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blimps are cool

Friday, February 11

Inter arma, enim silent leges

Inter arma, enim silent leges - In times of war, laws fall silent:

The United States has a long and consistent pattern of unduly restricting civil liberties in time of war. Time after time, we have panicked in the face of war fever. We have lashed out at those we fear and allowed ourselves to be manipulated by opportunistic and exploitative politicians. We did this in 1798, when we enacted the Alien and Sedition Acts, during the Civil War when Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus, during World War I when the nation brutally suppressed all criticism of the war and the draft, during World War II when we interned 120,000 individuals of Japanese descent, during the Cold War when we humiliated, abused and silenced tens of thousands of individuals for their political beliefs and associations, and during the Vietnam War when the government engaged in an aggressive program of surveillance, infiltration, and surreptitious harassment designed to "exposre, disrupt, and neutralize" antiwar dissent.


-- Geof Stone, part of a series of blog entries regarding the suspension of liberty in war. posted on Professor Lawrence Lessig's Blog .

Read it and be doomed to knowingly repeat history forever.

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