Real life is more frightening than fiction. 1984 scared many because of how close to home the blow struck, and even Stephen King, admits in his grimoire of horror fiction, Danse Macabre that there is some amazing talent involved in scaring people with monsters and fiction when there are so many real things to be afraid of.

But after November, 15th even Stephen King is going to have a hard time scaring civil libertarians, constitutionalists, and those paying close eyes on politics and history. In a move that they claim is taken out of George Orwellโ€™s aforementioned novel, the United States Senate passed the National Defense Authorization Act.

A version of this bill is passed each year, allocating funds and responsibilities to the Department of Defense for the given fiscal year. The alarming nature of this bill comes from section 1031, which lists detainee policies.

The section states that prisoners of war are not guaranteed civil rights, or due process of law, furthermore that American citizens and legal residents are not subject to the above, except in the name of national security.

The wording of the bill becomes tricky in this section. A careful reading discovers that those found to be suspects of terrorisms may be locked away without a trial, and without a say. This means U.S. Citizens, when suspected of being a national security threat, are no longer guaranteed civil rights, due process, or a trial by their peers and this is what is upsetting civil libertarians. Constitutionalists and a lot of Southern Maryland residents.

โ€œโ€ฆ If anyone doubted we were becoming a police state before, this should eliminate that doubtโ€ a resident said in armature debate forum December 6th.

The frightening part of the bill is the wording, there are provisions to allow American citizens their due process and constitutional rights; however a โ€œwaiver for national secretaryโ€ found latter in the bill, overrides those provisions making it possible for a future president to detain and execute, without warrant, trial, or due process anyone deemed, a National Security Threat.

In the past such