| 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   | http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18637.htm The 
American Police State
 By Chris Hedges
 
 10/29/07 "Truthdig" 
-- -- A Dallas jury, a week ago, deadlocked in its deliberations and caused a 
mistrial in the government case against this country's largest Islamic charity. 
The action raises a defiant fist on the sinking ship of American democracy.
 
 If we lived in a state where due process and the rule of law could curb the 
despotism of the Bush administration, this mistrial might be counted a victory. 
But we do not. The jury may have rejected the federal government's claim that 
the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development funneled millions of dollars 
to Middle Eastern terrorists. It may have acquitted Mohammad el-Mezain, the 
former chairman of the foundation, of virtually all criminal charges related to 
funding terrorism (the jury deadlocked on one of the 32 charges against el-Mezain), 
and it may have deadlocked on the charges that had been lodged against four 
other former leaders of the charity, but don't be fooled. This mistrial will do 
nothing to impede the administration's ongoing contempt for the rule of law. It 
will do nothing to stop the curtailment of our civil liberties and rights. The 
grim march toward a police state continues.
 
 Constitutional rights are minor inconveniences, noisome chatter, flies to be 
batted away on the steady road to despotism. And no one, not the courts, not the 
press, not the gutless Democratic opposition, not a compliant and passive 
citizenry hypnotized by tawdry television spectacles and celebrity gossip, seems 
capable of stopping the process. Those in power know this. We, too, might as 
well know it.
 
 The Bush administration, which froze the foundation's finances three months 
after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and indicted its officials three 
years later on charges that they provided funds for the militant group Hamas, 
has ensured that the foundation and all other Palestinian charities will never 
reopen in the United States. Any organized support for Palestinians from within 
the U.S. has been rendered impossible. The goal of the Israeli government and 
the Bush administration—despite the charade of peace negotiations to be held at 
Annapolis—is to grind defiant Palestinians into the dirt. Israel, which has 
plunged the Gaza Strip into one of the world's worst humanitarian crises, has 
now begun to ban fuel supplies and sever electrical service. The severe 
deprivation, the Israelis hope, will see the overthrow of the Hamas government 
in Gaza and the reinstatement of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who has 
become the Marshal Pétain of the Palestinian people.
 
 The Dallas trial—like all of the major terrorism trials conducted by this 
administration, from the Florida case against the Palestinian activist Dr. Sami 
al-Arian, which also ended in a mistrial, to the recent decision by a jury in 
Chicago to acquit two men of charges of financing Hamas—has been a judicial 
failure. William Neal, a juror in the Dallas trial, told the Associated Press 
that the case "was strung together with macaroni noodles. There was so little 
evidence."
 
 Such trials, however, have been politically expedient. The accusations, true or 
untrue, serve the aims of the administration. A jury in Tampa, Chicago or Dallas 
can dismiss the government's assaults on individual rights, but the draconian 
restrictions put in place because of the mendacious charges remain firmly 
implanted within the system. It is the charges, not the facts, which matter.
 
 Dr. al-Arian, who was supposed to have been released and deported in April, is 
still in a Virginia prison because he will not testify in a separate case before 
a grand jury. The professor, broken by the long ordeal of his trial and unable 
to raise another million dollars in legal fees for a retrial, pleaded guilty to 
a minor charge in the hopes that his persecution would end. It has not. Or take 
the case of Canadian citizen Maher Arar, who in 2002 was spirited away by 
Homeland Security from JFK Airport to Syria, where he spent 10 months being 
tortured in a coffin-like cell. He was, upon his release, exonerated of 
terrorism. Arar testified before a House panel this month about how he was 
abducted by the U.S. and interrogated, stripped of his legal rights and 
tortured. But he couldn't testify in person. He spoke to the House members on a 
video link from Canada. He is forbidden by Homeland Security to enter the United 
States because he allegedly poses a threat to national security.
 
 Those accused of being involved in conspiracies and terrorism plots, as in all 
police states, become nonpersons. There is no rehabilitation. There is no 
justice.
 
 "He was never given a hearing nor did the Canadian consulate, his lawyer, or his 
family know of his fate," Amnesty International wrote of Arar. "Expulsion in 
such circumstances, without a fair hearing, and to a country known for regularly 
torturing their prisoners, violates the U.S. Government's obligations under 
international law, specifically the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, 
Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment."
 
 You can almost hear Dick Cheney yawn.
 
 The Bush administration shut down the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and 
Development six years ago and froze its assets. There was no hearing or trial. 
It became a crime for anyone to engage in transactions with the foundation. The 
administration never produced evidence to support the charges. It did not have 
any. In the "war on terror," evidence is unnecessary. An executive order is 
enough. The foundation sued the government in a federal court in the District of 
Columbia. Behind closed doors, the government presented secret evidence that the 
charity had no opportunity to see or rebut. The charity's case was dismissed.
 
 The government has closed seven Muslim charities in the United States and frozen 
their assets. Not one of them, or any person associated with them, has been 
found guilty of financing terrorism. They will remain shut. George W. Bush can 
tar any organization or individual, here or abroad, as being part of a terrorist 
conspiracy and by fiat render them powerless. He does not need to make formal 
charges. He does not need to wait for a trial verdict. Secret evidence, which 
these court cases have exposed as a sham, is enough. The juries in Tampa, 
Chicago and Dallas did their duty. They spoke for the rights of citizens. They 
spoke for the protection of due process and the rule of law. They threw small 
hurdles in front of the emergent police state. But the abuse rolls on. I fear 
terrorism. I know it is real. I am sure terrorists will strike again on American 
soil. But while terrorists can wound and disrupt our democracy, only we can kill 
it.
 __._,_.___  
 
       |