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Homeland Security Scams (Paperback)
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Homeland Security Scams (Paperback)
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A direct consequence of the War on Terror launched after the
attacks of September 11, 2001 is an awareness of the need for
homeland security. This war is being used to justify a huge
expansion of government powers and spending, but funds allocated
for homeland security are often for programs far removed from
anything that might be termed "defense" or "security." In Homeland
Security Scams, James T. Bennett shows that this government
spending is doing very little to make us safer, but a great deal to
make us poorer, less free, and more dependent on the federal
government.Regardless of the color of the "security alert" issued
by the Homeland Security czar, the spending light is always green
as pork barrel dollars are showered on programs of dubious worth.
Lobbyists lobby for homeland security grants and contracts;
corporations and state and local governments are becoming ever more
dependent on federal subsidies; the vested interest in prolonging
and intensifying the concern about homeland security increases; and
lobbyists press for ever more money. As Bennett makes clear, with
government money comes government control. Law enforcement and
emergency response agencies at all levels of government are being
effectively "nationalized." Police power is being concentrated, and
the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) envisions a
"surveillance" state that the East German State Police under
Communism would have envied.In this hard-hitting critique, Bennett
argues that all the spending and surveillance will not win the War
on Terror or preserve us from natural disasters. The foe cannot be
beaten (we're having trouble even finding the enemy), cannot
surrender, and still has awesome powers to lay waste to American
cities and citizens. He argues that we should view terrorism as
just one of many other serious threats to individuals and to
nations. More sternly, he warns that the War on Terror is also a
War on Privacy and a War on Liberty.
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