BILL
OREILLY IN DRAG
By William Fisher
Michelle Malkin, sometimes known as Bill OReilly in
drag, opened one of her recent syndicated rants with this question:
Oh, dear. Oh, dear. Civil-liberties activists, anti-war
organizers, eco-militants and animal-rights operatives are in a fright over news
that the nefarious FBI is watching them. Why on earth would the government be
worried about harmless liberal grannies, innocent vegetarians, unassuming rainforest
lovers and other peaceful groups simply exercising their First Amendment
rights?
Ms. Malkin was referring
to a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union, charging that the
FBI had amassed hundreds of pages of secret files on that organization and similar
groups.
Well, let me suggest that this
cute-looking new darling of the salivating right is asking the wrong question.
What she should want to know is why the FBI is snooping on the ACLU. After all,
the rights the ACLU defends include those that allow Ms. Malkin to write exactly
what she wants to write, no matter how misinformed.
Ms.
Malkin is too young to remember, and obviously hasnt read much American
history, but if she wants an answer to that question, there are lots of answers.
Here are a few.
Back in the 1960s and
1970s, the FBI engaged in widespread spying on ordinary Americans. The targets
back then were left-wing groups and individuals, civil rights and anti-Vietnam
activists and, of course, President Nixons enemies list.
The leader of the pack was the FBIs powerful first director,
J. Edgar Hoover. J. Edgar started his witch-hunting career in the 1920s under
Attorney General Mitchell Palmer. Palmers infamous Red Raids
were enabled by a national environment of fear and suspicion and led to the jailing
or deportation of hundreds of communists, anarchists, Bolsheviks, and other dissidents,
including Emma Goldman, the well-known Russian émigré poet.
The FBI under Hoover collected information on all America's
leading politicians. Known as Hoover's secret files, this incriminating
material was used to make sure that the eight presidents under whom he served
would be too frightened to sack him. The strategy worked and Hoover was still
in office when he died in 1972.
Not even
Martin Luther King, Jr. got a free pass. The FBI used wiretaps and a covert operation,
personally directed by Hoover, to unearth derogatory information intended to destroy
King as a national civil rights leader.
In between the Red
Raids and Martin Luther King, there was the internment of 120,000 Japanese-Americans
during World War Two an action for which the United States Government finally
apologized, but which young Ms. Malkin thinks was just a dandy idea.
Even earlier in the life of our Republic, there were the Alien
and Sedition Acts, passed in 1798 under the administration of President John Adams.
They were sold as measures to protect the United States from "dangerous"
aliens, but were actually used by the Federalists to stop the growth of the Democratic-Republican
Party.
The four laws making up the Act
authorized the president to imprison or deport any alien associated with any nation
the United States was fighting in a "declared war, " and deport any
alien considered dangerous, even in peacetime, extended the duration of residence
required for aliens to become citizens, nearly tripling it from five years to
14, and made it a crime to publish "false, scandalous, and malicious writing"
against government or government officials.
These
unambiguous violations of the First Amendment were vigorously opposed by such
well-known lefties as Thomas Jefferson and James Madison.
Ms. Malkin saves her fiercest invective for the eco-radicals
who urge their followers to take direct actions" against American military
establishments, urban centers, corporations, government buildings, media outlets,
and the financial centers of the country through massive property destruction,
online sabotage, physical occupation of buildings, and
large-scale urban rioting.
Ms. Malkin
conveniently ignores that fact that such eco-radicals have nothing whatever to
do with the ACLUs lawsuit. She also ignores Americas long history
of civil disobedience which started with the Revolutionary War that created
the country, continued through the Civil Rights movement, and is still alive and
well today.
No one wants to see mass destruction
of anything by anyone, but Ms. Malkin would do well to acknowledge that it was
acts of civil disobedience that gave her many of the rights she now enjoys.
Ms. Malkin concludes: " Dissent is patriotic
is a bromide no responsible agent can swallow blindly. Tolerating the unfettered
free speech of saboteurs has threatened enough lives already.
How about your free speech, Michelle?
I forget who said it, but its a statement Ms. Malkin
needs to think about: The greatest threat to democracy is the unbridled power
of government.
Funny how often small-government
states-rights conservatives like Michelle Malkin forget what it is theyre
supposed to stand for!
Please click
on the link below.
THE WORLD ACCORDING TO BILL FISHER