The War on Our Freedoms: Civil Liberties in an Age of Terrorism - Kathleen Sullivan, Anthony Lewis, Joseph Lelyveld, and Alan Brinkely are Among Contributors to New Book from The Century Foundation and PublicAffairs
Topics: Homeland Security
Jun 8, 2003
Authors: admin
Publisher(s): The Century Foundation
The War on Our Freedoms: Civil Liberties in an Age of Terrorism <br>Kathleen Sullivan, Anthony Lewis, Joseph Lelyveld and Alan Brinkley are among contributors to new book from the century foundation and PublicAffairs <br>6/9/03, New York City — With the whole world watching, America, in the name of freedom, has twice gone to war half way around the globe. But here at home, the war on our freedoms is being conducted largely behind closed doors. The government has adopted numerous policies that challenge existing legal norms, freedom of information, and many basic civil liberties. Yet it is still far from clear that the nation is much safer. <br>In The War on Our Freedoms: Civil Liberties in an Age of Terrorism (A Century Foundation book, published by PublicAffairs, June 2003) fourteen thinkers, scholars, journalists, and historians warn that we may be giving up more of our freedoms than we realize to gain less security than we need. They argue that the rush to limit civil liberties in the name of national security is ultimately destructive to American values and may, in some cases, impede efforts in the war on terrorism. <br>Contributors to the volume include Anthony Lewis, Kathleen Sullivan, John Podesta, Alan Brinkley, Stanley Cloud, Joseph Lelyveld, Christopher Edley Jr., Ann Beeson, E.J. Dionne, John Stacks, Roberto Suro, Richard C. Leone, Stephen Schulhofer, and Patricia Thomas (bios attached). In a series of essays, they detail how due process is being undermined, government secrecy is on the rise, racial profiling is rampant, immigration policies are being compromised, and individual freedoms are at risk. A central theme is that this war on our freedoms is being conducted largely behind closed doors, and with little public debate. Richard C. Leone and Greg Anrig, Jr. are the co-editors of The War on Our Freedoms. <br>“The struggle against terrorism could continue for generations, and we run the risk of finding ourselves on a slippery slope, making decisions






