Posted by
RicFrankel on Tuesday, May 13, 2008 9:19:01 AM
Re: TownHall.com –
5/2/2008 – “Willful Blindness to the Jihad” – David Limbaugh
I’m afraid Limbaugh has missed the point of American
justice. He states correctly that the “entire
orientation of the criminal justice system is to protect the rights of innocents,
affording the accused due process and a litany of other constitutional
protections”. He correctly continues that “we are at war with an enemy who doesn't fight wars according to
conventional rules”. But he begins to loose his way with “If we continue to treat them as criminal
suspects rather than enemy combatants, they'll always be many steps ahead of us
in a war that only they are fighting” when he seems to refer to both those
accused of and those guilty of being the enemy as equivalent entities. And with
“While our government frets over their
constitutional rights -- rights to which enemy combatants have never been
historically entitled -- it abdicates its duty to protect American lives”
Limbaugh clearly reveals his utter confusion between being accused of a crime
and actually being guilty of a crime.
In making any determination about the guilt or innocence of
the accused, the legal system is always faced with two distinct but related
kinds of errors. On one hand, an innocent may be wrongly convicted and
punished; on the other hand, the guilty can be erroneously absolved of guilt
and thus escape their just punishment. Assuming the null hypothesis in our
legal system is always that the accused is presumed innocent until proven
guilty, the first kind of error is called a “type I error” (an invalid
rejection of a correct null hypothesis) and the second type of error is called
a “type II error” (an invalid acceptance of an erroneous null hypothesis). In
general the probabilities of making type I and type II errors are related, and
by decreasing one, the other tends to increase.
For those of who believe that our judicial system must
maintain the same type I / type II threshold no matter how serious the danger
of a type II error is, the danger of terrorism is of no significance in
establishing the guilt of a suspected terrorist, and everyone (accused
terrorists included) is equally innocent until proven guilty. It is not that we
don’t understand the danger of terrorism; it’s just that we do recognize the danger
of deserting our democratic traditions and institutions in the name of
defending them and declaring the accused guilty based on the accusations
against them instead of the evidence in support of the accusation.
For those Americans who cannot believe that our democracy is
a strong enough form of government to stand up to terrorism, I challenge them
to produce a better form of government. But until then, the accused (regardless
of what they are accused of) must be offered the same protection against being
falsely accused that the innocent deserve.