By John W. Whitehead
“I
don’t need invitations by the state, state mayors,
or state governors, to do our job. We’re going to do
that, whether they like us there or not.”—Acting
Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf’s defense of
the Trump Administration’s deployment of militarized
federal police to address civil unrest in the states
July 22, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - This is a wake-up call.
What is unfolding before our very eyes—with
police agencies defying local governments in order to
tap into the power of federal militarized troops in
order to put down domestic unrest—could very quickly
snowball into an act of aggression against the states, a
coup by armed, militarized agents of the federal
government.
At a minimum, this is an attack on the
Tenth Amendment, which affirms the sovereignty of
the states and the citizenry, and the right of the
states to stand as a bulwark against
overreach and power grabs by the federal government.
If you’re still deluding yourself into believing that
this thinly-veiled exercise in martial law is anything
other than an attempt to bulldoze what remains of the
Constitution and reinforce the iron-fisted rule of the
police state, you need to stop drinking the Kool-Aid.
This is no longer about partisan politics or civil
unrest or even authoritarian impulses.
This is a turning point.
Unless we take back the reins—and soon—looking back
on this time years from now, historians may well point
to the events of 2020 as the death blow to America’s
short-lived experiment in self-government.
The government’s recent actions in Portland,
Oregon—when unidentified federal agents (believed to be
border police, ICE and DHS agents), wearing military
fatigues with patches that just say “Police” and
sporting all kinds of weapons,
descended uninvited on the city in unmarked vehicles,
snatching protesters off the streets and detaining
them without formally arresting them or offering any
explanation of why they’re being held—is just a
foretaste of what’s to come.
One of those detainees was a 53-year-old disabled
Navy veteran who was in downtown Portland during the
protests but not a participant. Concerned about the
tactics being used by government agents who had taken an
oath of office to protect and defend the Constitution,
Christopher David tried to speak the “secret” police.
Almost immediately, he was
assaulted by federal agents, beaten with batons and
pepper sprayed
Another peaceful protester was
reportedly shot in the head with an impact weapon by
this federal goon squad.
No Advertising - No Government Grants - This Is Independent Media
|
The Trump Administration has already announced its
plans to
deploy these border patrol agents to other cities across
the country (Chicago is supposedly next) in an
apparent bid to put down civil unrest. Yet the
overriding concerns by state and local government
officials to Trump’s plans suggest that weaponizing
the DHS as an occupying army will only provoke more
violence and unrest.
We’ve been set up.
Under the guise of protecting federal properties
against civil unrest, the Trump Administration has
formed a
task force of secret agents who look, dress and act like
military stormtroopers on a raid and have been empowered
to roam cities in unmarked vehicles, snatching
citizens off the streets, whether or not they’ve been
engaged in illegal activities.
As the Guardian reports, “The
incidents being described sound eerily reminiscent of
the CIA’s post-9/11 rendition program under George W
Bush, where intelligence agents would roll up in
unmarked vans in foreign countries, blindfold terrorism
suspects (many of whom turned to be innocent) and kidnap
them without explanation. Only instead of occurring on
the streets of Italy or the Middle East, it’s happening
in downtown Portland.”
The so-called racial justice activists who have made
looting, violence, vandalism and intimidation tactics
the hallmarks of their protests have played right into
the government’s hands
They have delivered all of us into the police state’s
hands.
There’s a reason Trump has tapped the Department of
Homeland Security and the U.S. Customs and Border
Protection for this dirty business: these agencies are
notorious for their lawlessness, routinely sidestepping
the Constitution and trampling on the rights of anyone
who gets in their way, including legal citizens.
Indeed, it was only a matter of time before these
roving bands of border patrol agents began flexing their
muscles far beyond the nation’s borders and exercising
their right to disregard the Constitution at every turn.
Except these border patrol cops aren’t just
disregarding the Constitution.
They’re
trampling all over the Constitution, especially the
Fourth Amendment, which prohibits the government from
carrying out egregious warrantless searches and seizures
without probable cause.
As part of the government’s so-called crackdown on
illegal immigration, drugs and trafficking, its border
patrol cops have been expanding their reach,
roaming further afield and subjecting greater
numbers of Americans to warrantless searches, ID
checkpoints, transportation checks, and even
surveillance on private property far beyond the
boundaries of the borderlands.
That so-called border, once a thin borderline, has
become an ever-thickening band spreading deeper and
deeper inside the country.
Now, with this latest salvo by the Trump
administration in its so-called crackdown on rioting and
civil unrest, America itself is about to become a
Constitution-free zone where freedom is off-limits and
government agents have all the power and “we the people”
have none.
The Customs and Border Protection (CBP), with its
more than 60,000
employees, supplemented by the National Guard and
the U.S. military, is an arm of the Department of
Homeland Security, a national police force imbued with
all the brutality, ineptitude and corruption such a role
implies.
As journalist Todd Miller explains:
In these vast domains, Homeland Security
authorities can institute
roving patrols with broad, extra-constitutional
powers backed by national security, immigration
enforcement and drug interdiction mandates.
There, the Border Patrol can set up traffic
checkpoints and fly surveillance drones overhead
with high-powered cameras and radar that can track
your movements. Within twenty-five miles of the
international boundary, CBP agents can enter a
person’s private property without a warrant.
Just about every nefarious deed, tactic or thuggish
policy advanced by the government today can be traced
back to the DHS, its police state mindset, and the
billions of dollars it distributes to local police
agencies in the form of grants to transform them into
extensions of the military.
As Miller points out, the government has turned the
nation’s expanding border regions into “a
ripe place to experiment with tearing apart the
Constitution, a place where not just undocumented
border-crossers, but millions of borderland residents
have become the targets of continual surveillance.”
In much the same way that police across the country
have been schooled in the art of sidestepping the
Constitution, border cops have also been drilled in the
art of “anything goes” in the name of national security.
In fact, according to FOIA documents shared with
The Intercept,
border cops even have a checklist of “possible
behaviors” that warrant overriding the Constitution
and subjecting individuals—including American
citizens—to stops, searches, seizures, interrogations
and even arrests.
For instance, if you’re
driving a vehicle that to a border cop looks unusual
in some way, you can be stopped. If your
passengers look dirty or unusual, you can be
stopped. If you or your
passengers avoid looking at a cop, you can be
stopped. If you or your
passengers look too long at a cop, you can be
stopped.
If you’re
anywhere near a border (near being within 100 miles
of a border, or in a city, or on a bus, or at an
airport), you can be stopped and asked to prove you’re
legally allowed to be in the country. If you’re
traveling on a public road that smugglers and other
criminals may have traveled, you can be stopped.
If you’re
not driving in the same direction as other cars, you
can be stopped. If you
appear to be avoiding a police checkpoint, you can
be stopped. If your
car appears to be weighed down, you can be stopped.
If your
vehicle is from out of town, wherever that might be,
you can be stopped. If you’re
driving a make of car that criminal-types have also
driven, you can be stopped.
If your
car appears to have been altered or modified, you
can be stopped. If the
cargo area in your vehicle is covered, you can be
stopped.
If you’re
driving during a time of day or night that border cops
find suspicious, you can be stopped. If you’re
driving when border cops are changing shifts, you
can be stopped. If you’re
driving in a motorcade or with another vehicle, you
can be stopped. If your
car appears dusty, you can be stopped.
If
people with you are trying to avoid being seen, or
exhibiting “unusual” behavior, you can be stopped. If
you
slow down after seeing a cop, you can be stopped.
In Portland, which is 400 miles from the border,
protesters didn’t even have to be near federal buildings
to be targeted. Some claimed to be targeted
for simply wearing black clothing in the area of the
demonstration.
Are you starting to get the picture yet?
This was never about illegal aliens and border
crossings at all. It’s been a test to see how far “we
the people” will allow the government to push the limits
of the Constitution.
We’ve been failing this particular test
for a long time now.
It was 1798 when Americans, their fears stoked by
rumblings of a Quasi-War with France, failed to protest
the
Alien and Sedition Acts, which criminalized
anti-government speech, empowered the government to
deport “dangerous” non-citizens and made it harder for
immigrants to vote.
During the Civil War, Americans went along when
Abraham Lincoln
suspended the writ of habeas corpus (the right to a
speedy trial) and authorized government officials to spy
on Americans’ mail.
During World War I, Americans took it in stride when
President Woodrow Wilson and Congress adopted the
Espionage and Sedition Acts, which made it a crime to
interfere with the war effort and
criminalized any speech critical of war.
By World War II, Americans were marching in lockstep
with the government’s expanding war powers to imprison
Japanese-American citizens in detainment camps, censor
mail, and
lay the groundwork for the future surveillance state.
Fast-forward to the
Cold War’s Red Scares, the McCarthy era’s hearings on
un-American activities, and the government’s
surveillance of Civil Rights activists such as
Martin Luther King Jr.—all done in the name of national
security.
By the time 9/11 rolled around, all George W. Bush
had to do was claim the country was being invaded by
terrorists, and the government was given greater
powers to spy, search, detain and arrest American
citizens in order to keep America safe.
The terrorist invasion never really happened, but the
government kept its newly acquired police powers made
possible by the nefarious USA Patriot Act.
Barack Obama continued Bush’s trend of undermining
the Constitution, going so far as to give
the military the power to strip Americans of their
constitutional rights, label them extremists, and detain
them indefinitely without trial, all in the name
of keeping America safe.
Despite the fact that the breadth of the military’s
power to detain American citizens violates not only U.S.
law and the Constitution but also international laws,
the government has refused to relinquish its detention
powers made possible by the National Defense
Authorization Act (NDAA).
Then Donald Trump took office, claiming the country
was being invaded by dangerous immigrants and insisting
that the only way to keep America safe was to build an
expensive border wall, expand the reach of border
patrol, and empower
the military to “assist” with border control.
That so-called immigration crisis has now morphed
into multiple crises (domestic extremism, the COVID-19
pandemic, race wars, civil unrest, etc.) that the
government is eager to use in order to expand its
powers.
Yet as we’ve learned the hard way, once the
government acquires—and uses—additional powers (to spy
on its citizens, to carry out surveillance, to transform
its police forces into extensions of the police, to
seize taxpayer funds, to wage endless wars, to censor
and silence dissidents, to identify potential
troublemakers, to detain citizens without due process),
it does not voluntarily relinquish them
This is the slippery slope on which we’ve been
traveling for far too long.
As Yale historian Timothy Snyder explains, “This is a
classic way that violence happens in authoritarian
regimes, whether it’s Franco’s Spain or whether it’s the
Russian Empire.
The people who are getting used to committing violence
on the border are then brought in to commit violence
against people in the interior.”
Sure, it’s the Trump Administration calling the shots
right now, but it’s government agents
armed with totalitarian powers and beholden to the
bureaucratic Deep State who are carrying out these
orders in defiance of the U.S. Constitution and all it
represents.
Whether it’s Trump or Biden or someone else
altogether, this year or a dozen years from now, the
damage has been done: as I make clear in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American People,
we have allowed the president to acquire dictatorial
powers that can be unleashed at any moment.
There’s a reason the Trump Administration is
consulting with John Yoo, the Bush-era attorney
notorious for justifying waterboarding torture tactics
against detainees. They’re not looking to understand how
to follow the law and abide by the Constitution. Rather,
they’re desperately seeking ways to thwart the
Constitution.
As Harvard constitutional law professor Laurence
Tribe recognizes, “The
dictatorial hunger for power is insatiable.
This is how it begins.
This is how it always begins.
Don’t be fooled into thinking any of this will change
when the next election rolls around.
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.
Post your comment below
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.