This Way Lies Madness: The Summer of Hate Meets
the Age of Intolerance
By John W. Whitehead
“Violence creates many more social problems than
it solves…. If they succumb to the temptation of
using violence in their struggle, unborn generations
will be the recipients of a long and desolate night
of bitterness, and our chief legacy to the future
will be an endless reign of meaningless chaos.
Violence isn’t the way.”—Martin Luther King Jr.
June 25, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Marches, protests,
boycotts, sit-ins: these are nonviolent tactics that
work.
Looting, vandalism, the destruction of public
property, intimidation tactics aimed at eliminating
anything that might cause offense to the establishment:
these tactics of mobs and bullies may work in the short
term, but they will only give rise to greater injustices
in the long term.
George Floyd’s death sparked the flame of outrage
over racial injustice and police brutality, but
political correctness is creating a raging inferno that
threatens to engulf the nation.
Activists who object to Yale University being named
after its founder
Elihu Yale, a slave trader, are lobbying to re-name
the school.
Students at Harvard University want to re-name Mather
House, one of the dorms
named after Increase Mather, the college president
from 1685 to 1692 and a slave owner.
Administrators at Woodrow Wilson High School in
Camden, N.J.—named
after the nation’s 28th president, who
guided the nation through World War I while upholding
segregation policies—are now looking for a new name.
Gone with the Wind, the Civil War epic that
won 10 Academy Awards and has long been considered one
of the greatest films of all times, was
temporarily pulled from HBOMax’s streaming service
in response to concerns that it depicts “ethnic and
racial prejudices” that “were wrong then and are wrong
today.”
What started as a movement to denounce police
brutality in the wake of George Floyd’s death at the
hands of killer cops has become a free-for-all campaign
to rid the country of any monument, literal or
figurative, to anyone who may have at any time in
history expressed a racist thought, exhibited racist
behavior, or existed within a racist society.
The police state has got us exactly where it wants
us: distracted, distraught and divided.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
While protesters topple statues of men with
racist pasts who are long dead, unarmed Americans
continue to be killed by militarized police trained
to shoot first and ask questions later.
While activists use their collective might to
pressure corporations to rebrand products in a more
racially sensitive fashion, the American police
state—aided and abetted by the Corporate State—continues
to disproportionately target blacks, Hispanics and other
minorities.
And while politically correct censorship is
attempting to sanitize the public sphere of words and
images that denigrate minorities, it is not doing
anything to rid hearts and minds of racism.
Muzzling speech, censoring discourse, erasing
history: that’s the worst possible antidote.
As Rod Serling, creator of the Twilight Zone,
concluded in the “Deaths-Head Revisited” episode:
“All the Dachaus must remain standing. The
Dachaus, the Belsens, the Buchenwalds, the
Auschwitzes, all of them. They must remain standing
because they are a monument to a moment in time when
some men decided to turn the earth into a graveyard.
Into it, they shoveled all of their reason, their
logic, their knowledge, but worst of all, their
conscience. And the moment we forget this, the
moment we cease to be haunted by its remembrance,
then we become the gravediggers.”
In other words, what we need is more speech, more
discourse, and a greater understanding of history and
the evils perpetrated in the name of conquest, profit
and racial supremacy. Because if we bury the mistakes of
the past under a sanitized present, if we fail to at
least provide context to the past, we risk allowing the
government to repeat those past mistakes—rewritten for a
new age—and no one will be the wiser.
It has happened already: we have allowed the
government strip people of their humanity; to segregate
them into polarized classes; to treat them as chattel;
to deny them basic human rights; and to reduce them to
figures on a ledger sheet.
Censoring speech—toppling monuments—kowtowing to
political correctness—is not the answer to what ails
this nation.
As long as we focus on words and ignore the systemic
injustices that undergird the words, the disease will
spread.
As long as we continue to allow the most
controversial issues of our day—gay rights, abortion,
race, religion, sexuality, political correctness, police
brutality, et al.—to serve as battlegrounds for those
who claim to believe in freedom of speech but only when
it favors the views and positions they support, we will
all eventually lose.
Silencing unpopular viewpoints with which the
majority might disagree—whether it’s by shouting them
down, censoring them, muzzling them, or criminalizing
them—only empowers the controllers of the Deep State.
Consider some of the kinds of speech being targeted
for censorship or outright elimination.
Offensive, politically incorrect and “unsafe”
speech: Disguised as tolerance, civility and
love, political correctness has resulted in the chilling
of free speech and the demonizing of viewpoints that run
counter to the cultural elite. Consequently, college
campuses have become hotbeds of student-led censorship,
trigger warnings,
microaggressions, and
“red light” speech policies targeting anything that
might cause someone to feel uncomfortable, unsafe or
offended.
Bullying, intimidating speech:
Warning that “school bullies become tomorrow’s hate
crimes defendants,” the Justice Department has led the
way in urging schools to curtail bullying, going so far
as to
classify “teasing” as a form of “bullying,” and
“rude” or “hurtful” “text messages” as “cyberbullying.”
Dangerous, anti-government speech:
As part of its ongoing war on “extremism,” the
government partnered with the tech industry to establish
a
task force to counter online “propaganda” by
terrorists hoping to recruit support or plan attacks
(the program started under President Obama). In this
way, anyone who criticizes the government online can be
considered an extremist and will have their content
reported to government agencies for further
investigation or deleted. They might even find
themselves pulled from their homes, arrested by the
police and thrown into a mental hospital for expressing
their opposition to government policies, as happened to
Marine Brandon Raub.
The police state could not ask for a better citizenry
than one that carries out its own censorship.
It’s a brilliant ploy, with the added bonus that
while the citizenry remains focused on and distrustful
of each other, they’re incapable of presenting a united
front against the threats posed by the government and
its cabal of Constitution-destroying agencies and
corporate partners.
The antidote to intolerance is more tolerance.
What this requires is opening the door to more speech
not less, even if that speech is offensive to some.
Understanding that freedom for those in the unpopular
minority constitutes the ultimate tolerance in a free
society, James Madison, the author of the Bill of
Rights, fought for a First Amendment that protected the
“minority” against the majority, ensuring that even in
the face of overwhelming pressure, a minority of
one—even one who espouses distasteful viewpoints—would
still have the right to speak freely, pray freely,
assemble freely, challenge the government freely, and
broadcast his views in the media freely.
The First Amendment is a steam valve. It allows
people to speak their minds, air their grievances and
contribute to a larger dialogue that hopefully results
in a more just world.
When there is no steam valve—when there is no one to
hear what the people have to say—frustration builds,
anger grows and people become more volatile and
desperate to force a conversation. By bottling up
dissent, we have created a pressure cooker of stifled
misery and discontent that is now bubbling over and
fomenting even more hate, distrust and paranoia among
portions of the populace.
By becoming so fearfully polite, careful to avoid
offense, and largely unwilling to be labeled intolerant,
hateful or closed-minded that we’ve eliminated words,
phrases and symbols from public discourse, we have
entered into an egotistical, insulated, narcissistic era
in which free speech has become regulated speech: to be
celebrated when it reflects the values of the majority
and tolerated otherwise, unless it moves so far beyond
our political, religious and socio-economic comfort
zones as to be rendered dangerous and unacceptable.
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 (and championed by those who want to
suppress speech with which they might disagree) have
conspired to corrode our core freedoms, purportedly for
our own good.
On paper—at least according to the U.S.
Constitution—we are technically free to speak.
In reality, however, we are only as free to speak as
a government official—or corporate entities such as
Facebook, Google or YouTube—may allow.
The end result: free speech is no longer free, and
injustice persists.
So what we can do to end racial inequality, police
brutality, and systemic injustice that does not involve
sacrificing free speech on the altar of political
correctness or adopting violent tactics?
Stop tiptoeing around, easily offended or afraid to
cause offense. Stop allowing the government and its
architects to micromanage your life and curtail your
freedoms. Stop being a pawn in someone else’s game.
Find your own voice. Give voice to your own outrage.
Speak truth to power nonviolently. And throughout it
all, love your enemies and put that love into action.
That last point, to love your enemies, is the hardest
of all, yet it was the principle that Jesus Christ spoke
of most often: “Love your enemies, bless them that curse
you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them
that despitefully use you.”
King was not speaking in abstracts. This was a man
who, despite having faced down water cannons, police
dogs and police brutality, intimidation and prejudice
and assassination attempts, still insisted that “mass
non-violent resistance based on the principle of love”
was his best weapon.
The first step in loving one’s enemies, says King, is
to
discover the element of good in them. “Within the
best of us, there is some evil, and within the worst of
us, there is some good. When we come to see this, we
take a different attitude toward individuals. The person
who hates you most has some good in him; even the nation
that hates you most has some good in it; even the race
that hates you most has some good in it… There is an
element of goodness that he can never slough off.
Discover the element of good in your enemy. And as you
seek to hate him, find the center of goodness and place
your attention there and you will take a new attitude.”
Second, says King,
focus on defeating evil systems, rather than
vanquishing individuals caught up in an evil system.
“Love is greater than like. Love is understanding,
redemptive goodwill for all men, so that you love
everybody, because God loves them. You refuse to do
anything that will defeat an individual, because you
have agape [the love of God working in the
lives of men] in your soul. And here you come to the
point that you love the individual who does the evil
deed, while hating the deed that the person does. This
is what Jesus means when he says, ‘Love your enemy.’
This is the way to do it. When the opportunity presents
itself when you can defeat your enemy, you must not do
it.”
Third, says Kings,
cut off the chain of hate and the chain of evil in the
universe with love. “If I hit you and you hit me and
I hit you back and you hit me back and go on, you see,
that goes on ad infinitum. It just never ends... And
that is the tragedy of hate, that it doesn’t cut it off.
It only intensifies the existence of hate and evil in
the universe… Men must see that force begets force, hate
begets hate, toughness begets toughness. And it is all a
descending spiral, ultimately ending in destruction for
all and everybody.”
Fourth, says King,
hate ends up in tragic, neurotic responses. “Hate at
any point is a cancer that gnaws away at the very vital
center of your life and your existence. It is like
eroding acid that eats away the best and the objective
center of your life. So Jesus says love, because hate
destroys the hater as well as the hated.” Instead, use
love to redeem and transform those who would do you
harm.
Lastly, don’t resort to violence.
King’s conclusion to his sermon is a timeless
message, sent through time, to our present age. As I
make clear in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American People,
we are still fighting the triple evils of racism,
poverty and militarism. We are still struggling to find
our way in the world dominated by corporate greed and
political ambition. We are still being manipulated into
focusing our anger on flawed individuals rather than
working to defeat evil establishments.
Sixty-three years later, King’s words are still
relevant:
“Our world is in transition now. Our whole world
is facing a revolution. Our nation is facing a
revolution. History unfortunately leaves some people
oppressed and some people oppressors. And there are
… ways that individuals who are oppressed can deal
with their oppression. One of them is to rise up
against their oppressors with physical violence and
corroding hatred. But there is another way. And that
is to organize mass non-violent resistance based on
the principle of love… This is the only way. And our
civilization must discover that. Individuals must
discover that as they deal with other individuals… [T]o
a power-drunk generation …
love is the only way… to a generation depending
on nuclear and atomic energy, a generation depending
on physical violence…love is the only creative,
redemptive, transforming power in the universe…. [T]hrough
the power of this love somewhere, men of the most
recalcitrant bent will be transformed… because we
had the power to love our enemies, to bless those
persons that cursed us, to even decide to be good to
those persons who hated us, and we even prayed for
those persons who despitefully used us.”
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