Weekly Opinion Editorial
FEAR NOT!
by Steve Fair
On October 26, 2001, just over a month
after the 9/11 attacks, Congress passed and President George W. Bush signed
into the law The Patriot Act. It was designed
to help law enforcement have the tools to identify and track terrorists. Key tenets of the 2001 Patriot Act included
allowing government the authority to intercept wire, oral, and electronic
communications relating to terrorism. It
also allowed law enforcement to wiretap suspected terrorists with no court
order. It also required that banks
report to the government any large withdrawals from bank accounts. Perhaps the most controversial part of the
Patriot Act was the bulk data (cell phone/computer usage) the NSA was
authorized to collect from the general public and hold it for five years.
Most of the general public was unaware
of just how extensive the collecting was until former CIA computer worker Edward
Snowden leaked classified documents to the main stream media. Snowden has been charged with violation of
the Espionage Act, but he considers himself a whistle-blower. He has been granted temporary asylum in
Russia. Some have hailed Snowden as a
hero, others a traitor, but whatever your opinion, it is for certain, the
government was collecting massive amount of personal information on innocent
citizens without their knowledge and we might not have known if Snowden hadn’t
ratted on his former employer.
On
Sunday night, the U.S. Senate voted allowed the Patriot Act to expire. The U.S. House has already passed a bill- USA
Freedom Act- that would shift the data collection from the government to the
service providers. The Senate voted
77-17 to take up the House bill this week.
The National Security Agency supposedly shut down the bulk metadata
collection program officially at 7:44 p.m. Three observations about the debate:
First,
the nature of human government is to grow in scope and power. Throughout history, government, including our
own, has effectively used fear to keep the folks in line. Fear works best in wartime. In the midst of the war with France, in 1798,
the Alien & Sedition Act was passed which increased the residency requirements
for American citizenship from five to fourteen years. Designed by Federalists to limit the power of
their political opponents, the enforcement ended after Jefferson was elected
president in 1800. President Lincoln suspended Habeas Corpus, the legal
procedure that prevents the government from holding you indefinitely without
showing cause, in the midst of the Civil War. President Roosevelt sent 100,000 Japanese
Americans to internment camps after Pearl Harbor, because the general public
was scared. This coming from the
president who said Americans ‘had nothing to fear but fear itself.’ Government uses fear to increase their power.
Second,
government isn’t the only group to use fear as a tool. Politicians use it- on both sides of the
aisle. Conservative politicos tell
citizens to fear the government's overreaching authority. Liberals say citizens should fear the
conservatives. Debates on issues have
evolved into carefully rehearsed speeches pandering to a political base, used
to position for re-election or higher office.
During the recent debate on the Patriot Act, both sides of the political
spectrum used fear as the primary point in their argument. And using fear
works. According to a 2005 Gallup poll,
teens between 13-17 were asked what they feared most and the top ten in order
were: terrorist attacks, spiders, death, being a failure, war, crime or gang violence,
being alone, the future, and nuclear war.
Third,
what and who should we fear? Should we
fear those who can kill us? That would
make sense. We should have the God given
right to defend ourselves and our loved ones against anyone who wants to kill
us. Should we fear those who can disrupt
our way of life- hurt us economically? That
also seems to make sense, but how do we deal with dishonest merchants and
overreaching government? How do we
identify those economic enemies? Fear is a human mechanism that can protect us
or debilitate us, depending on how we respond to it.
It is clear from scripture
that government is given the ‘power of the sword,(Romans 13)’ to provide
citizens some measure of security, but no government, politician or man can
give us true security. Security comes
only from God. Jesus said, “And fear not
them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear
him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.” The fear of God is
the beginning of wisdom, not the fear of government or terrorists.
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