Townhall
Paranoid
or Prescient?
By Victor Davis Hanson
May 23, 2013
Government
is now so huge, powerful
and callous that citizens risk becoming proverbial serfs without the
freedoms
guaranteed by the Founders.
Is
that perennial fear an
exaggeration? Survey the current news.
We
have just learned that the
Internal Revenue Service before the 2012 election predicated its
tax-exempt
policies on politics. It inordinately denied tax exemption to groups
considered
either conservative or possibly antagonistic to the president's agenda.
If
the supposedly nonpartisan IRS
is perceived as scoring our taxes based on our politics, then the
entire system
of trust in self-reporting is rendered null and void. Worse still, the
bureaucratic overseer at the center of the controversy, Sarah Hall
Ingram, now
runs the IRS division charged with enforcing compliance with the new
Obamacare
requirements.
Recently,
some reporters at the
Associated Press had their private and work phone records monitored by
the
government, supposedly because of fear about national-security leaks.
The
Justice Department gave the AP no chance, as usually happens, first to
question
its own journalists. The AP ran a story in May 2012 about the success
of a
Yemeni double agent before the administration itself could brag about
it.
In
fact, the Obama White House
itself has been accused of leaking classified information deemed
favorable to
the administration -- top-secret details concerning the Stuxnet
computer virus
used against Iran, the specifics of the raid on Osama bin Laden's
compound, and
the decision-making behind the drone program -- often to favored
journalists.
The message is clear: A reporter may have his most intimate work and
private
correspondence turned over to government -- a Fox News journalist had
his email
account tapped into -- on the mere allegation that he might have tried
to do
what his own government had in fact already done…
Read
the rest of the article at
Townhall
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