The ACLU vs. America
by Michelle Malkin
Human Events
March 31, 2005
On April Fools' Day, the American Civil Liberties Union will
show us what a joke its commitment to American civil liberties really is.
April 1st, in case you haven't heard, is the launch of the Minuteman Project,
an all-volunteer effort by law-abiding American citizens to call attention to
the nation's wide open southern border. Hundreds of Americans from New York to
Michigan to California will travel down to the U.S.-Mexico border for a month
to monitor illegal aliens and alert immigration enforcement officials if they
witness law-breaking.
Call it the mother of all neighborhood watch programs.
In doing so, the Minutemen will be exercising their constitutionally protected
freedom of speech, freedom of assembly and freedom to petition the government
for a redress of grievances. Those would be fundamental civil liberties found
in something called the, uh, First Amendment, of which the ACLU is supposed to
be the foremost expert and champion. Or so the group and its celebrity
supporters say. In sanctimonious new fund-raising ad campaigns, the
organization features the likes of liberal actress Holly Hunter, who asks:
"Do you want to be heard without fear? I am not an American who believes
that questioning or criticizing my government is unpatriotic."
Uh-huh. "Dissent is patriotic," the Left likes to preach. Except,
apparently, if the questioning and criticizing deals with the government's
abject failure to enforce immigration laws. Minuteman Project founder Jim
Gilchrist has been harassed by open-borders activists at his home. The group is
reportedly being targeted by savage illegal alien gangsters from Mara
Salvatrucha (a.k.a. MS-13). Mexican government officials are lobbying American
law enforcement officials to suppress the Minutemen's rights to speak and
assemble.
But instead of coming to the defense of the Minutemen who are challenging our
government, the ACLU has warned the 1,000 volunteers that it will send monitors
to document the Americans' activities. Moreover, the ACLU has already
threatened lawsuits against the American dissenters for exercising their
rights.
This bullying of pro-immigration enforcement activists comes as no surprise to
those of us who have followed the ACLU's aggressive open-borders agenda -- from
its support for driver's licenses for illegal aliens, to its opposition to
detaining illegal alien terror suspects after 9/11 and profiling foreign
visitors from terror-friendly countries, to its efforts to stop local and state
law enforcement officers from helping federal homeland security efforts.
ACLU of Arizona spokesman Ray Ybarra argues that the mere presence of the
Minutemen at the border constitutes "unlawful imprisonment" of
illegal (excuse me, "undocumented") aliens (excuse me,
"migrants"). Ybarra told the Washington Times that the ACLU
will have lawyers on standby ready to file civil cases against the volunteers.
He warned that the Minutemen could "come to our state as 'vigilantes' and
end up leaving as 'defendants.'"
The Minutemen have made it clear on their website and in repeated statements
that they "will not violate anyone's civil rights, and will not abuse
anyone from any country. . . . We will alert border patrol to the location of
illegals, and wait for [the Border Patrol] to come and pick them up. We will
follow illegal aliens from a distance and continue spotting them until
authorities answer our cell phone and/or back-pack radio calls. All spotting,
calls for assistance, and the response from the appropriate authorities will be
chronicled and provided to any media representative."
Contrary to the ACLU and mainstream media representations of the group as
racists and immigrant-bashers, the Minutemen are a diverse volunteer group that
includes Americans of Mexican, Armenian, Russian, Lebanese, Indian and Cuban
descent; and black and Native American minorities. Also among the volunteers
are 19 legal immigrants from Mexico, Peru, Russia, New Zealand, England,
Australia and the Philippines.
By recklessly linking the Minutemen to white separatists and casting them as
outlaws, the civil liberties crowd engages in the very guilt-by-association
smear tactics it has so loudly condemned. And in putting the protection of
illegal aliens' rights over law-abiding Americans' civil liberties, the ACLU
demonstrates on which side of the border its true allegiances lie.
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