I had tweeted thusly: "America has gone from land of the free to land where govt listens to your phone calls and probes your body orifices at will."
But Prof. Juan Cole says it much better.
Americans think of themselves as brave rugged individualists who
enjoy the liberties of an Enlightenment constitution. In fact, they
most often are timid and cowed in the face of the world’s most powerful
government, which increasingly acts like a medieval tyrant. Americans
don’t seem outraged that the government is spying on them. The
government has put 6 million Americans either in prison or under
correctional supervision, and has the highest per capita rate of
incarceration in the world– more than Cuba, nearly twice that of Russia,
and more than 4 times that of Communist China! Only 8 percent of
inmates in Federal penitentiaries are there for violent crimes. In many
states, former prisoners are stripped of the right to vote. These
extreme penal practices of course primarily target minorities and
function as a racial control mechanism. (Famously, penalties in the US
for using cocaine powder, a favorite in the white suburbs, are much less
than for crack cocaine, mostly used by poor minorities.)
Not only does the US have an enormous number of people in jail but
they subject arrestees (people not convicted of a crime) to routine
strip and cavity searches. Women are often forced to be naked in front
of the other inmates and to spread their labia for a policewoman.
These practices have been challenged. The ninth district federal
appeals court in California decades ago found LAPD routine body cavity
searches unconstitutional. But last year, our Supreme Court– the same
one that thinks corporations are people, that doesn’t think big money
campaign donors should have to identify themselves, and thinks it is all
right for traditionally discriminatory states to pass voter suppression
laws against minorities– weighed in. It found constitutional routine strip searches even in minor traffic violations cases.
A guy got a ticket. He paid it off, but it mistakenly stayed on his
record. He bought a new house and went out with family to celebrate.
He got stopped by police, who ran his registration and found the ticket.
They handcuffed him in front of his family and hauled him off to six
days in jail during which he was subjected to cavity searches. John
Roberts thinks the whole thing perfectly reasonable.
Prof. Cole also notes something that seems to be along the lines of my thinking - that the English/American genius is to make bad behavior legal.
While police in India sometimes mistreat prisoners, they are behaving
illegally when they do so. To have the official policy be to humiliate
people routinely is outrageous to people outside the United States,
especially where it concerns a woman diplomat who functions as a symbol
of the nation.