John Doe Showdown This Week
NRO
Suspicious Behavior
By The Editors
July 23, 2007 10:10 AM
Those who watch for suspicious behavior will want to keep a close eye on House Democratic leaders this week. A House-Senate conference committee is expected to produce the final text of the homeland-security bill, and Democrats want to eliminate a provision that would protect citizens from being sued for reporting possible terrorist activity.
In March, the House adopted that provision — an amendment sponsored by Rep. Peter King (R., N.Y.) — by a margin of 304 to 121. It shields from civil liability not only citizens who report threats in good faith, but transportation employees and organizations that take reasonable actions to mitigate those threats. It is retroactive, in order to cover events that took place on or after November 20, 2006.
That was the date of the “flying imams” incident, which prompted King’s efforts. Six Muslim clerics were removed from a U.S. Airways flight in Minneapolis after fellow passengers reported their suspicious behavior. The men didn’t sit in their assigned seats, asked for seatbelt extenders that they apparently didn’t need, and were overheard making anti-American statements. All were cleared after questioning by the authorities. But, with the help of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), they filed suit against the airline and the “John Doe” passengers who had called attention to them. Their suit alleges nothing less than a “malicious . . . conspiracy to discriminate.”
Most Democrats are opposed to King’s measure. It was added, over the objections of a majority of House Democrats, to a bill implementing many of the 9/11 commission’s recommendations. When Joe Lieberman sought a similar provision in the Senate, 38 Democrats opposed it, and it failed to receive the 60 votes needed for approval. The Democrats either argue that King’s amendment will promote “ethnic profiling” (in fact, it is necessary precisely because airport screeners do not profile), or they discount the importance of passenger vigilance. House Democrats have tried to strip the amendment from the conference bill, and Lieberman is expected to join King in opposing them.
It is important that Lieberman and King prevail, lest passengers who “see something” decline to “say something” unless they have a good lawyer on retainer. Democratic opposition to the King amendment only underscores how poor their national-security judgment is. They are against using force overseas, against the Patriot Act, against the terrorist-surveillance program, against effective interrogation techniques, and against even the most modest profiling measures. Now they are against concerned citizens, too. Passenger vigilance is an essential component of post-9/11 security efforts, and failure to report suspicious activity could end up costing thousands of lives. Recall what an airline employee who checked in two of the September 11 hijackers told the 9/11 Commission: The pair of hijackers, on one-way, first-class e-tickets, “didn’t act right,” and were selected for secondary screening. But the employee didn’t insist on a more thorough search because he was “worried about being accused of being ‘racist’ and letting ‘prejudice’ get in the way.” If CAIR and the Democrats prevail, how long will it be until another potentially life-saving voice is silenced?
The slumber party is worried more about “offending people” instead of worrying about the safety of this country and protecting the passengers from smut-peddlers like CAIR-less.
I sure wish Joe would run on ‘08. As soon as he got away from albore, Joe turned out to be great.
July 23rd, 2007 at 7:30 am“Those who watch for suspicious behavior will want to keep a close eye on House Democratic leaders this week.”
Uhhhhhh, excuse me officer, I saw a large group of non-Muslims plus 1 Muslim in Washington DC who are acting in a way that makes me suspect THEY ARE COMMITTING TREASON. And they are pretending to be Democrats, the same party as Harry Truman, John Kennedy, and Scoop Jackson…
July 23rd, 2007 at 7:49 amThey are the one’s that are most concerned about oil. Let’s not upset the countries that have the most, Venezuela, Iran, Saudi Arabia. They want to sell out the country so they can continue to live their lavish lifestyles while the common american suffers with higher prices, and less security.
time for recall votes!!!
July 23rd, 2007 at 7:50 amHey JO, if ya wanna have some fun with leftys on an open forum, just quote Kennedy at ‘em, but don’t _say_ you’re quoting Kennedy. They’ll debunk him as a radical right-wing nut. It’s hilarious. JFK couldn’t get nominated for dog catcher in today’s Dem party.
July 23rd, 2007 at 8:03 amThese anti-patriots need a sound womping in the elections. At least try to elect people not determined to bring the U.S. to it’s knees!
Get Active!
July 23rd, 2007 at 9:14 amSoooo, let me get this straight. I’m supposed to die “PC happy” as another group of extremist pieces of $hit drive my plane into the White House because “those who are defending us (read self-appreciating Democrats)” don’t want to offend anyone.
Racial profiling isn’t a touchy-feeling thing, it’s based on historical fact. Fact - it wasn’t a group of 80 year old grandmothers from Sweden who used our planes as missiles - so “please wake the fuck-up (I did say please).
Personally I’m offended. I’m offended that the Dems think I’m as spineless and PC as they are that I would 1) Actually listen to the garbage they spew from their cake-holes and 2) That I wouldn’t have the gonads to stand-up for what’s right (as opposed to assuming the position and facing East). The disgust I have for these traitors can’t be put into words.
July 23rd, 2007 at 6:29 pm