The
Government Is Still the Enemy of Freedom
By John W.
Whitehead
“Rights aren’t rights if someone can take them
away. They’re privileges. That’s all we’ve ever
had in this country, is a bill of temporary
privileges. And if you read the news even badly,
you know that every year the list gets shorter
and shorter. Sooner or later, the people in this
country are gonna realize the government …
doesn’t care about you, or your children, or
your rights, or your welfare or your safety…
It’s interested in its own power. That’s the
only thing. Keeping it and expanding it wherever
possible.”— George Carlin
March 10,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- My friends, we’re being played for fools.
On paper,
we may be technically free.
In reality,
however, we are only as free as a government
official may allow.
We only
think we live in a constitutional republic,
governed by just laws created for our benefit.
Truth be
told, we live in a dictatorship disguised as a
democracy where all that we own, all that we earn,
all that we say and do—our very lives—depends on the
benevolence of government agents and corporate
shareholders for whom profit and power will always
trump principle. And now the government is
litigating and legislating its way into a new
framework where the dictates of petty bureaucrats
carry greater weight than the inalienable rights of
the citizenry.
We’re in
trouble, folks.
Freedom no
longer means what it once did.
This holds
true whether you’re talking about the right to
criticize the government in word or deed, the right
to be free from government surveillance, the right
to not have your person or your property subjected
to warrantless searches by government agents, the
right to due process, the right to be safe from
soldiers invading your home, the right to be
innocent until proven guilty and every other right
that once reinforced the founders’ belief that this
would be “a government of the people, by the people
and for the people.”
Not only do
we no longer have dominion over our bodies, our
families, our property and our lives, but the
government continues to chip away at what few rights
we still have to speak freely and think for
ourselves.
If the
government can control speech, it can control
thought and, in turn, it can control the minds of
the citizenry.
The
unspoken freedom enshrined in the First Amendment is
the right to think freely and openly debate
issues without being muzzled or treated like a
criminal.
In other
words, if we no longer have the right to tell a
Census Worker to get off our property, if we no
longer have the right to tell a police officer to
get a search warrant before they dare to walk
through our door, if we no longer have the right to
stand in front of the Supreme Court wearing a
protest sign or approach an elected representative
to share our views, if we no longer have the right
to protest unjust laws by voicing our opinions in
public or on our clothing or before a legislative
body—no matter how misogynistic, hateful,
prejudiced, intolerant, misguided or politically
incorrect they might be—then we do not have free
speech.
What we
have instead is regulated, controlled speech, and
that’s a whole other ballgame.
Protest laws,
free speech zones, bubble zones, trespass zones,
anti-bullying legislation, zero tolerance policies,
hate crime laws and a host of other legalistic
maladies dreamed up by politicians and prosecutors
are conspiring to corrode our core freedoms
purportedly for our own good.
For
instance, the protest laws being introduced across
the country—in 18 states so far—are supposedly in
the name of “public safety and limiting economic
damage.”
Don’t fall
for it.
Break
Free From The Matrix
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No matter
how you package these laws, no matter how
well-meaning they may sound, no matter how much you
may disagree with the protesters or sympathize with
the objects of the protest, these proposed laws are
aimed at one thing only: discouraging dissent.
In
Arizona, police
would be permitted to seize the assets of anyone
involved in a protest that at some point becomes
violent.
In
Minnesota,
protesters would be forced to pay for the cost of
having police on hand to “police” demonstrations.
Oregon
lawmakers want to “require public community colleges
and universities to expel any student convicted of
participating in a violent riot.”
A
proposed North Dakota law
would give drivers the green light to “accidentally”
run over protesters who are blocking a public
roadway.
Florida and
Tennessee are entertaining similar laws.
Pushing back against what it refers to as “economic
terrorism,”
Washington wants to
increase penalties for protesters who block access
to highways and railways.
Anticipating protests over the Keystone Pipeline,
South Dakota wants
to apply the governor’s emergency response authority
to potentially destructive protests, create new
trespassing penalties and make it a crime to
obstruct highways.
In
Iowa, protesters
who block highways with speeds posted above 55 mph
could spend five years in prison, plus a fine of up
to $7,500. Obstruct traffic in
Mississippi and you
could be facing a $10,000 fine and a five-year
prison sentence.
A
North Carolina law
would make it a crime to heckle state officials.
Under this law, shouting at a former governor would
constitute a crime.
Indiana lawmakers
wanted to authorize police to use “any means
necessary” to breakup mass gatherings that block
traffic. That legislation has since been
amended to merely
empower police to issue fines for such behavior.
Georgia
is proposing harsh penalties and mandatory
sentencing laws for those who obstruct public
passages or throw bodily fluids on “public safety
officers.”
Virginia
wants to subject protesters who engage in an
“unlawful assembly” after “having been lawfully
warned to disperse” with up to a year of jail time
and a fine of up to $2,500.
Missouri
wants to make it illegal for anyone participating in
an “unlawful assembly” to intentionally conceal “his
or her identity by the means of a robe, mask, or
other disguise.”
Colorado
wants to lock up protesters for up to 18 months who
obstruct or tamper with oil and gas equipment and
charge them with up to $100,000 in fines.
Oklahoma
wants to create a sliding scale for protesters whose
actions impact or impede critical infrastructure.
The penalties would range from $1,000 and six months
in a county jail to $100,000 and up to 10 years in
prison. And if you’re part of an organization, that
fine goes as high as $1,000,000.
Michigan
hopes to make it easier for courts to shut down
“mass picketing” demonstrations and fine protesters
who block entrances to businesses, private
residences or roadways up to $1,000 a day. That fine
jumps to $10,000 a day for unions or other
organizing groups.
Ask
yourself: if there are already laws on the books in
all of the states that address criminal or illegal
behavior such as blocking public roadways or
trespassing on private property—because such laws
are already on the books—then why does the
government need to pass laws criminalizing
activities that are already outlawed?
What’s
really going on here?
No matter
what the politicians might say, the government
doesn’t care about our rights, our welfare or our
safety.
How many
times will we keep falling for the same tricks?
Every
despotic measure used to control us and make us
cower and fear and comply with the government’s
dictates has been packaged as being for our benefit,
while in truth benefiting only those who stand to
profit, financially or otherwise, from the
government’s transformation of the citizenry into a
criminal class.
Remember,
the Patriot Act didn’t make us safer. It simply
turned American citizens into suspects and, in the
process, gave rise to an entire industry—private and
governmental—whose profit depends on its ability to
undermine our Fourth Amendment rights.
Placing TSA agents in our nation’s airports didn’t
make us safer. It simply subjected Americans to
invasive groping, ogling and bodily searches by
government agents. Now the TSA plans to subject
travelers to
even more “comprehensive” patdowns.
So, too,
these protest laws are not about protecting the
economy or private property or public roads. Rather,
they are intended to muzzle discontent and
discourage anyone from challenging government
authority.
These laws
are the shot across the bow.
They’re
intended to send a strong message that in the
American police state, you’re either a patriot who
marches in lockstep with the government’s dictates
or you’re a pariah, a suspect, a criminal, a
troublemaker, a terrorist, a radical, a
revolutionary.
Yet by
muzzling the citizenry, by removing the
constitutional steam valves that allow people to
speak their minds, air their grievances and
contribute to a larger dialogue that hopefully
results in a more just world, the government is
deliberately stirring the pot, creating a climate in
which violence becomes inevitable.
When there
is no steam valve—when there is no one to hear what
the people have to say, because government
representatives have removed themselves so far from
their constituents—then frustration builds, anger
grows and people become more volatile and desperate
to force a conversation.
Then again,
perhaps that was the government’s plan all along.
As
John F. Kennedy
warned in March
1962, “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible
will make violent revolution inevitable.”
The
government is making violent revolution inevitable.
How do you
lock down a nation?
You sow
discontent and fear among the populace. You
terrorize the people into believing that radicalized
foreigners are preparing to invade. You teach them
to be non-thinkers who passively accept whatever is
told them, whether it’s delivered by way of the
corporate media or a government handler. You
brainwash them into believing that everything the
government does is for their good and anyone who
opposes the government is an enemy. You acclimate
them to a state of martial law, carried out by
soldiers disguised as police officers but bearing
the weapons of war. You polarize them so that they
can never unite and stand united against the
government. You create a climate in which silence is
golden and those who speak up are shouted down. You
spread propaganda and lies. You package the police
state in the rhetoric of politicians.
And then,
when and if the people finally wake up to the fact
that the government is not and has never been their
friend, when it’s too late for peaceful protests and
violence is all that remains to them as a recourse
against tyranny, you use all of the tools you’ve
been so carefully amassing—the criminal databases
and surveillance and identification systems and
private prisons and protest laws—and you shut them
down for good.
As I
make clear in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American
People, once a
government assumes power—unconstitutional or not—it
does not relinquish it. The militarized police are
not going to stand down. The NSA will continue to
collect electronic files on everything we do. More
and more Americans are going to face jail time for
offenses that prior generations did not concern
themselves with.
The
government—at all levels—could crack down on
virtually anyone at any time.
Martin
Luther King saw it coming: both the “spontaneous
explosion of anger by various citizen groups” and
the ensuing crackdown by the government.
“Police,
national guard and other armed bodies are feverously
preparing for repression,” King wrote shortly before
he was assassinated. “They can be curbed not by
unorganized resort to force…but only by a massive
wave of militant nonviolence….It also may be the
instrument of our national salvation.”
Militant
nonviolent resistance.
“A
nationwide nonviolent movement is very important,”
King wrote. “We know from past experience that
Congress and the President won’t do anything until
you develop a movement around which people of
goodwill can find a way to put pressure on them…
This means making the movement powerful enough,
dramatic enough, morally appealing enough, so that
people of goodwill, the churches, laborers,
liberals, intellectuals, students, poor people
themselves begin to put pressure on congressmen to
the point that they can no longer elude our demands.
“It must be
militant, massive nonviolence,” King emphasized.
In other
words, besides marches and protests, there would
have to be civil disobedience. Civil disobedience
forces the government to expend energy in many
directions, especially if it is nonviolent,
organized and is conducted on a massive scale. This
is, as King knew, the only way to move the beast. It
is the way to effect change without resorting to
violence. And it is exactly what these protest laws
are attempting to discourage
We are
coming to a crossroads. Either we gather together
now and attempt to restore freedom or all will be
lost. As King cautioned, “everywhere, ‘time is
winding up,’ in the words of one of our spirituals,
corruption in the land, people take your stand; time
is winding up.”
Constitutional attorney and author John W. Whitehead
is founder and president of The
Rutherford Institute.
His new book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People (SelectBooks,
2015) is available online at www.amazon.com.
Whitehead can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing
House.
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