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Thursday, May 17, 2007
Jon Sanders :: Townhall.com Columnist
Democrat opponents of free speech squash that "Dissent Is Patriotic" stuff
by Jon Sanders
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"Why don't you go f--- yourself?" That was how House Democrat Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel reportedly responded to a Politico reporter's request – made "in the effort for openness and disclosure" – to sit in on a caucus debate over the language of a lobbying bill.

The incident is emblematic. The Democrats this year have taken a disturbingly statist downturn in their approach to governing, especially regarding speech by political opponents and presumed unfriendly press.

An early sign of this tendency was the orchestrated walkout by Democrat presidential candidates from debates co-sponsored by Fox News over the networks' presumed conservative bias. The spectacle was clownish at first glance, but it revealed a deep-seated aversion to question or debate that is not only unattractive in political leadership, but also downright ominous.

Then the House passed a bill to broaden the federal "hate crimes" law, which seeks to specify which inferred bigoted opinions involved in the commission of violent crime makes those crimes more offensive to society. Stripped of its emotional raison d'etre, the bill is essentially a thought-crimes bill. The violent acts were already illegal.

Of greater concern is the renewed push for the Fairness Doctrine. As reported in The American Spectator's "Washington Prowler," Democrat leaders in the U.S. House will, in their words, "aggressively pursue" the reinstatement of the Fairness Doctrine. Aides told TAE that Democrats were interested in the legislation specifically to limit conservative talk radio and have already begun to investigate certain targets, among them Rush Limbaugh, Bill Bennett, Michael Medved, and Dr. Richard Lind.

As I write this, on Wednesday afternoon, news surfaced on The Drudge Report that "[t]he Democratic Leadership is threatening to change the current House Rules regarding the Republican right to the Motion to Recommit or the test of germaneness on the motion to recommit." This change, which would "completely shut down the floor to the minority," would be the first change to the germaneness rule since 1822.

Others will no doubt point out that such heavy-handed squelching of dissent is 180 degrees out of phase with the Democrats' pre-election day promises of openness and fair dealings with the minority party. Nevertheless, winning on promises of new openness, fairer dealings, etc. and then reneging on them is a time-honored prelude to socialists usurping power in other countries. For that matter, so is silencing dissent.

The targets of this menace in the Land of the First Amendment, however, are exactly those who are least likely to protest. As Alan Charles Kors and Harvey A. Silverglate pointed out nearly a decade ago in The Shadow University, their 1998 book on university speech codes, the academic proving ground of this threat to freedom: "Republicans, moderates, evangelicals, assimilationist blacks or Hispanics, and devout Catholics don’t occupy buildings or cause disruptions that will bring the media to campus." Unlike the "self-appointed militants" representing grievance groups, individuals – especially law-and-order types – are unlikely to protest, so they're more likely to have their rights trampled by the speech police, be they on campus on in Congress.

But with free speech already this deeply imperiled with these Democrats having held Congressional power for less than half a year, those who care for individual rights must protest now. If this Orwellian insurgency isn't beaten back quickly, imagine the chilled climate in a couple more years – especially if a like-minded enemy of free speech is placed in the White House. Our freedom of speech is secured by the Bill of Rights. Let's not forget that – nor let this current Congress erode it.

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About The Author
Jon Sanders is a policy analyst and research editor at the John Locke Foundation in Raleigh, N.C.

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Watch Out, Liberty
Liberty:
"Dr. Paul was trying to point out that our foreign policy over the last 50 years had created conditions that made an attack on us more likely. Regardless of how right or just you personally believe our reasons to be, are we actually going to sit here and say that our actions of meddling with so many other countries' affairs have absolutely no repercussion down the line? Is that what you're arguing? Seems more than naive to me."

Uh oh, liberty, I think you might be one of them Islamofascist terrorists! I think they're getting out another couple prayer mats for you & Congressman Paul down there at Gitmo....

See ya in a couple - five - twenty years, or so. (maybe)

Mostly, So What

The only thing that Mr Sanders complains about that makes me upset with the people I elected to the house last fall is the following:

"Democratic Leadership is threatening to change the current House Rules regarding the Republican right to the Motion to Recommit or the test of germaneness on the motion to recommit."

Frankly, I don't know what this means, but it sounds like it could squelch minority party participation in debating legislation.

I don't care if Reporters are kept out of committee meetings, or if the Democratic House leaders makes noises about Fox News like everybody here does about the dreaded MSM, and if you don't like a hate crimes bill protecting Gays just come out and say so, cut this B.S. about "thought crime".

When the Democrats start hiding the times and locations of committee meetings from the Republican committee members (like the previous crew did to the Democrats), then you can start complaining.



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