Among other things, this law protects pedophiles and over 250 other categories of sexual deviants. For example: if a pervert flashes a woman on the street, he commits only a misdemeanor. If she strikes him with her pocketbook, she commits a felony assault upon a person protected by this law.
I am starting to suspect that, on January 20th 2009, Earth passed through a "wormhole" in space and entered an alternate reality where everything seems similar to the way it used to be, but backwards.
May 24, 2009
Hate Crimes and the Sedition Act of 2009
By John Griffing
HR 1913, The Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act, and its companion
bill S. 909, the Matthew Shepard Hate Crimes Prevention Act threaten us with
targeted censorship, attacks on religious freedom, and outrageous protections
for pedophilia and other deviant behavior. Even prominent gay activists like
Andrew Sullivan say that this legislation is unnecessary and dishonest. But if
these arguments aren't enough to cause you to grab a pitchfork and march on
Washington (or at least call your Senators), then perhaps you need a bigger
perspective about what's really at stake.
As a reminder, the bill has been passed in the House, and is now in process in
the Senate. The legislation contains provisions that will increase the penalties
for acts committed against certain protected groups, punishing motives as well
as acts, and giving special legal stature to homosexuals and those with
sexually-related "disabilities". The language of the bill arguably undermines
Fourteenth Amendment "equal protection of the law," making some groups more
equal than others. Pedophiles are elevated to a protected class, but a mother
who slaps a child rapist can go to jail for a hate crime. Rep. Alcee Hastings
was even so brazen as to align the purpose of the bill with acts of sexual
deviancy, saying that it is time to protect "‘philias and fetishes.'"
At the same time, amendments that would have protected faith-based groups from
antagonistic prosecution were voted down. This has caused many advocates of
religious expression to fear this legislation, drawing on examples of hate
crimes laws in Britain and Canada where pastors and other persons of faith have
been arrested for religious speech in public places.
These are all good reasons to oppose this bill.
But S. 909 must be stopped for reasons that go far beyond the issues attached to
this particular legislation. This proposed law will set a precedent that can be
broadened to encompass potentially any idea, belief, or viewpoint. Today hate,
tomorrow fill in the blank.
S. 909 will merely serve as a mechanism or litmus test to determine how much of
our liberty we are willing to give up. Immediate concerns about targeted
censorship, religious oppression, and the predicted ascendancy of gay fascism
are tangential to understanding the real threat this law represents.
Consider one of America's earliest threats, one that came from an unlikely
source. Alexander Hamilton, one of the authors of the Federalist Papers, spent a
year assuring the anti-Federalists (those suspicious of government expansion)
that the Constitution's broad and ambiguous wording would not be misused to
deprive the people of their liberty, or the states of their sovereignty. But it
was Hamilton who would author and succeed in enacting the infamous Sedition Act
of 1798 that criminalized anti-government speech. Fearing the spirit of faction
and division, Hamilton convinced his peers that the Sedition Act was necessary
to preserve national unity and prevent civil war. Good intentions aside, the
Sedition Act became the tool of the big-government Federalist Party to jail
political opponents and silence debate.
One of the culprits arrested: Ben Franklin's grandson, a prominent publisher.
It was only a virtual second revolution with the election of Thomas Jefferson as
President that reestablished the sanctity of the Constitution's protections of
individual liberty and halted America's rapid descent into tyranny. Freedom was
saved, but the Sedition Act proved that freedom was not invulnerable.
Today, S. 909 represents a new attack on freedom that could condemn future
Americans to a life where ideas are the province of government, where freedom of
opinion is regulated by bureaucrats in some cold, dark room. This and comparable
future laws will inevitably create a climate of fear that will make it easier to
coerce uniformity, regardless of who is in power. And if good men are threatened
with criminal penalties for their ideas, many are likely to do nothing.
We need only look at the present bill to see how this might play out in the
future. Due to the intentionally broad wording of S. 909, entire categories of
thought can potentially be banned under the false pretext of ending "hate" or
intolerance. Section 10 of the bill does contain a paper assurance that,
"Nothing in this Act...shall be construed to prohibit any expressive
conduct...or any activities protected by the free speech or free exercise
clauses of, the First Amendment to the Constitution." But First Amendment
protections are easily overridden by the application of US Code Title 18,
Section 2 about criminal accessories: "Whoever commits an offense against the
United States or aids, abets, counsels, commands, induces, or procures its
commission, is punishable as a principal." If so-called "hate" is criminalized,
then anything said in opposition to one of the protected groups can be defined
as incitement to violence, and therefore illegal speech.
Additionally, S. 909 could have serious implications for the future of political
discourse. If this power play works, then similar laws could be used to silence
debate on many fronts. The two-party system could potentially be put at risk. If
the temptations of power proved too much for a patriot like Alexander Hamilton,
what can we expect from today's Washington?
The First Amendment is our nation's last defense against this massive
encroachment. Outside of shouting fire in a crowded theatre, the First Amendment
forbids any regulation of free speech, even if motivated by good intentions. The
author of the First Amendment understood that,
If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on
government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to be
administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: You must first
enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place, oblige it
to control itself.
The question is, who will watch the watchers? Thomas Jefferson explained:
Confidence is everywhere the parent of despotism...In questions of power, then,
let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by
the chains of the Constitution.
S. 909 isn't just about hate or homosexuality or religious views. At the center
of this bill is the question of liberty. Will we continue to be a nation that
protects freedom of thought, or will we prize conformity above all else?
Defeating this bill should be every American's battle.
"And then they came for the Jews, And I didn't speak up because I wasn't a
Jew...."
Freedom itself is in danger if this bill is not defeated. If even one idea can
be criminalized, then no idea will be safe. Government seldom gives up power,
and once that power is established and the precedent set, there will be no limit
to the ideas that can be outlawed. Every idea, every belief will be a possible
candidate. And once that door is opened, it will not be closed in our lifetimes.
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass
it on to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and
handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years
telling our children what it was once like in the United States when men were
free.
Ronald Reagan
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at May 24, 2009