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Homeland Security? Don't Make Me Laugh!
CNSNews.com ^ | December 09, 2002 | Alan Caruba

Posted on 12/09/2002 6:26:30 AM PST by Stand Watch Listen

Like a lot of folks who actually are old enough to remember what a scoundrel Henry Kissinger is, I got a pretty good laugh out of his appointment to head a commission that will, we are assured, determine just why this nation was caught unawares on 9-11.

This is a man who dragged out the peace negotiations with the North Vietnamese so Richard Nixon could get re-elected. And, of course, won a Nobel Peace Prize in the process. Yassir Arafat and Jimmy Carter won the prize too. The Swedes should give me one just for making a damned fine cup of coffee. That's all its worth these days.

The news, however, got me to thinking about homeland security and that got me to thinking of moving further to the hinterlands away from New York City. I live in a small, suburban town about fifteen miles from "ground zero" and that's too close for me.

Not that any one of us is "safe" anywhere. Can the day be far off before al Qaeda blows up Disneyland? The Mall of America? An oil refinery in Texas? Or maybe a federal courthouse in Oklahoma City?

What's stopping them? Nothing. I repeat. Nothing.

This was impressed on me as I read the recent news that thousands of trucks from Mexico will soon be crossing our borders and traveling throughout the United States. More than 14,000 trucks cross the border from Canada every day. Let's add to them the thousands more trucks from Mexico. Do you think this will stem the flow of illegal drugs and aliens from south of the border? Are you feeling secure yet?

Then, let's throw in the countless folks with bad intentions who pass the State Department's rigorous three-minute review of those seeking visas or the ones who are already here as "students" attending our best colleges and universities. Not enough for you? Add in the "tourists" coming in to sample the delights of Rodeo Drive or Fifth Avenue. Don't forget those "businessmen" from Saudi Arabia.

Not every member of al Qaeda is an Arab. Some are blond, blue-eyed Muslims from the former Yugoslavia. Some are Afro-Americans recruited into Islam in some of the finest penitentiaries of our fair nation. Some, like the Lackawanna, NY cell, are native-born Arab Americans who look and sound just like your neighbor. Some look a lot like John Walker Lindh.

Let us understand something about waging war. You first fix the perimeter of your firebase. Any sergeant in the US Army or Marines will tell you that. Before you get into a fight with the enemy, you make damn sure you also have a deep foxhole, well defended. You make sure your machinegun fire zone overlaps in all directions. You have a couple of mortars standing ready; stuff like that just in case there are more of them than there are of you.

Right about now, it would be very nice to have Ronald Reagan's missile defense system in place, but everyone made fun of him when he suggested it in the 1980s.

So, the notion that this nation is "on alert" (pick your favorite color) is both true and irrelevant at the same time. We do not know if the FBI, CIA and NSA, among other intelligence agencies, are actually talking with one another these days, although friends who know about such things tell me they are. At least, they are talking a lot more than before 9-11. And since, despite a year's delaying tactics by a Democrat controlled Senate, a Homeland Security Department could begin to function.

A lot of deep-fried conservative friends of mine are worried about losing our civil rights as we gear up to fight an invisible enemy that looks like your next door neighbor. I am conservative, too, but not to the point that I think the Department of Justice, Department of Defense, and other government agencies have so many people and so much time that they are going to be checking what I bought at the market last week. No, realistically, they will focus their personnel, time and money on finding the real enemies.

Does it bother me the government now has such broad powers? Yes and no. Yes, because the last time I read the US Constitution, they really should not have the right to invade my privacy without a court-ordered warrant. No, because I want them to invade the privacy of everyone of the more than one thousand mosques, the many Muslim parochial schools and Arab "charities" in America. I may be a patriot, but I am not stupid either.

Homeland security, right now, is a very thin line of dedicated men and women seeking to protect us and all the others who are too stupid to cooperate with them. Colleges and universities are balking about providing the government with the names of their foreign students.

There are an estimated eight to eleven million illegal aliens living in the United States and the Immigration and Naturalization Service hasn't a clue where any of them are.

Let me repeat. Our national borders are just lines on a map, unprotected. Our seaports are unprotected. There isn't a single passenger jet that can't be blown out of the air and, on the ground, airport security is a joke. The good news is you can now take fingernail clippers with you on your next trip.

For good measure, Red China owns huge facilities at both ends of the Panama Canal and a large port facility in Los Angeles. Canada will accept any foreigner who gets off the airplane and asks for protection. The Mexican government is issuing identification cards to any one of their citizens who wants to cross our border legally or illegally. Many American banks accept these cards so they can open an account and ship money to the folks back home. In some states, they are sufficient proof to get a driver's license.

So, please, the next time someone in high office tells you about homeland security, try not to laugh. Try not to cry either.

(Alan Caruba writes "Warning Signs," a weekly column posted at the Internet site of The National Anxiety Center.)


Alan Caruba





TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: alqaeda; canada; illegal; immigration; kissinger; mexico; nobel; peaceprize; yassirarafat
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1 posted on 12/09/2002 6:26:30 AM PST by Stand Watch Listen
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Good article. The Constitution is not a suicide pact.
2 posted on 12/09/2002 6:33:32 AM PST by Wolfie
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To: Wolfie
A lot of deep-fried conservative friends of mine are worried about losing our civil rights as we gear up to fight an invisible enemy that looks like your next door neighbor. I am conservative, too, but not to the point that I think the Department of Justice, Department of Defense, and other government agencies have so many people and so much time that they are going to be checking what I bought at the market last week. No, realistically, they will focus their personnel, time and money on finding the real enemies.

Does it bother me the government now has such broad powers? Yes and no. Yes, because the last time I read the US Constitution, they really should not have the right to invade my privacy without a court-ordered warrant. No, because I want them to invade the privacy of everyone of the more than one thousand mosques, the many Muslim parochial schools and Arab "charities" in America. I may be a patriot, but I am not stupid either.

What are your thoughts on this?

3 posted on 12/09/2002 6:40:47 AM PST by Huck
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To: Stand Watch Listen
I am conservative, too, but not to the point that I think the Department of Justice, Department of Defense, and other government agencies have so many people and so much time that they are going to be checking what I bought at the market last week.

If they can catch the right villains by doing so, they will. But if they can't, they'll check "what I bought at the market last week" in the hopes of catching somebody doing something and justifying their budgets. Alan Caruba doesn't understand bureaucracy.

4 posted on 12/09/2002 6:48:22 AM PST by Grut
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To: Huck
I think I said it all in #2.
5 posted on 12/09/2002 6:52:11 AM PST by Wolfie
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Right about now, it would be very nice to have Ronald Reagan's missile defense system in place, but everyone made fun of him when he suggested it in the 1980s.

I'm trying to remember which terrorist incident this would have prevented. ....anywhere in the world, If ANY country had such a system. Nope, can't think of one.

6 posted on 12/09/2002 6:52:33 AM PST by Diverdogz
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To: Grut
>>...But if they can't, they'll check "what I bought at the market last week" in the hopes of catching somebody doing something and justifying their budgets....<<

Very true.

7 posted on 12/09/2002 6:57:51 AM PST by FReepaholic
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To: Stand Watch Listen
We are on the verge of a global transformation. All we need is the right major crisis and the nations will accept the New World Order. David Rockefeller
8 posted on 12/09/2002 7:03:40 AM PST by panaxanax
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To: panaxanax
We are on the verge of a global transformation. All we need is the right major crisis and the nations will accept the New World Order. David Rockefeller

They've been working very hard the last few decades to get the leadership in place in key areas that will accept it. As long as we think we are running it, the US citizen will go along.
9 posted on 12/09/2002 7:21:06 AM PST by steve50
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To: Wolfie
OK.
10 posted on 12/09/2002 7:24:17 AM PST by Huck
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To: Huck
You're no fun ;). I'm sure a lot of people agree with the author, but if the Constitution only means something when its convenient, then it means nothing at all.
11 posted on 12/09/2002 7:29:00 AM PST by Wolfie
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To: Huck
I generally agree with these excerpted comments. My life is already an open book to whoever wants to look at it, whether I like it or not. This is nothing different than what very clever retailers already know about my purchases from "saver's cards", or if I pay by check or credit card, my "habits" can be tracked by the retailer. My phone bill can be viewed by the phone company. My insurance company knows all about my medical conditions. "Free" internet cards subjects me to continuing barrages of advertisements for products they think I want. Cookies keep track of all kinds of information about us on the internet. The bottom line is, if you don't want something about you disclosed, pay cash, keep your mouth shut, and your fingers silent. Anyone who doesn't think that they don't do this already (before passing the Homeland Security Act) is dreaming.

What I LIKE about the bill is that it puts the bad guys on notice that they are no longer protected by an indifferent bureaucracy and an apathetic criminal justice system. This President and this attorney general ARE pressing for prosecution and conviction of criminals. They think that Osama bin Laden is a bigger threat to the country than Microsoft or RJ Reynolds. That part is okay by me.
12 posted on 12/09/2002 7:37:03 AM PST by alwaysconservative
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To: panaxanax
A 21st century "Reichstag Fire"?

Here in the USA?

All the peices are in place, except controlling the OIL.

They're working on that.
13 posted on 12/09/2002 7:40:54 AM PST by WhiteGuy
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To: Wolfie
I recently ran across these comments by Phil Gramm, from CNN.com:

He disagrees with the president and most Republican politicians about the GOP's current hero: "I am not a Theodore Roosevelt man. In the end, he was very weak on private property, had a strong collectivist bent and saw government as an engine for good in a way that was fashionable."

I got into a debate about all this on Thanksgiving with my uncle from TN. He hates the Homeland Security bill. To tell you the truth, I still don't even know much about it.

14 posted on 12/09/2002 7:42:22 AM PST by Huck
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To: Huck; Wolfie
If you all don't mind me stepping into the fray here ---

Huck says (re the Homeland Security Bill):To tell you the truth, I still don't even know much about it.

I admit that I don't know much about it either. However, I support the general idea of restructuring the government bureacracies so, at least where it comes to security issues, a greater capability for getting information/intelligence into the hands of people who can do something with it is enhanced. Hopefully, this restructuring will make it easier for we the people to identify the responsible parties in government and thus increase their accountability.

What I don't like --
Combine this with the Patriot Act - frankly speaking, the government had the capability, or the tools so-to-speak, to already investigate, sniff-out, and prevent the 9/11 attacks from occurring. Our government failed us, in part because it is made up of a maze of bureaucracies that often work at against one another (the FBI and CIA is the classic example), or a set of bureaucracies that don't do the job they were tasked to do (some don't even come close).

But the failure of the government is not entirely based on the failure of the bureaucracies, the failure lies in their oversight and the legislators we elect to supervise and manage the bureaucracies they create. Our elected leaders failed us miserably with respect to the terror attacks on our country and our national security in general, yet the American people for the most part have given them a pass. So, part of the problem I have with these acts of Congress that are supposed to enhance our security is that they work to dissolve the elected leaders from the accountability and culpability they hold for the jeoprady in which they have placed the country. It's quite typical of politicians to enact any sort of leglislation to give the appearance they are doing something - anything - in a time of crisis or at a time when expedience demands they need the appearance that they are doing their jobs.

I am sure I could find a more eloquent and direct way of getting to the point here...but the more I think about this issue, the more angry I become, and it's tough enough to get off to a good start on a Monday...

15 posted on 12/09/2002 9:17:37 AM PST by citizenK
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Can You Change America? Part 2
16 posted on 12/09/2002 10:37:49 AM PST by B4Ranch
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To: strela
ping
17 posted on 12/09/2002 3:33:56 PM PST by galt-jw
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To: Stand Watch Listen
What's stopping them? Nothing. I repeat. Nothing.

This was impressed on me as I read the recent news that thousands of trucks from Mexico will soon be crossing our borders and traveling throughout the United States. More than 14,000 trucks cross the border from Canada every day. Let's add to them the thousands more trucks from Mexico. Do you think this will stem the flow of illegal drugs and aliens from south of the border? Are you feeling secure yet?

preach on, me brother. this is the game, exactly. the govt is protecting us?

yeah, kinda like a pimp is protecting his whore.

18 posted on 12/09/2002 3:36:56 PM PST by galt-jw
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To: citizenK
But the failure of the government is not entirely based on the failure of the bureaucracies, the failure lies in their oversight and the legislators we elect to supervise and manage the bureaucracies they create

Only if you have not considered the contradiction between those who obviously know better and are intelligent, versus their consistency of failure against the measure of chance, along with the contradiction between their behavior and their promises and principles.

19 posted on 12/09/2002 3:46:23 PM PST by galt-jw
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Does it bother me the government now has such broad powers? Yes and no. Yes, because the last time I read the US Constitution, they really should not have the right to invade my privacy without a court-ordered warrant.

A statement stunning in its sweeping meaninglessness. Last time I checked, a warrant was still required to "invade one's privacy."

No, because I want them to invade the privacy of everyone of the more than one thousand mosques, the many Muslim parochial schools and Arab "charities" in America. I may be a patriot, but I am not stupid either.

Ah, I see now. So, according to the author, only white, Christian males are entitled to privacy - Muslims who also happen to be American citizens need not apply. Lovely.

20 posted on 12/09/2002 6:41:56 PM PST by strela
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