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About
Frank Salvato
Frank Salvato
is
the Executive Director and Director of Terrorism Research for
BasicsProject.org
a non-profit, non-partisan, 501(c)(3) research and education
initiative. His writing has been recognized by the US House
International Relations Committee and the Japan Center for
Conflict Prevention. His organization, BasicsProject.org,
partnered in producing the original national symposium series
addressing the root causes of radical Islamist terrorism. He is
a member of the
International Analyst Network.
He also serves as the managing editor for The New Media Journal.
Mr. Salvato has appeared on The O'Reilly Factor on FOX News
Channel, and is a regular guest on talk radio including on The
Captain's America Radio Show airing on AM1220 WSRQ and on the
Internet catering to the US Armed Forces around the world and on
The Roth Show with Dr. Laurie Roth syndicated nationally on the
USA Radio Network. His
opinion-editorials have been published by The American
Enterprise Institute, The Washington Times & Human Events and
are syndicated nationally. He is occasionally quoted in The
Federalist. Mr. Salvato is available for public speaking
engagements. |
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Social Bookmarking
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Past Articles
Our
Federal Government’s Basic Purpose
The Tea
Party Movement, The GOP & Making It Work
The
Time Is Ripe for Divide & Conquer
The
Janus Face of the Progressive Democrats
At This Point It’s About Defining the
"Win”
American
Liberty v. Obama’s Social Engineering
Is the
Constitution Just a Grand Suggestion?
Have
Dems Been Marginalized within Their Own Party
Confronting
the Spin on the Fort Hood Massacre
Pretending
to Speak for an Entire Culture
When
Ideology Masks Ignorance
It's Time
to Pay Close Attention to the Politicians
The Only
Real Strategy for Afghanistan
Why Obama
Will Throw ACORN Under the Bus
"Please,
God, No...It's So Hot, I'm Burning Up"
Missing the
Larger Point on the Public Option
Challenging
the Status Quo
You Say You
Want a Real Solution
'You Have
Awakened the Sleeping Giant'
"Birther"
Label Overshadows a Real Issue
Reading
Legislation...It’s Your Job!
A
Government Run by Mrs. Kravitz
Instituting
a Safeguard Against Political &...Tyranny
Amid All
the Celebrity Deaths, A Reality Check
When In The
Course of Human Events...
Genocide or
Massacre, US Repeating Mistakes...
The Path to
the Future Requires a Return to the Roots
With All
Things, Facts & Truth Matter
Gitmo,
Liberals, Politics & Deceit
Obama, Cheney & The Bright Shiny Thing
Nancy Pelosi: Damaged Beyond Repair
Radical Islam By Any Other Name...
Celebrating the Exit of a RINO, Cheering as Rome...
Specter: An Opportunist Guilty of Political Treason
A Week for the Earth; A Day for the Constitution
Left Is Making a Mistake in Ridiculing the Tea Parties
Obama’s European Tour: Arrogance, Ineptness &...
The Two-Faced Brutality of Hope & Change
The United States of America Is Not a Democracy
The ‘Give Obama a Chance’ Trial Period is Over
Recognizing the Reality of Radical Islam
‘Oh, God!’ It’s Bobby Jindal!
Determining the Intent of the Pres. Determination
It’s Not Obama’s "Stimulus” Bill
Time to Admit the Realities of Pakistan
Gaza & The One-World Media’s Propaganda
Illinois
Politics, Chicago Corruption...I Told You So
Barack
Obama: Neither Oblivious Nor Deceptive
Why the
POTUS Needs to Be a Natural-Born Citizen
A
Cornucopia of Gratitude
Giving
Marriage Back to the Church |
Frank Salvato,
Managing Editor
Our Federal Government’s Basic Purpose
February 19, 2010
In February of 2009, legislation
was introduced in the 111th Congress that would protect the First Amendment
rights of United States citizens when faced with malicious lawsuits, brought
against them in foreign courts, claiming defamation. The Free Speech Protection
Act of 2009 is meant not only to secure and assure a US citizen’s First
Amendment right to free speech in the aforementioned circumstance, but to serve
as a tool in guaranteeing our nation’s sovereignty under constitutional law. As
of this writing,
Senate Bill 449, officially titled as introduced as "A Bill to Protect Free
Speech,” languishes in the Senate Judiciary Committee. We all must ask
why.
The Free Speech Protection Act of 2009 (the short title for S449) is meant to
protect writers, authors, lecturers and any other US citizen against "libel
tourism,” a phrase emanating from a lawsuit over the book
Funding Evil, by Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld, explained in a short film
titled
The Libel Tourist and in an article titled,
A Federal Law is Needed to Deter Libel Tourism, by Daniel J.
Kornstein. Mr. Kornstein refers to libel tourism as:
"...when a person, usually prominent and wealthy, sues an American author for
libel in a country that lacks the equivalent of First Amendment protections and
where the American author never took any steps to publish or market the
allegedly libelous work. Foreign courts may assert jurisdiction over American
authors in these cases because the publication could be read over the Internet
or because a handful of copies made their way into the foreign country via
Amazon.com. Libel tourists often file suit in England because the laws there are
very plaintiff friendly, and libel plaintiffs can obtain judgments there that
they could not obtain in the United States.”
So, a wealthy individual, let’s say a Saudi Sheik, who has come under
scrutiny for actions identified as pro-jihadi or in support of al Qaeda, by an
author or lecturer who happens to be an American citizen, can purchase a dozen
copies of the book, published lecture notes or DVD in Britain, file a lawsuit
for defamation and win adjudication – including monetary damages, all without
the author or lecturer ever having set foot on British soil or having contracted
to have the intellectual property offered in that country.
Similarly, an American writer, journalist or author who uncovers and publishes –
exclusively in the United States – information about, let’s say, a known and
wanted al Qaeda operative who was attending classes at a foreign university so
that he could acquire knowledge of nuclear technology while gaining access to
the university’s nuclear research reactor – activities that directly threaten
the national security of the United States, mind you – that writer, author or
journalist could find himself the target of a foreign-court defamation lawsuit
subjecting him to foreign law jurisdiction without ever having been in that
country; foreign law that completely ignores his First Amendment right to free
speech under the Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments to the United States
Constitution.
Can you understand the danger in allowing foreign courts to adjudicate against
US citizens who have never been physically present in that foreign
jurisdiction? Allowing this type of grotesque over-reaching legal precedent to
stand not only decimates a US citizen’s constitutional right to free speech, it
attacks the very sanctity of the US Constitution as law of the land. To
allow foreign courts to adjudicate against US citizens – especially when that
adjudication transgresses constitutional rights – when they have had no physical
or intended presence on that country’s soil, is a direct and vicious attack
on US sovereignty.
The Father of the US Constitution, and certainly a man in possession of more
intellect than almost all who now serve in elected office, James Madison, is
quoted as saying:
"It is sufficiently obvious, that persons and property are the two great
subjects on which Governments are to act; and that the rights of persons, and
the rights of property, are the objects, for the protection of which Government
was instituted. These rights cannot well be separated.”
In that, Madison identified our federal government’s basic purpose, to
protect the constitutional rights of the American people. This duty, this
obligation, is the single most important function of the US government. Yet, a
piece of legislation that simply re-asserts the protection of our citizenry’s
absolute right to free speech lays in debate in the Senate Judiciary Committee.
How can this possibly be? What could possibly be in question?
A summary of The Free Speech Protection Act of 2009, as provided by the Library
of Congress, via its website
Thomas.gov, states:
"Allows any US person against whom a lawsuit for defamation is brought in a
foreign country for defamation on the basis of the content of any speech by that
person that has been published, uttered, or otherwise disseminated in the United
States to bring an action in a US district court against any person who, or
entity which, brought the suit, if: (1) the speech at issue in the foreign
lawsuit does not constitute defamation under US law; and (2) the person or
entity which brought the foreign lawsuit serves or causes to be served any
documents in connection with such foreign lawsuit on a US person.
"Allows the award of treble damages if it is determined by a preponderance of
the evidence that the person or entity bringing the foreign lawsuit
intentionally engaged in a scheme to suppress rights under the First Amendment
to the Constitution by discouraging publishers or other media from publishing,
or by discouraging financial supporters from employing, retaining, or supporting
the research, writing, or other speech of an individual.”
In essence, what this legislation – and its House counterpart
HR1304 – says is that the First Amendment free speech rights of US citizens
will not be usurped by foreign-court adjudications based on the content of any
published works disseminated in the United States unless they meet the US Code
defining defamation.
Because we are a sovereign nation, a nation with a judicial system based on the
rule of law emanating uniquely from the United States Constitution, it is almost
embarrassing that such legislation would have to be crafted at all. Truth be
told, the fragile knowledge of the US Constitution possessed by students in the
8th grade includes a solid understanding of the right to free speech and the
historical events that led our Framers to include this most basic of rights into
our Charters of Freedom.
So, why is this legislation languishing in the Senate Judiciary Committee?
Because we are so saddled with the ideological cancer of one-world political
correctness, that it has become more important to "not hurt feelings” than it is
to defend a most cherished and absolute right.
While engaging the office staffers of several senators on the Judiciary
Committee, two people directly affected by libel tourism and foreign-court
adjudication – who shall remain nameless so as not to exact the ire of the
political elite upon their quest for constitutional justice – were told, and I
paraphrase:
"If we try to safeguard the constitutional rights of Americans in [a foreign
country] then a [foreign] company would feel exempt from US law should it be in
opposition to US law, thus providing an incentive to adhere to the [foreign
country’s] law.”
And then there was an even more disturbing politically correct response
coming from one Senator's office:
"Rights of Americans cannot be upheld in foreign courts of law because we
would offend our friends.”
The US Constitution
specifies quite clearly in Article VI, Clause 3:
"The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the members of the
several state legislatures, and all executive and judicial officers, both of the
United States and of the several states, shall be bound by oath or affirmation,
to support this Constitution..."
For this manner of thinking to even be considered – let alone embraced
– by our elected officials is not only a violation of their oaths of office to
protect the US Constitution and the rights it affords every US citizen, it is
seditious.
In fact, as our military engages Islamic jihadists on the field of battle in
what two presidents have now declared a "war,” one could make a pretty strong
case for
treason, where the attack on US sovereignty is concerned.
One has to wonder how quickly the politically correct creatures of the Judiciary
Committee would advance this legislation to the full Senate if those engaged in
the Tea Party Movement started asking why they don’t champion protecting a US
Citizen’s free speech rights... |
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