I'm refering to martial law, not a national state of emergency. You were refering to martial law and the President becoming a dictator for a while, but now you are changing horses mid-stream.The Duchess of Zeon wrote: The PATRIOT Act is far worse because it is in the law code, and exists as part of the legal process; it can be extended, or made permanent (and I believe some sections are, while only some sunset), while a national emergency is most definitely not permanent--it is a State, as opposed to a Law.
Furthermore, you seriously exagerrate a declaration of national emergency, which has happened before and not resulted in a loss of freedom, or even in a reduction of freedom comparable to the state of society like we lived in before 9/11.
Such a state of emergency that would grant the President such powers would be worse than the PATRIOT act. People in congress have realized what a major screw-up the act was, and will let it just go away. But let me tell you how much my life changed because of those restrictions... lets see, my college ended up making a policy that all students had to go through a particular door to get into the main building and that we had to go through a certain protocol when we took out equipment from the Cage, both of which were revoked about a month later and no one took them seriously when they were in effect anyway. Plus, I think I spent about 30 bucks buying dinner for a sobbing young woman in my typography class because she was doing a remarkable impression of Chicken Little and needed a gentleman like myself to calm her down. Like you said, we aren't significantly less free than we were before and those restrictions are going to be going away.But it did include the PATRIOT Act, and various other restrictive provisions that may have long-lasting effects on our society that we cannot yet quantify. We cannot tell if we would have avoided other attacks without them, and yet at the same time were they really worth it, when a state of national emergency could have instead been declared?
On the other hand, declaring Bush a Dictator would have significantly effected society and would have made us significantly less free. At the very least, it would guarantee a Democratic victory in 2004, since Americans would not take well to having the President nullify their rights completely.
He was a Tribune of the People. He just, um, requested it. But the point stands, having a dictator is a dangerous thing, especially if they've got any sort of ambition.He was never elected Tribune. *crooked grin* He was, however, elected Aedile in 65 B.C.
There are only two reasons anyone acts as pedantic as you do; they are trying to look smart or they've got a massive rod up their ass. You have all the ear marks of the former.I think we are misunderstanding each other. Of course I seriously work at it, Gil. But I do it for a purpose--I am analyzing those events and comparing them to the present, because I believe that, human nature being constant, important lessons can be learned from such comparisons. I object simply to the contention that I'm only do it to add some aura of intelligence.