What’s Wrong With the ACLU
I stopped contributing to the ACLU in 1978 when the organization intervened on behalf of the American Nazi Party which had
been denied a parade permit by the Skokie, Illinois City Council. The Nazis had chosen Skokie because of its
large Jewish population and intended to appear in full swastika regalia.
It was not a matter of my denying that the
Nazis had a “free speech”, First Amendment, right to march, rather I did not believe that I had an
obligation to pay for their forum. It
was my view that the ACLU did not have unlimited resources. The
money and time expended on one case was money and time not devoted to another.
I could not bring myself to believe that there was not at that time some poor
guy on death row because he did not have adequate counsel or a woman somewhere being
harassed on the job with no one to come to her aid. I wanted whatever money I
could contribute to organizations seeking social justice to be spent on those
kinds of cases rather than facilitating Nazis harassing Holocaust survivors.
Update 40 years to Charlottesville. But
for the ACLU going to court on their behalf the Klan, the Nazis and the other
assorted haters might never have been able to march, and again people of good
conscience have to ask questions about the organization's actions.
Does your
conception of “speech” embrace thugs carrying assault rifles and torches and shouting Nazi slogans?
Even if it does,
are you morally obliged to help promote this “speech”?
Could the contribution you made vindicating
the constitutional rights of Klansmen and Nazis have been spent on behalf a kid
doing serious time because his constitutional right to assistance of counsel
was not honored, or on any of countless other extant failures by the legal system to respect the
rights of the poor and the powerless?
There is nothing wrong with refusing to expend available time or money on certain kinds of matters where issues of constitutional rights are in the balance. I did criminal appeals
when I practiced law, pleading on behalf men convicted of murder and other
serious felonies, but there was one type of case I could not, would not
handle----people convicted of child abuse.
That did not mean that I believed the constitutional rights of
child abusers should be ignored. It was simply a matter of choosing not to spend my time or money vindicating those rights. There were other attorneys who did,
and God bless them, just as there are other
attorneys ready to step forward on behalf of the Nazis and the Klan. But, even had there not been, my position would be the same. There is a certain personal economy relative to time and money that serving certain kinds of needs rather than others.
There would be
nothing wrong with the ACLU simply recognizing that every hour spent on Nazis
is hour not spent on others who may have no one to speak on their behalf.