A Victory for All of Us
By Chris Hedges
In January, attorneys Carl Mayer and Bruce Afran asked me to be
the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit against President Barack Obama and
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta that challenged the harsh provisions of
the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). We filed the lawsuit,
worked for hours on the affidavits, carried out the tedious depositions,
prepared the case and went to trial because we did not want to be
passive in the face of another egregious assault on basic civil
liberties, because resistance is a moral imperative, and because, at the
very least, we hoped we could draw attention to the injustice of the
law. None of us thought we would win. But every once in a while the gods
smile on the damned.
U.S. District Judge Katherine Forrest, in a 68-page opinion, ruled
Wednesday that Section 1021 of the NDAA was unconstitutional. It was a
stunning and monumental victory. With her ruling she returned us to a
country where—as it was before Obama signed this act into law Dec.
31—the government cannot strip a U.S. citizen of due process or use the
military to arrest him or her and then hold him or her in military
prison indefinitely. She categorically rejected the government’s claims
that the plaintiffs did not have the standing to bring the case to trial
because none of us had been indefinitely detained, that lack of
imminent enforcement against us meant there was no need for an
injunction and that the NDAA simply codified what had previously been
set down in the 2001 Authorization to Use Military Force Act. The ruling
was a huge victory for the protection of free speech. Judge Forrest
struck down language in the law that she said gave the government the
ability to incarcerate people based on what they said or wrote. Maybe
the ruling won’t last. Maybe it will be overturned. But we and other
Americans are freer today than we were a week ago. And there is
something in this.
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment