‘Neutralizing’ John Lennon: One Man Against the
‘MonsterBy John W. Whitehead
“You gotta remember,
establishment, it’s just a name for evil. The monster
doesn’t care whether it kills all the students or whether
there’s a revolution. It’s not thinking logically, it’s out of
control.”—John Lennon (1969)
John Lennon, born 75 years ago on October 9, 1940,
was a musical genius and pop cultural icon.
He was also a vocal peace protester and anti-war
activist and a high-profile example of the lengths to which the U.S.
government will go to persecute those who dare to challenge its
authority.
Long before Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden
were being castigated for blowing the whistle on the
government’s war crimes and the National Security Agency’s
abuse of its surveillance powers, it was Lennon who was being
singled out for daring to speak truth to power about the
government’s warmongering, his phone calls monitored and data files
collected on his activities and associations.
For a little while, at least, Lennon became enemy
number one in the eyes of the U.S. government.
Years after Lennon’s
assassination it would be revealed that the FBI had collected
281 pages of files
on him, including song lyrics, a letter from J. Edgar Hoover
directing the agency to spy on the musician, and various written
orders calling on government agents to set the stage to set Lennon
up for a drug bust. As reporter Jonathan Curiel observes, “The FBI’s
files on Lennon … read like the
writings of a paranoid goody-two-shoes.”
As the New York Times
notes, “Critics of today’s domestic surveillance object largely
on privacy grounds. They have focused far less on how easily
government surveillance can become an instrument for the people in
power to try to hold on to power. ‘The U.S. vs. John Lennon’ … is
the story not only of one man being harassed, but of a democracy
being undermined.”
Indeed, as I point out in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American People,
all of the many complaints we have about government
today—surveillance, militarism, corruption, harassment, SWAT team
raids, political persecution, spying, overcriminalization, etc.—were
present in Lennon’s day and formed the basis of his call for social
justice, peace and a populist revolution.
For all of these reasons, the U.S. government was
obsessed with Lennon, who had learned early on that rock music could
serve a political end by proclaiming a radical message. More
importantly, Lennon saw that his music could mobilize the public and
help to bring about change. Lennon believed in the power of the
people. Unfortunately, as Lennon recognized: “The trouble with
government as it is, is that it doesn’t represent the people.
It controls them.”
However, as Martin Lewis writing for Time
notes: “John Lennon was not God. But he earned the love and
admiration of his generation by creating a huge body of work that
inspired and led. The appreciation for him deepened because he then
instinctively decided to use his celebrity as a bully pulpit for
causes greater than his own enrichment or self-aggrandizement.”
For instance, in December 1971 at a concert in Ann
Arbor, Mich., Lennon took to the stage and in his usual
confrontational style belted out “John Sinclair,” a song he had
written about a man sentenced to
10
years in prison for possessing two marijuana cigarettes. Within
days of Lennon’s call for action, the Michigan Supreme Court ordered
Sinclair released.
What Lennon did not know at the time was that
government officials had been keeping strict tabs on the ex-Beatle
they referred to as “Mr. Lennon.” FBI agents were in the audience at
the Ann Arbor concert, “taking
notes on everything from the attendance (15,000) to the artistic
merits of his new song.”
The U.S. government was spying on Lennon.
By March 1971, when his “Power to the People”
single was released, it was clear where Lennon stood. Having moved
to New York City that same year, Lennon was ready to participate in
political activism against the U. S. government, the “monster” that
was financing the war in Vietnam.
The release of Lennon’s Sometime in New York
City album, which contained a radical anti-government message
in virtually every song and depicted President Richard Nixon and
Chinese Chairman Mao Tse-tung dancing together nude on the cover,
only fanned the flames of the conflict to come.
The official U.S. war against Lennon began in
earnest in 1972 after rumors surfaced that Lennon planned to embark
on a U.S. concert tour that would combine rock music with antiwar
organizing and voter registration. Nixon, fearing Lennon’s influence
on about 11 million new voters (1972 was the first year that
18-year-olds could vote), had the ex-Beatle served with deportation
orders “in an
effort to silence him as a voice of the peace movement.”
Then again, the FBI has had a long history of
persecuting, prosecuting and generally harassing activists,
politicians, and cultural figures, most notably among the latter
such
celebrated names as folk singer Pete Seeger, painter Pablo
Picasso, comic actor and filmmaker Charlie Chaplin, comedian Lenny
Bruce and poet Allen Ginsberg.
Among those most closely watched by the FBI was
Martin Luther King Jr., a man labeled by the FBI as “the most
dangerous and effective Negro leader in the country.” With wiretaps
and electronic bugs planted in his home and office, King was kept
under constant surveillance by the FBI with the aim of
“neutralizing” him. He even received letters written by FBI agents
suggesting that he either commit suicide or the details of his
private life would be revealed to the public. The FBI kept up its
pursuit of King until he was felled by a hollow-point bullet to the
head in 1968.
While Lennon was not—as far as we know—being
blackmailed into suicide, he was the subject of a four-year campaign
of surveillance and harassment by the U.S. government (spearheaded
by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover), an attempt by President Richard
Nixon to have him “neutralized” and deported. As Adam Cohen of the
New York Times points out, “The F.B.I.’s surveillance of
Lennon is a reminder of how easily
domestic spying can become unmoored from any legitimate law
enforcement purpose. What is more surprising, and ultimately
more unsettling, is the degree to which the surveillance turns out
to have been intertwined with electoral politics.”
As Lennon’s FBI file shows, memos and reports
about the FBI’s surveillance of the anti-war activist had been
flying back and forth between Hoover, the Nixon White House, various
senators, the FBI and the U.S. Immigration Office.
Nixon’s pursuit of Lennon was relentless and in
large part based on the misperception that Lennon and his comrades
were planning to disrupt the 1972 Republican National Convention.
The government’s paranoia, however, was misplaced.
Left-wing activists who were on government watch
lists and who shared an interest in bringing down the Nixon
Administration had been congregating at Lennon’s New York apartment.
But when they revealed that they were planning to cause a riot,
Lennon balked. As he recounted in a 1980 interview, “We said, We
ain’t buying this. We’re not going to draw children into a situation
to create violence so you can overthrow what? And replace it with
what? . . . It was all based on this illusion, that you can create
violence and overthrow what is, and get communism or get some
right-wing lunatic or a left-wing lunatic. They’re all lunatics.”
Despite the fact that Lennon was not part of the
“lunatic” plot, the government persisted in its efforts to have him
deported. Equally determined to resist, Lennon dug in and fought
back. Every time he was ordered out of the country, his lawyers
delayed the process by filing an appeal. Finally, in 1976, Lennon
won the battle to stay in the country when he was granted a green
card. As he said afterwards, “I have a love for this country....
This is where the action is. I think we’ll just go home, open a tea
bag, and look at each other.”
Lennon’s time of repose didn’t last long, however.
By 1980, he had re-emerged with a new album and plans to become
politically active again.
The old radical was back and ready to cause
trouble. In his final interview on Dec. 8, 1980, Lennon mused, “The
whole map’s changed and we’re going into an unknown future, but
we’re still all here, and while there’s life there’s hope.”
That very night, when Lennon returned to his New
York apartment building,
Mark David Chapman was waiting in the shadows. As Lennon stepped
outside the car to greet the fans congregating outside, Chapman, in
an eerie echo of the FBI’s moniker for Lennon, called out, “Mr.
Lennon!”
Lennon turned and was met with a barrage of
gunfire as Chapman—dropping into a two-handed combat stance—emptied
his .38-caliber pistol and pumped four hollow-point bullets into his
back and left arm. Lennon stumbled, staggered forward and, with
blood pouring from his mouth and chest, collapsed to the ground.
John Lennon was pronounced dead on arrival at the
hospital. He had finally been “neutralized.”
Yet where those who neutralized the likes of John
Lennon, Martin Luther King Jr., John F. Kennedy, Malcolm X, Robert
Kennedy and others go wrong is in believing that you can murder a
movement with a bullet and a madman.
Thankfully, Lennon’s legacy lives on in his words,
his music and his efforts to speak truth to power. As Yoko Ono
shared in a 2014 letter to the parole board tasked with determining
whether Chapman should be released: “A man of humble origin, [John
Lennon] brought light and hope to the whole world with his words and
music. He tried to be a
good power for the world, and he was. He gave encouragement,
inspiration and dreams to people regardless of their race, creed and
gender.”
Sadly, not much has changed for the better in the
world since Lennon walked among us. Peace remains out of reach.
Activism and whistleblowers continue to be prosecuted for
challenging the government’s authority. Militarism is on the rise,
with police acquiring
armed drones, all the while the governmental war machine
continues to wreak havoc on innocent lives. Just recently, for
example, U.S. military forces carried out airstrikes in Afghanistan
that left a
Doctors without Borders hospital in ruins, killing several of
its medical personnel and patients, including children.
For those of us who joined with John Lennon to
imagine a world of peace, it’s getting harder to reconcile that
dream with the reality of the American police state. For those who
do dare to speak up, they are labeled dissidents, troublemakers,
terrorists, lunatics, or mentally ill and tagged for surveillance,
censorship or, worse, involuntary detention.
As Lennon shared in a 1968 interview:
I think all our society is run by insane
people for insane objectives… I think we’re being run by maniacs
for maniacal means. If anybody can put on paper what our
government and the American government and the Russian… Chinese…
what they are actually trying to do, and what they think they’re
doing, I’d be very pleased to know what they think they’re
doing. I think they’re all insane. But
I’m liable to be put away as insane for expressing that.
That’s what’s insane about it.”
So what’s the answer?
Lennon had a multitude of suggestions.
“If everyone demanded peace instead of another
television set, then there’d be peace.”
“Produce your own dream. If you want to save Peru,
go save Peru. It’s quite possible to do anything, but not to put it
on the leaders….You have to do it yourself. That’s what the great
masters and mistresses have been saying ever since time began. They
can point the way, leave signposts and little instructions in
various books that are now called holy and worshipped for the cover
of the book and not for what it says, but the instructions are all
there for all to see, have always been and always will be. There’s
nothing new under the sun. All the roads lead to Rome. And people
cannot provide it for you. I can’t wake you up. You can wake you up.
I can’t cure you. You can cure you.”
“Life is very short, and there’s no time for
fussing and fighting my friends.”
“Peace is not something you wish for; It’s
something you make, Something you do, Something you are, And
something you give away.”
“If you want peace, you won’t get it with
violence.”
“Say you want a revolution / We better get on
right away / Well you get on your feet / And out on the street /
Singing power to the people.”
And my favorite advice of all: “All you need is
love. Love is all you need.”
John W. Whitehead is an attorney and author who
has written, debated and practiced widely in the area of
constitutional law and human rights. Whitehead's concern for the
persecuted and oppressed led him, in 1982, to establish The
Rutherford Institute, a nonprofit civil liberties and human rights
organization whose international headquarters are located in
Charlottesville, Virginia. Whitehead serves as the Institute’s
president and spokesperson, in addition to writing a weekly
commentary that is posted on The Rutherford Institute’s website (www.rutherford.org)
Copyright 2015 © The Rutherford Institute