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US House passes Democrat-crafted homegrown terrorism
prevention legislation
By Naomi Spencer
1 December 2007
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A month ago, the US House of Representatives overwhelmingly
approved passage of legislation that would set up a commission
targeting domestic radicalization as a threat to so-called
homeland security. Although it has received little media attention,
civil liberties groups have expressed concerns for the future
of public protest and other forms of constitutionally protected
speech.
The bill, H.R. 1955, The Violent Radicalization Homegrown
Terrorism Act of 2007, was crafted and sponsored by Democrat
Jane Harman of California and approved by the House by a margin
of 404-6. A mere three Democrats and three Republicans voted against
the bill.
Twenty-three congress members abstained, including House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi and House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers.
The bill is currently pending approval in the Senate and is widely
anticipated to pass by a similar proportion before the end of
the session.
Introduced in April as an amendment to the 2002 Homeland Security
Act, the legislation adds provisions for the establishment of
a 10-member commission to collect data on radicalization. Evoking
the memory of the anticommunist House Committee on Un-American
Activities headed by Joseph McCarthy, the anti-radicalization
commission would be granted authority to hold hearings and
sit and act at such times and places, take such testimony, receive
such evidence, and administer such oaths as the Commission considers
advisable to carry out its duties.
As Equal Justice Alliance director Odette Wilkens pointed out,
the commission would be empowered to subpoena and investigate
anyone, and would create a public perception that whoever
is being investigated by the Commission must be involved in subversive
or illegal activities. Wilkens noted to Truthout.org reporter
Matt Renner, in an article published November 29, It would
give the appearance that whoever they are investigating is potentially
a traitor or disloyal or a terrorist, even if all they were doing
was advocating lawful views.
The commission would be composed of appointees, one chosen
each respectively by Bush, Homeland Security secretary Michael
Chertoff, the Senate and House majority and minority leaders,
and by the ranking majority and minority members of the two congressional
homeland security committees. Such a selection process would certainly
result in an extremely right-wing panel.
The language of the bill is very broad and includes in its
designations of terrorist activity a category of intent. For example,
ideologically based violence is defined as the
use, planned use, or threatened use of force or violence by a
group or individual to promote the group or individuals
political, religious, or social beliefs. No force or violence
need have occurred; the government commission needs only charge,
without the burden of evidence, that an individual or group thought
about violence.
Similarly, the term violent radicalization is defined
as the process of adopting or promoting an extremist belief
system for the purpose of facilitating ideologically based violence
to advance political, religious, or social change. The definition
of an extremist belief system is not specified, leaving
interpretation to the discretion of the commission.
Homegrown terrorism is defined by the bill as the
use, planned use, or threatened use, of force or violence by a
group or individual born, raised, or based and operating primarily
within the United States or any possession of the United States
to intimidate or coerce the United States government, the civilian
population of the United States, or any segment thereof, in furtherance
of political or social objectives.
The implications of this definition of terrorism are far-reaching.
Participants in protests against US policy, for instance, could
be designated as terrorists if the conductor intentof
any individual were alleged by police to be violent.
Under the legislation, after 18 months the anti-radicalization
commission would report to Congress on its findings, then establish
a university-based organization, the Center of Excellence
for the Study of Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism
in the United States.
The Centers mission would not be limited to research,
but also would include a mandate to contribute to the establishment
of training, written materials, information, analytical assistance
and professional resources to aid in combating violent radicalism
and homegrown terrorism in coordination with federal, state
and local homeland security officials. This could have a definite
chilling effect on the political activity and exercise of free
speech on campuses because of the virtual enlistment of students
and academics into the campaigns of the governments intelligence
apparatus.
The legislation specifically singles out the Internet as a
weapon for domestic radicalization. In remarks introducing
the legislation November 6 to the Senate Committee on Homeland
Security, Congresswoman Harman said, There can be no doubt:
the Internet is increasingly being used as a tool to reach and
radicalize Americans and legal residents. The web, Harman
said, allowed Americans to become indoctrinated by extremists
and to learn how to kill their neighbors ... from the comfort
of their own living rooms.
In the same speech, Harman portrayed American youth in a thoroughly
contemptuous manner. Combine ... personal adolescent upheaval
with the explosion of information technologies and communications
tools, she said, tools which American kids are using
to broadcast messages from Al Qaedaand there is a road map
to terror, a retail outlet for anger and warped aspirations.
Link that intent with a trained terrorist operative who has actual
capability, and a Made in the USA suicide bomber is
born.
Even more absurdly, she added, How we address violent
radicalizationwhile respecting the Constitution in the processis
not easy. There is no magic pill or rulebook or law that will
fix this.
It is already clear that not the slightest attempt will be
made, by legislators or by the empanelled commission, to actually
explain the social origins of unrest, let alone the political
aggravators of extremism.
Both the bills content and its landslide congressional
support underscore the fact that the entire war on terror
is geared toward quashing political opposition and dissent and
dismantling constitutional protections, not fighting a supposed
terrorist threat. While targeting the civil liberties of the population
as a whole, it poses a particular threat to workers and
students organizations as well as left-wing and socialist
parties.
As with the bills predecessors since 2001including
the Patriot Act, the Homeland Security Act, and the Military Commissions
Actthe Democrats are working to actively undermine free
speech and protections against government surveillance in their
role as the nominal opposition in Congress.
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