(Boylove News Articles) - DEAD END: The International Megan's Law's Assault on Everyone's Freedom of Travel: Difference between revisions
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'''''The free movement of the individual is increasingly seen as a revocable privilege, not an inalienable right, as the U.S., Interpol, and governments worldwide conspire to strip, not just “sex offenders”, but everyone of the fundamental right to travel and to cross borders | '''''The free movement of the individual is increasingly seen as a revocable privilege, not an inalienable right, as the U.S., Interpol, and governments worldwide conspire to strip, not just “sex offenders”, but everyone of the fundamental right to travel and to cross borders | ||
''''' | ''''' | ||
<Center>By David Kennerly</Center> | <Center>By David Kennerly | ||
June 22, 2014 | |||
</Center> | |||
Table Of Contents | Table Of Contents | ||
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'''PART III:''' | '''PART III:''' | ||
An Inescapable Conclusion | [[#An Inescapable Conclusion|An Inescapable Conclusion]] | ||
Restless Natives | [[#Restless Natives|Restless Natives]] | ||
Presumption Of Future Guilt Of Those Said To Be Victimizers (and of Eternal Saintliness of Those Said To Be Victims) | [[#Presumption Of Future Guilt|Presumption Of Future Guilt Of Those Said To Be Victimizers (and of Eternal Saintliness of Those Said To Be Victims)]] | ||
[[#Endnotes|Endnotes]] | [[#Endnotes|Endnotes]] | ||
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<span id="The Alarm Which Finally Roused Us From Our Slumber "></span> | |||
'''The Snowden Alarm Which Finally Woke Us''' | '''The Snowden Alarm Which Finally Woke Us''' | ||
We have learned, in extraordinary detail, of the wanton illegality in which our governments now engage through the remarkable revelations of Edward Snowden as well as those of Bradley Manning, William Binney, Thomas Drake and others. They have all taken a courageous stand to insist that government must be held to account for policies which identify liberty as incompatible with the interests of safety and security, policies which are, in any case (at least, in the United States) ''unconstitutional and illegal''. <ref>“Privacy under attack: the NSA files revealed new threats to democracy and, thanks to Edward Snowden, we know the apparatus of | We have learned, in extraordinary detail, of the wanton illegality in which our governments now engage through the remarkable revelations of Edward Snowden as well as those of Bradley Manning, William Binney, Thomas Drake and others. They have all taken a courageous stand to insist that government must be held to account for policies which identify liberty as incompatible with the interests of safety and security, policies which are, in any case (at least, in the United States) ''unconstitutional and illegal''. <ref>“Privacy under attack: the NSA files revealed new threats to democracy and, thanks to Edward Snowden, we know the apparatus of | ||
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<span id="The Next Step Down The Road To Oblivion "></span> | |||
'''The Next Step Down The Road To Oblivion''' | '''The Next Step Down The Road To Oblivion''' | ||
It is into this civil liberties and constitutional milieu which International Megan's Law, not yet enacted (but already partially in force), now emerges; as an additional power of the advanced global security state to strip citizens of the fundamental right to travel and of the expanded powers of two agencies within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS): Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and which are the faces of its implementation. The stark implications for freedom imposed by this law have, thus far, escaped the serious attentions of civil libertarians. It is my hope to make them aware of its dangers which go well beyond its stated goals and which pose a grave threat to the free movement of people today and with even broader implications for the future. | It is into this civil liberties and constitutional milieu which [[International Megan's Law]], not yet enacted (but already partially in force), now emerges; as an additional power of the advanced global security state to strip citizens of the fundamental right to travel and of the expanded powers of two agencies within the [[Department of Homeland Security]] (DHS): [[Customs and Border Patrol]] (CBP) and [[Immigration and Customs Enforcement]] (ICE) and which are the faces of its implementation. The stark implications for freedom imposed by this law have, thus far, escaped the serious attentions of civil libertarians. It is my hope to make them aware of its dangers which go well beyond its stated goals and which pose a grave threat to the free movement of people today and with even broader implications for the future. | ||
<span id="Understanding “International Megan's Law” "></span> | |||
'''Understanding “International Megan's Law”''' | '''Understanding “International Megan's Law”''' | ||
''“It is imperative that we take the lessons we have learned on how to protect our children from known child sex predators within our borders and expand those protections globally,”'' declared a triumphant U.S. Representative Chris Smith, Republican of New Jersey after successfully pushing his bill, the “International Megan's Law” through the U.S. House of Representatives. | ''“It is imperative that we take the lessons we have learned on how to protect our children from known child sex predators within our borders and expand those protections globally,”'' declared a triumphant U.S. Representative [[Chris Smith]], [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] of New Jersey after successfully pushing his bill, the “International Megan's Law” through the U.S. House of Representatives. | ||
''“Child predators thrive on secrecy, a secrecy that allows them to commit heinous crimes against children with impunity and without any real accountability. Megan’s Law must go global to protect American children and children worldwide.”'' | ''“Child predators thrive on [[secrecy]], a secrecy that allows them to commit heinous crimes against children with impunity and without any real accountability. Megan’s Law must go global to protect American children and children worldwide.”'' | ||
Smith has been introducing one version after the other of this bill, named after a child murder victim for whom any number of federal and state laws have been named, for the past six years, but without much success. That is, until this year. | Smith has been introducing one version after the other of this bill, named after a child murder victim for whom any number of federal and state laws have been named, for the past six years, but without much success. That is, until this year. | ||
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Following the wildly successful formula of adorning criminal statutes with the names of murdered child crime victims, this bill is, nevertheless, something new altogether. | Following the wildly successful formula of adorning criminal statutes with the names of murdered child crime victims, this bill is, nevertheless, something new altogether. | ||
Since the appalling Supreme Court decision in 2002 in | Since the appalling Supreme Court decision in 2002 in “[[Smith v. Doe]]”<ref>Smith v. Doe, 538 U.S. 84 (2003) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_v._Doe</ref> <ref>Catherine Carpenter: "Sexual Offense Laws and Constitutionality." Excellent overview of issues as well as “Smith v. Doe”. YouTube: | ||
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qyA9TU8nE8</ref> in which the Justices held, in a six-to-three decision, that sex offender registration laws were perfectly constitutional since they do not represent retroactive ''ex post facto punishment'' (in the ''criminal'' sense) but ''civil regulation'' as a means of ensuring ''public safety'' (yet imposing criminal sanctions for non-compliance) there has been a succession of laws blithely unencumbered by constitutional concerns for sex offenders which restrict where they can live, work, visit and even who they can associate with as well as dictate the frequency with which they must report the myriad details of their lives to law enforcement. | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qyA9TU8nE8</ref> in which the Justices held, in a six-to-three decision, that sex offender registration laws were perfectly constitutional since they do not represent retroactive ''ex post facto punishment'' (in the ''criminal'' sense) but ''civil regulation'' as a means of ensuring ''public safety'' (yet imposing criminal sanctions for non-compliance) there has been a succession of laws blithely unencumbered by constitutional concerns for sex offenders which restrict where they can live, work, visit and even who they can associate with as well as dictate the frequency with which they must report the myriad details of their lives to law enforcement. | ||
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<span id="“The International Megan's Law”: An Analysis "></span> | |||
'''“The International Megan's Law”, An Analysis''' | '''“The International Megan's Law”, An Analysis''' | ||
To “eliminate the demand” for child sex tourism and child sexual exploitation outside of the U.S. by making it extremely difficult, if not impossible, for American child sex offenders to be permitted entry to any foreign country and, further, as a ''quid pro quo'' to ensure that similar information be provided to the U.S. from foreign governments whose own “child sex offenders” intend to visit the U.S. (where they '''will''' be refused entry). Its effect will certainly be to virtually eliminate child sex offenders leaving the U.S. | To “eliminate the demand” for child sex tourism and child sexual exploitation outside of the U.S. by making it extremely difficult, if not impossible, for American child sex offenders to be permitted entry to any foreign country and, further, as a ''quid pro quo'' to ensure that similar information be provided to the U.S. from foreign governments whose own “child sex offenders” intend to visit the U.S. (where they '''will''' be refused entry). Its effect will certainly be to virtually eliminate child sex offenders leaving the U.S. | ||
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The following is what this law will do: | The following is what this law will do: | ||
*::Burdens the Child Sex Offender (includes those convicted of possessing or viewing child pornography and other ''non-contact'' offenses), with the legal obligation to notify authorities, in advance, of their intention to travel internationally along with extensive travel plans and destinations. Failure to provide such information will result in felony criminal prosecution and imprisonment. | |||
*::Establishes a new office, The “Angel Watch Center” within ICE (Immigration & Customs Enforcement, Department of Homeland Security) which acts as an intermediary between the U.S., foreign governments and [[Interpol]]. However, this bill ''does not directly reference Interpol'', even though it is clearly designed to integrate directly with Interpol and its own much publicized program to identify sex offenders in international travel. Discussions amongst policymakers clearly identify Interpol as the intermediary which facilitates such notifications. One could surmise why they fail to mention Interpol but I would suggest it is because its formal role in U.S. law would strike many Americans (including this one) as an advance towards “world government”. ICE will also act with final authority in issuing notifications to foreign governments, other agencies of the U.S. government, such as the [[U.S. Marshals Service]] [[National Sex Offender Targeting Office]] and the [[U.S. Department of State]] as well as to American sex offenders themselves. Needless to say, the “Angel Watch Office” will come with a very big “database” (actually, many databases) with vast inter-connectivity. | |||
*::Through the “Angel Watch Center”,<ref>'Registered Sex Offenders: Sharing More Information Will Enable Federal Agencies to Improve Notifications of Sex Offenders' International Travel' which was released on February 14, 2013. http://www.gao.gov/assets/660/652212.txt</ref> provides advance warning to foreign destination countries of the travel plans of American child sex offenders, alerting them to their arrival and of the entirety of their travel plans and locations and affording that government the opportunity to refuse them entry. If the destination country were to allow them entry (perhaps to enable a “criminal investigation”, as helpfully suggested in House hearings), they will be, as Rep. Smith has said, “watched like a hawk while they're there.” We are assured that (as an inducement for Americans to urge its passage) the receipt of advance notice of travel and criminal background of travelers to the U.S. will be conditioned upon the U.S. reciprocating in providing foreign governments the criminal records of Americans who travel outside of the U.S. | |||
*::The “Angel Watch Center” will consult with non-governmental organizations, including those which are “faith-based”, who are said to have “expertise” in matters of “child sex trafficking” and other “sex crimes” and who will also liaise with those organizations in conducting criminal investigations, such as covertly surveilling identified American sex offenders in “hot spots” said to be rife with “sex trafficking” (in one scenario enthusiastically envisioned by Rep. Smith). “Faith-based” is a clear reference to fundamentalist Christian organizations who have explicitly religious missions to advance a “social-purity” agenda with some actively proselytizing native peoples (who, in Asia, are often Buddhist, Hindu or Muslim). | |||
*::Purports to simply transmit criminal conviction data to foreign governments without the expectation that it will necessarily result in the sex offender having his (or her, increasingly) travel rights restricted. But the speeches on the floor of the House tell a different story with Rep. Smith explicitly identifying refusal of entry, and keeping sex offenders confined within the U.S., as a clearly desirable goal and preferred outcome. | |||
*::Purports to provide “constructive notice” to sex offenders which will include a good-faith attempt to advise them prior to their departure if the Office believes they are likely to be refused entry (as a result of foreign government notification). It exempts itself from such reporting when the sex offender is the target of an ongoing investigation, in which case he may well be walking into a trap set by the U.S. in conjunction with a foreign government or NGO. This vague assurance (with no real teeth) is one of the few “bones” being thrown to those with constitutional reservations about this bill. It was one of the tepid “compromises” hammered out before House passage to which Smith could point as emblematic of both the unanimity and “bipartisanship” behind this issue. | |||
*::Purports to provide an appeals process although one which appears to offer no actual remedy (coming, as it would, after foreign entry and travel had already been refused) and is entirely ex-parte that is, the sex offender is not present during the process and the “Angel Watchers” word is final. | |||
*::Provides “technical assistance” to foreign authorities to enable them to participate in the global program. | |||
*::In part, appears simply to be codifying practices '''already in place''' within the U.S. government in cooperation with Interpol and other nations. By that I mean: for some unknown (to this writer) period of time but at least since March, 2013, the U.S. has '''already been providing''' data about child sex offenders to those governments to which they travel as it is able to do so. Many such U.S. policies have been introduced “administratively” i.e. under broad discretionary powers of federal departments, rather than by law. This timeframe coincides with Interpol's stated (in 2013) timetable for the implementation of its own program to issue “Green Notices”,<ref> INTERPOL Washington FY 2011 Performance Budget Congressional Submission | |||
http://www.justice.gov/jmd/2011justification/pdf/fy11-usncb-justification.pdf | http://www.justice.gov/jmd/2011justification/pdf/fy11-usncb-justification.pdf | ||
</ref> <ref>The Interpol 'Green Notice' To provide warnings and intelligence about persons who have committed criminal offences and are likely to repeat these crimes in other countries. http://www.interpol.int/Crime-areas/Crimes-against-children/Sex-offenders</ref> <ref> Note: the press release from Interpol in which it announced the implementation of its system of worldwide alerts, issued in the early part of 2013, with an announced rollout date of March 2013, has simply disappeared from the web (but with different content under an identical URL [the link immediately above this one]), as best this author can tell. If someone has had the prescience to save it, I would be most grateful to receive a copy.</ref> to be available worldwide, when ''sex offenders'' travel internationally. This current practice lacks several crucial elements which they wish to implement and which this law will achieve: | </ref> <ref>The Interpol 'Green Notice' To provide warnings and intelligence about persons who have committed criminal offences and are likely to repeat these crimes in other countries. http://www.interpol.int/Crime-areas/Crimes-against-children/Sex-offenders</ref> <ref> Note: the press release from Interpol in which it announced the implementation of its system of worldwide alerts, issued in the early part of 2013, with an announced rollout date of March 2013, has simply disappeared from the web (but with different content under an identical URL [the link immediately above this one]), as best this author can tell. If someone has had the prescience to save it, I would be most grateful to receive a copy.</ref> to be available worldwide, when ''sex offenders'' travel internationally. This current practice lacks several crucial elements which they wish to implement and which this law will achieve: | ||
:# | :#Makes more rigorous and thorough the process of monitoring the movement of sex offenders. | ||
:# | :#Gets the information to foreign governments well in advance of the sex offender's arrival so as to better enable the foreign country to refuse them entry which is, after all, the explicit goal of the bill's author (in his remarks to The House). | ||
:# | :#Codifies the practice of providing this information to foreign countries and demonstrates (to their minds) both a degree of “due process” extended to the sex offender as well as establishing the framework for a reciprocal international agreement. | ||
:# | :#Current practice does not provide for the criminalization of the sex offender to travel without having provided government with advance travel intentions (UNLESS they are resident in a “SORNA-compliant” state, in which case it is already a legal obligation). In this way, International Megan's Law can be seen to be an end-run around most individual states' failure to comply with the SORNA requirements of the Adam Walsh Act. [Note: SORNA refers to the “Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act” which is part of the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act (AWA). SORNA provisions were a sweeping expansion of federal laws and restrictions imposed on registered sex offenders and represented a major incursion into what had once been almost entirely the sole authority of individual states. States failing to comply with Adam Walsh/SORNA face losing federal monies as a consequence. Years after its passage, most states - in a rare instance of “push-back” which can be seen as an index of the Fed's extreme overreach with AWA - still have not complied with all the law's elements. Nevertheless, sex offenders in those non-compliant states are still subject to many of AWA's provisions.] <ref> "The Adam Walsh Act Study Guide" by Derek Logue. November 13, 2013. http://www.oncefallen.com/AdamWalshAct.html</ref> | ||
<span id="The Exterminating Angel In the Driver's Seat"></span> | |||
'''The “Exterminating Angel” In the Driver's Seat''' | '''The “Exterminating Angel” In the Driver's Seat''' | ||
This is an extraordinarily powerful law that will further degrade the liberty and citizenship of those Americans who have once been convicted of any kind of “child sexual offense” (including those who were, themselves, children at the time of its commission), permanently exiling them to within the borders of the U.S., regardless of their reason or need to travel and regardless of the number of years that have elapsed since their conviction and completion of sentence. Because of the judicial and legislative conceit that sex offender registration laws are “civil and not criminal”, they have no right of appeal in challenging their status and are subject to any additional regulations and restrictions which an election-year politician might imagine (2014 being such a year) because they are not protected by ''ex post facto'' limitations on punishment. | This is an extraordinarily powerful law that will further degrade the liberty and citizenship of those Americans who have once been convicted of any kind of “child sexual offense” (including those who were, themselves, children at the time of its commission), permanently exiling them to within the borders of the U.S., regardless of their reason or need to travel and regardless of the number of years that have elapsed since their conviction and completion of sentence. Because of the judicial and legislative conceit that sex offender registration laws are “civil and not criminal”, they have no right of appeal in challenging their status and are subject to any additional regulations and restrictions which an election-year politician might imagine (2014 being such a year) because they are not protected by ''ex post facto'' limitations on punishment. | ||
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'''PART II''' | '''PART II''' | ||
<span id="The Actors:"></span> | |||
'''The Actors:''' | '''The Actors:''' | ||
<span id="The National Security State"></span> | |||
'''The National Security State, Post Snowden and Greenwald (& Manning & Assange & Scahill & Binney & Drake)''' | '''The National Security State, Post Snowden and Greenwald (& Manning & Assange & Scahill & Binney & Drake)''' | ||
It has been one year since the revelations of Edward Snowden in which a shocked world began to learn of the scope and extent of U.S. government surveillance upon the world's citizens, one which is conducted without regard for either their privacy interests or their capacity for terrorism. These bombshell revelations have made absolutely clear that the U.S. has targeted the concept of privacy, itself, and as a concept, both too 'quaint' and too inconvenient to the exigencies of fighting terrorism or, as we are coming to realize, ''crime''. | It has been one year since the revelations of Edward Snowden in which a shocked world began to learn of the scope and extent of U.S. government surveillance upon the world's citizens, one which is conducted without regard for either their privacy interests or their capacity for terrorism. These bombshell revelations have made absolutely clear that the U.S. has targeted the concept of privacy, itself, and as a concept, both too 'quaint' and too inconvenient to the exigencies of fighting terrorism or, as we are coming to realize, ''crime''. | ||
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http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/21/us/facial-scanning-is-making-gains-in-surveillance.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0</ref> | http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/21/us/facial-scanning-is-making-gains-in-surveillance.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0</ref> | ||
<span id="The Five Eyes"></span> | |||
'''The “Five Eyes”'''<ref> "The Five Eyes”, Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_Eyes</ref> <ref>“The Five Eyes Fact Sheet” https://www.privacyinternational.org/blog/the-five-eyes-fact-sheet</ref> <ref>“UKUSA ('Five Eyes') Agreement”, the multilateral agreement for cooperation in signals intelligence between the United Kingdom, the United. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UKUSA_Agreement</ref> | '''The “Five Eyes”'''<ref> "The Five Eyes”, Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_Eyes</ref> <ref>“The Five Eyes Fact Sheet” https://www.privacyinternational.org/blog/the-five-eyes-fact-sheet</ref> <ref>“UKUSA ('Five Eyes') Agreement”, the multilateral agreement for cooperation in signals intelligence between the United Kingdom, the United. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UKUSA_Agreement</ref> | ||
We have known for some years that the [[Anglophone nations]]: [[U.S.]], [[U.K.]], [[Canada]], [[Australia]] and [[New Zealand]] (known, eerily, within intelligence circles, as the''' “Five Eyes” '''), have legalistically circumvented irksome restrictions on monitoring one's own citizens by entering into a multilateral pact in which each acts on behalf of the other, much like in the Hitchcock film, “Strangers On A Train” in which two strangers agree to kill one another's problematic family members. Having spied on each other's citizens, they would simply hand-off the purloined data to their “rightful owners”. Very clever! When the cover for this arrangement was blown several years ago it was, at the time, a shocking revelation of governments at their most cynical (or so we thought). This was, of course, before the Snowden revelations which would break all previous records for justified outrage. | |||
[Note: since Snowden, we now know that the NSA appears no longer constrained within the limits of the “Five Eyes” agreement, i.e. the need for such requisite 'plausible deniability', since we now know it also simply spies on Americans, directly. Regardless, there is every reason to believe that the “Five Eyes” continue to enthusiastically harvest information using the clever 'Strangers On a Train' method.] | [Note: since Snowden, we now know that the NSA appears no longer constrained within the limits of the “Five Eyes” agreement, i.e. the need for such requisite 'plausible deniability', since we now know it also simply spies on Americans, directly. Regardless, there is every reason to believe that the “Five Eyes” continue to enthusiastically harvest information using the clever 'Strangers On a Train' method.] | ||
<span id="Extending the Security State To Sex Offenders"></span> | |||
'''Extending the Security State To Sex Offenders''' | '''Extending the Security State To Sex Offenders''' | ||
It is now widely known that “The '''Five Eyes'''” block sex offenders from entering each others' countries (and perhaps other nations, as well) and has been the case for a number of years now, although one imagines it having become more thoroughgoing, over time. This is supported both by anecdotal reports of those having been refused entry as well as smidgeons of information (with as few details as possible) the governments provide to the press. | It is now widely known that “The '''Five Eyes'''” block sex offenders from entering each others' countries (and perhaps other nations, as well) and has been the case for a number of years now, although one imagines it having become more thoroughgoing, over time. This is supported both by anecdotal reports of those having been refused entry as well as smidgeons of information (with as few details as possible) the governments provide to the press. | ||
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<span id="Interpol's Big Makeover"></span> | |||
'''Interpol's Big Makeover''' <ref>“Interpol accused of undermining justice. Governments allegedly misused global police force to crack down on political opponents and | '''Interpol's Big Makeover''' <ref>“Interpol accused of undermining justice. Governments allegedly misused global police force to crack down on political opponents and | ||
human rights activists.” http://www.aljazeera.com/humanrights/2014/03/interpol-accused-undermining-justice-201432010467639126.html</ref> <ref>“INTERPOL must protect its systems against misuse, to ensure its vital crime fighting tools are not abused against refugees, journalists and peaceful political activists.” http://www.fairtrials.org/interpol</ref> <ref>"Strengthening Respect For Human Rights, Strengthening INTERPOL” http://www.fairtrials.org/wp-content/uploads/Strengthening-respectfor-human-rights-strengthening-INTERPOL5.pdf</ref> <ref>Mission Creep: “Interpol hopes physical border security will solve virtual borders”, ZDNET, June 5, 2013 | human rights activists.” http://www.aljazeera.com/humanrights/2014/03/interpol-accused-undermining-justice-201432010467639126.html</ref> <ref>“INTERPOL must protect its systems against misuse, to ensure its vital crime fighting tools are not abused against refugees, journalists and peaceful political activists.” http://www.fairtrials.org/interpol</ref> <ref>"Strengthening Respect For Human Rights, Strengthening INTERPOL” http://www.fairtrials.org/wp-content/uploads/Strengthening-respectfor-human-rights-strengthening-INTERPOL5.pdf</ref> <ref>Mission Creep: “Interpol hopes physical border security will solve virtual borders”, ZDNET, June 5, 2013 | ||
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<ref>SPD detective in line to lead Interpol fight against child abuse” Interpol News, December 12, 2012 http://interpol.einnews.com/article/127757755/fMTD1GLkqzCkXJnD</ref> | <ref>SPD detective in line to lead Interpol fight against child abuse” Interpol News, December 12, 2012 http://interpol.einnews.com/article/127757755/fMTD1GLkqzCkXJnD</ref> | ||
Before 9/11, Interpol had been seen as a backwater of an international agency whose continued relevance was in grave doubt. Most people had little or no awareness of it except, perhaps, as a global police force last heard from during the Cold War. | Before 9/11, Interpol had been seen as a backwater of an international agency whose continued relevance was in grave doubt. Most people had little or no awareness of it except, perhaps, as a global police force last heard from during the Cold War. | ||
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<span id="The Special Role of the Media In Driving the Sex Panic"></span> | |||
'''The Special Role of the Media In Driving the Sex Panic''' | '''The Special Role of the Media In Driving the Sex Panic''' | ||
''“News that shocks, scandalizes, or evokes fear and dread brings temporary relief from the tedium of modern life.” - Georg Simmel'' | ''“News that shocks, scandalizes, or evokes fear and dread brings temporary relief from the tedium of modern life.” - Georg Simmel'' | ||
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Several years ago, during a rare moment in which I watched CNN, its purported business travel “expert”, Richard Quest, triumphantly boasted about his (and others') campaign to conscript business travelers, hotel desk clerks, flight attendants, Hollywood celebrities, etc., to report any suspicions which they might have of “Western tourists” who strikes them as a bit dodgy and who may, possibly, be “sexually exploiting” native (and, invariably, “vulnerable”) youth. Any pretense of journalistic objectivity went out the window when he exhorted his viewers to contact law enforcement authorities or organizations working against child prostitution “immediately” with their suspicions. | Several years ago, during a rare moment in which I watched CNN, its purported business travel “expert”, Richard Quest, triumphantly boasted about his (and others') campaign to conscript business travelers, hotel desk clerks, flight attendants, Hollywood celebrities, etc., to report any suspicions which they might have of “Western tourists” who strikes them as a bit dodgy and who may, possibly, be “sexually exploiting” native (and, invariably, “vulnerable”) youth. Any pretense of journalistic objectivity went out the window when he exhorted his viewers to contact law enforcement authorities or organizations working against child prostitution “immediately” with their suspicions. | ||
In an interview with the Executive Director of one of those organizations, Carol Smolenski of ECPAT,<ref>“The ECPAT 'Code'”, http://www.thecode.org “Carol Smolenski on Quest Means Business”, https://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=873830195282</ref> he expressed shock and incredulity that any corporation would not take the “ECPAT Code of Conduct” pledge that commits companies to: insert ECPAT's rules of sexual conduct into their own employee manuals, rewrite employee contracts with child sexual misconduct clauses(!), provide specific ECPAT training to their employees, report back annually to ECPAT with “progress” they have made (as well as to pay them steep annual fees) and adopt a policy that would require their traveling executives to act as police informants on other travelers. | In an interview with the Executive Director of one of those organizations, Carol Smolenski of [[ECPAT]],<ref>“The ECPAT 'Code'”, http://www.thecode.org “Carol Smolenski on Quest Means Business”, https://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=873830195282</ref> he expressed shock and incredulity that any corporation would not take the “ECPAT Code of Conduct” pledge that commits companies to: insert ECPAT's rules of sexual conduct into their own employee manuals, rewrite employee contracts with child sexual misconduct clauses(!), provide specific ECPAT training to their employees, report back annually to ECPAT with “progress” they have made (as well as to pay them steep annual fees) and adopt a policy that would require their traveling executives to act as police informants on other travelers. | ||
In his loudest, most outraged voice, (which is to say, his normal speaking voice) Quest declared “Hold on, Carol, isn't it time to begin ''naming and shaming'' those companies that have been invited to sign the code but have refused to do so? You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs!” | In his loudest, most outraged voice, (which is to say, his normal speaking voice) Quest declared “Hold on, Carol, isn't it time to begin ''naming and shaming'' those companies that have been invited to sign the code but have refused to do so? You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs!” | ||
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<span id="Non-Governmental Organizations"></span> | |||
'''Non-Governmental Organizations''' | '''Non-Governmental Organizations''' | ||
While varying widely in size and influence, those | While varying widely in size and influence, those [[NGO]]s taking, as their brief, the saving of children from sexual abuse constitute a vast growth industry. Some, like ECPAT, are enormous with chapters and affiliates, as well as the ears of lawmakers and celebrities, worldwide. | ||
Somaly Mam <ref> “Somaly Mam: The Holy Saint (and Sinner) of Sex Trafficking”, Newsweek, May 21, 2014 | Somaly Mam <ref> “Somaly Mam: The Holy Saint (and Sinner) of Sex Trafficking”, Newsweek, May 21, 2014 | ||
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One expat,<ref>“Pedophile!” http://ltocambodia.blogspot.ch/search/label/pedophiles</ref> with a Cambodian wife (and two children), recounted how he had been followed and photographed by one tourist - infused with self-righteous anger - who accused of him of being a pedophile while he was out with his own two children. She told him she was going to post his pictures on the Internet, identifying him as a “pedo”. Such is the prevalence of the hysteria which now grips much of the world and which diverts scarce resources away from genuine social ills. | One expat,<ref>“Pedophile!” http://ltocambodia.blogspot.ch/search/label/pedophiles</ref> with a Cambodian wife (and two children), recounted how he had been followed and photographed by one tourist - infused with self-righteous anger - who accused of him of being a pedophile while he was out with his own two children. She told him she was going to post his pictures on the Internet, identifying him as a “pedo”. Such is the prevalence of the hysteria which now grips much of the world and which diverts scarce resources away from genuine social ills. | ||
As he wrote, recounting the event: “If this Italian woman isn’t simply a racist, her mind has probably been twisted by the constant stream of sensational, repetitive and often wildly-overstated stories of western pedophiles and abused children in | As he wrote, recounting the event: “If this Italian woman isn’t simply a racist, her mind has probably been twisted by the constant stream of sensational, repetitive and often wildly-overstated stories of western pedophiles and abused children in Cambodia. And not only by the western press but by NGOs that profit from it and feed the beast with exaggerated stats and a constant stream of rehashed horrors stories that keep the funds flowing and the presses humming.” | ||
Cambodia. And not only by the western press but by NGOs that profit from it and feed the beast with exaggerated stats and a constant stream of rehashed horrors stories that keep the funds flowing and the presses humming.” | |||
An Australian woman who ran another NGO,<ref>“They claim good intentions, but more than one Australian expat in Phnom Penh’s charity sector has been feeling the heat over questionable conduct.” Stephanie Wood, Sydney Morning Herald, February 15, 2014 http://www.smh.com.au/national/dodge-city-20140210-32amy.html</ref> one with an enviable foreign donor base, recently fled the country after Cambodian police raided her Phnom Penh orphanage based on the stories of physical beatings and rampant neglect reported by kids who had run away. They found children who suffered from malnutrition, tuberculosis and anemia. All endured infestations of head-lice. Human waste went unremoved. Oddly, some of the little boys in the orphanage's care were dressed, coiffed, and fingernail-painted like little girls. | An Australian woman who ran another NGO,<ref>“They claim good intentions, but more than one Australian expat in Phnom Penh’s charity sector has been feeling the heat over questionable conduct.” Stephanie Wood, Sydney Morning Herald, February 15, 2014 http://www.smh.com.au/national/dodge-city-20140210-32amy.html</ref> one with an enviable foreign donor base, recently fled the country after Cambodian police raided her Phnom Penh orphanage based on the stories of physical beatings and rampant neglect reported by kids who had run away. They found children who suffered from malnutrition, tuberculosis and anemia. All endured infestations of head-lice. Human waste went unremoved. Oddly, some of the little boys in the orphanage's care were dressed, coiffed, and fingernail-painted like little girls. | ||
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<span id="Congress"></span> | |||
'''Congress''' | '''Congress''' | ||
Congressman Chris Smith, a Republican, is the author of International Megan's Law. Republicans are more likely to author anti-sex offender laws than Democrats but it takes very little for Democrats to hop on those bandwagons, especially when it is an election year, as this year is. The 2014 mid-term election sees all U.S. House seats and 33 out of the 100 Senate seats up for grabs. Little wonder that a fully internationalized | Congressman Chris Smith, a Republican, is the author of International Megan's Law. Republicans are more likely to author anti-sex offender laws than Democrats but it takes very little for Democrats to hop on those bandwagons, especially when it is an election year, as this year is. The 2014 mid-term election sees all U.S. House seats and 33 out of the 100 Senate seats up for grabs. Little wonder that a fully internationalized “''Megan''” has passed the House this year! | ||
The videos available of House “debates” on International Megan's Law betray no sense of discord between the two parties. They are all in agreement. Their assumptions about sex offenders obviously warrant no debate nor can they imagine a sex offender traveling outside of the U.S. for anything but “predatory” purposes. Surely, no “sex offender” would have a job which takes them overseas nor family or friends who would delight in his visit. For our elected representatives, that's just a given. | |||
The videos available of House “debates” on International Megan's Law betray no sense of discord between the two parties. They are all in agreement. Their assumptions about sex offenders obviously warrant no debate nor can they imagine a sex offender traveling outside of the U.S. for anything but “predatory” purposes. Surely, no “sex offender” would have a job which takes them overseas nor family or friends who would delight in his visit. For our elected representatives, that's just a ''given''. | |||
Nor does one get a sense that anyone in The House either questions the legitimacy or premise of this bill nor entertains any reservations about its constitutionality. In other words, it is the perfect opportunity for them to demonstrate their “good faith” and “bipartisanship”. | Nor does one get a sense that anyone in The House either questions the legitimacy or premise of this bill nor entertains any reservations about its constitutionality. In other words, it is the perfect opportunity for them to demonstrate their “good faith” and “bipartisanship”. | ||
In their more candid moments, it is clear that lawmakers routinely promise constituents the opportunity to put sex offenders back in jail (and on the thinnest of pretenses). Any slip-up in the confusing minefield of regulations through which the “sex offender” must step offers another opportunity to “put them back where they belong.” | In their more candid moments, it is clear that lawmakers routinely promise constituents the opportunity to put sex offenders back in jail (and on the thinnest of pretenses). Any slip-up in the confusing minefield of regulations through which the “sex offender” must step offers another opportunity to “put them back where they belong.” | ||
This is the cynical reason behind these laws, the message behind each of which is clear: "We didn't get to put you away for life the first time, so we're going to try like hell to do it now!" | This is the cynical reason behind these laws, the message behind each of which is clear: "We didn't get to put you away for life the first time, so we're going to try like hell to do it now!" | ||
This bill, as with all of the “civil, not criminal” sex offender “civil regulations” is careful not to suggest that its purpose lies in further punishing the sex offender; only in regulating his behavior for the interest of public safety. Because to suggest otherwise would be to force the courts to strike it down. Better that the lawmakers should “wink” at the judiciary who will, | |||
This bill, as with all of the “civil, not criminal” sex offender “civil regulations” is careful not to suggest that its purpose lies in further punishing the sex offender; only in regulating his behavior for the interest of public safety. Because to suggest otherwise would be to force the courts to strike it down. Better that the lawmakers should “wink” at the judiciary who will, in all likelihood, accommodatingly “wink” in return. | |||
We await The Senate's response to this bill while recognizing that, so far, no one (to my knowledge) has lost an election yet because they were seen as being “too hard” on sex offenders! | |||
---- | ---- | ||
'''PART III:''' | |||
PART III: | <span id="An Inescapable Conclusion"></span> | ||
An Inescapable Conclusion | '''An Inescapable Conclusion''' | ||
Would the “Underground Railway”, a covert (and dangerous) network facilitating the escape of slaves in mid-nineteenth century America, be possible today given the seamless integration of a vastly more intrusive government with the now ubiquitous technology of surveillance? | Would the “Underground Railway”, a covert (and dangerous) network facilitating the escape of slaves in mid-nineteenth century America, be possible today given the seamless integration of a vastly more intrusive government with the now ubiquitous technology of surveillance? | ||
Eben Moglen, Professor of Law and Legal History at Columbia University and noted advocate for Internet freedom, anonymity and robust safeguards against government intrusion, has recently asked, in a piece in The Guardian, “What if the underground railroad had been constantly under efforts of penetration by the United States government on behalf of slavery?” | |||
Eben Moglen, Professor of Law and Legal History at Columbia University and noted advocate for Internet freedom, anonymity and robust safeguards against government intrusion, has recently asked, in a piece in The Guardian, ''“What if the underground railroad had been constantly under efforts of penetration by the United States government on behalf of slavery?”'' | |||
Indeed! And given the application of today's technology to those efforts? The unavoidable conclusion should leave us extremely uneasy. | Indeed! And given the application of today's technology to those efforts? The unavoidable conclusion should leave us extremely uneasy. | ||
When those Nineteenth Century Americans of conscience could correctly perceive slavery as the great evil that it was and were willing to expose themselves to considerable risks in undermining it as a system by covertly lending essential aid to those attempting to escape its clutches, they were sacrificing their immediate safety and security for the cause of liberty, a cause to which they recognized they owed much. | When those Nineteenth Century Americans of conscience could correctly perceive slavery as the great evil that it was and were willing to expose themselves to considerable risks in undermining it as a system by covertly lending essential aid to those attempting to escape its clutches, they were sacrificing their immediate safety and security for the cause of liberty, a cause to which they recognized they owed much. | ||
A few brave people, today, recognize that a modern injustice, now being deployed worldwide, threatens to undermine the cause of liberty. Brave, because any attempt to speak up for the rights of sex offenders is widely viewed as tantamount, itself, to being an admission of pedophilia, with angry denunciations swiftly heaped upon anyone so courageous (or so foolhardy). | A few brave people, today, recognize that a modern injustice, now being deployed worldwide, threatens to undermine the cause of liberty. Brave, because any attempt to speak up for the rights of sex offenders is widely viewed as tantamount, itself, to being an admission of pedophilia, with angry denunciations swiftly heaped upon anyone so courageous (or so foolhardy). | ||
There are those who are genuinely outraged at this injustice but who do not, understandably, possess the necessary confidence to openly challenge either it or the hysteria from which it arose. | There are those who are genuinely outraged at this injustice but who do not, understandably, possess the necessary confidence to openly challenge either it or the hysteria from which it arose. | ||
It seems safe to say that sex offenders have no underground railway through which to flee an often miserable existence. They are not handed-off, from one station-master along its route to the next, to be hidden in a succession of cleverly concealed compartments, or skillfully guided through an elaborate network of tunnels by those willing to risk their own freedom in its perilous operation. | It seems safe to say that sex offenders have no underground railway through which to flee an often miserable existence. They are not handed-off, from one station-master along its route to the next, to be hidden in a succession of cleverly concealed compartments, or skillfully guided through an elaborate network of tunnels by those willing to risk their own freedom in its perilous operation. | ||
And while there may be, today, few souls brave enough to comprise such a network, it is also clear that they would be right to be skeptical of its potential for success, given the ruthless thoroughness of our government in leaving few remaining opportunities for concealment. The extraordinary power of technology to dramatically expand communication, to improve safety and security and to enrich lives with a wealth of information also empowers government to eliminate blind-spots within its vigilant field-of-view and to liberally distribute, in effect, identity tracking and anonymity-destroying “choke-points” in a proliferation once unimaginable. | |||
We have reached a point where it appears extremely difficult for anyone, and especially “sex offenders”, to run away. If this is no longer an option, then perhaps more people will put greater effort into fighting these terrible laws and the delusions which give rise to them. | And while there may be, today, few souls brave enough to comprise such a network, it is also clear that they would be right to be skeptical of its potential for success, given the ruthless thoroughness of our government in leaving few remaining opportunities for concealment. The extraordinary power of technology to dramatically expand communication, to improve safety and security and to enrich lives with a wealth of information also empowers government to eliminate blind-spots within its vigilant field-of-view and to liberally distribute, in effect, identity tracking and anonymity-destroying “choke-points” in a proliferation once unimaginable. | ||
We have reached a point where it appears extremely difficult for anyone, and especially “sex offenders”, to run away. If this is no longer an option, then perhaps more people will put greater effort into fighting these terrible laws and the delusions which give rise to them.<ref> U.S. Marshall's Press release reveals program: “International roundup INFRA-RED and the G8 Wanted Child Sex Offender initiatives.” | |||
“As we continue to work together - across borders - it is becoming increasingly hard for criminals to flee our shores and find refuge overseas.” , | |||
U.S. Marshalls Service press release, “One of America's Most Wanted. http://www.usmarshals.gov/news/chron/2011/012011.htm</ref> | |||
The many “gaps” which once limited government's ability to see all that it desired, and essential to the viability of any underground railway, have been gradually filled-in through the liberal application of the same stunning technological breakthroughs that gave us YouTube and instantaneous global inter-connectivity. | The many “gaps” which once limited government's ability to see all that it desired, and essential to the viability of any underground railway, have been gradually filled-in through the liberal application of the same stunning technological breakthroughs that gave us YouTube and instantaneous global inter-connectivity. | ||
The design goals of the “panopticon”, a radical nineteenth Century approach to arranging prison cells so as to afford continuous visual monitoring of as many prisoners as possible (while utilizing as few staff as possible) have now been achieved electronically - yet deployed universally. That is, the power of omniscience is no longer limited in its application | The design goals of the “panopticon”, a radical nineteenth Century approach to arranging prison cells so as to afford continuous visual monitoring of as many prisoners as possible (while utilizing as few staff as possible) have now been achieved ''electronically'' - yet deployed ''universally''. That is, the power of omniscience is no longer limited in its application to prisons or prisoners. It now extends, through digital technology, to everyone, everywhere. The digital revolution has succeeded where architectural engineering proved impractical. | ||
Government has created this ''virtual'' panopticon because it now '''can''' do so. The technology which makes ubiquitous its ability to see and to hear all has become very cheap, very easy and “off the shelf”. | |||
Regardless of the capabilities of government to crush dissent and to bring all within its field-of-view (and its reach) to its submission, there remains the impulse of free peoples of conscience to support the liberty of their fellows against the blind tyranny of their government. | |||
Today, there is, at least within some segments of society, an emerging moral dissonance which finds in the escalating sex offender hysteria resonances with the guilt many were beginning to feel for slavery in the Nineteenth Century. | Today, there is, at least within some segments of society, an emerging moral dissonance which finds in the escalating sex offender hysteria resonances with the guilt many were beginning to feel for slavery in the Nineteenth Century. | ||
Again, here's Eben Moglen: ''“But there is a second constitutional tradition. It was made by people who were brought here against their will, or who were born into slavery, and who had to run away, here, in order to be free. This second constitutional tradition is slightly different in its nature from the first, although it conduces, eventually, to similar conclusions.'' | |||
''Running away from slavery is a group activity. Running away from slavery requires the assistance of those who believe that slavery is wrong. People in the United States have forgotten how much of our constitutional tradition was made in the contact between people who needed to run away in order to be free and people who knew that they needed to help, because slavery is wrong.'' | |||
''We have now forgotten that in the summer of 1854, when Anthony Burns – who had run away from slavery in Richmond, Virginia – was returned to slavery by a state judge acting as a federal commissioner under the second fugitive slave act, Boston itself had to be placed under martial law for three whole days. Federal troops lined the streets, as Burns was marched down to Boston Harbor and put aboard a ship to be sent back to slavery. If Boston had not been held down by force, it would have risen. | |||
'' | |||
''When Frederick Douglass ran away from slavery in 1838, he had the help of his beloved Anna Murray, who sent him part of her savings and the sailor's clothing that he wore. He had the help of a free black seaman who gave him identity papers. Many dedicated people risked much to help him reach New York.'' | |||
''Our constitutional tradition is not merely contained in the negative rights found in the bill of rights. It is also contained in the history of a communal, often formally illegal, struggle for liberty against slavery. This part of our tradition says that liberty from oppressive control must be accorded people everywhere, as a right. It says that slavery is simply wrong, that it cannot be tolerated or justified by the master's fear or need for security.'' | |||
''So the constitutional tradition Americans should be defending now is a tradition that extends far beyond whatever boundary the fourth amendment has in space, place, or time. Americans should be defending not merely a right to be free from the oppressive attentions of the national government, not merely fighting for something embodied in the due process clause of the 14th amendment. We should rather be fighting against the procedures of totalitarianism because slavery is wrong. Because fastening the surveillance of the master on the whole human race is wrong. Because providing the energy, the money, the technology, the system for subduing everybody's privacy around the world – for destroying sanctuary in American freedom of speech – is wrong.” | |||
'' | |||
<span id="Restless Natives"></span> | |||
'''Restless Natives''' | |||
It has become increasingly apparent, in recent years, that the United States can no longer countenance the possibility that some of its sex offenders may wish, simply, to “vote with their feet” and ''quit its borders'' altogether, and permanently. That some would now be willing to do so through the irrevocable act of relinquishing ones citizenship, but one which is vastly degraded beyond that of other Americans and which, uniquely, imposes upon them ceaseless and escalating demands that makes their lives increasingly unbearable, could hardly come as a surprise. | |||
It is a curious development that ''non''-sex offender Americans are now giving up their citizenship in record numbers and for a variety of reasons, not the least being a deep and growing dissatisfaction with the increasingly ominous and illiberal path down which their government seems, inexorably, to be descending. Many intelligent, educated and rational people, indeed, many ''students of history'', are rightly concerned as to where that path appears leading.<ref>U.S. Marshalls Service press release, “One of America's Most Wanted. http://www.usmarshals.gov/news/chron/2011/012011.htm | |||
“Record Numbers Renounce U.S. Citizenship---And Many Aren't Counted”, Robert Wood, Forbes, May 3, 2014 http://www.forbes.com/sites/robertwood/2014/05/03/americans-are-renouncing-citizenship-at-record-pace-and-many-arent-even-counted</ref> | |||
So we should not be very surprised to learn that the U.S., using every agency at its disposal (including the Internal Revenue Service) have made the act of relinquishment of ones citizenship difficult, under the best of circumstances and, for the sex offender, nearly impossible. | So we should not be very surprised to learn that the U.S., using every agency at its disposal (including the Internal Revenue Service) have made the act of relinquishment of ones citizenship difficult, under the best of circumstances and, for the sex offender, nearly impossible. | ||
But now, sex offenders find that their right to take leave of their country, even briefly, say, for a few weeks on holiday in Spain or a one-week business trip to Hong Kong, may be about to become as verboten as living within two thousand feet of a school or park in California. | |||
If passed, the enforcement of International Megan's Law - given the digital dragnet which now swathes and encompasses the globe (and dominated by the sole remaining superpower), and with Homeland Security staffing levels at staggeringly high, post-9-11 levels - are confidently assured. | But now, sex offenders find that their right to take leave of their country, ''even briefly'', say, for a few weeks on holiday in Spain or a one-week business trip to Hong Kong, may be about to become as verboten as living within two thousand feet of a school or park in California. | ||
Presumption Of Future Guilt Of Those Said To Be Victimizers and of Eternal Saintliness of Those Said To Be Victims | |||
Apart from the question of whether or not this law would be effective in “eliminating the demand for child sexual abuse” in foreign countries (and its constitutionally dubious assertion of “jurisdiction expansion” which the law implicitly endorses and which must be [but is not being] vigorously challenged) is the question at the heart of the film “The Minority Report”. The trope of “pre-crime” and the unquestioned assertion of its legitimacy - as a validly actionable intelligence signal (although one with an appallingly low signal-to-noise ratio) - has yet to be successfully challenged on a constitutional basis in its use against sex offenders, though many civil libertarians believe it to be manifestly unconstitutional. | If passed, the enforcement of International Megan's Law - given the digital dragnet which now swathes and encompasses the globe (and dominated by the sole remaining ''superpower''), and with Homeland Security staffing levels at staggeringly high, post-9-11 levels - are confidently assured. <ref> "Has The Department of Homeland Security Become America’s Standing Army? If the United States is a police state, then the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is its national police force, with all the brutality, ineptitude and corruption such a role implies." Mint Press News, John Whitehead, June 17, 2014 http://www.mintpressnews.com/department-homeland-security-become-americas-standing-army/192576</ref> | ||
<span id="Presumption Of Future Guilt"></span> | |||
'''Presumption Of Future Guilt Of Those Said To Be Victimizers and of Eternal Saintliness of Those Said To Be Victims''' | |||
Apart from the question of whether or not this law would be effective in “eliminating the demand for child sexual abuse” in foreign countries (and its constitutionally dubious assertion of “jurisdiction expansion” which the law implicitly endorses and which must be [but is not being] vigorously challenged) is the question at the heart of the film “The Minority Report”. The trope of “pre-crime” and the unquestioned assertion of its legitimacy - as a validly actionable intelligence signal (although one with an appallingly low signal-to-noise ratio) - has yet to be ''successfully'' challenged on a constitutional basis in its use against sex offenders, though many civil libertarians believe it to be ''manifestly'' unconstitutional. | |||
There is, to most legal scholars, a great, red, flashing neon sign which says “You Must Not Punish People For Crimes They Haven't Committed (even if you believe them capable of doing so)” but which American citizens and Supreme Court Justices alike, in a massive display of tribal solidarity, have chosen to ignore, and out of a dangerous misperception of threat and a perverse sense of criminological expedience. | There is, to most legal scholars, a great, red, flashing neon sign which says “You Must Not Punish People For Crimes They Haven't Committed (even if you believe them capable of doing so)” but which American citizens and Supreme Court Justices alike, in a massive display of tribal solidarity, have chosen to ignore, and out of a dangerous misperception of threat and a perverse sense of criminological expedience. | ||
If our citizens are prone to believing the very worst of those cast out as child sex offenders, then they are, in equal measure, predisposed to imbuing in their ostensible victims, as well as in those who claim to be their selfless supporters, the virtue of unassailable honesty and the probity of saintliness. | If our citizens are prone to believing the very worst of those cast out as child sex offenders, then they are, in equal measure, predisposed to imbuing in their ostensible victims, as well as in those who claim to be their selfless supporters, the virtue of unassailable honesty and the probity of saintliness. | ||
Hardly more Manichean could be its view of the players in this drama. They exist as caricatures, the product of visions heavily refracted through the zeitgeist. The accolades showered upon those said to be childhood's defenders have no upper limit in ''effusiveness'' and the condemnations heaped upon those said to be its perpetrators know no ''attainable depths''. | |||
Most educated people now know that there weren't tens of thousands, let alone hundreds of thousands, of children being abducted by crazed sex demons in the U.S. in any of the years during which those ridiculous claims were made (back in the 1980's). In fact, there weren't even “thousands” or even “hundreds”. And yet, dramatically more punitive statutes, still on the books, exist on the strength of those frightening numbers to assuage an alarmed public. Those ''abuse-industrialists'' who lobbied for their passage were catapulted into lifetime careers and celebrated as heroes. In every salient respect, it is as if those invented victim statistics had never been revealed as lies. One might conclude that many simply want them to be true, in a world where evil is useful if only to define oneself ''in its opposition''. | |||
Sex offenders find themselves in the position, in attempting to challenge both unsubstantiated numbers and apocryphal legends, of having to prove that many of the things attributed to sex offenders, as a class, simply never happened. And of those horrors which did occur, they are baffled by a society's willingness to hold vast swathes of individuals responsible, ''en masse'', as if they, together, defined an amorphous monstrosity to be punished without distinction and undeserving of the slightest mercy. | |||
In the precise way in which we saw society fail to distinguish between radically different behaviors and people in the first wave of the sex abuse panic so many years ago, we see them just as willing to do the same now in order to prevent their freedom of movement. | In the precise way in which we saw society fail to distinguish between radically different behaviors and people in the first wave of the sex abuse panic so many years ago, we see them just as willing to do the same now in order to prevent their freedom of movement. | ||
The victimist agenda has been thoroughly and successfully propagated by academia, government funding, the U.N., impassioned N.G.O.'s and ratings-poisoned media barons (and baronesses). It has been adorned with the patina of "human rights" and represented as politically neutral. Indeed, this movement has benefited from a remarkably broad alliance of those on both the left and the right. But, whether consciously or not, in its bipartisan heart lies fear of liberty and its undervaluation. | |||
The ''victimist'' agenda has been thoroughly and successfully propagated by academia, government funding, the U.N., impassioned N.G.O.'s and ratings-poisoned media barons (and baronesses). It has been adorned with the patina of "human rights" and represented as politically neutral. Indeed, this movement has benefited from a remarkably broad alliance of those on both the left and the right. But, whether consciously or not, in its bipartisan heart lies fear of liberty and its undervaluation. | |||
This agenda has been wildly successful, almost regardless of where it has been implemented, whether in the first- or third-worlds. That it has been so enthusiastically embraced in the developing world has much to do with the conditions placed upon foreign aid assistance. | This agenda has been wildly successful, almost regardless of where it has been implemented, whether in the first- or third-worlds. That it has been so enthusiastically embraced in the developing world has much to do with the conditions placed upon foreign aid assistance. | ||
But it's more than that, too. If you scare people enough with lurid tales of the boogeyman and his designs upon their children and are willing to lie, distort and to create the phantoms necessary to sustain his mythology, they will tend to believe you, no matter their culture, no matter where they live and no matter their station in life. | But it's more than that, too. If you scare people enough with lurid tales of the boogeyman and his designs upon their children and are willing to lie, distort and to create the phantoms necessary to sustain his mythology, they will tend to believe you, no matter their culture, no matter where they live and no matter their station in life. | ||
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==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*[[ | *[[Portal:Boylove News Channel/Reform Sex Offender Laws]] | ||
*[[ | *[[International Megan's Law]] | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
*[https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/44284820/INTERNATIONAL%20MEGANS%20LAW.pdf DEAD END: The International Megan's Law Assault on Everyone's Freedom of Travel (original pdf)] | *[https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/44284820/INTERNATIONAL%20MEGANS%20LAW.pdf DEAD END: The International Megan's Law Assault on Everyone's Freedom of Travel (original pdf)] | ||
[[Category:News]] | *[http://tomocarroll.wordpress.com/2014/06/23/techno-tethering-globalises-oppression/ Techno-tethering globalises oppression (Heretic TOC)] | ||
{{Template:Navbox David Kennerly}} | |||
{{Navbox RSOL organizations|collapsed}} | |||
[[Category:Boylove News/Reform Sex Offender Laws]] | |||
[[Category:News articles by David Kennerly]] |
Latest revision as of 15:12, 2 January 2022
The free movement of the individual is increasingly seen as a revocable privilege, not an inalienable right, as the U.S., Interpol, and governments worldwide conspire to strip, not just “sex offenders”, but everyone of the fundamental right to travel and to cross borders June 22, 2014 Table Of Contents PART I: The Alarm Which Finally Roused Us From Our Slumber The Next Step Down The Road To Oblivion Understanding “International Megan's Law” “The International Megan's Law”: An Analysis The "Exterminating Angel" In the Driver's Seat PART II: Extending the Security State To Sex Offenders The Special Role of the Media In Driving the Sex Panic Non-Governmental Organizations PART III:
See alsoExternal links |