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Bush Wants to Secretly Read Your Mail By John W. Whitehead January 11,
2007
First came the sneak-and-peek, black-bag searches. Then there was the surveillance of Americans’ private
phone calls and emails. Now, we’re being told that the government, under direction from the president,
can open and read our private mail without a warrant.
What’s next—the quartering of soldiers in our homes?
In what could be considered a stealthy maneuver, on December 20, 2006, while Americans threw themselves into
the frenzy of last-minute Christmas shopping, President Bush quietly claimed the authority to allow government
agents to open the private mail of American citizens.
This brazen plan to further invade what little privacy we have left was conveyed in a presidential signing
statement on a new postal law. The statement interprets the law in such a way as to allow government agents to
open sealed mail to protect life, guard against hazardous materials or conduct “physical searches
specifically authorized by law or foreign intelligence collection.”
The Bush Administration insists that this is not a sweeping new power but merely a statement of current law
and present authorities granted to the president. However, the signing statement goes beyond long-recognized
limits on the ability of the government to open U.S. mail without a judge’s approval. For example,
current law permits the government to peer into letters and other types of mail if there is a suspicion that
they might contain a bomb. Also, if mail cannot be delivered as addressed, they can open it to determine if a
correct address or return address can be found. But that’s about as far as the government can go without
a warrant—and with good reason.
Strict limits on the government’s ability to open mail have been in place since the 1970s, when a U.S.
Senate committee chaired by Frank Church (D-ID) issued its infamous Church Reports, which revealed that the CIA
and FBI had illegally opened more than 215,000 pieces of mail starting in the 1950s and continuing through
1973. The committee found that government agents had opened mail to and from American dissidents, including
those who challenged the condition of racial minorities and those who opposed the war in Vietnam, as well as
the mail of senators, congressmen, journalists, businessmen and even a presidential candidate.
As Sen. Church declared at the onset of the hearings into the government’s illegal mail-opening
activities, such a practice is “fundamentally at odds with freedom of _expression and contrary to the laws
of the land.” Furthermore, the U.S. Postal Service should not be “an inviolate haven for those who
would destroy our liberties.” And as another member of the committee, Sen. John Tower (R-TX), stated,
“If our efforts are to have lasting value in the protection of the liberties of our citizens, persons
charged with the defense of the national security in the future must go about their task with an ingrained
sense of the critical balance between protection of freedom and the sanctity of individual liberty in our
society.”
President Bush would have done well to heed Tower’s words prior to issuing his most recent signing
statement—or the approximately 750 others issued by him (more than those issued by all the other
presidents combined) that preceded it.
Although signing statements have been used for decades by presidents as a way to thank supporters, provide
reasons for signing a bill or express dissatisfaction or pleasure with Congress, the Bush Administration has
used the statements as a way of disregarding laws which it believes may interfere with national security or
limit the power of the president, essentially doing an end-run around congressionally enacted laws.
Now, with this latest assault on our freedoms, things have gone from bad to worse. Since 9/11, our civil
liberties have been under constant attack, especially as the Bush Administration has steadily carried out its
agenda to exponentially expand the power of the executive branch. The end result will be the creation of an
imperial presidency that will wreak havoc on our Constitution and undermine our freedoms.
Yet contrary to what the present administration seems to think, the Constitution is not a piece of paper to
which one can strike a match. It is a binding contract between the people and our elected representatives.
Furthermore, the rule of law laid out in the Constitution is the very foundation of our [republican form of government]. This means
that the president, as are all our elected officials, is under the law, not above it. He must faithfully
execute the laws of the United States. And we have to be able to trust that our president, as his oath of
office declares, will uphold and defend the Constitution. If not, then everything our courageous men and women
in uniform are fighting for in Iraq becomes null and void.
As history has shown, freedom can be lost at a second’s notice. But the process of undermining liberty
happens slowly and insidiously, long before it becomes evident to the average citizen. And I fear that too many
Americans, distracted by everyday life and caught up in all the entertainment spectacles, are asleep at the
wheel. All the while, the government continues to assume Orwellian powers that undermine everything our country
stands for. It’s time to wake up.
WC: 861
Constitutional attorney and author John W. Whitehead is founder and president of The Rutherford Institute. He
can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org. Information about The
Rutherford Institute is available at www.rutherford.org.
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