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Thursday, June 27, 2013

NAPOLITANO: The truth shall keep us free - Washington Times

NAPOLITANO: The truth shall keep us free - Washington Times

Which is more dangerous to personal liberty in a free society: a renegade who tells an inconvenient truth about government lawbreaking, or government officials who lie about what the renegade revealed? That is the core issue in the great public debate this summer, as Americans come to the realization that their government has concocted a system of laws violative of the natural law, profoundly repugnant to the Constitution and shrouded in secrecy.

The liberty of which I write is the right to privacy: the right to be left alone. The framers jealously and zealously guarded this right by imposing upon government agents intentionally onerous burdens before letting them invade it. They did so in the Fourth Amendment, using language that permits the government to invade that right only in the narrowest of circumstances.

The linchpin of those circumstances is “probable cause” of evidence of crime in “the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.” If the government cannot tell a judge specifically what evidence of crime it is looking for and precisely from whom, a judge may not issue a search warrant, and privacy — the natural human yearning that comes from within all of us — will remain where it naturally resides: outside the government’s reach.
Congress is the chief culprit here because it has enacted laws that have lowered the constitutional bar that federal agents must meet in order for judges to issue search warrants. It has commanded that this be done in secret.
And I mean secret.


Read more: http://p.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/jun/27/the-truth-shall-keep-us-free/#ixzz2XQZm0Bo4
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