At a lecture in Cleveland in March, Supreme Court Justice Antonin
Scalia told the audience, "Most of the rights that you enjoy go way
beyond what the Constitution requires." The government can legitimately
scale back individual rights during wartime, he explained, since "the
Constitution just sets minimums." For an increasing number of Americans,
it seems, even such minimums are excessive. Last August, the Freedom
Forum's annual First Amendment survey showed that 49 percent of those
polled said the Amendment goes too far in the rights it guarantees, a
ten-point jump since the last survey, conducted just before 9/11. In the
wake of the recent war and the triumphalism that has followed, it's a
fair guess that in this summer's survey, the numbers will climb even
higher.
While we've seen a flood of antiwar activity over the past eight
months, we've also witnessed a powerful countercurrent of political
repression. From shopping malls to cyberspace, Hollywood to the Ivy
League, Americans have taken it upon themselves to stifle and shame
those who question the legitimacy of the Administration or the war on
Iraq. When we read a story here or there about the arrest of a man
wearing a "Peace on Earth" T-shirt in an upstate New York mall, or about
country music fans crushing Dixie Chicks CDs because the lead singer
said she was ashamed of the President, each may seem like an anomalous
episode. But taken as a whole, the far-flung incidents of bullying,
silencing and even threats of violence reveal a political and cultural
shift that recalls some of America's darkest days.
Like any avalanche, this one started at the top, and likely dates back
to the moment after 9/11 when President Bush warned the world's nations,
"Either you are with us or you are with the terrorists." From Bush on
down, in the months that followed, government officials drew limits
around acceptable speech. White House spokesperson Ari Fleischer told
Americans to "watch what they say." Such words gained force when the
Patriot Act gave the government extensive new powers to spy, interrogate
and detain. When civil libertarians began to protest the curbing of
constitutional rights, Attorney General John Ashcroft offered a
forbidding rejoinder: "To those who scare peace-loving people with
phantoms of lost liberty, my message is this: Your tactics only aid
terrorists." These kinds of remarks from our government's top leaders,
says Anthony Romero, executive director of the ACLU, have granted
ordinary people license "to shut down alternative views." The
Administration has fashioned a domestic arm of its new doctrine of
pre-emption.
Rashes of American conformity and nativism have broken out before
during periods of war, social strain and insecurity over national
self-definition. During World War I, the McCarthy period and the
COINTELPRO program of three decades ago, dissenters lost their jobs,
went to jail and endured mob violence or government smears. Today's
crackdowns do not match the force and scale of those shameful times, or
take the same forms. History rarely repeats precisely those excesses,
which have since been declared dishonorable or unconstitutional. Though
Phil Donahue was recently fired for his views, and charities have been
canceling events with antiwar celebrities such as Susan Sarandon and Tim
Robbins, the Hollywood blacklist itself, says historian Howard Zinn,
could not happen again. Still, while the government expands its power
even as it loosens constitutional limitations on it, the public
acquiescence--and participation--in suppression threatens American
democracy anew.
Henry Foner, a longtime labor organizer who lost his state teaching
license to the Red Scare, remembers the "tremendous terror" he felt in
the McCarthy period, as "FBI agents were all over the place, visiting
people's neighbors." Now, that fear is being experienced by Muslim and
Arab immigrants, who are regarded as dangerous regardless of their
political beliefs. Immigrant neighborhoods like Midwood, Brooklyn, home
to more than 100,000 Pakistanis, have been decimated by the loss of
thousands of men who were deported or who have fled. Many still languish
in detention for minor visa violations or for donations to the wrong
charity. Businesses have failed as customers have been afraid to venture
out even to buy their groceries.
But if Arab and Muslim immigrants are enduring fear levels reminiscent
of the McCarthy period, dissenters are experiencing a chill, according
to historian Blanche Wiesen Cook, "more along the lines of the total
repression during World War I, though we're not all the way there yet."
The government has not revived, precisely, the Espionage Act of 1917,
which barred from the mails any material (including this magazine)
"advocating or urging treason, insurrection, or forcible resistance to
any law of the United States"; or the Sedition Act of 1918, which
outlawed virtually all criticism of the war and the government. Under
that law, a man was sentenced to twenty years for stating in a private
conversation that he hoped the "government goes to hell so it will be of
no value." Today's clampdown, though far less systematic, is
reminiscent: In February a former public defender, Andrew O'Conner, was
arrested in Santa Fe for "threatening the president" and subjected to
five hours of interrogation by special agents because he'd said, in an
Internet chat room, "Bush is out of control." Glenda Gilmore, a
professor of US history at Yale, sees significant parallels with that
period, especially in the "nationalist hysteria that was in the streets
and in the air." Egged on by government leaders warning of the presence
of German spies and "seditious" antiwar labor activists, Americans
joined mob actions to contain and castigate dissenters. Though not as
widespread or as violent, patriotic vigilantism has broken out again
across the nation. As before, it is often spontaneous, threatening and
out of proportion to the action it means to challenge.
The New Patriotism
During the First World War, a man was beaten by fellow baseball fans
for failing to stand up for "The Star-Spangled Banner." Today's
patriotic outbursts are less bloody, though just as emotionally intense.
Last winter, hundreds of merchant marine cadets amassed at a
Manhattanville College basketball game to chant "Leave our country!" at
senior Toni Smith, who had quietly been turning her back during the
national anthem all season. Practically every sports columnist and
talk-radio host in the country made sure to get in his licks against the
obscure Division III player.
At Wheaton College, a small liberal arts school in Norton,
Massachusetts, seven housemates hung an upside-down "distress" flag on
their campus house the day the war started. Their neighbors responded by
throwing rocks through the students' windows, calling in death threats
to their answering machine and strapping a dead fish to their front
door, Godfather-style. Restaurants in town stopped serving kids from
Wheaton, and bar patrons harassed them. Norton police recommended that
for their own safety, the housemates move out for a few days. "I know
it's nothing like Baghdad or Palestine," says Geoffrey Bickford, a
recent political science graduate and resident of the house. "But being
forced to flee from my home, having my voice silenced and living in fear
because of my beliefs--that concept is so frightening."
At Yale, when sophomore Katherine Lo also hung an upside-down flag out
her window, several men wielding a 2 by 4 tried to enter her room late
at night while Lo was home. They left a convoluted note on her door that
ended, "Fuck Iraqi Saddam following fucks. I hate you, GO AMERICA."
In the swanky Detroit suburb of Birmingham, Shelli Weissberg recalls
sitting down to lunch at a cafe with her 8-year-old daughter and one of
the child's friends, when a man she'd never met stomped up and yelled at
her for wearing a "No War" button in front of children. The Rev. Joseph
Matoush, who led peace vigils in the military town of Twentynine Palms,
California, found a letter tacked to his church door with caricatures of
Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden next to the lines, "These are your
friends! Why don't you leave America now."
In Albuquerque, humanities teacher Bill Nevins was suspended because,
he told the local press, poetry students he coaches wrote and recited
anti-Bush verses at a local slam. (School officials say it's because he
failed to supervise the kids correctly.)
ACLU affiliates around the country report cases of students being
punished for expressing antiwar views. In Louisville, Kentucky, Sarah
Doyle and her two older brothers, inspired by ballplayer Toni Smith,
decided to protest the war by staying seated through the daily Pledge of
Allegiance. Doyle's seventh-grade teacher made her come up to the front
of the room and recite the pledge twice; one of her brothers received
in-school suspension. Bretton Barber, 16, was sent home from Dearborn
High School in Michigan when he refused to remove a T-shirt labeling
George Bush an international terrorist. "I thought it was obvious the
T-shirt was protected speech," says Barber, who filed suit against
Dearborn High in March. He says he hopes to "send the message that all
high school students have the right to express themselves."
But as the social costs increase, how many people will make use of
such rights? Tim Robbins told the National Press Club on April 15 that
on a recent trip to Florida for an extended family reunion, "the most
frightening thing...was the amount of times we were thanked for speaking
out against the war.... 'Keep talking,' they said. 'I haven't been able
to open my mouth."'
A hush has even come over the arts, where free expression is supposed
to be paramount. San Francisco's Alliance Francaise, a French language
and cultural center, removed a sculpture that poked fun at the Bush
Administration from its February exhibition. The Palestinian-American
comedian Maysoon Zayid reports that clubs she plays regularly have taken
to declaring certain material beyond the pale: No more jokes, for
instance, about Ariel Sharon bragging to Saddam Hussein about the
Security Council resolutions he's violated. In a joint act of
self-censorship, New York's most established Off Broadway theater
companies declined to participate in an April day of action called by
the downtown group Theaters Against War. According to Mark Russell,
executive director of the experimental performance space P.S. 122,
people inside the National Endowment for the Arts have let it be known
that "we shouldn't even bother to apply this year unless we have a
really safe project."
This self-censorship extends all the way up to the halls of Congress,
where Democrats have assured the President, in the words of Tom Lantos,
the ranking Democrat on the House International Relations Committee, of
"solid, unanimous support" in the war on terrorism. This silence on the
part of the official opposition party serves as a restraining factor,
too: Notes political historian Gerald Horne, "Americans say to
themselves, 'If people with money and power and influence are trimming
their sails, why should little old me step forward?"'
A Culture of Fear
The September 11 terrorist attacks go a long way toward explaining why
so much of the public has shivered quietly under this chill. "The fear
in this country since 9/11," says Henry Foner, "is probably more intense
than the fear of Communism in the 1950s."Already a nation primed to
panic, thanks to sensational broadcast news and the Willie Horton
tradition in political campaigns, a real attack on American soil
profoundly shook most Americans. We've still not had a chance to
recover.
Quite the contrary. Since the Department of Homeland Security began
its color-coded alerts a little over a year ago, it has never designated
the United States to be at less than yellow--at "significant" risk of
terrorist attack. A shoe-bomber arrest, an orange alert for Christmas,
checkpoints on highways and now a simulated bioterror attack in
Seattle--a constant drumbeat reminds us of our vulnerability. Facing a
shattered economy, the Bush Administration fans these anxieties, sending
us to buy duct tape, warning us away from public monuments and
scheduling the Republican Party's convention for New York City on the
anniversary of 9/11. People who are afraid want to be protected and
reassured, explains Barry Glassner, author of The Culture of Fear. When
the White House tends to those fears by laying out a plan to protect
Americans, however misdirected, people do not want to see those leaders
undermined.
The events of 9/11 were destabilizing in another way: They forced on
many Americans the astonishing recognition that their country is not
universally beloved. While some Americans responded with teach-ins or
protests, others have acted out aggressively--think of the 2 by 4, the
broken windows, the angry outbursts--to quell the expression of these
troubling doubts.
The anti-dissidents don't have to look far for validation--it's
available every night from the broadcast media and most days from the
halls of government. Fox's Bill O'Reilly criticizes progressive Los
Angeles Times (and Nation) columnist Robert Scheer by hammering him as a
"traitor"; defense adviser Richard Perle, objecting to a report on his
conflicts of interest, calls Seymour Hersh "the closest thing American
journalism has to a terrorist." When Tom Daschle lamented the
President's failure to find a diplomatic solution in Iraq, it wasn't
just Rush Limbaugh who laid into the Senate minority leader, but House
Speaker Dennis Hastert too, saying Daschle came "mighty close" to giving
"comfort" to the enemy. Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Richard Myers
even lashed out angrily at former generals who had aired reservations
about the war strategy, questioning their "agenda."
Woodrow Wilson officially sponsored vigilantism by forming the
American Protective League, citizen security forces that spied on and
intimidated war critics. But then he didn't have Fox TV. Jingoistic
broadcast media have provided Bush with his own "protective league" by
setting the tone for repression. Who needs government censorship when
stations owned by Clear Channel, the nation's largest radio chain
(reaching, thanks to deregulation, 54 percent of all American adults
under age 49), can drop the Dixie Chicks from their playlists, as they
did in March? Clear Channel, facing a Congressional investigation into
its business practices, promoted prowar rallies in cities throughout the
country.
'Free-Speech Zones'
As an inflamed public, incited by government hawks and shock jocks,
does its best to shut down critical speech, the state has used force to
quash expression in the public square. Local police across the country
have used barricades and handcuffs to assert that some speech is more
free than others.
On October 24 Brett Bursey tucked a cardboard sign under his arm and
headed out to the Columbia, South Carolina, airport, where President
Bush was about to touch down and stump for local Republicans. But as
soon as Bursey lifted his homemade No War for Oil placard above the
cheering throngs, police ordered him to leave the airport access road
and take his message to a "free-speech zone" about a mile away.
When Bursey, director of the statewide Progressive Network, pointed
out that people with pro-Bush banners were not being asked to move, an
officer replied, "It's the content of your sign that is the problem."
When Bursey refused to move, he was arrested and now faces federal
charges carrying a potential penalty of six months in prison.
In St. Louis in January, where Bush was giving a presentation on his
economic stimulus plan, residents lined his motorcade with flags and
signs. Banners proclaiming INSTEAD OF WAR, INVEST IN PEOPLE were
selected by the police for removal; WE LOVE YOU, MR. PRESIDENT was
allowed to stay. Police in other cities have subjected protesters to
mass arrests, questions about their political views and affiliations,
and even, in Oakland, rubber bullets. Legislation proposed in Oregon
would jail street-blocking demonstrators as "terrorists" for at least
twenty-five years.
Just as the range of expression permitted in the public square is
constricted, traditional "free-speech zones," such as campuses, find
themselves under pressure to hold dissent in check as well. Middle East
studies scholars have been targeted in the past year in an aggressive,
highly organized campaign attacking their positions not only on the war
in Iraq but on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Campus Watch, launched
last September to "monitor Middle East studies" on campus, has conducted
virtual witch-hunts, posting "dossiers" on individual professors,
distorting their criticisms of Israeli or US policy to malign them as
"apologists for Palestinian and Islamist violence." In April, Bush
nominated Campus Watch founder Daniel Pipes to join the board of the
United States Institute of Peace, a body designed to promote the
peaceful resolution of international conflicts.
Dozens of scholars have been mercilessly harassed and threatened.
According to Amy Newhall, executive director of the Middle East Studies
Association, some faculty members have had to abandon their e-mail
addresses because they received so much anti-Arab hate e-mail--as many
as 18,000 messages in a single day. Some have been "spoofed," meaning
hackers sent out anti-Semitic diatribes from the professor's own e-mail
accounts. Some have received menacing warnings--"Your neighbors have
been alerted to your allegiance to Islamic terrorists"--and threats of
violence.
No sooner had Yale's Glenda Gilmore published an antiwar op-ed in the
campus paper than she received a rush of rape and death threats. It
turned out that Andrew Sullivan had set up a link from a blog denouncing
her, and Pipes had attacked her in a hyperventilating op-ed titled
"Professors Who Hate America."
In an article for Academe, Newhall notes that the purpose of these
attacks is to stifle debate, and she warns that these efforts "will
provide a model for future assaults."
At Columbia University an assistant professor of anthropology received
so many death threats after remarks he made at a late March teach-in
that he had to move out of his home and teach under the protection of
security guards. The professor, Nicholas de Genova, was quoted by
Newsday as saying that he hoped Iraq would defeat the United States and
that he wished for "a million Mogadishus." An ugly statement, certainly,
but not as extreme as Bill O'Reilly's enthusiastic on-air reading of an
e-mail from a US soldier who bragged, "You would not believe the
carnage. Imagine your street where you live with body parts, knee deep,
with hundreds of vehicles burning and the occupants inside." On
O'Reilly's remarks? Silence. But dozens of news outlets, from the
Jerusalem Post to CNN, seized on de Genova's, portraying them as a
bloodcurdling cry for American deaths. In an interview with The
Chronicle of Higher Education, de Genova said he had hoped to
"contest...the notion that an effective strategy for the antiwar
movement is to capitulate to the patriotic pro-war pressure that demands
that one must affirm support for the troops."
The debate de Genova meant to provoke, needless to say, was never
engaged. In an unprecedented move, 104 Republican members of Congress
signed a letter to Columbia president Lee Bollinger demanding de
Genova's ouster.
The Defense Mechanisms of Democracy
Confronting the right's organized censure, and the popular patriotic
flare-ups it inspires, it's easy to become demoralized. In the face of
such effective pressure, says Gerald Horne, young people like his
students at the University of North Carolina--who were born during
Reagan's presidency--easily learn to distrust the very idea of dissent
out of a feeling that the right always wins. "They have a pragmatic, if
not very deep, sentiment that's the political version of 'Nobody ever
got fired for buying IBM': If you want to lead a comfortable,
hassle-free life and not be a loser, be with the right," he says.
"Unlike in the Vietnam period, we've all become sadly familiar with
TINA--there is no alternative." In such a univocal world, dissent can
seem downright futile.
As the space for dissent constricts, it's global public opinion and
our own domestic civic institutions of liberal democracy--the courts,
opposition parties, nongovernmental organizations and the media--that
have to keep the channels open for alternatives to emerge. An
inquisitive and vigorous press is essential, but too much of the
mainstream media quickly succumbed to Pentagon spin. NBC fired Peter
Arnett for making the obvious points to Iraqi television that war
planners had "misjudged the determination of the Iraqi forces" and that
there was "a growing challenge to President Bush about the conduct of
the war." According to a leaked memo, MSNBC's sacking of Donahue in
February was the result of fear that he might ask guests tough questions
about foreign policy; he was replaced by right-wingers like former
Republican Congressman Joe Scarborough. San Francisco Chronicle
technology staff writer Henry Norr was fired in April after taking a
sick day to participate in an antiwar protest, and two deejays at
Colorado radio station KKCS were suspended in early May for playing a
Dixie Chicks tune. Aaron McGruder's acerbic antiwar comic The Boondocks
was dropped by the Boston Globe in late March when McGruder penned a
special antiwar "protest strip."
As for the courts, Ellen Schrecker, who has written several books
about the McCarthy period, fears that they won't reverse their trade-off
of rights for security the way they did some decades ago. By 1957, the
Supreme Court had begun to rein in the most restrictive Red Scare laws.
"They're feeble now," she says. "Twenty years of Reagan-Bush have really
reconfigured the judiciary." The opposition party has also failed to
rise to the occasion, leaving us, says Horne, accidental anarchists,
with "no electoral vehicle through which to express dissent." What we do
have is a small but vibrant alternative press, growing numbers in
organizations like the ACLU, more than a hundred city councils that have
voted to condemn the Patriot Act or similar measures and an inchoate
protest movement that thronged the streets all winter. Howard Zinn
regards these outpourings as significant, "a broader shield of
protection than we had during the McCarthy period."
One of the spirited chants at the February and March demonstrations
went, "This is what democracy looks like." True enough, the multiracial,
intergenerational demos, which brought together Plumbers for Peace and
Queers Against War, corporate attorneys, public hospital nurses,
students, retirees and Sunday school teachers, reflected the vast
diversity and insistent expression of the American polis. But that can't
be all that democracy looks like. It takes powerful civic institutions
to provide checks and balances, meaningful enfranchisement and vigorous
open debate to make democracy function. None other than Donald Rumsfeld
made this point recently. He was talking about Iraq.
In at least one respect, the current situation has the potential to do
graver damage than even the McCarthy and Wilson eras. Historically,
civil liberties have sprung back to full force when hot or cold wars
have ended, thanks in large part to the perseverance, or the
resuscitation, of the press, the courts and the opposition party. But in
an open-ended "war on terrorism," the day when danger passes may never
come. Even if it does, the democratic muscle of the courts, the press
and the opposition party--already failing so miserably to flex
themselves--may be too atrophied to do the heavy lifting needed to
restore our fundamental rights and freedoms.
Alisa Solomon is a staff writer at the Village Voice and a professor
of English at Baruch College/CUNY.