Pubdate: Mon, 26 Aug 2002
Source: Christian Science Monitor (US)
Copyright: 2002 The Christian Science Publishing Society
Contact:  http://www.csmonitor.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/83
Author: Amitai Etzioni
Note: Amitai Etzioni is a University Professor at George Washington 
University and author of 'The Limits of Privacy' (Basic Books, 1999).

HOW DEMOCRACY IS PRESERVED

WASHINGTON - Civil libertarians claim that John Ashcroft and Co. have 
endangered our civil liberties since 9/11, as we enter the inevitable 
assessments around the first anniversary of the attacks. The American Civil 
Liberties Union already has pointed to the government's "insatiable 
appetite" for secrecy, lack of transparency, rejection of equality under 
the law, and "disdain and outright removal of checks and balances."

Sen. Patrick Leahy (D) of Vermont believes the US has been "shredding the 
Constitution." Others simply maintain that in our efforts to protect 
ourselves from terrorists we are "doing their job for them," undermining 
democracy.

They have it all upside down: Democracy is threatened when burning public 
needs are not addressed. Indeed, evidence shows that as Congress rushed 
through numerous measures to protect us from terrorism, support for civil 
liberties in this country has grown stronger, not weaker.

Americans have some direct experience in this matter. In the days when our 
cities were awash with violent crime, people supported police chiefs like 
Daryl Gates of Los Angeles, who advocated "street justice" and "shoot 
first, ask questions later."

At the time, the country favored excessively punitive measures, such as, 
"Three strikes and you're in jail forever," and preferred to spend money on 
incarcerating drug abusers rather than on rehabilitation. Since then, as 
crime subsided, Los Angeles police chiefs have been much more sensitive to 
individual rights, and the nation moved toward spending less on prisons and 
more on drug rehabilitation.

Social scientists who study the conditions under which democracy is lost 
have little to work with.

Democracy - once firmly established - has almost never been lost because of 
internal developments (as distinct from because of occupation by an 
invading force).

The one notable exception is the Weimar Republic. What happened there is 
subject to a much contested literature. However, most agree that following 
the defeat of Germany in World War I, the people's pride was deeply shaken, 
and they felt further threatened by massive unemployment and 
hyperinflation. The Weimar government, weakened by squabbles among numerous 
parties, corruption, and scandals, was unable to muster an effective 
response. As a result, "too many Germans did not regard it as a legitimate 
regime," writes E.J. Feuchtwanger in his book "From Weimar to Hitler."

In short, inaction in the face of threats, not excessive action, killed the 
Weimar Republic.

A quick change of scenery and decades: Some relevant data come from an 
event that now seems relatively small, but at the time shook the nation - 
the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995. Shortly thereafter, a hefty majority (59 
percent) of Americans favored giving up some liberties, an ABC 
News/Washington Post poll shows. A month later, the numbers began to 
subside, to 52 percent.

In the period immediately after Sept. 11, people were most willing to 
support a strong government that would set aside many basic individual 
rights. However, in the subsequent months, as the government did enhance 
public safety and no new attacks occurred, the public gradually restored 
its commitment to the rights-centered, democratic regime.

Two-thirds of Americans were willing to sacrifice some civil liberties to 
fight terrorism immediately after the 9/11 attacks, according to ABC 
News/Washington Post. More recently, only 4 in 10 Americans support 
government steps to prevent terrorism if civil liberties are violated, 
reported a CNN/USA Today poll.

A growing concern for civil liberties can also be seen in the percentage of 
Americans who have held that the government went too far in restricting 
civil liberties to fight terrorism, according to a Newsweek poll. Over time 
this percentage has remained small, but increased from 8 percent to 12 
percent as America experienced no new attacks and numerous new safety 
measures were introduced.

When Americans were asked about 10 specific safety measures, the picture 
was completely consistent: While support for safety even at the cost of 
liberty remained high, it did fall in the six months following the attacks, 
as fear subsided. For example, 93 percent of Americans supported expanded 
under-cover activities to penetrate groups under suspicion in September 
2001; in March 2002 it fell to 88 percent.

Those favoring closer monitoring of banking and credit cards fell from 8 in 
10 in September 2001 to 7 in 10 in March 2002. And support for expanded 
camera surveillance fell from 63 percent to 58 percent during the same 
period, according to the Harris poll.

All in all, as far as one can rely on attitudinal data that vary according 
to how the question is phrased, the data support the thesis that the higher 
the fear, the greater the willingness to curtail liberty to protect safety. 
As the government's response seemed effective, fear subsided and support 
for democracy began to increase again.

The fact that support for strong antiterrorist measures remains high 
reflects the fact that most of the data were collected within six months of 
the attack and under frequent warnings about imminent attacks and new 
threats. The thesis would lead one to expect that if the panic subsides 
some more, the proportion of those supporting a curtailment of rights will 
further decline.

This may seem obvious, but it surely is not so obvious to those who hold 
that democracy is lost by introducing new safety measures that entail some 
curtailment of rights. These safety measures are core elements of what 
protects the public and reassures it.
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