By John W. Whitehead
“If we confuse dissent with disloyalty—if we
deny the right of the individual to be wrong,
unpopular, eccentric or unorthodox—if we deny the
essence of racial equality then hundreds of millions
in Asia and Africa who are shopping about for a new
allegiance will conclude that we are concerned to
defend a myth and our present privileged status.
Every act that denies or limits the freedom of the
individual in this country costs us the confidence
of men and women who aspire to that freedom and
independence of which we speak and for which our
ancestors fought.” - Edward R. Murrow
July 14, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - For those old enough to
have lived through the McCarthy era, there is a whiff of
something in the air that reeks of the heightened
paranoia, finger-pointing, fear-mongering, totalitarian
tactics that were hallmarks of the 1950s.
Back then, it was the government—spearheaded by
Senator Joseph McCarthy and the House Un-American
Activities Committee—working in tandem with private
corporations and individuals to blacklist Americans
suspected of being communist sympathizers.
By the time the witch hunts carried out by federal
and state investigative agencies drew to a close,
thousands of individuals (the
vast majority of them innocent any crime whatsoever)
had been accused of communist ties, investigated,
subpoenaed and blacklisted. Regarded as bad risks, the
accused were blacklisted, and struggled to secure
employment. The witch hunt ruined careers, resulting in
suicides, and tightened immigration to exclude alleged
subversives.
Seventy years later, the vitriol, fear-mongering and
knee-jerk intolerance associated with McCarthy’s tactics
are once again being deployed in a free-for-all attack
by those on both the political Left and Right against
anyone who, in daring to think for themselves,
subscribes to ideas or beliefs that run counter to the
government’s or mainstream thought.
It doesn’t even seem to matter what the issue is
anymore (racism, Confederate monuments, Donald Trump,
COVID-19, etc.): modern-day activists are busily tearing
down monuments, demonizing historic figures, boycotting
corporations for perceived political transgressions, and
using their bully pulpit to terrorize the rest of the
country into kowtowing to their demands.
All the while, the American police state continues to
march inexorably forward.
This is how fascism, which silences all dissenting
views, prevails.
The silence is becoming deafening.
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After years of fighting in and out of the courts to
keep their 87-year-old name, the NFL’s Washington
Redskins have bowed to public pressure and
will change their name and team logo to avoid causing
offense. The new name, not yet announced, aims to
honor both the military and Native Americans.
Eleanor Holmes Norton, a delegate to the House of
Representatives who supports the name change, believes
the team’s move “reflects
the present climate of intolerance to names, statues,
figments of our past that are racist in nature or
otherwise imply racism [and] are no longer
tolerated.”
Present climate of intolerance, indeed.
Yet it wasn’t a heightened racial conscience that
caused the Redskins to change their brand. It was the
money. The team caved after its corporate sponsors
including
FedEx, PepsiCo, Nike and Bank of America threatened to
pull their funding.
So much for that U.S. Supreme Court
victory preventing the government from censoring
trademarked names it considers distasteful or
scandalous.
Who needs a government censor when the American
people are already doing such a great job at censoring
themselves and each other, right?
Now there’s a
push underway to boycott Goya Foods after its CEO,
Robert Unanue, praised President Trump during a press
conference to announce Goya’s donation of a million cans
of Goya chickpeas and a million other food products to
American food banks as part of the president’s Hispanic
Prosperity Initiative.
Mind you, Unanue—whose grandfather emigrated to the
U.S. from Spain—also praised the Obamas when they were
in office, but that kind of equanimity doesn’t carry
much weight in this climate of intolerance.
Not to be outdone,
the censors are also taking aim at To Kill a
Mockingbird, Harper Lee’s Pulitzer
Prize-winning novel about Atticus Finch, a white lawyer
in the Jim Crow South who defends a black man falsely
accused of rape. Sixty years after its debut, the
book remains a powerful testament to moral courage in
the face of racial bigotry and systemic injustice,
told from the point of view of a child growing up in the
South, but that’s not enough for the censors. They want
to axe the book—along with The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn—from school reading curriculums
because of the
presence of racial slurs that could make students
feel “humiliated or marginalized.”
Never mind that the N-word makes a regular appearance
in hip-hop songs. The prevailing attitude seems to be
that
it’s okay to use the N-word as long as the person saying
the word is not white. Rapper Kendrick Lamar “would
like white America to let black people exclusively have
the word.”
Talk about a double standard.
This is also the overlooked part of how oppression
becomes systemic: it comes about as a result of a
combined effort between the populace, the corporations
and the government.
McCarthyism worked the same way.
What started with Joseph McCarthy’s headline-grabbing
scare tactics in the 1950s about Communist infiltrators
of American society snowballed into a devastating witch
hunt once corporations and the American people caught
the fever.
McCarthyism was a contagion, like the plague,
spreading like wildfire among people too fearful or weak
or gullible or paranoid or greedy or ambitious to
denounce it for what it was: an opportunistic scare
tactic engineered to make the government more powerful.
McCarthy, a young Republican senator, grasped the
opportunity to make a name for himself by capitalizing
on the Cold War paranoia of the time. In a speech in
February 1950, McCarthy claimed to have a list of over
200 members of the Communist Party “working and shaping
the policy of the U.S. State Department.” The speech was
picked up by the Associated Press, without
substantiating the facts, and within a few days the
hysteria began.
McCarthy specialized in sensational and
unsubstantiated accusations about Communist infiltration
of the American government, particularly the State
Department. He also targeted well-known Hollywood actors
and directors, trade unionists and teachers. Many others
were brought before the inquisitional House Committee on
Un-American Activities for questioning.
“McCarthyism” eventually smeared all the accused with
the same broad brush, whether the evidence was good, bad
or nonexistent.
The parallels to the present movement cannot be
understated.
Even now, with modern-day McCarthyism sweeping the
nation and America’s own history being blacklisted, I
have to wonder what this sudden outrage and crisis of
conscience is really all about.
Certainly, anyone who believes that the injustices,
cruelties and vicious callousness of the U.S. government
are unique to the Trump Administration has not been
paying attention.
No matter what the team colors might be at any given
moment, the playbook remains the same. The leopard has
not changed its spots.
Scrape off the surface layers and you will find that
the American police state that is continuing to wreak
havoc on the rights of the people under the Trump
Administration is the same police state that wreaked
havoc on the rights of the people under every previous
administration.
So please spare me the media hysterics and the
outrage and the hypocritical double standards of those
whose moral conscience appears to be largely dictated by
their political loyalties.
While we squabble over which side is winning this
losing battle, a tsunami approaches.
While the populace wages war over past injustices,
injustice in the here and now continues to trample
innocent lives underfoot. Certainly, little of
significance is being done to stem the tide of
institutional racism that has resulted in
disproportionate numbers of black Americans who continue
to be stopped, frisked, shot at, arrested and jailed.
I’ve had enough of the short- and long-term amnesia
that allows political sycophants to conveniently forget
the duplicity, complicity and mendacity of their own
party while casting blame on everyone else.
When you drill right down to the core of things, the
policies of a Trump Administration have been no
different from an Obama Administration or a Bush
Administration, at least not where it really counts.
In other words, Democrats by any other name have been
Republicans, and vice versa.
War has continued. Surveillance has continued. Drone
killings have continued. Police shootings have
continued. Highway robbery meted out by government
officials has continued. Corrupt government has
continued. Profit-driven prisons have continued.
Censorship and persecution of anyone who criticizes the
government have continued. The militarization of the
police has continued. The devastating SWAT team raids
have continued. The government’s efforts to label
dissidents as extremists and terrorists has continued.
The more things change, the more they have stayed the
same.
We’ve been stuck in this political Groundhog’s Day
for so long that minor deviations appear to be major
developments while obscuring the fact that we’re stuck
on repeat, unable to see the forest for the trees.
This is what is referred to as creeping normality, or
a death by a thousand cuts.
It’s a concept invoked by Pulitzer Prize-winning
scientist Jared Diamond to describe how major changes,
if implemented slowly in small stages over time, can be
accepted as normal without the shock and resistance that
might greet a sudden upheaval.
Diamond’s concerns related to Easter Island’s
now-vanished civilization and the societal decline and
environmental degradation that contributed to it, but
it’s a powerful analogy for the steady erosion of our
freedoms and decline of our country right under our
noses.
As Diamond explains, “In just a few centuries, the
people of Easter Island wiped out their forest, drove
their plants and animals to extinction, and saw their
complex society spiral into chaos and cannibalism…
Why didn’t they look around, realize what they were
doing, and stop before it was too late? What were
they thinking when they cut down the last palm tree?”
His answer: “I suspect that the
disaster happened not with a bang but with a whimper.”
Much like America’s own colonists, Easter Island’s
early colonists discovered a new world—“a pristine
paradise”—teeming with life. Yet almost 2000 years after
its first settlers arrived, Easter Island was reduced to
a barren graveyard by a populace so focused on their
immediate needs that they failed to preserve paradise
for future generations.
The same could be said of the America today: it, too,
is being reduced to a barren graveyard by a populace so
focused on their immediate needs that they are failing
to preserve freedom for future generations.
In Easter Island’s case, as Diamond
speculates:
The forest…vanished slowly, over decades. Perhaps
war interrupted the moving teams; perhaps by the
time the carvers had finished their work, the last
rope snapped. In the meantime, any islander who
tried to warn about the dangers of progressive
deforestation would have been overridden by vested
interests of carvers, bureaucrats, and chiefs, whose
jobs depended on continued deforestation… The
changes in forest cover from year to year would have
been hard to detect…
Only older people, recollecting their childhoods
decades earlier, could have recognized a difference.
Gradually trees became fewer, smaller, and less
important. By the time the last fruit-bearing adult
palm tree was cut, palms had long since ceased to be
of economic significance. That left only smaller and
smaller palm saplings to clear each year, along with
other bushes and treelets.
No one would have noticed the felling of the last
small palm.”
Sound painfully familiar yet?
We’ve already torn down the rich forest of liberties
established by our founders. It has vanished slowly,
over the decades. Those who warned against the dangers
posed by too many laws, invasive surveillance,
militarized police, SWAT team raids and the like have
been silenced and ignored. They stopped teaching about
freedom in the schools. Few Americans know their
history. And even fewer seem to care that their fellow
Americans are being jailed, muzzled, shot, tasered, and
treated as if they have no rights at all.
The erosion of our freedoms happened so
incrementally, no one seemed to notice. Only the older
generations, remembering what true freedom was like,
recognized the difference. Gradually, the freedoms
enjoyed by the citizenry became fewer, smaller and less
important. By the time the last freedom falls, no one
will know the difference.
This is how tyranny rises and freedom falls: with a
thousand cuts, each one justified or ignored or shrugged
over as inconsequential enough by itself to bother, but
they add up.
Each cut, each attempt to undermine our freedoms,
each loss of some critical right—to think freely, to
assemble, to speak without fear of being shamed or
censored, to raise our children as we see fit, to
worship or not worship as our conscience dictates, to
eat what we want and love who we want, to live as we
want—they add up to an immeasurable failure on the part
of each and every one of us to stop the descent down
that slippery slope.
We are on that downward slope now.
The contagion of fear that McCarthy helped spread
with the help of government agencies, corporations and
the power elite is still poisoning the well,
whitewashing our history, turning citizen against
citizen, and stripping us of our rights.
What we desperately need is the kind of resolve
embodied by Edward R. Murrow, the most-respected newsman
of his day.
On March 9, 1954, Murrow dared to speak truth to
power about the damage McCarthy was inflicting on the
American people. His message remains a timely warning
for our age.
We will not walk in fear, one of another. We will
not be driven by fear into an age of unreason, if we
dig deep in our history and our doctrine; and
remember that we are not descended from fearful men.
Not from men who feared to write, to speak, to
associate, and to defend causes that were for the
moment unpopular. This is no time for men who oppose
Senator McCarthy’s methods to keep silent, or for
those who approve. We can deny our heritage and our
history, but we cannot escape responsibility for the
result. There is no way for a citizen of a republic
to abdicate his responsibilities. As a nation we
have come into our full inheritance at a tender age.
We proclaim ourselves, as indeed we are, the
defenders of freedom, wherever it continues to exist
in the world, but we cannot defend freedom abroad by
deserting it at home. The actions of the junior
Senator from Wisconsin have caused alarm and dismay
amongst our allies abroad, and given considerable
comfort to our enemies. And whose fault is that? Not
really his. He didn’t create this situation of fear;
he merely exploited it—and rather successfully.
Cassius was right. ”The fault, dear Brutus, is not
in our stars, but in ourselves.”
America is approaching another reckoning right now,
one that will pit our commitment to freedom principles
against a level of fear-mongering that is being used to
wreak havoc on everything in its path.
The outcome rests, as always, with “we the people.”
As Murrow said to his staff before the historic March 9
broadcast: “No one can terrorize a whole nation, unless
we are all his accomplices.”
Take heed, America.
As I make clear in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American People,
this may be your last warning.
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 is
available at
www.amazon.com. Whitehead can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
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