WASHINGTON -- On Sept. 11 of last   year, President Bush declared,Freedom has been attacked, but freedom   will be defended. However, a new Cato Institute report shows that Bush   and Attorney General John Ashcroft have supported measures that are   antithetical to freedom, such as secretive subpoenas, secretive arrests,   secretive trials, and secretive deportations.
In Breaking the Vicious Cycle: Preserving Our Liberties While Fighting   Terrorism, Timothy Lynch, director of the Cato Institute's Project on   Criminal Justice, explains that lawmakers too often respond to terrorist   attacks by rushing to enact more antiterrorism legislation in a   desperate attempt to give police and intelligence agencies additional powers to stop the killing.
According   to Lynch, lawmakers made a dreadful mistake by rushing to enact new   legislation before launching an inquiry to hold government officials  accountable for negligence or incompetence. The new homeland security  department is simply the latest turn in a cycle of terrorist attacks followed  by freedom-stifling legislation, the study shows.
In   the hurry to appear to be doing something about a threat facing   the nation, policymakers too often overlook accountability, history, reality   and liberty, Lynch says. Because another terrorist attack is a virtual  certainty, It is vitally important for policymakers to break the recurring cycle of enacting antiterrorism legislation before the pillars of our  constitutional republic are completely undermined.
In   the report, Lynch surveys the different antiterror measures that have been   proposed, including those following the first World Trade Center bombing, the Oklahoma City bombing, and the September 11 attack. Among other things, he  shows that military trials of American citizens are unconstitutional and that  the most recent antiterrorism legislation will allow the police to  compel records from any business regarding any person, including medical  records from hospitals, educational records from universities, and even   records of books that have been checked out from the local library or  purchased from the bookstore.
If   present trends continue, it is likely that America will drift toward national   identification cards, a national police force, and more extensive military   involvement in domestic affairs, Lynch writes. That ought to give  pause to people of goodwill from all across the political spectrum--Since   those are telltale signs of societies that are unfree.
See  Breaking the Vicious Cycle
Preserving Our Liberties While Fighting   Terrorism
http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa-443es.html
http://www.cato.org/new/06-02/06-21-02r.html
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