Posted on 08/11/2003 8:46:25 AM PDT by DPB101
How many American lives has John Ashcroft saved? Plenty. Across our nation, enemy terrorists have been apprehended since 9/11 in Portland, Seattle, Detroit, Chicago, Peoria, Columbus, Buffalo, Baltimore, Alexandria, and elsewhere. Thanks to Mr. Ashcroft and the Bush Justice Department, terrorist cells have been disrupted and prevented from launching attacks (and from killing both Americans and non-Americans who live here), and more than 2,000 illegal aliens from the Middle East have been deported.
Meanwhile, opponents led by the ACLU have instigated a vicious campaign of slander against the Bush-administration efforts to protect American lives. Reluctant until very recently to challenge President Bush directly on national-security issues, they have primarily targeted Attorney General John Ashcroft.
Thus not surprisingly in the minds of the media, the battle over domestic antiterrorism over the past 21 months has divided into two camps: the camp of John Ashcroft and the camp of the ACLU. And this summer has seen a major defection from the Ashcroft camp to the ACLU camp.
James Ziglar, who was commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) from August 2001 to November 2002 and a recent and high-ranking Bush-administration political appointee blasted the U.S Justice Department in a speech before an ACLU convention. Only a short time ago, Ziglar was a chief lieutenant of John Ashcroft. Unlike FBI Director Robert Mueller, however, who also spoke at the convention but defended the Justice Department, Ziglar made it clear to the ACLU that he was on their side in the campaign against Ashcroft and against the domestic antiterrorist strategy of President Bush.
During his ACLU speech, Ziglar made some of the following statements:
"It seems that the insatiable appetite for more power by those who already have it is always justified by necessity "
"Although the 'niceties' of the law seem sometimes to escape the attention, or are deemed irrelevant by those who have sworn to faithfully execute the laws."
And just who are "those" with "an insatiable appetite for power" and who deem the "niceties" of the law "irrelevant?" Obviously, George W. Bush's Justice Department, headed by John Ashcroft.
Thus, Ziglar told the cheering ACLU members: "Those who occupy positions of authority in each branch must be mindful that protecting and defending not disrupting and preventing the vision of our Founders, as embodied in the Constitution, and particularly the Bill of Rights, is the specific and primary duty they swear to uphold." He further declared that if "they fail to fulfill their duty," the people have the "duty to remove and replace them."
The phrase "disrupting and preventing" is a reference to Attorney General Ashcroft's statement that the Justice Department's new emphasis in the war we're in will be to "disrupt and prevent" terrorist acts on our soil.
Ziglar chose to deliberately distort Ashcroft's words.
Throughout the ACLU speech, he continuously attacked the Justice Department's emphasis on "disruption and prevention" never mentioning that Ashcroft's focus is on preventing and disrupting terrorism, and instead implying that Justice is somehow "disrupting" our constitutional order.
In a paragraph typical of the speech, Ziglar states: "No Attorney General, whether Democrat or Republican, should be invested with the power, real or imagined, to ignore, bend, or break the rule of law."
This is classic innuendo. Ziglar does not directly say that Ashcroft is ignoring, bending, or breaking the rule of law, but his implication is not lost on the ACLU audience. Indeed, just before this assertion, Ziglar had decried the "increasingly aggressive tactics of the Justice Department" and declared that an "attitude" of "how much can they get away with already pervades the Department of Justice."
But Ziglar does not simply slander his former colleagues at the Justice Department (one of them is the brilliant young architect of the Patriot Act, Viet Dinh, an immigrant who knows something about real oppression he fled Communist Vietnam as a boy). No, Ziglar also heartily embraces his new allies at the ACLU by effusively declaring that he has "nothing but admiration for your unwavering devotion to protecting the Bill of Rights" and reminding us that this is a "time in American history when the need is great for organizations such as the ACLU."
And just what has the ACLU been doing in the war against terrorism? In one case in Florida, the ACLU defended the right of a Muslim-American woman to be covered from head to toe in a veil (with only her eyes showing) for a driver's license ID photo, rendering the identification i.e., the purpose of the card useless. The ACLU argued the case on First Amendment "religious freedom" grounds.
Fortunately, a judge ruled against the ACLU and the Muslim woman who, incidentally, turned out to be a criminal who had been previously convicted of battery against a three-year-old girl. Still, the fact that ACLU would initiate such as lawsuit in the first place shows that it is a not merely a frivolous organization, but (and much more significantly) a dangerous one, especially at a time when American lives are being threatened by terrorists in our own homeland.
The ACLU's campaign against the Patriot Act is full of half-truths and distortions. For example, the ACLU charges that Section 215 of the Act means that "The FBI could spy on a person because they don't like the books she reads or they don't like the websites she visits."
Heather Mac Donald, in a trenchant article attacking the anti-Ashcroft hysteria in the Summer 2003 City Journal, calls this "nonsense." Mac Donald notes, for instance, that the Justice Department would need court approval before it could be permitted to examine the e-mail surfing in a public library of an Islamic militant who had traveled to Pakistan and was seen with terror suspects in Virginia.
The actions of the ACLU endanger the lives of all Americans. It is disgraceful that a former INS chief in the Bush administration would fawn over and pander to this organization.
That time frame suggests against Mr. Zigler being a holdover...
Ziglar was elected as the 35th Sergeant at Arms and Doorkeeper of the Senate in October 1998. Prior to his election, he served as Managing Director of Paine Webber Incorporated in the firm's Municipal Securities Group. He was a member of the Paine Webber Operating Committee, the Municipal Securities Group Executive Committee and served as the Chairman of the Municipal Securities Group Operating Committee. During that time, Mr. Ziglar had responsibility for the National Infrastructure Finance Group and the West Coast General Markets Group.
In addition to his 23 years in the public sector finance industry, he has worked in various capacities of the federal government. He served as Assistant Secretary of Interior for Water and Science from 1987 to 1988, where he directed the operations of the Bureau of Reclamation, the U.S. Geological Survey and the Bureau of Mines. He served a member of the Senior Advisory Group on Water Governance of the Advisory Committee on Intergovernmental Relations and was the joint recipient of the Water Statesman of the Year Award from the National Water Resources Association in 1988.
Looks to me like he is a career guy and perpetual bureaucrat.
Good riddance to James Ziglar, the hopeless head of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) who announced his resignation last week.This is a man whose main qualifications for the nation's top immigration enforcement job were his boyhood friendship with Senate Minority Leader Trent Lott and his effortless ability to suck up to Sen. Ted Kennedy.
This is a man whose law enforcement background consisted of less than three years as the U.S. Senate's sergeant-at-arms and doorkeeper, protecting the Senate gavel and playing Senate hall monitor.
This is a man who freely admitted before his confirmation that he had "no discernible experience in immigration law and policy."
This is a man whose idea of increasing U.S.-Mexican border security was to give his beleaguered agents pepperball guns . . .continued
Under Ziglar's "leadership," INS did little to close the loopholes exposed after 9-11. His resignation as INS director was demanded, and rightfully so. At least he found the "right" audience as a speaker; I can't think of any organization--aside from the ACLU--that would actually applaud his drivel.
Did he wear that goofy little uniform I see hotel doormen wearing?
To say that there are only two basic positions on the new security laws, Ashcroft or the ACLU, with us or the enemy, is nonsense. There are a lot of ctitical opinions on the PATRIOT act from Conservatives and Libertarians who detest the ACLU. But of course these "flyover country" types aren't considered to be fully human by the East Coast Establishment (and their Quislings) and their opinions can be safely ignored.
It is almost inconceivable that international terrorist attacks could have occured in America of 1950, and even if they had it would have been a simple matter to round up the terrorists, most of whom would have stuck out like a sore thumb, throw them out and prevent them from coming back or coming in the first place. But when you invite the world to colonize your nation you invite the world's crime, strife, wars, and hatreds in at the same time, and militarized police and PATRIOT acts are necessary to keep a lid on the unnatural society that results. To choose multiculturalism as the pinnacle of public morality is to ultimately choose a police state. (A somewhat amusing example of this conflict between Mutli-culti and freedom is the spectacle of Grandmothers being forced to be felt-up at airports so that the system can pretend that it is not singling out Arabs and Southwestern Asians.) Arguments about security arrangements or the failure of the CIA or FBI to prevent 9-11 are just red herrings to avoid discussing the real problem.
2,000 illegal aliens from the Middle East have been deported. Out of what, 50,000? 100,000? A million? They should all be rounded-up and deported, both as a matter of upholding the concept of democratically-made law, and so we won't have to curb our freedoms because of their presence.
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