698 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
698 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
"What is the position of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) on
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the 2nd amendment."
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Ira Glasser, Executive Director of the ACLU, responded thusly on October 30,
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1989 to an inquiry from Hal Berenson of Colorado Springs, Colorado, a former
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ACLU supporter,
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``We understand that the purpose of the Second Amendment was to guarantee to
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the states the right to maintain state militias as a countervailing force
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against an armed central government.
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``Back then, there was no state repository for weapons or any standing state
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militia, so in effect it was impossible to have a state militia unless people
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were allowed to keep arms.
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``But looked at in the contemporary context, we do not believe that the Second
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Amendment, or the purpose for which it was intended, confers an unlimited
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right upon individuals today to possess and use all manners of firearms,
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including handguns, AK-47s, etc. That does not mean that the government can
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constitutionally prohibit all weapons but it probably means that the
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government can reasonably regulate and limit their use.
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``The ACLU does not advocate gun control laws. But we do not oppose reasonable
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regulations on Second Amendment grounds because we do not think the Second
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Amendment bars such regulations.``
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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The ACLU has sold it's name list to HCI.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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The ACLU tried to get hollow-point bullets banned, even from use by
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police on the grounds they were "too lethal." The truth of the matter
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is that hollow-point bullets are LESS lethal than round nose bullets.
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More on this in bullet posts.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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ACLU Policy #47
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After sending a copy of the Yale Law Journal article "The Embarrasing Second
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Amendment" to several of the Southern California ACLU staff and bringing
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to their attention, the NRA suit against the California "assault weapons"
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ban, I received, in reply, a copy of their infamous policy statement #47
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(adapted to the Southern California chapter):
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We deplore the ghastly fact that in the life of this nation the use
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of handguns brings death to 60 men, women and children by accident--
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and 200 more by intent--every week.
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We concur with repeated rulings of every court that has ruled on
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the issue--including the U.S. Suprme Court--that the Constitution's
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Second Amendment provision for militia never has meant that all
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individuals have a right to own all kinds of firearms.
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We urge passage of federal legislation--and meanwhile, in its absence,
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the partial remedy of state law--to prohibit, with few and narrowly drawn
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exceptions, the private ownership and possession of handguns, much the
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way existing laws prohibit machine guns, grenades and cannons.
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We declare that Americans and their rights to life and liberty will
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face less danger in the presence of such laws and their enforcement
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than in the deadly, daily civilian shooting war around us now.
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The National ACLU gun control policy, adopted in 1967, calls for the
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reistration of firearms and the licensing of owners and dealers. The
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Union recommends the adoption of strong federal gun control legislation
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as a "necessary condition o fostering the atmosphere of open and fearless
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debate on which a free society rests."
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Both National ACLU and the Southern California affiliate base their
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policy provisions on long-standing interpretations of the Second Amendment
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by the U.S. Supreme Court, that the individual's right to keep and bear
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arms applies only to the preservation or efficiency of "a well-regulated
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militia".
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(Adopted by Board of Directors in September 1976. See national ACLU
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policy #47, "Gun Control".)
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I recommend that all members of the ACLU write to their chapter and urge
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the ACLU to rescind policy #47 if not to defend the Second Amendment.
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You should cite the Yale Law Journal article "The Embarrasing Second
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Amendment". Also, cite the Ninth Amendment and the individual RKBA clauses
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of nearly every state Constitution most recognizing the RKBA for self
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defense. Ask them to justify their distortion of the Second Amendment
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and the Supreme Court's interpretation of it particularly as it relates
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to "assault weapons".
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The signification attributed to the term Militia appears from the debates
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in the Convention, the history and legislation of Colonies and States,
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and the writings of approved commentators. These show plainly enough
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that the Militia comprised all males physically capable of acting
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in concert for the common defense. "A body of citizens enrolled for
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military discipline." And further, that ordinarily when called for
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service these men were expected to appear bearing arms supplied by
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themselves and of the kind in common use at the time.
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-- Supreme Court, United States v. Miller et al., 307 U.S. 174
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Ask them about their claim that the ACLU "champions the rights of man
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set forth in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution..."
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The national ACLU address is:
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American Civil Liberties Union
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22 E. 40th St.
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NY, NY 10016
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In Southern California:
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ACLU Foundation of Southern California
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633 South Shatto Place
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LA, CA 90005
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The ACLU has actively attacked the 2nd amendment by supporting a gun
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ban in Illinois.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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I've entered portions of an article on the ACLU that appeared in a
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recent edition of REASON Magazine. The article is specifically about
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how the ACLU is abandoning its defense of the First Amendment, but
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generally about how it has abandoned the protection of civil liberties
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in favor of a liberal political agenda. After reading this article, it
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becomes clear why the ACLU does not, and will not, defend the Second
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Amendment.
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REASON is a very pro-liberty monthly magazine, generally considered to
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be in the libertarian camp. I am a subscriber, and a contributor to the
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REASON Foundation. I would highly recommend the magazine to anyone with
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a serious interest in individual liberty.
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By the way, I am a former Sustaining Member of the ACLU.
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--
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The First Shall be Last? (REASON Magazine, 10/90)
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Charles Oliver
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"For 70 years, the First Amendment has been the American Civil Liberties
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Union's chief client. In case after case, ACLU lawyers have argued for
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absolute free speech, for a press unfettered by government restrictions,
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and for the strict separation of church and state. Outside the
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courtroom, ACLU leaders have been among the most eloquent defenders of
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the libertarian principles embodied in the First Amendment.
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Now those principles face their strongest challenge in years. Public
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and politicians alike appear increasingly intolerant of free speech -
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whether the lyrics of The 2 Live Crew, the anti-abortion pronouncements
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of the Catholic Church, the art of Robert Mapplethorpe, the
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advertisements of tobacco companies, or the posters of antigay college
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students. There is abroad in the land a sentiment that many, many ideas
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are too dangerous to be expressed and that these ideas must be shouted
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down or, where possible, forbidden by law. The ACLU, it would seem, has
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plenty of work to do - both in the courtroom and out.
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So, what is the ringing battle cry of ACLU President Norman Dorsen? 'We
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are the American Civil Liberties Union, not the American First Amendment
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Union.'
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In recent years, the ACLU has adopted an expansive definition of 'civil
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liberties' that dilutes its absolutist commitment to free speech. The
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ACLU, critics say, is now more committed to goals such as comparable
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worth, government aid to the homeless, and nuclear disarmament than to
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defending the First Amendment.
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In 1988, attorney Mark S. Campisano documented the shift from the ACLU's
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'old agenda,' which he describes as 'the rights of free speech, free
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press, free exercise of religion, freedom of assembly and association,
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and freedom from official acts of racism.' In 1948, he reported, this
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agenda encompassed 94 percent of the ACLU's cases; by 1987 is accounted
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for only 45 percent.
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Critics complain that greed and left-wing ideology have corrupted the
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union. The ACLU, they fear, has diluted its message, compromised its
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mission, and, in some instances, abandoned its commitment to the First
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Amendment.
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'America needs a civil liberties union," says Harvard law professor
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Alan Dershowitz, a 25-year member of the ACLU who once sat on the
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group's national board of directors. 'It no longer has one.'
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Dershowitz notes that the ACLU didn't get involved in one of the most
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important pornography cases in years: Osborne vs Ohio, which involved a
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sweeping Ohio statute aimed at child pornography. This spring, the
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Supreme Court upheld the law, in the process greatly expanding the
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states' ability to ban pornography. Civil libertarians blasted the
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decision for enunciating a new theory of censorship - a theory that says
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that the government can ban possesion of child pornography not because
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the material itself generates crime but because allowing people to own
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it creates a market for material that grows out of crime.
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'And the ACLU wasn't in that case at all,' says Dershowitz. 'And yet,
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it's in every abortion case, and it's in every femenist case, and it's
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in every fetal rights case, and it's in every racial case defending the
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most extreme forms of quotas and affirmative action.'
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The ACLU has also taken heat from libertarians for some of the cases
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that it *does* take. Perhaps the most famous example began over a
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decade ago, when teenage immigrant Walkter Palovchak decided he did not
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want to return to the Soviet Union with his parents. The ACLU went to
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court on behalf of his family to force Walter to return to Russia.
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'It still strikes me as strange,' says Palovchak's attorney, Henry Mark
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Holzer, 'The ACLU has a children's rights project. Their attorneys
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argue that teenage girls are competent to have an abortion without
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parental consent, but a teenage boy can't choose the United States over
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a totalitarian state. The only answer that makes sense is that their
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decisions aren't based on civil liberties but liberal politics. The
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ACLU likes abortion, and it likes the Soviet Union.'
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More recently, the ACLU actually sued an editor over the contents of his
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newsletter. In 1984, the ACLU's Southern California affiliate won a
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$1.8 million settlement against the Los Angeles Police Department. The
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ACLU had sued the police department on behalf of 144 left-wing
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organizations and individuals who complained that they had been the
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targets of illegal surveillance.
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But, the litigation didn't stop there. Some of the information in the
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files had allegedly been funneled to the conservative Western Goals
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foundation and printed in the foundation's newsletter. Shortly after
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settling with the police, the ACLU sued Western Goals; John Rees, the
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editor of the newsletter; and the estate of of Western Goal's chairman,
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Rep. Larry McDonald (D-Ga.). "It's not the business of law enforcement
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to furnish information to individuals, even reporters," said Southern
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California ACLU attorney Mark D. Rosenbaum, according to the Wall Street
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Journal.
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'I can understand why the ACLU was concerned about the police keeping
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records on people who aren't connected with any crime. I can understand
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the suit against the LAPD,' says Rees's attorney Manual Klausner (who is
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a trustee of the REASON Foundation). 'But under what interpretation of
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the First Amendment could they sue the journalist? The ACLU took the
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position that Rees and other journalists don't even have the right to
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receive a newspaper clipping or other article in the public domain from
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the police. The implications of this position would undermine the
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ability of journalists to use the police as sources. In my judgement,
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we were defending the First Amendment against the ACLU.' (Western Goals'
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insurance company eventually forced the organization to settle out of court.)
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No issue more clearly demonstrates the new thinking within the ACLU
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than the group's reaction, or differing reactions, to recent attempts by
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some universities to ban sexually or racially insentive speech on their
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campuses.
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Last year, the Michigan affiliate of the ACLU brought the first lawsuit
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against one of these college codes. A federal district judge overturned
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the University of Michigan's speech restrictions on First Amendment
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grounds. The ACLU has now taken more than 20 cases across the country
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challenging student conduct codes that prohibit offensive speech.
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But two of the ACLU's largest affiliates aren't so sure about such
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challeges. In September 1989, the University of California revised its
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student conduct code to ban racial or sexual epithets on the
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university's nine campuses. The Northern and Southern California
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affiliates - which account for more than one-fifth of the ACLU's total
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membership - didn't challenge the code.
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Instead, they endorsed a policy that recognizes colleges can prohibit
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speech that creates 'a hostile and intimidating environment which the
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speaker knows or reasonably should know will seriously and directly
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impeded the educational opportunities of the individual or individuals
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to whom it is directly addressed.'
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Campus speech codes divided the Massachusetts affiliate for months,
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Village Voice writer Nat Hentoff reports that the debate was heated.
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One proponent of speech codes 'accused some of his opponents of giving
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free rein to white racists,' writes Hentoff. 'He claimed that the real
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issue is not speech, but white power.' Another advocate of speech codes
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'wondered whether the position of the First Amendment absolutionists
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"has something to do with who the victims of this kind of speech are."'
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Finally, this summer the board approved 16-14 a policy that called for
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colleges 'to minimize and eliminate attitudes and practices that create
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a hostile educational environment, but these measures must not include
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rules which prohibit and punish speech on the basis of its content.' It
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was not exactly a resounding victory for free speech.
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Because of the differing policies adopted by affiliates, the national
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board has appointed a committee to study the issue and decide how to
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deal with campus speech codes. 'I think the fact that they even
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appointed a committee forces one to question whether the national board
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is as committed to the First Amendment as it used to be," says Hentoff."
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...
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"'I think the changes started when the ACLU got involved in the civil
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rights movement,' says Lambert [Ed - Mark Lambert, former legislative
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director of the Iowa Civil Liberties Union] 'That opened the door for
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all of these other issues that have nothing to do with the First
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Amendment. Today, when someone says that homelessness or comparable
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worth is not a civil liberties issue, the common retort is "Well, 30
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years ago some people didn't think civil rights was a civil liberties
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issue." Well, maybe it wasn't.'
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Civil liberties have usually been conceived as freedom from government
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coercion, including government-enforced segregation. But once Jim Crow
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laws began to fall, civil rights leaders started to demand government
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coercion - from anti-discrimination statutes to racial quotas - to
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ensure racial equality. That quickly created tensions between the
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ACLU's commitment to civil liberties and its involvement in civil
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rights. And in nearly every debate, civil liberties lost.
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In 1960, for example, the ACLU's national board opposed the inclusion of
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questions about race, color, or national origin on the nation's census
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forms. But once Congress passed the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the board
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changed its mind. Census data, it held, provide the basis for programs
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'to combat discrimination in education, employment, and housing.' At
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first, the ACLU supported only voluntary answers to questions about
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race; now it says the census may make such questions mandatory. The
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group does, however, request that the government store the racial
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information apart from the personal items."
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...
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"Perhaps the most important result of the ACLU's plunge into civil
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rights was the change in its attitude toward quotas. Throughout the
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1940s and 1950s the group opposed racial quotas. In the 1970s the ACLU
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revered its stand and came out in favor of quotas. In fact, in 1977 it
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adopted its own quota system.
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Under this policy, the ACLU's national board must be 50 percent female
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and 20 percent minorities."
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...
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"Some believe that racial and gender quotas changed dramatically the
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nature of the boards and the nature of the ACLU. 'Election to the board
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used to be based on one's dedication to civil liberties. Members were
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elected because they had demonstrated an effective commitment to free
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speech and separation of church and state," says Dershowitz. 'But
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affirmative action changed all that. Some people were elected because
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they *were* women and because they *were* minorities. And they were told
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that they were there to represent women and minorities. Inevitably they
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formed caucuses for women's rights and minority rights within the
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ACLU....What the ACLU needs now is a civil liberties caucus.'"
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...
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"In the last 25 years, the ACLU's membership has sky-rocketed from
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around 70,000 to 300,000. But many long-time members worry that the
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recent recruits are mainly interested in the group's liberal politics,
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rather than civil liberties. 'They were advertising for members,
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*period*. They weren't trying to get members who were necessarily
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committed to civil liberties," says Hentoff.
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Former Iowa legislative director Lambert argues that the ACLU's stands
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on economic issues turn off promarket libertarians and conservatives who
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would support First Amendment rights. 'To recruit new members,' he
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complains, 'the ACLU buys the mailing lists of other liberal groups.
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They have more and more people joining who are just liberals, not civil
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libertarians. You have to worry that someday there'll be no one there
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whose top commitment is the First Amendment." A spokewoman for the
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national office says that the ACLU rents the lists of "like-minded"
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groups. When pressed for examples, she cites Greenpeace and Amnesty
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International. "
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[Ed - The article goes on to cover more on the ACLU's foray into
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economic issues, interference in private employer/employee
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relationships, and attempts to create a "right of access" to the media.
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I entered about 40% of the total text above. REASON Magazine is
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available at some better book stores, such as McKinzy-White here in
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Colorado Springs, or from Reason, P.O. Box 526, Mt. Morris, IL 61054]
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"'I'm still a member, and I still make my contribution because the ACLU
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still does some good,' says Dershowitz. 'But if things don't change, in
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10 years it may not be doing any good. In fact, it could become an
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enemy of free speech.'"
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Note: Attorney Dershowitz is 100% anti-gun.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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A PRIMER ON THE ACLU By L. GORDON CROVITZ
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(from _Wall_Street_Journal_ Monday, October 3, 1988)
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"Our positions are mainstream positions," says Norman
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Dorsen, president of the American Civil Liberties Union,
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defending his organization in the wake of George Bush making an
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issue out of Michael Dukakis's boast of card-carrying membership.
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The ACLU does have a long history of efforts to protect actual
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constitutional rights, but a sampling of its recent positions can
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allow voters to decide for themselves where the mainstream lies.
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The best source for the ACLU's positions and world view is
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its own 576-page listing, last published in 1986, of "Policy
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Guides," which are approved by the national board; local branches
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often take more radical positions. Here is a primer on the ACLU
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as a mainstream organization:
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*Drugs should not be prohibited by law*. Without mentioning the
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word "deterrent," the ACLU voted to legalize everything from
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heroin to marijuana. "Gambling, attempted suicide, sexual
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relations or the introduction of substances into one's own body"
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should not be crimes. (Policy 210, Victimless Crimes.) Drug use
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is akin to catching a cold: "There is today widespread
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recognition of the fact that narcotics addiction is at bottom an
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illness to be treated and not a crime to be punished." (Policy
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214, State Control of Drugs and Alcohol.)
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Schools and Beepers
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*School discipline must be strictly limited*. Despite nearly
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universal problems in urban high schools, "the school has no
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jurisdiction over its students' non-school activities. " This
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explains ACLU opposition to the more than 50 school districts
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nationwide that have banned electronic beepers from the
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classroom. These are now a key tool of the school drug trade. A
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spokesman for the group's privacy and technology project says,
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"The school has the burden of proof to show that the beepers are
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disruptive and not being banned because they are linked with
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illegal drugs." The ACLU is consistent-it also tried,
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unsuccessfully, to protect students from searches of their
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lockers. (Policy 76, Secondary School Students' Civil Liberties.)
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*Few crimes should be punished by jail*. "A fine should always be
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the preferred form of the penalty," the ACLU says. For those who
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do go to jail, "probation should be authorized by the legislature
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in every case, exceptions to the principle are not favored, and
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any exceptions, if made, should be limited to the most serious
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offenses, such as murder or treason." The group does not mention
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furloughs. (Policy 242, Criminal Sentences.)
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*Workfare is unconstitutional*. Citing "basic concerns of
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fairness, dignity and privacy," the ACLU "opposes work
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requirements at government-assigned tasks as a condition of
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eligibility for welfare benefits or for any transfer payments
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designed to compensate for insufficient income." Presumably, the
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group will sue against the welfare-reform program Congress just
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passed. (Policy 318, Poverty and Civil Liberties.)
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*The Constitution mandates increased welfare spending*. Welfare
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"classifications which exclude some people from the basic
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necessities of life, while granting such necessities to others,
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are constitutionally 'suspect.' " This is the legal argument, so
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far rejected by the Supreme Court, that the group is using with
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some success in state courts. It translates immediately into
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taxpayer or third-party obligations and invalidates reforms
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encouraging an end to welfare dependency. (Policy 318, Poverty
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and Civil Liberties..)
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*Equal pay for equal work is not enough*. "The current ACLU
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policy on sex and race discrimination in employment encompasses
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the concept of comparable worth as the essential next step in
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achieving full equality for women and minorities." (Policy 315,
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Employment and Education.)
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*No more rescue attempts of American hostages or secret
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operations against terrorists*. "Abolish all covert operations."
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(policy 117, Controlling the Intelligence Agencies.)
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*There can be no military draft, even in wartime*. Although the
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Supreme Court has ruled against the ACLU, the organization's
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position remains that "military conscription, under any
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||
circumstances, is a violation of civil liberties and
|
||
constitutional guarantees. . . . at least in the absence of an
|
||
extreme national emergency as defined by ACLU." (Policy 120,
|
||
Conscription..)
|
||
|
||
*U.S. officials owe U.S. constitutional protections to foreigners
|
||
overseas*. The ACLU says the "Constitution requires the same
|
||
standard of conduct for government personnel, (whether civilian
|
||
or military) overseas as it requires at home." Presumably, if
|
||
he's ever arrested, Gen. Manuel Noriega must get Miranda rights
|
||
read to him or be set free; by the same reasoning, poppy farmers
|
||
in South America have a Fifth Amendment taking claim if the U.S.
|
||
sprays their land. (Policy 401, ACLU Role in International Civil
|
||
Liberties Matters.)
|
||
|
||
*Churches and synagogues should lose their tax-exempt status*.
|
||
Contrary to hundreds of years of Anglo-American practice, "the
|
||
ACLU opposes tax benefits for religious bodies." The group's
|
||
reasoning is that "the free exercise clause is put at risk when
|
||
the establishment clause is breached." The group has litigated
|
||
against the Catholic Church in particular. One complaint against
|
||
the Catholics is that they oppose abortion and thus the church is
|
||
a political entity; of course, churches are in the business of
|
||
expressing themselves on matters of ethics. (Policy 92, Religious
|
||
Bodies' Tax Exemption.)
|
||
|
||
*The First Amendment protects all pornography, including child
|
||
porn*. "The ACLU opposes any restraint on the right to create,
|
||
publish or distribute materials . . . on the basis of obscenity,
|
||
pornography or indecency." The procurers of children who appear
|
||
in kiddie porn can be punished for crimes under the rubric of
|
||
child abuse -- if the police can catch them -- but sellers and
|
||
distributors are absolutely protected regardless of the content -
|
||
- that is, regardless of what the little boys and/or little girls
|
||
are doing or having done to them on screen. (Policy 4, Censorship
|
||
of Obscenity, Pornography and Indecency.)
|
||
|
||
*Rating movies is itself an unconstitutional prior restraint*.
|
||
The ACLU opposes the industry rating system for parental guidance
|
||
that categorizes movies from X- to G-rated. "Rating systems
|
||
create the potential for constraining the creative process" and
|
||
"inevitably have serious chilling effects on freedom of
|
||
expression," the ACLU says. For example, "hotels, airlines, pay
|
||
television . . . frequently refuse to accept X-rated films." Does
|
||
the ACLU want "Debbie Does Dallas" shown on transcontinental
|
||
flights? (Policy 18, Rating Systems Sponsored by the
|
||
Communications Industries.)
|
||
|
||
*Prostitution should be legal*. "The ACLU supports the
|
||
decriminalization of prostitution and opposes state regulation of
|
||
. . . prostitutes of both sexes." Prostitution is protected by
|
||
"the right of individual privacy," and solicitation comes under
|
||
the First Amendment. (Policy 211, Prostitution.)
|
||
|
||
*Homosexuals can be foster parents*. In 1986, the ACLU
|
||
radicalized its position on non-discrimination against
|
||
homosexuals to include all rights that would "qualify gay and
|
||
lesbian couples for benefits and rights enjoyed by married
|
||
persons, including the right to become foster parents." In
|
||
lawsuits, the ACLU has also tried to establish the right for
|
||
homosexuals to become Big Brothers and to marry. (Policy 264,
|
||
Homosexuality.) See Joyce Brown
|
||
|
||
*The deinstitutionalization of the mentally ill was required by
|
||
law*. Beginning in the early 1960s, the ACLU led the fight to
|
||
empty the nation's mental institutions. The leading principle was
|
||
that "mental illness cannot by itself be a justifiable reason for
|
||
depriving a person of liberty against his or her objection."
|
||
There could be commitment in limited circumstances, for example
|
||
where there is "an observable violent criminal act against self
|
||
or others in a time period immediately preceding or during the
|
||
commitment process." In any case, "the individual has a right to
|
||
counsel at every step of the proceeding" and "an involuntarily
|
||
committed individual must be allowed to refuse any treatment for
|
||
mental illness." See, for example, Joyce Brown, New York City.
|
||
(Policy 244, Civil Commitment.)
|
||
|
||
It's perfectly fine for the ACLU to argue these positions.
|
||
Indeed, it's probably healthy for society to have a fringe group
|
||
agitating new "rights." But others are entitled to criticize
|
||
these positions as having little to do with the Constitution or,
|
||
for that matter, with common sense. After all, a president who
|
||
belongs to the ACLU has many chances to implement its policies.
|
||
from passing new laws to repealing old ones to nominating federal
|
||
judges and Supreme Court justices. Certainly, voters have a
|
||
right to decide whether they want a president who
|
||
enthusiastically associates himself with these views, or at least
|
||
with the political outlook that gives rise to them.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Mr. Crovitz is assistant editorial page editor of the Journal. A
|
||
related editorial appears today.
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Subject: ACLU Policy #47
|
||
|
||
Gun Control Policy #47
|
||
|
||
The setting in which the Second Amendment was proposed and
|
||
adopted demonstrates that the right to bear arms is a collective
|
||
one, existing only in the collective population of each state for
|
||
the purpose of maintaining an effective state militia.
|
||
The ACLU agrees with the Supreme Court's long-standing
|
||
interpretation of the Second Amendment that the individual's
|
||
right to bear arms applies only to the preservation or efficiency
|
||
of a well-regulated militia. Except for lawful police and
|
||
military purposes, the possession of weapons by individuals is
|
||
not constitutionally protected. Therefore, there is no
|
||
constitutional impediment to the regulation of firearms.
|
||
Nor does the ACLU believe that there is a significant civil
|
||
liberties value apart from the Second Amendment in an individual
|
||
right to own or use firearms. Interests of privacy and self-
|
||
expression may be involved in any individual's choice of
|
||
activities or possessions, but these interests are attenuated
|
||
where the activity, or the object sought to be possessed, is
|
||
inherently dangerous to others. With respect to firearms, the
|
||
ACLU believes that this quality of dangerousness justifies legal
|
||
regulation which substantially restricts the individual's
|
||
interest in freedom of choice. 1/
|
||
However, particular federal or state laws on licensing,
|
||
registration, prohibition or other regulation of the manufacture,
|
||
shipment, sale, purchase or possession of guns may raise civil
|
||
liberties questions. For example, the enforcement process of
|
||
systems of licensing, registration, or prohibition may threaten
|
||
extensive invasions of privacy as owners are required to disclose
|
||
details of ownership and information about their personal
|
||
history, views, and associations. Furthermore, police
|
||
enforcement or such schemes may encourage entrapment, illegal
|
||
searches and other means which violate civil liberties.
|
||
The ACLU takes the position that any such legislation must
|
||
be drafted bearing these problems in mind and seeking to minimize
|
||
them. [Board Minutes, June 14-15, 1979.]
|
||
|
||
_______
|
||
1/ When the Board adopted the June 1979 policy, it was
|
||
suggested that it was unclear as to whether or not the ACLU
|
||
supported gun control as a civil liberties matter, or simply did
|
||
not oppose government regulation on this issue. In order to
|
||
clarity this question, the following sentence was added to
|
||
paragraph three of the policy as a footnote, "It is the sense of
|
||
this body, that the word 'justifies' in this policy means we will
|
||
affirmatively support gun control legislation."
|
||
At the April 12-13, 1980 Board meeting, the policy's
|
||
footnote was reconsidered. Several Board members believed that
|
||
the statement was inconsistent with the rest of the policy
|
||
because there was no civil liberties rationale within the policy
|
||
for affirmative ACLU support of gun control legislation. The
|
||
Board then moved to refer the policy to the Due Process Committee
|
||
to refine and discuss further the rationale for affirmative ACLU
|
||
support of gun control legislation. At the June 23-24, 1982
|
||
Board meeting, the Due Process Committee recommended deletion of
|
||
the footnote from the gun control policy. The Committee's
|
||
recommendation was based on the fact that no acceptable civil
|
||
liberties rationale could be developed for affirmative support of
|
||
gun control legislation. The link between guns and the breakdown
|
||
of civil liberties, the Committee suggested, contains too much of
|
||
the approach to crime control. And crime control, the Committee
|
||
said, includes measures violative of civil liberties. The
|
||
possibility that a person who might be defending his or her self
|
||
at home might be arrested for use of a handgun is troubling. If
|
||
we support gun control legislation, we are encouraging the police
|
||
to search homes, cars and persons. The Due Process Committee
|
||
suggested that the problem with the footnote was that it was
|
||
indefensible on civil liberties grounds, and that it is not the
|
||
ACLU's role to commit the ACLU to involve ourselves in social
|
||
issues by finding a constitutional basis where there is none.
|
||
Even though gun control is a desirable social objective, and it
|
||
would be nice to find a civil liberties rationale for affirmative
|
||
ACLU support of gun control legislation, the Committee noted that
|
||
the ACLU has never supported particular remedies for particular
|
||
crimes, and as such, we cannot support gun control legislation.
|
||
The Board approved the Committee's recommendation, and
|
||
deleted the footnote from the existing policy, but left intact
|
||
the basic policy which expressed ACLU's views.
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Newsgroups: talk.politics.guns
|
||
Subject: ACLU's position on Gun Control
|
||
Message-ID: <70697@apple.Apple.COM>
|
||
From: brianw@Apple.COM (Brian Wilson)
|
||
Date: 31 Jul 92 22:06:47 GMT
|
||
Organization: Apple Computer Inc., Cupertino, CA
|
||
Lines: 58
|
||
Status: R
|
||
|
||
Hi-
|
||
|
||
For anyone who cares, I received the attached letter from the ACLU a week
|
||
ago. When I sent them my yearly contribution I pointed out that they
|
||
never seem to publish anything on the 2nd Amendment in their monthly
|
||
newsletters, and that I would like a one page statement of their position
|
||
regarding the 2nd amendment.
|
||
|
||
Although I am unhappy with their position, it is impressive that they were
|
||
willing to state it clearly for me.
|
||
|
||
-- Brian
|
||
|
||
|
||
------------------ CUT HERE for letter from ACLU ---------------------
|
||
July 22, 1992
|
||
|
||
Mr. Brian Wilson
|
||
<Address deleted>
|
||
|
||
Dear Mr. Wilson:
|
||
|
||
Thank you for your recent contribution. This is in response to your
|
||
note which was attached to your donation.
|
||
|
||
As you requested, here is a one page letter explaining the ACLU's
|
||
position on the second amendment. The second amendment states that
|
||
"A well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State,
|
||
the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
|
||
|
||
The ACLU agrees with the Supreme Court's long-standing interpretation
|
||
of the Second Amendment as set forth in the 1939 case, U.S. v. Miller: that
|
||
the right to bear arms applies only to the preservation of a well-regulated
|
||
militia. Except for police and military purposes, we believe that the
|
||
possession of weapons by individuals is not constitutionally protected.
|
||
|
||
Our neutrality on this issue means we neither favor nor oppose gun
|
||
control laws. Rather we believe that there is no constitutional objection
|
||
to gun control laws in general. At the same time, however, we are mindful
|
||
of regulation, licensing, and registration schemes which may involve
|
||
violations of civil liberties, because they may involve invasions of privacy
|
||
or may engender illegal searches and seizures.
|
||
|
||
I know this is probably not the reply you would have liked. Please
|
||
understand that every member does not agree with every ACLU position. We
|
||
even have members of our national board who disagree with certain ACLU
|
||
positions. However, I hope that you will be able to continue to support
|
||
the ACLU in good conscience even though you disagree with one small aspect
|
||
of our defense of a vast range of civil liberties.
|
||
|
||
If you have any further, questions please feel free to contact me.
|
||
|
||
Sincerely,
|
||
|
||
<signature>
|
||
|
||
Maureen Vialva
|
||
Membership Services Manager
|
||
|