish/article_1932.shtml
Making War on the American Public
by William Norman Grigg
July 27, 2005
In another triumph for "homeland security,"
62-year-old retired schoolteacher Phyllis Dintenfass
faces imprisonment and financial ruin. Her "crime"?
Reciprocating the "helpful" behavior of a federal
airport security screener.
Phyllis Dintenfass is an unassuming, 62-year-old
retired teacher from Appleton, Wisconsin. John C. Yoo
is a law professor at the University of
California-Berkeley, and a former high-ranking legal
adviser to President Bush. Yoo was a chief author of
the so-called USA PATRIOT act, and helped shape the
Bush administration’s quasi-totalitarian "homeland
security"
ideology. Mrs. Dintenfass, who has never committed a
crime against persons or property, faces a year in
prison and $100,000 in fines as a result of her
collision with a federal official acting on that
ideology.
Last September, Mrs. Dintenfass and her husband were
passing through security prior to a flight at
Appleton’s Outagamie County Regional Airport. Since
something she wore repeatedly triggered metal
detectors, Mrs. Dintenfass was taken to a "secondary
screening area" by a Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) supervisor named Anita Gostisha.
The would-be passenger meekly complied as Gostisha
used an electronic "wand" to scan for metal objects.
Gostisha then used the back of her hands to check the
area beneath Dintenfass’s breasts, provoking her to
"lash out." According to Dintenfass, her reaction was
to reciprocate the unwanted and uninvited physical
contact while saying, "How would you like it if I did
that to you?" Gostisha claims that the middle-aged
woman – uniformly described as mild-mannered and
inoffensive – also "slammed her against the wall,"
which would certainly be a proportionate response to
what reasonable people would consider a sexual
assault.
Dintenfass flatly denies shoving the TSA official. In
any case, she was arrested and charged with
"assaulting" a federal official. A federal jury found
her guilty of that supposed crime on July 26.
Sentencing will occur on November 1.
Dintenfass "punished Anita Gostisha for doing her
job," complained federal Prosecutor Tim Funnell. U.S.
Attorney Steven Bispukic added that TSA officers, who
perform a "vital function" are "entitled to protection
from assault."
Perhaps the only positive aspect of this case is that
we now have an official acknowledgment from federal
attorneys that the invasive, degrading physical
contact regularly inflicted on air travelers by TSA
drones is a form of "punishment" and "assault." But
this implicit admission is bundled with the assumption
that federal officials, who belong to a specially
privileged and protected class, are entitled to
assault common citizens – in the name of "homeland
security," naturally.
This is a splendid example of the ideology John C. Yoo
helped devise on behalf of the Bush administration.
Yoo’s influence was felt not only in the creation of
the so-called PATRIOT Act, but also in a September 25,
2001 memorandum entitled "The President’s
Constitutional Authority to Conduct Military
Operations Against Terrorists and Nations Supporting
Them" and a January 2002 legal brief arguing that
enemy troops captured in Afghanistan and elsewhere are
not entitled to the protection of the Geneva
Conventions.
Digested to its essence, the legal doctrine Yoo helped
compose is this: The President, and those who act on
his behalf, are entitled to do anything to anyone as
long as it is done in the name of fighting terrorism.
This claim was made explicitly in the September 25,
2001 memorandum, which held that "the Constitution
vests the President with the plenary authority, as
Commander in Chief and the sole organ of the Nation in
its foreign relations, to use military force abroad,"
and that neither Congress nor the courts can "place
any limits on the President's determinations as to any
terrorist threat, the amount of military force to be
used in response, or the method, timing, and nature of
the response."
The PATRIOT [sic] Act and related "homeland security"
measures represent the same claim of open-ended and
unqualified presidential power with respect to
domestic affairs. As Yoo explained in a February 24,
2004 interview with the California Patriot, a
GOP-aligned student publication, the Bush
administration’s homeland security doctrine is based
on the idea that "no artificial line could be drawn
between foreign and domestic threats." The primary
achievement of the PATRIOT Act, Yoo continued, "was
taking down the artificial line."
As Yoo put it in a separate interview, the executive
branch is now "using the legal tools of wartime" in
dealing with matters of domestic security. In essence,
this approach permits the President and his minions to
make war on the American public – in the name of
"protecting" us.
Yoo has described himself as a person who subscribes
to "the basic Republican beliefs," which in his view
include "limited government in areas aside from
foreign affairs and security and government
intervention should be as narrow as possible."
(Emphasis added.) Which is to say that government
intervention can continue indefinitely, as long it is
conducted in the name of "security."
In his continuing role as an informal adviser, Yoo is
urging the Bush administration to continue its assault
on the Constitution and the liberties it protects.
In a recent Los Angeles Times op-ed column, he
referred to the need to "change … the way the United
States deals with Islam" as part of a campaign to
"discredit" al-Qaeda and other radical Islamist
movements. "Under the Constitution’s religion
clauses," Yoo points out, "the government can neither
support nor interfere with religion"; however, he
continued, the federal government "must support
moderate versions [of Islam] compatible with democracy
and markets. The United States must ask the courts to
give us flexibility to combat fundamentalist Islam as
it would any other hostile ideology…."
By "flexibility," Yoo clearly intimates an approach to
religious liberty that would permit the feds to
subject religious associations and gatherings to
official scrutiny, or perhaps even some variety of
official regulation. And it shouldn’t be assumed that
the suddenly flexible feds would direct such treatment
exclusively at Muslim "fundamentalists."
Consider this. Most suicide bombers are young Muslim
males, not white, middle-aged retired female
schoolteachers from Appleton, Wisconsin. Yet federal
policy required that Phyllis Dintenfass undergo a body
search. As a result, she now faces imprisonment and
financial ruin because of her understandable reaction.
This does nothing to protect the public from
terrorism, but a great deal to reinforce the idea of
illimitable federal power – which is, apparently, the
entire point of the "war on terrorism."
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