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On Not Freaking Out With Fear: An Un-American Response to the Oslo Attack
Over the last decade, virtually every Terrorist plot aimed at the U.S. -- whether successful or failed -- has provoked greater security and surveillance measures. Within a matter of mere weeks, the 9/11 attacks infamously spawned a vast new surveillance statute (the Patriot Act), a secretly implemented warrantless eavesdropping program in violation of the law, an explosion of domestic surveillance contracts, a vastly fortified secrecy regime, and endless wars in multiple countries. As it turned out, that massive over-reaction was not a crisis-driven anomaly but rather the template for future actions.
What's most striking, and ironic, is that the Norwegian response to the Oslo attack is so glaringly un-American even though its core premise -- a brave refusal to sacrifice liberty and transparency in the name of fear and security -- was once the political value Americans boasted of exhibiting most.
The failed Christmas Day bombing over Detroit led to an erosion of Miranda rights and judge-free detentions as well as a due-process free assassination program aimed at an Muslim American preacher whose message allegedly "inspired" the attacker. The failed Times Square bombing was repeatedly cited to justify reform-free extension of the Patriot Act along with a slew of measures to maximize government scrutiny of the Internet. That failed plot, along with Nidal Hasan's shooting at Fort Hood, provoked McCarthyite Congressional hearings into American Muslims and helped sustain a shockingly broad interpretation of "material support for Terrorism" that criminalizes free speech. In sum, every Terrorist plot is immediately exploited as a pretext for expanding America's Security State; the response to every plot: we need to sacrifice more liberties, increase secrecy, and further empower the government.
The reaction to the heinous Oslo attack by Norway's political class has been exactly the opposite: a steadfast refusal to succumb to hysteria and a security-über-alles mentality. The day after the attack -- one which, per capita, was as significant for Norway as 9/11 was for the U.S. -- Oslo Mayor Fabian Stang, when asked whether greater security measures were needed, sternly rejected that notion: "I don't think security can solve problems. We need to teach greater respect." It is simply inconceivable that any significant U.S. politician -- the day after an attack of that magnitude -- would publicly reject calls for greater security measures. Similarly inconceivable for American political discourse is the equally brave response of the country's Prime Minister, Jens Stoltenberg, whose office was the target of the bomb and whose Labour Party was the sponsor of the camp where dozens of teenagers were shot:
He called on his country to react by more tightly embracing, rather than abandoning, the culture of tolerance that Anders Behring Breivik said he was trying to destroy.
“The Norwegian response to violence is more democracy, more openness and greater political participation,” Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg insisted at a news conference. . . .
Stoltenberg strongly defended the right to speak freely -- even if it includes extremist views such as Breivik’s.
“We have to be very clear to distinguish between extreme views, opinions — that’s completely legal, legitimate to have. What is not legitimate is to try to implement those extreme views by using violence,” he said in English.
Stoltenberg’s promise in the face of twin attacks signaled a contrast to the U.S. response after the 9/11 attacks, when Washington gave more leeway to perform wiretaps and search records.
It reflects the difference between the two countries’ approaches to terrorism. The U.S. has been frustrated by what it considers Scandinavia’s lack of aggressive investigation and arrests.
Since the attacks, Stoltenberg and members of Norway’s royal family have underlined the country's openness by making public appearances with little visible security.
Norway's government understandably intends to investigate what happened and correct any needed gaps in security, such as slow police response; but what it refuses to do is transform itself into a closed, secret surveillance state. About all of this, The New York Times today says that "Norway’s policy on public security [] seemed defined by a belief that bad things happen elsewhere." No: it is defined by a belief that there are other values besides security that matter a great deal and that pursuing security above all other values, in a quest for absolute safety, is both self-destructive and futile.
This realization was once not only common in the American political ethos, but its defining feature. Patrick Henry's decree -- give me liberty or give me death -- resonated for generations precisely because it underscored that Americans were willing to subordinate physical security to other values (such as freedom and privacy). The American Revolutionaries were long revered in our political culture because -- by risking everything, including their lives, to wage war against the most powerful empire on Earth -- they chose liberty and freedom from state intrusion over personal security.
Multiple provisions of the U.S. Constitution reflect this same prioritization of values. The Fourth Amendment bars the police from entering our homes without search warrants and probable cause even though that restriction means that some of the most heinous and dangerous of criminals -- from mass murderers to child rapists -- will remain un-apprehended. The Fifth Amendment bars imprisonment without due process and the Bill of Rights imposes a slew of restrictions on the state's power to convict accused criminals even though it means that those same horrific criminals may sometimes go free, able to commit their crimes again. This subordination of security to other values was long the defining attribute of the American political identity, because we didn't want to live in a Singapore-like Security State or an East-German-like Surveillance State.
All of this has given way -- among the political class in the U.S. -- to a supreme fixation on safety at the expense of every other value: a fixation that is in equal measures cowardly, authoritarian and exploitative. Patrick Henry's long celebrated tribute to courage has been turned on its head by the degraded cowardice of GOP tough-guy leaders -- such as Pat Roberts, John Cornyn, and Rush Limbaugh -- shrieking that civil liberties are worthless if you're dead: i.e., that safety is the paramount goal. Meanwhile, as virtually every other country that suffers a horrendous Terrorist attack puts the accused perpetrators on trial in their real court system in the city where the attack occurred -- the subway bombers in London, the train bombers in Madrid, the shooters in Mumbai, the Bali nightclub bombers in Indonesia -- it is only the U.S., the self-proclaimed Home of the Brave, that is too frightened to do so, instead concocting military tribunals and sticking accused terrorists in cages on a Caribbean island, as members of both parties spew base fear-mongering to bar trials on American soil.
Just to highlight how extreme is the fear-based American repudiation of openness and transparency, consider the responses to the efforts of two Democratic Senators, Sens. Wyden and Udall, to force the Obama administration to explain what Wyden previously called the Secret Patriot Act:
The Obama administration continued Wednesday to resist the efforts of two Democratic senators to learn more about the government’s interpretation of domestic surveillance law, stating that “it is not reasonably possible” to identify the number of Americans whose communications may have been monitored under the statute. . . .
“Every time the American public finds out that laws have been rewritten in secret or the administration can't give a basic answer, it erodes public confidence and makes it harder for intelligence agencies to do their jobs,” said Wyden, who for the past two years has decried what he calls a de facto "secret law" governing domestic surveillance.
So drowning in secrecy is the National Security State that the Obama administration refuses even to explain how it interprets and applies surveillance powers enacted by Congress. Even more perverse, the article describes how the Obama administration has been touting its commitment to openness by hailing the declassification of a 200-year-old document on cryptography: one that has been publicly available for years in Europe. As a new ACLU report documents -- one co-authored by former FBI agent Mike German -- "We are now living in an age of government secrecy run amok."
What's most striking, and ironic, is that the Norwegian response to the Oslo attack is so glaringly un-American even though its core premise -- a brave refusal to sacrifice liberty and transparency in the name of fear and security -- was once the political value Americans boasted of exhibiting most. What we now have instead is the instinctive exploitation by political elites of every threat -- real and imagined -- as a means of eroding liberties, privacy and openness, based in part on fear and in part on an opportunistic desire for greater power. That's why Norway's courageous, principled response seems so foreign to American eyes and ears.
Read more at Salon.com




83 Comments so far
Show AllThere is one big difference between Norway and the United States. Norway is a democracy and the USA is a fascist shithole.
Yup.
Double Yup
Most 'mericans are too f*cin stoopid to participate in a democracy.
You don't have to be insane to live here, but it seems to work for many.
As usual Glenn Greenwald hits the old nail on the proverbial head.
But to diggress, which I am going to do, I have to say that comment by Bill Gates today that "poverty shouldn't be an excuse for no education" or not geting an education is just what would be expected of a European Cauasion Amurcan who took the money he got from the employees in his company who created that wealth. As a multi billionaine jack ass who almost surely never earned but rather robbed from those who do, his words mean nothing but more lies from those who really know how to tell whoppers even if they claim to be "liberals." They wouldn't make good "pwogwessives" as far an Alexander Cockburn would surely put it.
Sister Cynthia if you turn out to be right, I'm gonna have to say eveybody let's push. We gonna have to push the way Rev Jesse Jackson Sr ain't ever pushed on this coaltion. That old fashioned brother man done and got on the war machine train in Libya. He's got to get black to where we all belong as the Beattles once put it so eloquently.
Mother Africa, all our civilzation we owe to you the greatest of all civlizations.
Sister Cynthia if you turn out to be right, I'm gonna have to say eveybody let's push. We gonna have to push the way Rev Jesse Jackson Sr ain't ever pushed on this coaltion. That old fashioned brother man done and got on the war machine train in Libya. He's got to get black to where we all belong as the Beattles once put it so eloquently.
The House UnAmerican Activities Committee of Common Dreams or one member of same has "convicted" Glenn Greenwald of being anti US. "Oh no!" That must mean that "I'm anti US!" Yeah, I guess it's "an open and shut case!"
The House UnAmerican Activities Committee of Common Dreams or one member of same has "convicted" Glenn Greenwald of being anti US. "Oh no!" That must mean that "I'm anti US!" Yeah, I guess it's "an open and shut case!"
Thanks Glenn for being a voice of reason, sanity and compassion and for highlighting that there are other and far better options than the USAmerican way.
I've been too busy to watch/listen to the MSM and talk radio recently . . . just how much derision is being vented at Norway right now for not wanting to hand out guns to its population?
More people get killed by handguns than by terrorists in a year in the US. Because of the handguns, the US is as dangerous as a warzone.
For sure. But I'm just curious in whether the MSM and Hate Radio here are having a good laugh at Norway's expense.
Do a comparison - how many terrorist attacks in Norway, the land without handguns, compared with the number of terrorist attacks in the US, the land that is armed to the teeth. Mmmmm? Anybody laughing would be a fool.
Umm, in case you haven't noticed, you're preaching to the choir.
Oh, believe me, I've noticed that. Best of all are the Vermonters who can barely keep their kill fantasies from spilling out all over their keyboards.
Oh, and singing in choirs, just like marching in parades, is an inevitably communitarian-authoritarian activity.
Do the people who rant about gun ownership, both against and for it, even check their facts before ranting?
Norway HAS handguns. Gun ownership is not uncommon in Norway.
We're being dragged by the political class (there being a distinction between these Koch and other types like Monsanto, and persons dedicated to legitimate public policy development) through the heavily mined and blade infested muck of predatory capitalism, otherwise recognized as a form of fascism. Minority populations worldwide are VERY familiar with the stench that begins to blow in the la-la-land strategic phase cycles.
Post-colonial? Not in the case of colonization of the mind.
"...some of the most heinous and dangerous of criminals -- from mass murderers to child rapists -- will remain un-apprehended" ANYWAY! There's simply a recogniton in Norway that no matter how tight the security, it can never be 100% safe all the time. America hasn't caught on yet that terror attacks are still happening despite the suspension of all their most basic rights. No amount of "security" legislation or "security" measures will stop the next fool from trying mass murder for some idiot cause. And it won't help you to be carrying a weapon, either.
Wow - do they accept immigrants from the US?
No kidding. My hope for humanity has been significantly ratcheted up since this event. Norway really has it together. I even forgive 'em for their error in awarding our Presidential Murderer-In-Charge the Nobel Peace Prize. They're the real deal.
I think that the Nobel prizes are awarded by Sweden, not Norway.
No, it's awarded by a committee chosen by the Norwegian parliament.
Yes, you can put the blame on one Torbjørn Jagland who is unrepentant of awarding Obama the peace prize to this day. He is currently the general secretary in the European council.
Ha.
When Kissinger has gotten one, you don't want one, know what I mean? ;)
heh. The Nobel folks discredited themselves royally when they gave one to Teddy Roosevelt.
"That's why Norway's courageous, principled response seems so foreign to American eyes and ears."
Not foreign at all. That's why so many of us are applauding it loudly and vocally. We realize this is what we once were, and we regret that we have allowed our government and their private contractors to usurp that.
To paraphrase Animal Farm: "All animals are equal and NONE are more equal than others." Those that think they are more equal are in for a rude awakening.
The most "unAmerican" things going on today that are foreign to most of us are what is happening to the sovereign nation of Libya lead by NATO and the US, the fact that we invaded Pakistan and executed an old man without a trial, that we are holding people in GITMO without legal recourse, and what's happening to our civil rights while Wall St. profits. The list is more extensive, but I am sure you get the drift.
Thanks Glenn Greenwald for a great essay.
I wish to add though that the U.S.A. war on terrorism is designed to create backlashes that can justify an increasingly oppressive national security state, all in the interests of predatory corporate capitalism, the rich, and Wall Street.
U.S. government institutions , namely the Defense Department, the Pentagon, the National Security Agency, the FBI, the CIA, and Homeland Security are all coordinated to enforce conformity to the ideology of monopolistic corporate capitalism to profit the rich from every human activity on the face of the earth. .
Your idea is correct, but your timeline needs to be expanded back to the formation of the FBI. Photious's remarks are quite good and ought to get people to undertstand that the Executive branch of the federal government's been out-of-control for well over a century once the Oligarchy captured it in the early 1870s to increase their power and wealth. When one merges DeChristopher's essay with the many written by Greenwald, it becomes clear that there are no checks on federal government power or the Oligarchy that controls its reigns, despite the efforts of the few Wydens and Kucinichs in congress (Imagine what sort of country we'd have were it not for their continued dissent).
Watching Norway's response in the press was like being in a time warp, like being in the Old America that we all remember and loved. Unlike any American reaction to anything, Norway's was calm, collected and thoughtful. Bravo to them and for retaining their sanity and way of life.
Greenwald is making a very valid point, but it still couldn't hurt the Norwegian police forces to buy a few more helicopters.
What are choppers going to do?
Shorten response time to incidents like Breivik's, I imagine, but otherwise not a lot.
Many in this forum have a sentimental image of the past that there once existed an America that was much like the Norway of today. Any honest appraisal of American history should dispel this myth.
Statutes such as the onerous Patriot Act are not new. The United States has passed laws in the past in response to perceived domestic and international threats that are just as odious as the Patriot Act. They include the following:
The Naturalization Act of 1798
The Alien Act of 1798
The Alien Enemies Act of 1798
The Sedition Act of 1798
The Espionage Act of 1917
Lets also not forget the tyrannical authority that President Lincoln exercised during the Civil War that included the suspension of habeas corpus and other abuses of American civil liberties such as political dissent and free speech. Lincoln went so far as to try American citizens before military tribunals.
How about FDR's internment of U.S. citizens of Japanese descent during WWII.
How about the widespread deportation of U.S. citizens of Mexican and Latin American descent during the administrations of Hoover, Truman, and Eisenhower.
The most odious statute that the U.S. has enacted, and the one that is directly responsible for the national security state mentality that has caused untold suffering within the U.S. and throughout the world, is the National Security Act of 1947. This heinous act created the CIA.
America was never like Norway. Norway is what America should aspire to become.
Outstanding observation.
It was once said that the USSR desired to install totalitarian governments worldwide. I would say that is now the USA's goal.
Great post, Photius! Thank you.
"The most odious statute that the U.S. has enacted, and the one that is directly responsible for the national security state mentality that has caused untold suffering within the U.S. and throughout the world, is the National Security Act of 1947. This heinous act created the CIA."
Yes, how right you are Photius
Thank you Harry Truman.
Gore Vidal has been railing against Truman and the National Security Act for 60 years.
Yes, that Lincoln was a horrible tyrant . And the Confederates were therefore Freedom Fighters. Sorry, Photius, but, once again, you toss one of the only truly good presidents in with the all the rats ( and you are 100% correct on them, just to be clear ) because of the suspension of Habeas Corpus during the Slaveholder Rebellion. Do you think the anti- slavery forces of the time saw it that way ? Or the slaves themselves ? It is an important point for those who seek revolutionary change today . It is also why liberals ( and "libertarians" ) are afraid of revolution.
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Can I become a Norwegian citizen? Can I buy Anders Breivik's farm and move there? What does it take to become an ex-patriot?
I want to become one of them.
I would make a small addendum to GG's great article and it would be this:
Our knee-jerk, over-the-top, rash and counterproductive reaction is in high gear when the words Muslim or Islam can be conjoined with terrorism. Otherwise, terrorism is ascribed as being the act of a "lone wolf" or "mentally unstable" person.
I love Glen Greenwald, so I'm not out to trash him as a person, or his good work. He is one of the few good investigative journalists we have, and I want him around for a long time.
However, on the topic of 9/11, he has shut down his brilliant mind, and his investigative journalist's credo. He, along with David Sirota, and every other good investigative journalist with a steady gig, refuse to breach the topic of the vast number of unanswered questions about the events of 9/11. Such a shame.
Greenwald writes "Within a matter of mere weeks, the 9/11 attacks infamously spawned a vast new surveillance statute (the Patriot Act), a secretly implemented warrantless eavesdropping program in violation of the law,…"
If anyone should know, that there is a major omission of fact in that sentence, it is Glen Greenwald. According to whistleblowers, that Bush, and then Obama pursued, have testified, that the warrantless eavesdropping program, didn't begin AFTER 9/11, but before. See, Glen Greenwald doesn't even need to go to the heart of the unanswered questions about the events of 9/11, but might remind us that things were a bit fishy long BEFORE 9/11 happened. But even THAT is too risky for even the best of what remains of the "fourth estate".
You make an important point about that time line. The big telecom companies were being approached and enlisted by the Bush administration in the early months of 2001 to create the giant digital databases of purely domestic and international electronic communications that NSA, the CIA, and other federal agencies would have access to trawl through.
This dangerous, illegal secret project was underway long before September 11, 2001. All the hype about how this was a necessary response to 9/11 is refuted by the time line. The wholesale abrogation of the FISA law safeguards against CIA/NSA warrantless surveillance on American soil preceded the WTC attack.
The Bushies essentially resurrected the old Omnivore program that Admiral Poindexter had championed during the Reagan/George H W Bush era, a program which was shut down when its existence leaked into the public domain and some members of Congress raised an alarm about the evils and lessons of Watergate.
Courtesy of 9/11, the evils of Watergate - US spy agencies running warrantless electronic surveillance and black ops inside the United States in addition to those they run overseas - have now become officially institutionalized, largely with specific Congressional approval.
Bill from Saginaw
Thank you so much for chiming in, and adding all of that important information. I remember at the time, when the news of Echelon broke, and then the domestic Omnivore. I passionately brought that to the attention of friends and acquaintances at the time, and their response was basically that I worried to much about it. And I imagine, even after all of the water that has flowed under that bridge, that they would still feel the same. Its nice to see that some people do pay attention, but we need so many more.
The events of September 11, 2001 are untouchable. They are a hot potato topic that no credible journalist wants to touch with a 10 foot pole.
If I didn't know any better, I would say that certain parties have made it impossible to discuss 9/11 without being cast as some unhinged nut. That perhaps is the best measure of a successful PSYWAR campaign.
Look at anyone who dares discuss 9/11, (s)he is immediately discredited as a Truther, as though that person was claiming that the Earth was flat or that dinosaurs never existed.
So aside from organized religion, who has the resources AND interest to tar an entire segment of the population? Who benefited from 9/11? It certainly wasn't any Moslem, especially none in Saudi Arabia or Egypt where the hijackers allegedly came from.
There are also elements that have been tying "Truthers" with Holocaust denial. As if the Truther label wasn't tarnished enough, certain groups like the Israel Lobby have been accusing those who dared question the government's version of being Holocaust deniers. The connection is dubious, but it is still being used to silence anyone who dares speak critically about the events of 9/11.
Again, why? Who benefits?
Norway isn't that cool: they still have a royal family. Phase it out.
Dunno.
Seems like a lot of pretty nice countries are Constitutional Monarchies.
Sweden, Denmark, Netherlands, ...
Ever been to those countries ? Or paid close attention to recent news?
I wouldn't want to live in any of those countries.
They are full to the brim with neo-nazis and have been for a long time.
Excuse me??
Breivik came as a surprise because there was no milieu for the police to monitor. Neo-nazism is getting bigger in England and Russia, but here there is little more than a handful of racists with political aspirations. Not so much in Norway as the rest of Scandinavia.
And as far as monarchy goes, I consider it superior to a republic as long it is parliamentary. The Royal family is doing an amazing job in representation, diplomacy, charity work and culture, things the prime minister doesn't have the time for, and which a president most certainly wouldn't have. It also spreads out the bases of authority. Power is officially split between the courts, the parliament and the government, but while the king has mainly a titular role, the parliament is still appointed by the king, and he is the commander-in-chief of the army. Members of the family are uncorruptable and are a source of morale amongst the population, no matter etnicity or religion. They all (depending on gender) take education in economics, social sciences, as well as officer training (usually navy) and classes held by the UN in bettering lives for people around the world.