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Future American lawyers take a stand for
freedom
By Tom DeWeese
Many patriotic Americans have rightly worried about
the nation's future in the hands of today's younger generation. Proven time and
again is their lack of understanding for American ideals and principles of
limited government, thanks to a woefully inadequate education from government
schools.
However, such fears received at least a small reprieve on
January 24, 2006, when a group of law students at Georgetown University Law
School staged a dramatic protest during a speech by Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales.
Gonzales was on the campus to defend the Bush Administration's
use of domestic spying. As the Attorney General began his remarks, more that
twenty law students stood and turned their backs on him as others unfurled a
sign which read, "Those who would sacrifice liberty for security deserve
neither," a paraphrase of a famous quote from Benjamin Franklin.
Prior
to becoming Attorney General, Gonzales helped write the infamous Patriot Act
(which has no definition of a terrorist) and has been an outspoken supporter of
increased surveillance on American citizens, all in the name of fighting
terrorism. Gonzales has called the Geneva Convention, which has historically
held nation's accountable for prisoner of war treatment, "quaint,"
The
Attorney General has argued that the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
(FISA) does not apply in the Bush Administration's domestic spying. FISA
clearly requires executive branch agencies to get approval for domestic
surveillance requests from a special court, whose proceedings are secret and
protect national security.
So, the law students at Georgetown decided to
let the Attorney General know they weren't supporters of Gonzales' brand of law,
and staged their protest. Afterwards, a panel of experts was held to discuss
what Gonzales had said. Members of the panel tore away at Gonzales' argument
while supporting the student's actions.
Said Georgetown law professor and
panel member David Cole, "When you're a law student, they tell you that if you
can't argue the law, argue the facts. They also tell you if you can't argue the
facts, argue the law. If you can't argue either, apparently, the solution is to
go on a public relations offensive and make it a political issue (and) to say
over and over again 'it's lawful,' and to think that the American people will
somehow come to believe this if we say it often enough." Concluded Cole, "In
light of this, I'm proud of the very civil civil disobedience that was shown
here today."
No American should blindly accept reduction of
their liberty simply because a government official says so. The choice is a
nation of laws or a nation of whims. No liberty is possible with the latter, no
matter how important the cause.
At Georgetown University, at least on
this day, there were students who understood the difference - and that bodes
well for the future of
freedom.
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