Sunday, April 5, 2020

Bipartisan majority supports violating constitution

Red and Blue America Agree That Now Is the Time to Violate the Constitution | The Atlantic - Adam Chilton, Kevin Cope, Charles Crabtree, & Mila Versteeg:

March 25, 2020 - ""To what extent should the Constitution be violated to fight the coronavirus? Lockdowns, especially ones that apply to people who haven’t tested positive for the virus, are constitutionally questionable. The threat ... to prosecute residents who spread false information about the virus ... could violate the First Amendment. Some people ... have challenged ... city ... authority to force a gun shop to close, citing their right to arm themselves. Perhaps most alarming, the U.S. Department of Justice 'has quietly asked Congress for the ability to ask chief judges to detain people indefinitely without trial during emergencies.'

"To assess how Americans weigh the trade-off between preserving civil liberties and halting the spread of the coronavirus, we ... presented a nationally representative sample of 3,000 U.S. residents with eight possible policy responses to the outbreak, all of which may be unconstitutional, including forced quarantine in a government facility, criminal penalties for spreading misinformation, bans against certain people entering the country, and conscription of health-care workers. We also asked our sample to imagine that public-health officials had reviewed the policies and estimated that each would likely save some number of lives, hypothetical figures that we provided.

"A majority of respondents supported all eight of these policies, most by considerable margins. The proposals with the lowest support were seizing businesses and banning all citizens and noncitizens outside the country from entering, but these policies still had 58 and 63 percent support, respectively. The proposals with the highest levels of support were banning noncitizens from entering the country (85 percent) and conscripting health-care professionals to work despite risks to their own health (78 percent). Both policies burden a defined minority of the population, so it’s not surprising that large majorities support them..... About 70 percent of respondents supported restricting people’s ability to say things that may qualify as misinformation. Likewise, 77 percent of respondents support suspending all religious services and gatherings.... And even when we explicitly told half of our sample that the policies may violate the Constitution, the majority supported all eight of them....

"Perhaps the most striking feature of our results is the broad bipartisan endorsement of these liberty-restricting policies. Like other surveys, ours reflected a huge gap between Democrats and Republicans in approval of President Donald Trump’s handling of the pandemic: 34 percent of Democrats expressed approval, while 88 percent of Republicans did. One might have reasonably concluded that different policy preferences were driving these responses....

"But our findings suggest that’s not the case. Democrats and Republicans ... show almost identical levels of support for detaining sick people in government facilities, conscripting people to work, prohibiting the spreading of misinformation, and banning all people (citizens and noncitizens alike) from entering the country. Seventy-four percent of Democrats supported each of the eight proposed policies, while 71 percent of Republicans did....

"Often, efforts to roll back civil liberties face political opposition, but now bipartisan support for rights-restricting COVID-19 responses could smooth the path for constitutional erosion. James Madison predicted as much when he described constitutional rights as 'parchment barriers,' easily transgressed when the majority is so inclined. And indeed, history presents numerous examples of liberty violations made in the face of security threats ... the Alien and Sedition Acts ... Japanese American internment camps during WWII, and the use of torture after 9/11. After the threat has subsided, Americans must recognize any constitutional violations for what they were, lest they become the new normal."

Read more: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/03/coronavirus-america-constitution/608665/

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