Rogue Justice, Karen J. Greenberg
Rogue Justice, Karen J. Greenberg
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Rogue Justice
The Making of the Security State

Author: Karen J. Greenberg

Narrator: Rebecca Mitchell

Unabridged: 8 hr 24 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Recorded Books

Published: 05/24/2016


Synopsis

The definitive account of how America's War on Terror sparked a decade-long assault on the rule of law, weakening our courts and our Constitution in the name of national security. The day after September 11, President Bush tasked the Attorney General with preventing another terrorist attack on the United States. From that day forward, the Bush administration turned to the Department of Justice to give its imprimatur to activities that had previously been unthinkable-from the NSA's spying on US citizens to indefinite detention to torture. Many of these activities were secretly authorized, others done in the light of day. When President Obama took office, many observers expected a reversal of these encroachments upon civil liberties and justice, but the new administration found the rogue policies to be deeply entrenched, and, at times, worth preserving. Obama ramped up targeted killings, held fast to aggressive surveillance policies, and fell short on bringing reform to detention and interrogation. How did America veer so far from its founding principles of justice? Rogue Justice connects the dots for the first time-from the Patriot Act to today's military commissions, from terrorism prosecutions to intelligence priorities, from the ACLU's activism to Edward Snowden's revelations. And it poses a stark question: will the American justice system ever recover from the compromises it made for the war on terror? Riveting and deeply reported, Rogue Justice could only have been written by Karen Greenberg, one of this country's top experts on Guantanamo, torture, and terrorism, with a deep knowledge of both the Bush and Obama administrations. Now she brings to life the full story of law and policy after 9/11, introducing us to the key players and events, showing that time and again, when liberty and security have clashed, justice has been the victim.

About Karen J. Greenberg

Karen J. Greenberg is director of the Center on National Security at Fordham Law, an international studies fellow at New America, and a permanent member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Her books include Rogue Justice: The Making of the Security State and The Least Worst Place: Guantanamo's First 100 Days.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Scott

As 9/11 recedes into history (has it already been almost 15 years?), the terrifying events of that are beginning to recede into history. Many freshmen in high school were not yet born on that tragic day (now I feel really old). And yet we live in a country that in many ways is starkly different than......more

Goodreads review by Rick

“Rogue Justice: The Making of the Security State” by Karen Greenberg is another tale in the privacy vs security debate. This one is a bit different though...this narrative comes from the angle of how our Constitutional freedoms have been trampled by our overreaction to the failures of 9/11, and this......more

Goodreads review by Clif

The collapse of the WTC towers on 9/11 was a horrible thing, but the reaction of the United States both immediately and for years afterward was a disaster for the country with regard to its own laws, one that could only have pleased Osama bin Laden. Karen Greenberg gives us an account of the speed wi......more

Goodreads review by George

"Never let a good crisis go to waste," it was famously said. For George W. Bush and his administration, he must have recited these words like catechism and religiously lived by them. After 9/11, with the nation's mood poignant, and the government's response seemingly benevolent, the Bush administrat......more