UN Intervention
is Necessary
By John Stanton and Wayne Madsen
15 March 2002
The U.S. justice system (courts, enforcement
agencies, rule and law making bodies) was the last venue
of hope for America's
censored, oppressed, disenfranchised, and falsely accused.
Indeed, the authors of the U.S. Constitution recognized
that the third branch of government, the judicial branch,
must
be the stable and incorruptible anchor of American government
and society as the other two branches-executive and legislative
- would be subject to the whim and whimsy of special interests
and the public whose opinions would invariably reflect
those special interests. But what was once the envy of the
world
is now gangrene on the public body of a once proud nation,
and it is the site of squalor, death, exploitation, rape,
abuse, experimentation, and profit and loss.
At this critical
moment in U.S. history when the American justice system
is needed to stem the tide of American totalitarianism,
it finds itself incapable of doing so. What a tragic commentary
on a once novel and enlightened system that ended segregation,
gave the convicted rights, ensured a free press and dissent,
enforced a women's right-to-choose, and checked the imperious
power of the executive branch. Now, however, it is extraordinarily
politicized and corrupted at every level, and wealthy ideologues,
corporations and defendants with money to burn far too
easily manipulate it. It is a system that is suspect by the
general
public and daily mocked by shows like Judge Judy. High
school students in America know that the right amount of
money and
influence can buy a favorable decision, a legislative loophole,
timeshare at a low security Federal Prison Camp, and even
the US presidency as the Election of 2000 demonstrated.
With the collapse of the American justice system, the United
States stands on the precipice of the totalitarian state.
Indeed, the evidence is there to show that the US is in
the initial stages of some form of mutated capitalist totalitarianism.
And in one of the most stunning bits of irony, the very
system
of justice that steered the country away from dalliances
in State totalitarianism, is leading America there.
The
War on Drugs - based on ill-conceived presidential directives,
legislation passed by a deaf, dumb and blind
Congress, and
public paranoia and panic fueled by self-serving interests
- increased the U.S. prison population by approximately
3 million people between 1990 and 2000; the collateral
damage
being innocents behind bars, ruined reputations, federal
interagency squabbles and further erosion of the Bill
of Rights. The War on Terrorism, designed with equal simple-mindedness
and expediency, seems destined to perform in similar
fashion
and will undoubtedly produce fresh crops of productive
inmates for the American justice system. Scylla and Charybdis,
those
quaint legends of yore, have now been replaced by the
War on Drugs and the War on Terrorism. The notorious Roman
emperor Caligula would have marveled at the viciousness
of these
monstrous creations and relished the opportunity to wield
these weapons against the population.
Drugwarfacts.org reports
89% of police departments have paramilitary units, and 46%
have been trained by active duty armed forces.
The most common use of paramilitary units is serving drug-related
search warrants (usually no-knock entries into private homes).
20% of police departments use paramilitary units to patrol
urban areas. The U.S. National Guard currently has more counter-narcotics
officers than the DEA has special agents on duty. Each day,
the National Guard is involved in 1,300 counter-drug operations
and has approximately 4,000 troops on duty. Without warning
or prior notification to civilian authorities, the U.S. military
will "mock" invade communities across America,
often causing panic, and in some cases, death.
On February 25, 2002, in North Carolina, for example, undercover
U.S. Army personnel-engaged in a training exercise--attempted
to disarm an on-duty civilian deputy sheriff. The officer
shot them both. Why would the military attempt to disarm
a civilian law enforcement officer? On March 13, 1999, without
notification to the bulk of its customers, on orders from
the U.S. military, Alabama Power cut off power to Anniston,
Alabama, so that 800 military personnel could mount an assault
on the local town and airport. The power company told the
populace it was "for repair purposes" and not that
it was part of a military exercise. Finally, on March 16-17,
1999, Operation Laser Cup was conducted against residents
in Beaver and Westmoreland Counties in Pennsylvania. Twelve
Black Hawk, Pave Low, and MH6 helicopters "attacked" an
area near a local mine in support of special operations troops
in search of certain materials.
The local enforcement offices
of both counties were overwhelmed with 911 calls from panicked
citizens, and, according to
reports, a fire truck and ambulance were unnecessarily dispatched
during the ensuing panic. According to one exasperated local
official, "I would prefer they [the military] notify
us so we can tell the people who call. But [the military]
doesn't have to tell us anything. They're Federal and we're
County. There's nothing we can do about it."
According
to groups as diverse as the Christian evangelical Operation
Starting Line and Human Rights Watch, the American
Panopticon houses 6 million people in some form of "correctional
supervision-incarceration, probation or parole". Roughly
2 million of those are behind bars in infamous Supermax prisons
and the rancid facilities that pass as federal, state and
local penitentiaries. According to Linda Evans and Eve Goldberg
in their work titled Prison Industrial Complex and the Global
Economy, those numbers give the U.S. the horrific distinction
of having the "highest per capita incarceration rate
in the history of the world".
The disproportionate number of minorities' living and working
in the American Panopticon is nothing short of criminal.
Clearly, the system targets these individuals from the moment
they are born into hunger and poverty in cities and towns
across the U.S. According to drugwarfacts.org, the incarceration
rate for African-American women was 205 per 100,000, and
for African-American men 3,457 per 100,000. The rate of incarceration
for Hispanic women is 60 per 100,000, and for Hispanic men
the rate is 1,220 per 100,000.
The rate of incarceration
for white women is 34 per 100,000, and for white men the
rate is 449 per 100,000. The United States spent a whopping
$146 billion in 1999 to incarcerate and monitor its 6 million
captives.
Yet you'd be silly to opine that that 46 billion was a
waste of money. Corporations ranging from pharmaceuticals
to telecommunications
view the American justice system as a productive source
of labour and a test bed. Even the Pentagon is a customer.
In
2000, UNICOR's slave labour force accounted for net sales
to the private and public sectors of roughly $600 million
dollars (UNICOR is a subsidiary of the US Department of
Justice). The products they produce are as diverse as guided
missile
components for the Pentagon and clothing for the likes
of Eddie Bauer. The electronics guiding the missiles used
against
American opponents and innocents in Afghanistan and Colombia,
and the upscale apparel in the shop window or on your back,
could be the product of U.S. slave labour.
The Bush administration's
frenzy to privatize traditional government responsibilities
has seen a concurrent increase
in profits for corporations that have got into the private
prison business. The biggest corporate predator is Wackenhut
Corporation, a company that owes its very existence to
the maniacal former FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. Founded
in
1954 by former FBI agent George Wackenhut, Sr., the company
got its kick start from Hoover who was convinced a private
company could get away with things the FBI was constitutionally
barred from doing.
Wackenhut has spun off a prison industry
subsidiary, Wackenhut Corrections, an operation that, according
to The Washington
Times, earned $562.1 million during 2001, an increase of
7 million over its 2000 revenues. While many companies
saw the bottom drop out of their stock values, since September
11, Wackenhut Corrections saw its stock price dramatically
increase. And there is little reason to wonder why. Wackenhut
has a virtual monopoly on U.S. immigration detention centres
- the places where more and more suspicious aliens will
be
interred as America spirals downward into a post-constitutional
Kafkaesque society.
Currently, Wackenhut runs 36 detention, prison, and juvenile
facilities in the United States, including Immigration
and Naturalization Service detention centres in the Borough
of
Queens and Aurora, Colorado. The lion's shares of Wackenhut
prisons - twelve -- are in George W. Bush's home state
of Texas. And perhaps seeing some sort of perverse benefit
in
combining Pavlovian tenets with criminal incarceration,
Wackenhut has embarked on running psychiatric hospitals
throughout
the United States, a frightening prospect when considering
the company was founded as a virtual front operation in
order to engage in political surveillance and chicanery
on behalf
of a sheepish J. Edgar Hoover, himself a known deviant.
The most worrisome prison operated by Wackenhut is the
Taft Correctional
Institution in rural Kern County, California. It is a 1,767-bed,
low security Federal Correctional Institution (FCI), which
is adjacent to a separate adjacent 512-bed minimum security
Federal Prison Camp - and the 380,000 square feet facility
has a lot of room for expansion. The federal government
supplements the camp with UNICOR slave labor factories.
Adolf Hitler certainly
saw the benefit in having minimum-security prison camps like
the one in Kern County. The ghetto camp
in Terezin (Theresienstadt), Czech Republic, was one such
camp. It was used by the Nazis to fool International Red
Cross inspectors who were naturally more interested in the
welfare of famous political prisoners like former French
Premier Leon Blum, German Lutheran Pastor Martin Niemoller,
and Czech feminist leader Milana Horokova, than in the plight
of non-notable prisoners like the hundreds of thousands who
were dispatched, via their stay in Theresienstadt, to their
ultimate fate in Nazi death camps.
Wackenhut plans to open other private prisons throughout
the United States. And it is, by no means, alone in that
respect. Other private prison corporations seeing tremendous
profits in incarcerating Americans include Correctional Corporation
of America (CCA) and Correctional Services Corporation (CSC).
CCA operates 64 prison facilities in 21 states. The company
saw a near threefold increase in revenue from 2000 to 2001.
CSC boasts 13 prisons and 33 juvenile centres in 18 states
and Puerto Rico. CSC specializes in military boot camp-style "Shock
Incarceration" facilities - camps that engage more in
sociopolitical re-engineering of drug-dependent inner city
minority youth than in traditional norms of juvenile rehabilitation.
Considering
the fact that the Bush administration installed John P. Walters
as Director of the Office of National Drug
Control Policy, investors can look upon private prisons and
their population as a growth industry - a definite "buy" in
Wall Street parlance. Walters told the neo-conservative Weekly
Standard that "what really drives the battle against
law enforcement and punishment, however, is not a commitment
to treatment, but the widely held view that (1) we are imprisoning
too many people for merely possessing illegal drugs, (2)
drug and other criminal sentences are too long and harsh,
and (3) the criminal justice system is unjustly punishing
young black men. These are among the great urban myths of
our time." However, the greatest urban myth is that
the United States is winning the so-called "War on Drugs."
Like
his predecessor, Gen. Barry McCaffrey, Walters seems more
interested in recruiting more slave laborers for America's
prison-industrial complex. Consider the fact that last year,
the U.S. sprayed twice as much herbicide on Colombia's coca
fields than in the previous year. The net result was, according
to the State Department, an increase in coca production.
However, the Central Intelligence Agency, oddly charged with
determining the production output of a narcotic for which
it has a sordid history of trafficking and distributing,
stalled on issuing its own Colombian production report. Perhaps
that is because in its own "wilderness of mirrors" it
must show a decrease in production to demonstrate its phony
war is working. With such cooked books, the future for America's
yet-to-be imprisoned youth looks very bleak indeed.
And the Caligulan madness doesn't end there.
In The Prison
as Laboratory, Silja J.A. Talvi quotes the Nuremberg Code
in 1947: "The voluntary consent of the
human subject is absolutely essential." The code was
drafted in direct response to the sheer barbarity of Nazi-era
medical experiments on Jews and other captive groups. "[The]
person involved should have legal capacity to give consent;
should be so situated as to be able to exercise free power
of choice, without the intervention of any element of force,
fraud, deceit, duress, over-reaching or other ulterior form
of constraint or coercion.
Yet in a convenient disassociation
from the ethical implications of the Nuremberg Code, the
United States became the only
nation in the world to officially sanction the use of prisoners
in experimental clinical trials. From the '40s through the
early '70s, American doctors regularly injected and infected
inmates with malaria, typhoid fever, herpes, cancer cells,
tuberculosis, ringworm, hepatitis, syphilis and cholera in
repeatedly failed attempts to "cure" such diseases.
Doctors in prisons pulled out prisoners' fingernails and
inflicted flash burns to approximate the results of atomic
bomb attacks and even conducted various "mind-control" experiments
using isolation techniques and high doses of LSD, courtesy
of the CIA." While those practices were outlawed in
the 1970's, Talvi reports that there is evidence that inmate
experimentation may be resuming again.
Considering Bush's
own Texas gubernatorial record of carrying out more executions
than any of his predecessors (and his
appointment of suspected human rights abusers to positions
of power in the US State Department and Pentagon), the situation
for America's burgeoning prison population-and the general
populace--can only get worse. His glibness on the death penalty
and death in general (on Bin Laden--"Dead or alive";
On a tax increase--"Over my dead body") could easily
result in America's condemned being harvested for their organs
- something for which we currently condemn China.
With recent
revelations that the Bush administration set about to create
a secret shadow government in two underground
bunkers near Washington (assumed to be one operated by
the Federal Emergency Management Agency [FEMA] at Mount Weather,
Virginia, and another operated by the Defense Department
at Raven Rock Mountain [Site R], near Waynesboro, Pennsylvania),
it is worth looking at the history of U.S. government list
keeping and plans to incarcerate political subversives.
And
that history, ironically or perhaps not, involves Wackenhut.
In 1977, the U.S. Privacy Protection Study Commission discovered
that Wackenhut had compiled a list of 2.5 million U.S. citizens
it considered to be "subversive." In addition to
people who had been subpoenaed to appear before the now-defunct
(soon to be resurrected?) House Un-American Activities Committee,
it contained the names of individuals culled from newspaper
clipping services and Wackenhut's own private investigative
business.
In 1977, President Jimmy Carter signed Executive
Order 12148 which transformed the Federal Emergency Preparedness
Agency
into the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). FEMA
was to become responsible for coordinating Federal civil
defense and other emergency relief activities within the
USA. However, when Ronald Reagan took over the presidency
in 1981, he named his old California National Guard chief,
retired General Louis Giuffrida, as his emergency czar. Giuffrida
had a tainted image as California's National Guard commander.
He drew up lists of "militant Negroes" who were
to be rounded up in emergencies.
He designed "Operation
Cable Splicer," which kept
track of political dissidents in California, especially anti-Vietnam
War protesters. When Giuffrida took over the reins at FEMA,
he began to embark on similar projects. FEMA began to store
some 12,000 names it had obtained from the FBI's domestic
intelligence files. FBI Director William Webster was so outraged
at this interference in FBI matters he forced FEMA to turn
the list back to the FBI. FEMA's surveillance lists may have
included at least 100,000 U.S. citizens who were assumed
to be potential threats to security. These included the names
of environmentalists, survivalists, and tax protesters (in
2002, these are the new terrorists).
Wackenhut is reportedly
a major contractor to FEMA. With FEMA now running a shadow
government, there is a real possibility
that the "subversive" lists for which both FEMA
and Wackenhut have an affinity are once again being dusted
off and updated. The USA PATRIOT Act, drawn up in a frenzy
only matched in history by the scrapping of the German Constitution
in the wake of the Reichstag Fire, certainly criminalizes
a range of what can be construed as "political crimes
against The State. The State's prison-industrial complex,
therefore, stands to benefit from a whole new population
of "criminal."
And what does Congress say about
Bush setting up a shadow government? They never knew about
it! According to The Washington
Post, Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle said he "had
not been informed about the role, location or even the existence
of the shadow government." House Minority Leader Richard
Gephardt said he "was unaware of the administration's
move." Senator Robert Byrd, the Senate President pro
tempore, third in line to succeed the President, was also
not informed. Aides to House Speaker Dennis Hastert, second
in succession, also expressed bewilderment.
The Bush-Cheney "regime," that
being the only descriptor that comes to mind for it, is playing
fast and loose with
the U.S. Constitution, demonstrating that they are not upholding
the oath of office they took on January 20, 2001. America
must come out of its catatonic state. It is time to recall
the words of Russian novelist Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in his
famous book, The Gulag Archipelago:
"
And how we burned in the camps latter, thinking: What would
things have been like if . during periods of mass arrests,
as for example in Leningrad, when they arrested a quarter
of the entire city, people had not simply sat there in their
lairs, paling with terror at every bang of the downstairs
door and at every step on the staircase, but had understood
they had nothing left to lose and had boldly set up in the
downstairs hall an ambush of half a dozen people with axes,
hammers, pokers, or whatever else was at hand? After all,
you knew ahead of time that those blue caps were out at night
for no good purpose. And you could be sure ahead of time
that you'd be cracking the skull of a cutthroat. Or what
about the Black Maria sitting out there on the street with
one lonely chauffeur---what if it had been driven off or
its tires spiked? The Organs would very quickly have suffered
a shortage of officers and transport and, notwithstanding
all of Stalin's thirst; the cursed machine would have ground
to a halt! If...if...We didn't love freedom enough. And even
more. We had no awareness of the real situation. We spent
ourselves in one unrestrained outburst in 1917, and then
we hurried to submit. We submitted with pleasure! .We purely
and simply deserved everything that happened afterward."
The
United Nations must recognize that one of its founding
members is drifting dangerously towards totalitarianism -
a prospect that endangers the peace and freedom of the
entire
world. Perhaps it's time they intervene.
Copyright © 2002
by the News Insider, John Stanton and Wayne Madsen
John Stanton is a Virginia-based writer on
national security affairs and Wayne Madsen is a Washington,
DC-based
investigative
journalist who writes and comments frequently on civil
liberties and human rights issues.
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