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Flood's Blog: Expostulations by Anthony Flood

Paul Craig Roberts on "The Beginning of Legal Terror"

The following review of Nikolaus Wachsmann’s Hitler’s Prisons is from Paul Craig Roberts’ LewRockwell.com essay of today’s date in which he also recommends Jimmy Carter’s Our Endangered Values and Robert Higgs’ The Resurgence of the Warfare State. Dr. Roberts is John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy and Research Fellow at the Independent Institute. The co-author of The Tyranny of Good Intentions, he was an assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury, associate editor of the Wall Street Journal, and contributing editor for National Review.


“The similarity of Bush administration policies to ‘those of abusive regimes that we have historically condemned’ is brought home to us by historian Nikolaus Wachsmann’s Hitler’s Prisons (Yale University Press 2004).

“Wachsmann’s book is a detailed history of the conflict and cooperation between the traditional legal-judicial-prison system on the one hand and the police-SS-concentration camp system on the other. He does not mention George Bush or Bush’s ‘war on terror.’ However, the similarities leap off the pages.

“Just as 9/11 was a crystallizing event for Bush’s seizure of executive power to suspend civil liberties, detain people indefinitely without evidence, and spy on American citizens without warrants, the Reichstag fire of 27 February 1933 was followed the next morning by Hitler’s Decree for the Protection of People and State. This decree became the constitutional charter of the Third Reich. It ‘suspended guarantees of personal liberty and served as the basis for the police arrest and incarceration of political opponents without trial.’

“In a frightening parallel to our own situation, Wachsmann writes: ‘Various police activities during the ‘seizure of power’ clearly damaged legal authority. Indefinite detention without due judicial process was incompatible with the rule of law. But, on the whole, there were no loud complaints or protests from legal officials.’ I read this passage the same day I heard on National Public Radio University of Chicago law professor Eric Posner defend President Bush’s use of extra-legal, extra-Constitutional authority to protect the people and state from terrorists.

“The precedent for Alberto Gonzales’ declaration that Bush is the law was Reich Minister of Justice Franz Gurtner, who agreed in a cabinet meeting on 3 July 1934 that ‘Hitler was the law.’ Bush’s claim that extraordinary powers are necessary for him to be able to defend our country under extraordinary circumstances is identical to Hitler’s claim that he was entitled to ignore the rule of law because he was ‘responsible for the fate of the German nation and thereby the supreme judge of the German people.’ What is the difference between Hitler’s claim and the US Department of Defense’s claim that President Bush has the right to violate domestic and international laws?

“Wachsmann’s book shows that it is extremely easy for extraordinary measures in the name of national emergency to become permanent. Germans did not understand that the Decree for the Protection of People and State was the beginning of legal terror.”


Flogger’s Observation: Google-ing “Bush” + “Reichstag” yields a quarter-million hits.
Spielberg’s “Munich” is Balanced, Nuanced, Courageous, Humane, etc.

If You Believe That, He’s Taken You for a Sucker . . . Again!

In reminding his readers of obvious things a slick movie has the power to delete from consciousness, As’ad, an Arab blogger, repays them handsomely for swimming through his paragraph-free ocean of words. (I’ve added paragraph breaks, following Ytzhak, and links. Even so, I believe it still could have benefited from some cold editing, but it is, after all, a blog entry, with all the uncensored spontaneity that implies. As’ad expressed annoyance at the unsolicited partitioning of his prose.)

The one or two facts about which some respondents have hotly challenged As’ad only increased my appreciation for his Herculean window-cleaning exercise. For apart from Michelle Goldberg’s Der Spiegel review, reverence for Spielberg’s latest contribution to public stupefaction is the only stance to be certified PC.

As’ad’s essay can enrich open minds, but only if others promote it.

Spielberg on Munich: the Humanization of Israeli Killers, and the Dehumanization of Palestinian Civilians.

Or the Celebration of the Israeli Killing Machine. And who is retaliating against whom in the Arab-Israeli conflict? THIS is the question. It reminds me of a line that George Carlin—yes, that Carlin—used to use in his comedy routine and went roughly like this: “why do “we” call Israeli terrorists commandos, and we call Palestinian commandos terrorists?” That line never got a laugh the two times I saw him use it with a live audience. [The Flogger observes: Televised coverage of the passing of ABC News correspondent Peter Jennings earlier this year included footage of his broadcast from the Olympic village in Munich, during which he referred to the event's instigators as "commandos." "Commandos" and "terrorists" have different connotations, don't they.]


Let’s Begin Praying for the Children of Iran Who Will Not Live to Have Children of Their Own

Having sold the world a bill of goods in prospect of its rape of Mesopotamia, the Washington-Tel Aviv Axis is now stepping up preparations for its assault on Persia. Central to its bloody scam are the ideological cocktails it must concoct to pep up the cattle for their next stampede. The casus belli will be the nuclear plants that Israel may have with impunity, but Iran is forbidden to possess. The galvanizing event, however, may be any one of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s recent utterances——roughly equivalent to those for which European governments now routinely incarcerate their own writers.