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Abbott鈥檚 blacklist: America鈥檚 tradition of branding dissent as treason
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This week, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott the Council on American-Islamic Relations a foreign terrorist organization, and prohibited them from purchasing land in the state. That move doesn鈥檛 just have practical ramifications for CAIR鈥檚 ability to operate in Texas 鈥 it follows an all-too-familiar pattern in American history. In moments of perceived crisis, public officials cast unpopular ideological minorities as internal enemies, exploiting 鈥渟ecurity鈥 concerns to trample on speech and belief.
CAIR is a D.C.-based, national organization whose is to 鈥渆nhance understanding of Islam, protect civil rights, promote justice, and empower American Muslims.鈥 CAIR has been fiercely critical of Israel and American efforts to support Israel鈥檚 military campaign in Gaza. Recently, CAIR successfully Abbott鈥檚 administration over executive orders that targeted pro-Palestinian campus protesters. CAIR also defended EPIC City, a Muslim-oriented development in Texas that Abbott investigated in September.
Against that backdrop, Abbott鈥檚 order designating CAIR cites to the organization鈥檚 protected speech and viewpoints, that CAIR supports terrorism, and says they are 鈥渞adical extremists鈥 who 鈥渁re not welcome in our state.鈥 He then offers the vague that CAIR wants 鈥渢o forcibly impose Sharia law and establish Islam鈥檚 鈥榤astership of the world.鈥欌 CAIR has since Abbott鈥檚 administration for the terror designation.
Using the language of 鈥渢errorism鈥 and 鈥渇oreign enemy鈥 is not a new tactic to quash disfavored speech. In 1918, on the heels of World War I and the ensuing anti-German and anti-Bolshevik fervor, Montana passed its . The Act made it a crime to 鈥渦tter, print, write or publish any disloyal, profane, violent, scurrilous, contemptuous, slurring or abusive language鈥 about the U.S. government, Constitution, flag, military, or any language 鈥渃alculated to incite or inflame resistance鈥 to federal or state authority during the war. In other words, it made criticizing the U.S. illegal.
Under Montana鈥檚 Sedition Act, hundreds of Montanans were arrested and 79 ultimately for things as minor as making offhand anti-war remarks in a bar. One convict, Slovenian native Josef Gocevar, said 鈥淧resident Wilson had no business getting into this war.鈥 He was to six years in prison. Another convict, Fay Rumsey, made the mistake of saying that he 鈥渨ished the Germans would come in and clean up the U.S.鈥 He a two-year sentence. By proscribing one side of the debate over the war, Montana鈥檚 Sedition Act effectively criminalized dissent.
When First Amendment rights are at stake, such speculative connections are nowhere near sufficient to impose sweeping punishments.
The Sedition Act also proved useful for pressuring anti-war Montanans into violating their consciences by buying war bonds. Local patriotic councils created lists of dissenters. Mobs weaponized the lists, threatening to report fellow citizens to the authorities if they did not purchase war bonds. It worked: One council that Montana subscribed to war bonds at a level 鈥渇ar exceeding national projections.鈥
When men pressured Earnest V. Starr, an Ohio native who moved to Montana, to buy war bonds and kiss an American flag, Starr refused, that the flag was 鈥渘othing but a piece of cotton with a little paint on it.鈥 Starr was sentenced to 10 years in prison and had to pay a $500 fine, which is about $9,000 in today鈥檚 dollars. Another mob to lynch German immigrant Herman Bausch for refusing to buy war bonds, instead interrogating him for several hours. After Bausch admitted that he was 鈥渙pposed to war鈥 and that he would 鈥渘ot contribute financially to this world calamity,鈥 he was convicted and sentenced to four years in prison.
Dissenters during the Second World War fared similarly, particularly Jehovah鈥檚 Witnesses. Jehovah鈥檚 Witnesses are pacifists, and categorically opposed the war. Their opposition 鈥 and refusal to salute the American flag 鈥 drew accusations that they were fifth columnists, a term for a group that secretly sympathizes with the enemy. Between 1940 and 1942, there were of attacks on Jehovah鈥檚 Witnesses in the US, almost always with the support of local law enforcement. In a sick twist, Nazi Germany similarly persecuted Jehovah鈥檚 Witnesses for to participate in Hitler鈥檚 patriotic exercises. Many were ultimately in Nazi concentration camps.
The Jehovah鈥檚 Witnesses and the First Amendment
Between 1938 and 1943, the Jehovah鈥檚 Witnesses had an astonishing 30 cases before the Supreme Court that mostly expanded First Amendment liberties. The result was a much stronger and richer jurisprudence.
In Minersville School District v. Gobitis (1940), the Supreme Court held that public schools did not violate the First Amendment when they compelled Jehovah鈥檚 Witnesses to salute the American flag and recite the Pledge of Allegiance. Within days of the Gobitis ruling, members of the American Legion (in conjunction with the local police chief) in Richwood, West Virginia, forced Jehovah鈥檚 Witnesses to and march to the post office to salute the flag. Similar attacks were carried out elsewhere: Litchfield, Illinois all 60 Witnesses in the town, while a mob a Witness building to the ground in Maine. As one Southern sheriff : 鈥渢hey鈥檙e traitors; the Supreme Court says so. Ain鈥檛 you heard?鈥
But the Jehovah鈥檚 Witnesses persevered. Only three years after the Gobitis-inspired fervor, the Supreme Court reversed course. In West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette (1943), the Court overruled Gobitis, famously holding that the government cannot 鈥減rescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion.鈥
That reversal fit into a broader rethinking of how far officials can go to marginalize 鈥渄isloyal鈥 speech. Early World War I prosecutions under the federal Sedition Act ended in victories for the government. But in Abrams v. United States (1919), Justices Brandeis and Holmes cautioned in dissent that punishing unpopular dissidents for their words alone was incompatible with a free society. It took decades, but their view eventually prevailed: Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969) held that even ugly, extremist advocacy is protected unless it is intended and likely to spur imminent lawless action. The logic that undergirded Montana鈥檚 Sedition Act no longer holds water, which should make us very skeptical when today鈥檚 officials reach for 鈥渘ational security鈥 to silence opposition.
Yet in Texas today, you can hear the same soundtrack playing underneath Abbott鈥檚 rhetoric about CAIR. He says CAIR has taken 鈥渁ctions . . . to support terrorism across the globe and subvert our laws through violence, intimidation and harassment鈥 and calls them 鈥渞adical extremists鈥 who 鈥渁re not welcome in our state.鈥 That line about support for terrorism does the same work as 鈥渄isloyal, profane, scurrilous . . . language鈥 in the Montana Sedition Act: It collapses speech and advocacy into treason. Much like 骋辞产颈迟颈蝉鈥&苍产蝉辫;effect on Jehovah鈥檚 Witnesses during World War II, Abbott鈥檚 decision singles out CAIR as a potential fifth column 鈥 and asks the state government to treat it as such.
Of course, if CAIR has broken the law, state law enforcement may follow its regular processes for criminal or civil investigations. That means opening investigations based on actual evidence of legal violations, not based on a target鈥檚 viewpoints and speech. When constitutional rights are at stake, evidence like Abbott鈥檚 is too thin. For example, Abbott cites an FBI agent who claimed that CAIR was a 鈥渇ront group鈥 for Hamas, but that was only , 17 years ago, and the federal government (across Democratic and Republican administrations) has brought material support for terrorism charges against CAIR. Abbott also cites a War on Terror-era case where a judge denied CAIR鈥檚 motion to file an amicus brief. In denying the motion, the judge suggested that CAIR was connected to terrorists. But that鈥檚 not an evidence-based ruling by a judge 鈥 it鈥檚 an aside in a decision that didn鈥檛 touch the core issues of the case. When First Amendment rights are at stake, such speculative connections are nowhere near sufficient to impose sweeping punishments.
The Montana Sedition Act and Gobitis should mark the outer boundary for what we should tolerate in a free society. States cannot demand ideological conformity from individuals, interest groups, or religious minorities to operate in their state. If a blue state banned pro-Israel or Jewish groups 鈥 claiming that those groups sponsored violations of international law by supporting the war in Gaza or violence in the West Bank 鈥 that would be just as much of a red flag for civil liberties as Abbott鈥檚 order. Whether one agrees with CAIR or not, the entire point of the First Amendment is that government officials do not get to decide which critics are patriots and which are enemies of the state.
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