9.17.09 @ 6:01AM
A special reply from Rachel Ehrenfeld. Plus: Obama's deception.
The leisure class. And more.
LIBEL TOURISM AND THE FIRST AMENDMENT
Re: Aaron Eitan Meyer's Islamist
Lawfare:
The Saudi billionaire and serial "libel tourist" Khalid bin
Mahfouz is dead, but libel tourism (the use of foreign courts to
sue American writers) continues to threaten Americans free speech
rights.
Sadly, the Special Report on Islamist Lawfare by Aaron Eitan
Meyer that appeared in the Spectator on September 15
misleads the reader to think that fighting for laws to protect
Americans from libel tourism is "dangerous." Specifically, Meyer
hopes that "bin Mahfouz's demise will provide an end to the
dangerous overemphasis that has been placed on libel tourism."
Such a statement is astonishing from the assistant director of
the Legal Project of the Middle East Forum, which uses the dire
threat of libel tourism to raise funds for their own
organization.
On its own website, the Legal Project offers my struggle against
Mahfouz as its first example of silencing free speech. Mahfouz
objected to my exposure of his terror financing activities in my
book Funding Evil: How Terrorism Is Financed -- and How to
Stop It, which was published only in the U.S. Instead of
suing me here, he chose the British libel laws and courts in an
attempt to silence me. Until I decided to fight for my
Constitutional rights for free expression, libel tourism was
successfully used as a weapon to intimidate the American media
into silence.
Mahfouz, who did the Saudi royals' bidding, was a serial suer. He
frequently used archaic British libel laws that allow foreigners
to sue other foreigners in British courts. Often with his son
Abdulrahman, he sued more than 40 writers and publishers --
mostly Americans -- because he did not like their criticism.
Mahfouz made libel tourism a multimillion-dollar industry for the
British Bar, and turned London into the "Libel Capital" of the
world. On behalf of the Saudis, Mahfouz succeeded in using libel
tourism as a weapon to intimidate the Western media from
reporting on Saudi terror financing, and even from reporting his
death.
However, due to my personal efforts, in May 2008, New York State
was the first to pass the "Libel Terrorism Protection Act," aka
"Rachel's Law" protecting New Yorkers from the likes of Mahfouz.
Since then, Illinois and Florida passed similar laws and in
California, the governor is about to sign the anti-libel tourism
law.
Moreover, as a direct result of Mahfouz's libel terrorism, the
bipartisan Free Speech Protection Act 2009, sponsored by Senators
Arlen Specter, Joseph Lieberman, Charles Schumer and Ron Wyden,
is now pending in Congress. The bill is widely supported by major
writers and publishers' organizations in the U.S. These
legislative victories were achieved with the endorsement of the
New York Times, the Washington Post, and the
Los Angeles Times, and the Association of American
Publishers (AAP); the American Library Association; American
Association of University Professors, the New York City Bar
Association, and many others.
This bipartisan broad-based support could be the reason behind
the Saudi new initiative to prevent this bill from passing. They
recently hired U.S.-based international law firms to publicly
lobby against the Free Speech Protection Act.
Nevertheless, the U.S. is the only country to make free speech
the foundation of its Constitution, and this bill would protect
Americans free speech rights from foreign libel judgments that do
not provide protection similar to our Constitution. Moreover, to
deter libel tourism, the bill allows for countersuit and damages.
A different version sponsored by Rep. Steve Cohen, passed in the
House earlier this year.
Congress passed many laws to protect us from the threats of
terrorist attacks. It should now act to stop the war on our First
Amendment and strengthen the protection of our rights for free
expression. Congress should pass the Free Speech Protection Act
2009 without further delay.
-- Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld
Director, American Center
for Democracy (ACD)
ALWAYS THE CULPRIT
Re: Peter Ferrara's
Unhinged From Reality:
Once again, Mr. Ferrara has hit the nail on the head. What you
fail to mention is the failure to address the malpractice
problems and the highly increased costs associated with them,
problems that continue to be compounded with no attempt to
reform. As a physician, I too have been guilty of ordering many
unnecessary tests as "cover" should those clever plaintiff
attorneys file suit at a later date -- suits that make claims
based on knowledge after the fact and entirely separate from
reality and the longitudinal thinking that goes into
decision-making in a contemporaneous mode. Funny how "smart"
those plaintiff attorneys seem in that setting, wholly separated
from the facts. I personally think plaintiff attorneys should be
on call to emergency rooms, as are doctors, to make those
decisions contemporaneously and see if they are really smart, or
just out for the money. I have always thought it problematic that
attorneys who lose cases in court never get sued for screwing up
the case, but a doctor with a bad scar is ALWAYS the
culprit.
-- R. Mandraccia, MD
Ft. Myers, Florida
Mr. Ferrara's article in your current issue ("Taking Health
Savings into Account") and today online ("Unhinged from Reality")
clearly reveal the duplicity behind the administration's
pronouncements about its health-care bill. He makes it crystal
clear why it is a bad idea by his illustrations. I do not believe
that the Grand Pooh-bah and his minions are stupid. They are
dyed-in-the-wool socialists. Their speeches follow the Marxist
tactic of using rhetorical veils to conceal while advancing their
hidden agenda. My questions are: What is the hidden agenda? What
is the end game they envision for nationalizing medicine and
health care? How will it benefit them? Why would they want to
knowingly impose upon the entire country a system they know will
be a detriment to the entire population? I fear the simple answer
is that we have been conquered by means of a bloodless coup
d'état and this gives them the power to intrude into every aspect
of one's private life. But surely it must be more Draconian than
this. How does it benefit them?
-- Joe Griffin
St. Charles, Missouri
"How can he possibly get away with spouting such shameless
falsehoods to the entire nation?"
Easy.
A state-controlled so-called "news media," that's no longer the
Fourth Estate, but Fifth Column. Actually, they're no longer even
subversive in their treachery. They're the new Ministry of
Newspeak, Nospeak and Dumbspeak.
Democrats, liberals and leftists, including the president, whose
monotonal message of socialism allows and speaks no truth.
The amorality of liberalism and its bedrock hypocrisy.
The apparent penchant for this particular president and his
Congressional leaders' cognitive dissonance and mendacity.
A megalomaniac, Obama, who doesn't care what anyone thinks of him
and who will say anything -- anything -- to advance his statist
position. And one who expects everyone to believe everything he
says, all the time.
Perhaps, though, Obama's performance was not for true public
consumption or reporting?
The endless-campaigner and lecturer-in-chief Obama wasn't
speaking to the nation in his same-old-same-old, finger-wagging,
angry and bitter speech, I think.
His real audience was just the Democrats in that chamber who were
or are fence-sitting on support of whatever “plan” it is about
which Obama fictionalizes and the Democrats rationalize—and about
which both still advance “shameless falsehoods.”
-- C. Kenna Amos Jr.
AT YOUR LEISURE
Re: Mark Judge's Lingua
Crapa:
W. H. Davies, a Welsh poet (1871-1940) expressed the same
sentiment in the poem "Leisure" -- the money quote being "What is
this life if full of care we have no time to stand and
stare....
-- M. Woods
EXPLODING THANKS
Re: Jeffrey Lord's
Media Malpractice: Tom Brokaw's World Implodes:
OUTSTANDING !!!! Thanks for this !
-- Steve Preheim