Close your eyes for a moment and imagine the worst possible future abuse by a government over its own citizens. The first thing likely to come to mind for many would be assassination of citizens without due process. Sadly, you will have to think a bit harder; in the US, which so often describes itself as the world’s leading democracy and regularly criticizes the human rights records of other nations, the right to kill its own citizens before allowing them a chance to give their side of the story has already been reserved. Targets are placed on a ‘kill list’ by a secret panel working out of the White House, and their findings are brought to the President, who makes the final decision on whether a suspect will live or die. And not just the suspect, anyone else unfortunate enough to be standing close by when the drone strikes.
It is a fundamental tenet of law in any country that can call itself even remotely civilized that one is innocent until proven guilty, and that no matter how bad something looks on the surface, formal due process must be followed to get to the root of any alleged guilt. The alternative is chaos: lynch mobs and random punishment based on hearsay or unverified evidence. Terrifyingly, the World’s Leading Democracy(TM) now countenances such lawlessness, setting a precedent that other nations are bound to follow, basing their judgments on ‘secret evidence’, while the citizenry are supposed to blindly trust the actions of the same government that has demonstrably lied and orchestrated cover-ups on multiple issues.
[Image: A map of #WikiLeaks reputation with media, politics, public, diplomacy, entertainment, September 2011. Designed by Metahaven for Fillip Magazine.]
Click on the image to view hi-res version.
[Image: Smashing Windows with Windows: Transparency, Design, and WikiLeaks Metahaven & Jeff Khonsary via fillip magazine]
WikiLeaks Scarf Limited edition at Gwangju Design Biennale, Korea 2011, “Named Design,” Politics Section. Production image. Garment size 120x120 cm. Design by Metahaven 2011.
[Image: Map by, and courtesy of, Domus, “in homage to Buckminster Fuller’s famous Dymaxion projection, and showing the locations of 259 critical infrastructures”; see it folded up, courtesy of David M.A.]
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