HON. RON PAUL OF TEXAS
BEFORE THE US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
November 16, 2005
Congress Erodes Privacy
The privacy issue has been around for a long time.
The brutal abuse of privacy and property of early Americans played
a big role in our revolt against the King. The 1st, 4th, and
5th amendments represented attempts to protect private property
and privacy from an overzealous federal government. Today
those attempts appear to have failed.
There have been serious legal debates in recent
decades about whether "privacy" is protected by the
Constitution. Some argue that since the word does not appear
in the text of that document, it is not protected. Others
argue that privacy protection grants the federal government power
to dictate to all states limits or leniency in enforcing certain
laws. But the essence of liberty is privacy.
In recent years-especially since 9-11-Congress has
been totally negligent in its duty to protect U.S. citizens from
federal government encroachment on the rights of privacy.
Even prior to 9-11, the Echelon worldwide surveillance system was
well entrenched, monitoring telephones, faxes, and emails.
From the 1970s forward, national security letters
were used sparingly in circumventing the legal process and search
warrant requirements. Since 9-11 and the subsequent passage
of the Patriot Act, however, use of these instruments has
skyrocketed, from 300 annually to over 30,000. There is
essentially no oversight nor understanding by the U.S. Congress of
the significance of this pervasive government surveillance.
It's all shrugged off as necessary to make us safe from terrorism.
Sacrificing personal liberty and privacy, the majority
feels, is not a big deal.
We soon will vote on the conference report
reauthorizing the Patriot Act. Though one could argue there's been
a large grass-roots effort to discredit the Patriot Act, Congress
has ignored the message. Amazingly, over 391 communities and
7 states have passed resolutions highly critical of the Patriot
Act.
The debate in Congress-if that's what one wants to
call it-boils down to whether the most egregious parts of the Act
will be sunsetted after 4 years or 7. The conference report
will adjust the numbers, and members will vote willingly for the
"compromise" and feel good about their effort to protect
individual privacy.
But if we're honest with ourselves we would admit
that the 4th amendment is essentially a dead letter. There
has been no effort to curb the abuse of national security letters
nor to comprehend the significance of Echelon.
Hard-fought liberties are rapidly slipping away from
us.
Congress is not much better when it comes to
protecting against the erosion of the centuries-old habeas corpus
doctrine. By declaring anyone an "enemy
combatant"-a totally arbitrary designation by the President-
the government can deny an individual his right to petition a
judge or even speak with an attorney. Though there has been
a good debate on the insanity of our policy of torturing
prisoners, holding foreigners and Americans without charges seems
acceptable to many. Did it never occur to those who condemn
torture that unlimited detention of individuals without a writ of
habeas corpus is itself torture-especially for those who are
totally innocent? Add this to the controversial worldwide
network of secret CIA prisons now known of for 2 years, and we
should be asking ourselves what we have become as a people.
Recent evidence that we're using white phosphorus chemical weapons
in Iraq does nothing to improve our image.
Our prestige in the world is slipping. The war
is going badly. Our financial system is grossly
overburdened. And we spend hundreds of hours behind the
scenes crafting a mere $5 billion spending cut while pretending no
one knows we can spend tens of billions in off-budget supplemental
bills- sometimes under unanimous consent!
It's time we reconsider the real purpose of
government in a society that professes to be free-protection of
liberty, peaceful commerce, and keeping itself out of our lives,
our economy, our pocketbooks, and certainly out of the affairs of
foreign nations.