By Amanda Witherell
There are a handful of freedoms
that have almost always been a
part of American democracy. Even
when they didn’t exactly apply
to everyone or weren’t always
protected by the people in charge,
a few simple but significant rights
have been patently clear in the
Constitution: You can’t be nabbed
by the cops and tossed behind
bars without a reason. If you
are imprisoned, you can’t be incarcerated
indefinitely; you have the right
to a speedy trial with a judge
and jury. When that court date
rolls around, you’ll be able to
see the evidence against you.
The president can’t suspend
elections, spy without warrants,
or dispatch federal troops to
trump local cops or quell protests.
Nor can the commander in chief
commence a witch-hunt, deem individuals
“enemy combatants,” or shunt them
into special tribunals outside
the purview of our 218-year-old
judicial system.
Until now. This year’s Project
Censored presents a chilling portrait
of a newly empowered executive
branch signing away civil liberties
for the sake of an endless and
amorphous war on terror. And for
the most part, the major news
media weren’t paying attention.
“This year, it seemed like civil
rights just rose to the top,”
says Peter Phillips, the director
of Project Censored, the annual
media survey conducted by Sonoma
State University researchers and
students who spend the year patrolling
obscure publications, national
and international Web sites, and
mainstream news outlets to compile
the 25 most significant stories
that were inadequately reported
or essentially ignored.
While the project usually turns
up a range of underreported issues,
this year’s stories all fall somewhat
neatly into two categories — the
increase of privatization and
the decrease of human rights.
Some of the stories qualify as
both.
“I think they indicate a very
real concern about where our democracy
is heading,” writer and veteran
judge Michael Parenti said.
For 31 years, Project Censored
has been compiling a list of the
major stories that the nation’s
news media have ignored, misreported,
or poorly covered.
The Oxford American Dictionary
defines censorship as “the practice
of officially examining books,
movies, etc., and suppressing
unacceptable parts,” which Phillips
says is also a fine description
of what happens under a dictatorship.
When it comes to democracy, the
black marker is a bit more nuanced.
“We need to broaden our understanding
of censorship,” he says. After
11 years at the helm of Project
Censored, Phillips thinks the
most bowdlerizing force is the
fourth estate itself: “The corporate
media is complicit. There’s no
excuse for the major media giants
to be missing major news stories
like this.”
As
the stories cited in this year’s
Project Censored selections point
out, the federal government continues
to provide major news networks
with stock footage, which is dutifully
broadcast as news. The George
W. Bush administration has spent
more federal money than any other
presidency on public relations.
Without a doubt, Parenti says,
the government invests in shaping
our beliefs. “Every day they’re
checking out what we think,” he
says. “The erosion of civil liberties
is not happening in one fell swoop
but in increments. Very consciously,
this administration has been heading
toward a general autocracy.”
Carl Jensen, who founded Project
Censored in 1976 after witnessing
the landslide reelection of Richard
Nixon in 1972 in spite of mounting
evidence of the Watergate scandal,
agreed that this year’s censored
stories amount to an accumulated
threat to democracy. “I’m waiting
for one of our great liberal writers
to put together the big picture
of what’s going on here,” he says.
1. Good-bye, habeas corpus
The Military Commissions Act,
passed in September 2006 as a
last gasp of the Republican-controlled
Congress and signed into law by
Bush that Oct. 17, made significant
changes to the nation’s judicial
system.
The law allows the president
to designate any person an “alien
unlawful enemy combatant,” shunting
that individual into an alternative
court system in which the writ
of habeas corpus no longer applies,
the right to a speedy trial is
gone, and justice is meted out
by a military tribunal that can
admit evidence obtained through
coercion and presented without
the accused in the courtroom,
all under the guise of preserving
national security.
Habeas corpus, a constitutional
right cribbed from the Magna Carta,
protects against arbitrary imprisonment.
Alexander Hamilton, writing in
the Federalist Papers, called
it the greatest defense against
“the favorite and most formidable
instruments of tyranny.”
The Military Commissions Act
has been seen mostly as a method
for dealing with Guantánamo
Bay detainees, and most journalists
have reported that it doesn’t
have any impact on Americans.
On Oct. 19, 2006, editors at the
New York Times wrote, in quite
definitive language, “this law
does not apply to American citizens.”
Investigative journalist Robert
Parry disagrees. The right of
habeas corpus no longer exists
for any of us, he wrote in the
online journal Consortium. Deep
down in the lower sections of
the act, the language shifts from
the very specific “alien unlawful
enemy combatant” to the vague
“any person subject to this chapter.”
“Why does it contain language
referring to ‘any person’ and
then adding in an adjacent context
a reference to people acting ‘in
breach of allegiance or duty to
the United States’?” Parry wrote.
“Who has ‘an allegiance or duty
to the United States’ if not an
American citizen?”
Reached
by phone, Parry says, “This loose
phraseology could be interpreted
very narrowly or very broadly.”
He says he’s consulted with lawyers
who are experienced in drafting
federal security legislation,
and they agreed that the “any
person” terminology is troubling.
“It could be fixed very simply,
but the Bush administration put
through this very vaguely worded
law, and now there are a lot of
differences of opinion on how
it could be interpreted,” Parry
says.
Though U.S. Sens. Patrick Leahy
(D-Vt.) and Arlen Specter (R-Pa.)
moved quickly to remedy the situation
with the Habeas Corpus Restoration
Act, that legislation has yet
to pass Congress, which some suspect
is because too many Democrats
don’t want to seem soft on terrorism.
Until tested by time, exactly
how much the language of the Military
Commissions Act may be manipulated
will remain to be seen.
Sources: “Repeal the Military
Commissions Act and Restore the
Most American Human Right,” Thom
Hartmann, Common Dreams Web site,
www.commondreams.org/
views07/0212-24.htm, Feb.
12, 2007; “Still No Habeas Rights
for You,” Robert Parry, Consortium,
consortiumnews.com/2007/ 020307.html,
Feb. 3, 2007; “Who Is ‘Any Person’
in Tribunal Law?” Robert Parry,
Consortium, consortiumnews.com/
2006/101906.html, Oct. 19,
2006
2. Martial law: coming
to a town near you
The Military Commissions Act
was part of a one-two punch to
civil liberties. While the first
blow to habeas corpus received
some attention, there was almost
no media coverage of a private
Oval Office ceremony held the
same day the military act was
signed at which Bush signed the
John Warner Defense Authorization
Act, a $532 billion catchall bill
for defense spending.
Tucked away in the deeper recesses
of that act, section 1076, allows
the president to declare a public
emergency and dispatch federal
troops to take over National Guard
units and local police if he determines
them unfit for maintaining order.
This is essentially a revival
of the Insurrection Act, which
was repealed by Congress in 1878,
when it passed the Posse Comitatus
Act in response to Northern troops
overstaying their welcome in the
reconstructed South. That act
wiped out a potentially tyrannical
amount of power by reinforcing
the idea that the federal government
should patrol the nation’s borders
and let the states take care of
their own territories.
The Warner act defines a public
emergency as a “natural disaster,
epidemic, or other serious public
health emergency, terrorist attack
or incident, or other condition
in any state or possession of
the United States” and extends
its provisions to any place where
“the president determines that
domestic violence has occurred
to such an extent that the constituted
authorities of the state or possession
are incapable of maintaining public
order.” On top of that, federal
troops can be dispatched to “suppress,
in a state, any insurrection,
domestic violence, unlawful combination,
or conspiracy.”
So everything from a West Nile
virus outbreak to a political
protest could fall into the president’s
personal definition of mayhem.
That’s right — put your picket
signs away.
The Warner act passed with 90
percent of the votes in the House
and cleared the Senate unanimously.
Months after its passage, Leahy
was the only elected official
to have publicly expressed concern
about section 1076, warning his
peers Sept. 19, 2006, that “we
certainly do not need to make
it easier for presidents to declare
martial law. Invoking the Insurrection
Act and using the military for
law enforcement activities goes
against some of the central tenets
of our democracy. One can easily
envision governors and mayors
in charge of an emergency having
to constantly look over their
shoulders while someone who has
never visited their communities
gives the orders.” In February,
Leahy introduced Senate Bill 513
to repeal section 1076. It’s currently
in the Armed Services Committee.
Sources: “Two Acts of Tyranny
on the Same Day!” Daneen G. Peterson,
Stop the North America Union Web
site, www.stopthenorthamericanunion.com/articles/Fear.html,
Jan. 20, 2007; “Bush Moves toward
Martial Law,” Frank Morales, Uruknet.info,
www.uruknet.info/?p=27769,
Oct. 26, 2006
3. AFRICOM
President Jimmy Carter was the
first to draw a clear line between
America’s foreign policy and its
concurrent “vital interest” in
oil. During his 1980 State of
the Union address, he said, “An
attempt by any outside force to
gain control of the Persian Gulf
region will be regarded as an
assault on the vital interests
of the United States of America,
and such an assault will be repelled
by any means necessary, including
military force.”
Under what became the Carter
Doctrine, an outpost of the Pentagon,
called the United States Central
Command, or CENTCOM, was established
to ensure the uninterrupted flow
of that slick “vital interest.”
The United States is now constructing
a similar permanent base in Africa,
an area traditionally patrolled
by more remote commands in Europe
and the Pacific. No details have
been released about exactly what
AFRICOM’s operations and responsibilities
will be or where troops will be
located, though government spokespeople
have vaguely stated that the mission
is to establish order and keep
peace for volatile governments
— that just happen to be in oil-rich
areas.
Though the official objective
may be peace, some say the real
desire is crude. “A new cold war
is under way in Africa, and AFRICOM
will be at the dark heart of it,”
Bryan Hunt wrote on the Moon of
Alabama blog. Most US oil imports
come from African countries —
in particular, Nigeria. According
to the 2007 Congressional Budget
Justification for Foreign Operations,
“disruption of supply from Nigeria
would represent a major blow to
US oil-security strategy.”
Though details of the AFRICOM
strategy remain secret, Hunt has
surveyed past governmental statements
and reports by other independent
journalists to draw parallels
between AFRICOM and CENTCOM, making
the case that the United States
sees Africa as another “vital
interest.”
Source: “Understanding AFRICOM,”
parts 1-3, b real, Moon of Alabama,
www.moonofalabama.org/2007/02/understanding_a_1.html,
Feb. 21, 2007
4. Secret trade agreements
As disappointing as the World
Trade Organization has been, it
has provided something of an open
forum in which smaller countries
can work together to demand concessions
from larger, developed nations
when brokering multilateral agreements.
At least in theory… The 2006
negotiations crumbled when the
United States, the European Union
and Australia refused to heed
India’s and Brazil’s demands for
fair farm tariffs.
In the wake of that disaster,
bilateral agreements have become
the tactic of choice. These one-on-one
negotiations, designed by the
U.S. and the EU, are cut like
backroom deals, with the larger
country bullying the smaller into
agreements that couldn’t be reached
through the WTO.
Bush administration officials,
always quick with a charming moniker,
are calling these free-trade agreements
“competitive liberalization,”
and the EU considers them essential
to negotiating future multilateral
agreements.
But critics see them as fast
tracks to increased foreign control
of local resources in poor communities.
“The overall effect of these changes
in the rules is to progressively
undermine economic governance,
transferring power from governments
to largely unaccountable multinational
firms, robbing developing countries
of the tools they need to develop
their economies and gain a favorable
foothold in global markets,” states
a report by Oxfam International,
the antipoverty activist group.
Sources: “Free Trade Enslaving
Poor Countries” Sanjay Suri, Inter
Press Service, ipsnews.org/news.asp?idnews=37008,
March 20, 2007; “Signing Away
the Future” Emily Jones, Oxfam
Web site, www.oxfam.org/en/policy/briefingpapers/bp101_regional_trade_agreements_0703,
March 2007
5. Shanghaied slaves
construct U.S. Embassy in Iraq
Part of the permanent infrastructure
the United States is erecting
in Iraq includes the world’s largest
embassy, built on Green Zone acreage
equal to that of Vatican City.
The $592 million job was awarded
in 2005 to First Kuwaiti Trading
and Contracting. Though much of
the project’s management is staffed
by Americans, most of the workers
are from small or developing countries
like the Philippines, India and
Pakistan and, according to David
Phinney of CorpWatch — a San Francisco
Bay Area organization that investigates
and exposes corporate environmental
crimes, fraud, corruption and
violations of human rights — are
recruited under false pretenses.
At the airport, their boarding
passes read Dubai. Their passports
are stamped Dubai. But when they
get off the plane, they’re in
Baghdad.
Once on site, they’re often
beaten and paid as little as $10
to $30 a day, CorpWatch concludes.
Injured workers are dosed with
heavy-duty painkillers and sent
back on the job. Lodging is crowded,
and food is substandard. One ex-foreman,
who’s worked on five other U.S.
embassies around the world, says,
“I’ve never seen a project more
fucked up. Every U.S. labor law
was broken.”
These workers have often been
banned by their home countries
from working in Baghdad because
of unsafe conditions and flagging
support for the war, but once
they’re on Iraqi soil, protections
are few. First, Kuwaiti managers
take their passports, which is
a violation of U.S. labor laws.
“If you don’t have a passport
or an embassy to go to, what do
you do to get out of a bad situation?”
asked Rory Mayberry, a former
medic for one of First Kuwaiti’s
subcontractors, who blew the whistle
on the squalid living conditions,
medical malpractice, and general
abuse he witnessed at the site.
The Pentagon has been investigating
the slave-like conditions but
has not released the names of
any violating contractors or announced
penalties. In the meantime, billions
of dollars in contracts continue
to be awarded to First Kuwaiti
and other companies at which little
accountability exists. As Phinney
reported, “No journalist has ever
been allowed access to the sprawling
104-acre site.”
Source: “A U.S. Fortress Rises
in Baghdad:
Asian Workers Trafficked to Build
World’s Largest Embassy,” David
Phinney, CorpWatch Web site,
www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=14173,
Oct. 17, 2006
6. FALCON’s Talons
Operation FALCON, or Federal
and Local Cops Organized Nationally,
is, in many ways, the manifestation
of martial law forewarned by Frank
Morales (see story 2). In an unprecedented
partnership, more than 960 federal,
state and local police agencies
teamed up in 2005 and in 2006
to conduct the largest dragnet
raids in U.S. history. Armed with
fistfuls of arrest warrants, they
ran three separate raids around
the country that netted 30,150
criminal arrests.
The Justice Department claimed
the agents were targeting the
“worst of the worst” criminals,
and Attorney General Alberto Gonzales
said, “Operation FALCON is an
excellent example of President
Bush’s direction and the Justice
Department’s dedication to deal
both with the terrorist threat
and traditional violent crime.”
However, as writer Mike Whitney
points out on Uruknet.info, none
of the suspects has been charged
with anything related to terrorism.
Additionally, while 30,110 individuals
were arrested, only 586 firearms
were found. That doesn’t sound
very violent either.
Though the U.S. Marshals Service
has been quick to tally the offenses,
Whitney says the numbers just
don’t add up. For example, FALCON
in 2006 captured 462 violent sex-crime
suspects, 1,094 registered sex
offenders, and 9,037 fugitives.
What about the other 7,481 people?
“Who are they, and have they been
charged with a crime?” Whitney
asks.
The Marshals Service remains
silent about these arrests. Whitney
suggests those detainees may have
been illegal immigrants and may
be bound for border prisons currently
being constructed by Halliburton.
As an added bonus of complicity,
the Justice Department supplied
local news outlets with stock
footage of the raids, which some
TV stations ran accompanied by
stories sourced from the Department
of Justice’s news releases without
any critical coverage of who exactly
was swept up in the dragnets and
where they are now.
Sources: “Operation Falcon and
the Looming Police State,” Mike
Whitney, Uruknet.info, uruknet.info/?p=m30971&s1=h1,
Feb. 26, 2007; “Operation Falcon,”
SourceWatch, www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Operation_FALCON,
Nov. 18, 2006
7. Blackwater
The outsourcing of war has served
two purposes for the Bush administration,
which has given powerful corporations
and private companies lucrative
contracts supplying goods and
services to American military
operations overseas and quietly
achieved an escalation of troops
beyond what the public has been
told or understands. Without actually
deploying more military forces,
the federal government instead
contracts with private security
firms like Blackwater to provide
heavily armed details for US diplomats
in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other
countries where the nation is
currently engaged in conflicts.
Blackwater is one of the more
successful and well connected
of the private companies profiting
from the business of war. Started
in 1996 by an ex-Navy Seal named
Erik Prince, the North Carolina
company employs 20,000 hired guns,
training them on the world’s largest
private military base.
“It’s become nothing short of
the Praetorian Guard for the Bush
administration’s so-called global
war on terror,” author Jeremy
Scahill said the on Jan. 26 broadcast
of the TV and radio news program
Democracy Now! Scahill’s “Blackwater:
The Rise of the World’s Most Powerful
Mercenary Army” was published
this year by Nation Books.
Source: “Our Mercenaries in Iraq,”
Jeremy Scahill, Democracy Now!,
www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/01/26/155923,
Jan. 26, 2007
8. KIA: The neoliberal
invasion of India
A March 2006 pact under which
the United States agreed to supply
nuclear fuel to India for the
production of electric power also
included a less-publicized corollary
— the Knowledge Initiative on
Agriculture. While it’s purportedly
a deal to assist Indian farmers
and liberalize trade (see story
4), critics say the initiative
is destroying India’s local agrarian
economy by encouraging the use
of genetically modified seeds,
which in turn is creating a new
market for pesticides and driving
up the overall cost of producing
crops.
The deal provides a captive
customer base for genetically
modified seed maker Monsanto and
a market for cheap goods to supply
Wal-Mart, whose plans for 500
stores in the country could wipe
out the livelihoods of 14 million
small vendors.
Monsanto’s hybrid Bt cotton
has already edged out local strains,
and India is currently suffering
an infestation of mealy bugs,
which have proven immune to the
pesticides the chemical companies
have made available. Additionally,
the sowing of crops has shifted
from the traditional to the trade
friendly. Farmers accustomed to
cultivating mustard, a sacred
local crop, are now producing
soy, a plant foreign to India.
Though many farmers are seeing
the folly of these deals, it’s
often too late. Suicide has become
a popular final act of opposition
to what’s occurring in their country.
Vandana Shiva, who for 10 years
has been studying the effects
of bad trade deals on India, has
published a report titled “Seeds
of Suicide,” which recounts the
deaths of more than 28,000 farmers
who killed themselves in despair
over the debts brought on them
by binding agreements ultimately
favoring corporations.
Hope comes in the form of a
growing cadre of farmers hip to
the flawed deals. They’ve organized
into local sanghams, 72 of which
now exist as small community networks
that save and share seeds, skills,
and assistance during the good
times of harvest and the hard
times of crop failure.
Sources: “Vandana Shiva on Farmer
Suicides, the U.S.-India Nuclear
Deal, Wal-Mart in India,” Democracy
Now!, www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/12/13/145122,
Dec. 13, 2006; “Genetically Modified
Seeds: Women in India take on
Monsanto,” Arun Shrivastava, Global
Research, www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=ARU20061009&articleId=3427,
Oct. 9, 2006
9. The privatization
of America’s infrastructure
In 1956, President Dwight D.
Eisenhower ushered through legislation
for the greatest public works
project in human history — the
interstate highway system, 41,000
miles of roads funded almost entirely
by the federal government.
Fifty years later, many of those
roads are in need of repair or
replacement, but the federal government
has not exactly risen to the challenge.
Instead, more than 20 states have
set up financial deals leasing
the roads to private companies
in exchange for repairs. These
public-private partnerships are
being lauded by politicians as
the only credible financial solution
to providing the public with improved
services.
But opponents of all political
stripes are criticizing the deals
as theft of public property. They
point out that the bulk of benefits
is actually going to the private
side of the equation — in many
cases, to foreign companies with
considerable experience building
private roads in developing countries.
In the United States these companies
are entering into long-term leases
of infrastructure like roads and
bridges, for a low amount. They
work out tax breaks to finance
the repairs, raise tolls to cover
the costs, and start realizing
profits for their shareholders
in as little as 10 years.
As Daniel Schulman and James
Ridgeway reported in Mother Jones,
“the Federal Highway Administration
estimates that it will cost $50
billion a year above current levels
of federal, state, and local highway
funding to rehab existing bridges
and roads over the next 16 years.
Where to get that money, without
raising taxes? Privatization promises
a quick fix — and a way to outsource
difficult decisions, like raising
tolls, to entities that don’t
have to worry about getting reelected.”
The Indiana Toll Road, the Chicago
Skyway, Virginia’s Pocahontas
Parkway, and many other stretches
of the nation’s public pavement
have succumbed to these private
deals.
Cheerleaders for privatization
are deeply embedded in the Bush
administration (see story 7),
where they’ve been secretly fostering
plans for a North American Free
Trade Agreement superhighway,
a 10-lane route set to run through
the heart of the country and connect
the Mexican and Canadian borders.
It’s specifically designed to
plug into the Mexican port of
Lázaro Cárdenas,
taking advantage of cheap labor
by avoiding the International
Longshore and Warehouse Union,
whose members are traditionally
tasked with unloading cargo, and
the International Brotherhood
of Teamsters, whose members transport
that cargo that around the country.
Sources: “The Highwaymen” Daniel
Schulman with James Ridgeway,
Mother Jones, www.motherjones.com/news
/feature/2007/01/highwaymen.html,
Feb. 2007; “Bush Administration
Quietly Plans NAFTA Super Highway,”
Jerome R. Corsi, Human Events,
www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=15497,
June 12, 2006
10. Vulture funds:
Devouring the desperate
Named for a bird that picks offal
from a carcass, this financial
scheme couldn’t be more aptly
described. Well-endowed companies
swoop in and purchase the debt
owed by a third world country,
then turn around and sue the country
for the full amount — plus interest.
In most courts, they win. Recently,
Donegal International spent $3
million for $40 million worth
of debt Zambia owed Romania, then
sued for $55 million. In February
an English court ruled that Zambia
had to pay $15 million.
Often these countries are on
the brink of having their debt
relieved by the lenders in exchange
for putting the owed money toward
necessary goods and services for
their citizens. But the vultures
effectively initiate another round
of deprivation for the impoverished
countries by demanding full payment,
and a loophole makes it legal.
Investigative reporter Greg
Palast broke the story for the
BBC’s “Newsnight,” saying that
“the vultures have already sucked
up about $1 billion in aid meant
for the poorest nations, according
to the World Bank in Washington.”
With the exception of the BBC
and Democracy Now!, no major news
source has touched the story,
though it’s incensed several members
of Britain’s Parliament as well
as the new prime minister, Gordon
Brown. US Reps. John Conyers (D-Mich.)
and Donald Payne (D-N.J.) lobbied
Bush to take action as well, but
political will may be elsewhere.
Debt Advisory International, an
investment consulting firm that’s
been involved in several vulture
funds that have generated millions
in profits, is run by Paul Singer
— the largest fundraiser for the
Republican Party in the state
of New York. He’s donated $1.7
million to Bush’s campaigns. CV
Source: “Vulture Fund Threat
to Third World,” Newsnight, www.gregpalast.com/
vulture-fund-threat-to-third-world,
Feb. 14, 2007
(Amanda Witherell is a reporter
for the San Francisco Bay Guardian.)
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