Your Freedoms
Don’t Have to Be Muzzled Just Because You’re Wearing a
Mask
By John W. Whitehead
“If 2019 was the year of the street protest, of tear
gas and rubber bullets,
2020 might be the year the street protest died,
or perhaps fell into a deep sleep, and went online.”—Journalist
Christopher Miller
April 28, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Despite all
appearances to the contrary, martial law has not been
declared in America.
We still have rights.
Technically, at least.
The government may act as if its police state powers
suppress individual liberties during this COVID-19
pandemic, but for all intents and purposes, the
Constitution—especially the battered, besieged Bill of
Rights—still stands in theory, if not in practice.
Indeed, while federal and state governments have
adopted specific restrictive measures in an effort to
lockdown the nation and decelerate the spread of the
COVID-19 virus, the current public health situation has
not resulted in the suspension of fundamental
constitutional rights such as freedom of speech and the
right of assembly.
Mind you, that’s not to say that the government has
not tried its best to weaponize this crisis as it has
weaponized so many other crises in order to expand its
powers and silence its critics.
All over the country, government officials are using
COVID-19 restrictions to muzzle protesters.
It doesn’t matter what the protest is about (church
assemblies, the right to work, the timing for re-opening
the country, discontent over police brutality, etc.):
this is activity the First Amendment protects
vociferously with only one qualification—that it be
peaceful.
Yet even peaceful protesters mindful of the need to
adhere to social distancing guidelines because of this
COVID-19 are being muzzled, arrested and fined.
For example, a Maryland family was reportedly
threatened with up to a year in jail and a $5000 fine if
they dared to publicly protest the injustice of their
son’s execution by a SWAT team.
If anyone had a legitimate reason to get out in the
streets and protest, it’s the Lemp family, whose
21-year-old son Duncan was gunned down in his bedroom
during an early morning, no-knock SWAT team raid on his
family’s home.
Imagine it.
It was 4:30 a.m. on March 12, 2020, in the midst of a
COVID-19 pandemic that has most of the country under a
partial lockdown and sheltering at home, when this
masked SWAT team—deployed to execute a “high risk”
search warrant for unauthorized firearms—stormed the
suburban house where 21-year-old Duncan, a software
engineer and Second Amendment advocate, lived with his
parents and 19-year-old brother.
The
entire household, including Lemp and his girlfriend, was
reportedly asleep when the
SWAT team directed flash bang grenades and gunfire
through Lemp’s bedroom window.
Lemp was
killed and his
girlfriend injured.