by magicotter » Wed Jul 18, 2012 7:46 pm
OK, wall of text. You've been warned.
I am in a very real way not a lawyer, but I think the legal argument against registration is fairly strong. It runs up against the right to privacy. As written, the registration law applies to anybody with “superhuman” powers, not just people who are actively using them. So if you’re Joe Nobody with telekinetic powers, but you don’t care and you’re just an IT guy for AT&T who does his job, pays his taxes and goes about his life, not using your powers beyond grabbing a book off your coffee table at a distance, SHIELD is still going to smash into your apartment and throw you into the negative zone if they ever find out about you. You don’t actually have to do anything with your powers, merely possessing them and not registering with the government makes you a criminal. It essentially makes you a criminal because of biology, which is entirely outside of the spirit and precedent of U.S. law. We have a selective service law in the U.S.-- a draft law, so the SHRA could follow that, however, failure to register for the draft is not a criminal act. It does make you ineligible for certain government programs and positions, but its not something they hunt you down and prosecute you for (perhaps they will if there actually is a draft instituted, but they don't bother chasing you down simply for not registering for a potential future draft).
The X-Men comics got a lot of mileage out of the idea of mutant registration is the first step towards a police state. The reasoning goes something like: U.S. Law is based firmly on precedent, and once you can categorize a whole group of people as dangerous and requiring registration and unlawful by their very existence, then you have the groundwork in place for declaring any group of people a danger. And then, if the nation gets scared enough of group X, and politicians want to make some quick political hay, you can get all manner of categories of people banned, Muslims, Gun Owners, Gangsta Rappers, Right-Wing Talk show hosts, Shock-Jock Radio DJs, depending on who the political/cultural enemy #1 is at the time and the political leaning / agenda of those in power. Granted, fairly large step from registering superhumans to gulags, but if you want to worry about legal precedent, it’s a good place to worry about it. That's the moral argument, the legal argument is Constitutional.
The issue with registration in Civil War is both how the law is constructed and how it is subsequently enforced. Simply enforcing laws on the books (in our universe) in regards to vigilantism would have prevented Stamford. I'm also fairly certain the FCC would fine the Hell out of a broadcaster for airing live, unauthorized crime-fighting. The law should have been drafted to be a reinforcement of laws against vigilantism. Meaning, if you want to dress up in spandex and fight crime and evil robots and dimensional invasions, we’ll leave you be if you register (and presumably, follow our rules). If not, you will be apprehended and prosecuted to the full extent of the law if you continue vigilante activities. That would make sense and be an extension of actual law (namely various laws laying out who has legal authority to “fight crime”). But that’s not what it’s about, or it would have been written that way, and would be enforced that way. Writing the law that way, would also survive a Constitutional challenge as it is not infringing on any rights secured by the Constitution, the actual SHRA (as far as I can tell, I don’t believe it was actually fully written out) simply wouldn’t. (Granted a reasonable law doesn’t give us an excuse for superheroes to fight, so, then we’d have to have a different comic series that ruins Iron Man…)
If the law as written survives, then it's still in trouble because the enforcement of the law is nothing short of criminal. SHIELD attacks people in their homes seemingly without warrants and when they catch people they are incarcerated without trial or access to a lawyer, in some extra-dimensional prison. Really, does anybody remember a trial? That’s kind of an important facet of all U.S. law. That’s so amazingly unconstitutional it’s ridiculous. Even the freaking CIA is required to obey all US laws while operating within U.S. borders (which may explain why they don’t really run ops in the U.S.), so SHIELD is way off base. If the law does write in language allow for such unlawful entry, surveillance, and illegal search and seizures that come up in the CW comics, those would also be obvious challenges to the constitutionality of the law which would be easily upheld by any court that wasn't mind-controlled by lunatics. Again, we’re talking about U.S. citizens here, the Constitution is quite clear about what you can and cannot do to a U.S. citizen, even one caught red handed in violation of the law. Foreign nationals may very well be screwed, but U.S. citizens have quite a bit of protection under the Constitution.
Granted, the enforcement of the law happens after the debate of passage, but I think it’s fairly clear from how the law is used from the outset that the intent behind the law was to force people to be government agents or else they go to prison to never be seen again. I mean, does anybody register then go live quietly somewhere? Maybe, I don’t remember, but most of them appear to immediately become government employees fighting the anti-reg people. Forcibly coercing people into paramilitary actions at the pain of incarceration without trial isn’t the action of a democracy interested in personal freedom, it’s tyranny. That’s extremely creepy, and when I run Civil War, there’s going to be a conspiracy behind it with that goal in mind. I still haven’t figured out how to get any worthwhile heroes on the government side, but (sadly) it’s a long ways off, so I’ve got time to ponder.
As an aside, kudos to Cam et al for making the Civil War Event interesting. I was lukewarm on the event because I didn't like the series, but it's presented extremely well, even if I did have to pollute my beloved Mac with Adobe Reader to get it to display properly on screen. Sigh. So many compromises. Seriously, high praise all around the CW event is an excellent book.
-Scot