It’s a constitution: U.S. Supreme Court sides with Guantanmo detainees
Thursday, June 12th, 2008By the narrowest of margins, the U.S. Supreme Court reportedly recognized that the right of habeas corpus applies to detainees at Guantanmo Bay. The opinion is not yet up on the Supreme Court’s website, so I haven’t been able to look at it first hand.
Maybe this seems distant and esoteric. While many of us question the conditions and circumstances of detentions of so-called enemy combatants, it seems like this may have little to do with our day-to-day lives. I beg to differ. When the Bush administration and Congress suspended the rights of habeas corpus, they chose expedience over a long-run vision of how our country should function.
The right of habeas corpus simply means that someone jailed has a right to have an independent judge determine whether he or she was illegally imprisoned. This is especially important in situations–like Gitmo–where some of the prisoners reportedly have been jailed for six years without a trial. For those of us who believe in the rule of law and the constitution, this is intolerable. Because when constitutional rights are suspended, there is no line that limits that suspension. Today it’s “enemy combatants” a new category that didn’t exist before the “war on terror.”
And for those who are critical of this ruling, I can only ask a simple question: Where does the “enemy combatants” line end? Does it include those of us who are critics of the current administration? The whole “war on terror” and “enemy combatants” things are right up there on my personal bill of particulars–along with “We don’t torture” (wrong!) and “Mission accomplished” (oops!)–as to why the current occupant of the White House really pisses me off. But enough about me.
In the film, Life is Beautiful, Roberto Benigni plays an Italian Jewish guy who goes from carefree clown to Holocaust statistic. The story is told from the point of view of his young son who survives the camp, because of his father’s wily antics. The movie is so damned poignant and beautiful.
Toward the end, the camp is liberated by the allies–Americans, as I recall–and the survivors slowly begin walking up a sunny road into freedom. The end is filled with hope and tears and laughter. While there is no comparing our current situation to that of post-World War II Europe, I sometimes think about the last scene of that movie and hope that we walk out of these dark times in a similar moment soon.
I have been extremely critical of the Supreme Court in the past. I imagine that won’t end, as they often do the wrong thing. The reported vote here–the narrowest 5-4–doesn’t give much comfort. Still, it’s a good day and a good thing because our constitution means something, even in the hard times.
I’m looking forward to reading this opinion, as it sounds like those who would suspend constitutional rights got slapped down. And that is good news.
David Sugerman