What’s in
Store for Our Freedoms in 2016? More of Everything
We Don’t Want
By John W. Whitehead
“Those who cannot remember the past are
condemned to repeat it.”—George Santayana, The
Life of Reason, Vol. 1
December 30, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
In
Harold Ramis’ classic 1993 comedy Groundhog Day,
TV weatherman Phil Connors (played by Bill Murray)
is forced to live the same day over and over again
until he not only gains some insight into his life
but changes his priorities. Similarly, as I
illustrate in my book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People, we
in the emerging American police state find ourselves
reliving the same set of circumstances over and over
again—egregious surveillance, strip searches, police
shootings of unarmed citizens, government spying,
the criminalization of lawful activities,
warmongering, etc.—although with far fewer moments
of comic hilarity.
What
remains to be seen is whether 2016 will bring more
of the same or whether “we the people” will wake up
from our somnambulant states. Indeed, when it comes
to civil liberties and freedom, 2015 was far from a
banner year.
The
following is just a sampling of what we can look
forward to repeating if we don’t find some way to
push back against the menace of an overreaching,
aggressive, invasive, militarized surveillance
state.
More surveillance. The
surveillance state is alive and well and kicking
privacy to shreds in America. Whether you’re walking
through a store, driving your car, checking email,
or talking to friends and family on the phone, you
can be sure that some government agency, whether the
NSA or some other entity, will still be listening in
and tracking your behavior. This doesn’t even begin
to touch on the corporate trackers that monitor your
purchases, web browsing, Facebook posts and other
activities taking place in the cyber sphere. We are
now in a state of transition with the police state
shifting into high-gear under the auspices of the
surveillance state. In such an environment, we
are all suspects to be spied on, searched, scanned,
frisked, monitored, tracked and treated as if we’re
potentially guilty of some wrongdoing or other.
Even our homes provide little protection against
government intrusions. Police agencies, already
empowered to crash through your door if they suspect
you’re up to no good, now have radars
that allow them to “see” through the walls of your
home.
More militarized police. Americans
will continue to be rendered powerless in the face
of militarized police. In early America, government
agents were not permitted to enter one’s home
without permission or in a deceitful manner. And
citizens could resist arrest when a police officer
tried to restrain them without proper justification
or a warrant. Daring to dispute a warrant with a
police official today who is armed with high-tech
military weapons would be nothing short of suicidal.
Moreover, as police forces across the country
continue to be transformed into extensions of the
military, Americans
are finding their once-peaceful communities
transformed into military outposts, complete
with tanks, weaponry, and other equipment designed
for the battlefield. Having already transformed
local police into extensions of the military, now
the Department of Homeland Security, the Justice
Department and the FBI are preparing to turn
the nation’s police officers into techno-warriors,
complete with iris scanners, body scanners, thermal
imaging Doppler radar devices, facial recognition
programs, license plate readers, cell phone Stingray
devices and so much more.
More police shootings of unarmed
citizens. Owing in
large part to the militarization of local law
enforcement agencies, not a week goes by without
more reports of hair-raising incidents by police
imbued with a take-no-prisoners attitude and a
battlefield approach to the communities in which
they serve.
More so-called “terrorist” attacks.
Despite the
government’s endless propaganda about the threat of
terrorism and even in the wake of the shootings in
San Bernardino and Paris, statistics show that you
are 17,600 times more likely to die from heart
disease than from a terrorist attack. You are
11,000 times more likely to die from an airplane
accident than from a terrorist plot involving an
airplane. You are 1,048 times more likely to die
from a car accident than a terrorist attack. You are
404 times more likely to die in a fall than from a
terrorist attack. And you are 8
times more likely to be killed by a police officer
than by a terrorist.
More costly wars.
The military industrial complex that has advocated
that the U.S. remain at war, year after year, is the
very entity that will continue to profit the most
from America’s expanding military empire. The U.S.
Department of Defense is the world’s largest
employer, with more than 3.2 million employees.
Thus far, the U.S. taxpayer has been made to shell
out more than $1.6
trillion to wage wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
When you add in our military efforts in Pakistan, as
well as the
lifetime price of health care for disabled veterans
and interest on the national debt, that cost rises
to $4.4 trillion.
More attempts by the government to
identify, target and punish so-called domestic
“extremists.” In much
the same way that the USA Patriot Act was used as a
front to advance the surveillance state, the
government’s anti-extremism program will, in many
cases, be utilized to render otherwise lawful,
nonviolent activities as potentially extremist. To
this end, police will identify, monitor and deter
individuals who exhibit, express or engage in
anything that could be construed as extremist before
they can become actual threats. This is pre-crime on
an ideological scale and it’s been a long time
coming. Moreover, under the guise of fighting
violent extremism “in
all of its forms and manifestations” in cities
and communities across the world, the Obama
administration has agreed to partner with the United
Nations to take part in its Strong
Cities Network program and hire a domestic
extremism czar.
More SWAT team raids.
More than 80%
of American communities have their own SWAT teams,
with more than 80,000 of these paramilitary raids
are carried out every year. That translates to more
than 200 SWAT team raids every day in which police
crash through doors, damage private property, kill
citizens, terrorize adults and children alike, kill
family pets, assault or shoot anyone that is
perceived as threatening—and all in the pursuit of
someone merely suspected of a crime, usually
some small amount of drugs.
More erosions of private property. Private
property means little at a time when SWAT teams and
other government agents can invade your home, break
down your doors, kill your dog, wound or kill you,
damage your furnishings and terrorize your family.
Likewise, if government officials can fine and
arrest you for growing vegetables in your front
yard, praying with friends in your living room,
installing solar panels on your roof, and raising
chickens in your backyard, you’re no longer the
owner of your property.
More debt.
Currently, the national debt is
somewhere in the vicinity of a
whopping $18.1 trillion and rising that our government
owes to foreign countries, private corporations and
its retirement programs. Not only is the U.S.
the largest debtor nation in the world, but
according to Forbes, “the amount of
interest on the national debt is estimated to be accumulating
at a rate of over one million dollars per minute.”
More government contractors. Despite
all the talk about big and small government, what we
have been saddled with is a
government that is outsourcing much of its work to
high-paid contractors at great expense to the
taxpayer and with no competition, little
transparency and dubious savings. According to the Washington
Post, “By some estimates, there are
twice as many people doing government work under
contract than there are government workers.”
These open-ended contracts, worth hundreds of
millions of dollars, “now account for anywhere
between one quarter and one half of all federal
service contracting.”
More overcriminalization.
The government’s tendency towards militarization and
overcriminalization, in which routine, everyday
behaviors become targets of regulation and
prohibition, have resulted in Americans getting
arrested for making and selling unpasteurized goat
cheese, cultivating certain types of orchids,
feeding a whale, holding Bible studies in their
homes, and picking
their kids up from school.
More strip searches and the
denigration of bodily integrity. The
Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was
intended to protect the citizenry from being
subjected to “unreasonable searches and seizures” by
government agents. While the literal purpose of the
amendment is to protect our property and our bodies
from unwarranted government intrusion, the moral
intention behind it is to protect our human dignity.
Unfortunately, court rulings
undermining the Fourth Amendment and justifying
invasive strip searches have left us powerless
against police empowered to forcefully draw our
blood, forcibly take our DNA, strip search us, and
probe us intimately. Accounts are on the rise of
individuals—men and women alike—being subjected to
what is essentially government-sanctioned rape by
police in the course of “routine” traffic stops.
More injustice.
Americans can no longer rely on the courts to mete
out justice. The courts were established to
intervene and protect the people against the
government and its agents when they overstep their
bounds. Yet the courts increasingly march in
lockstep with the police state, while concerned
themselves primarily with advancing the government’s
agenda, no matter how unjust or illegal. As a
result, Americans have no protection against police
abuse. It is no longer unusual to hear about
incidents in which police
shoot unarmed individuals first and ask questions
later. What is increasingly common, however, is
the news that the officers involved in these
incidents get off with little more than a slap on
the hands.
More political spectacles.
Americans continue to naively buy into the idea that
politics matter, as if there really were a
difference between the Republicans and Democrats (there’s
not). As if Barack Obama proved to be any
different from George W. Bush (he
has not). As if Hillary Clinton’s values are any
different from Donald Trump’s (with
both of them, money talks). As if when we elect
a president, we’re getting someone who truly
represents “we the people” rather than the corporate
state (in fact, in the oligarchy that is the
American police state, an
elite group of wealthy donors is calling the shots).
Politics in America is a game, a joke, a hustle, a
con, a distraction, a spectacle, a sport, and for
many devout Americans, a religion. In other words,
it’s a sophisticated ruse aimed at keeping us
divided and fighting over two
parties whose priorities are exactly the same.
More drones. As
corporations and government agencies alike prepare
for their part in the coming drone invasion—it is
expected that at least 30,000 drones will occupy
U.S. airspace by 2020, ushering in a $30 billion per
year industry—it won’t be long before American
citizens who will be the target of these devices
discover first-hand that drones—unmanned aerial
vehicles—come in all shapes and sizes, from nano-sized
drones as small as a grain of sand that can do
everything from conducting surveillance to
detonating explosive charges, to middle-sized copter
drones that can deliver pizzas to massive
“hunter/killer” Predator warships that unleash
firepower from on high.
More dumbed down, locked down public
schools. Our schools
have become training grounds for compliant citizens.
Despite the fact that we
spend more than most of the world on education ($115,000
per student), we rank 36th in
the world when it comes to math, reading and science,
far below most of our Asian counterparts. Even so,
we continue to insist on standardized
programs such as Common Core, which teach
students to be test-takers rather than thinkers.
Making matters worse is the heavy police presence in
schools, which have become little more than
quasi-prisons in which classrooms are locked down
and kids
as young as age 4 are being handcuffed for “acting
up,” subjected to body searches, and suspended
for childish behavior.
More ignorance about our rights.
Americans know little to nothing about their rights
or how the government is supposed to operate.
This includes educators and politicians. For
example, 27 percent of elected officials cannot name
even one right or freedom guaranteed by the First
Amendment, while 54
percent do not know the Constitution gives Congress
the power to declare war.
More prisons.
Our prisons, housing the
largest number of inmates in the world and still
growing, have become money-making
enterprises for private corporations that manage
the prisons in exchange for the states agreeing to
maintain a 90% occupancy rate for at least 20 years.
And how do you keep the prisons full? By passing
laws aimed at increasing the prison population,
including the imposition of life sentences on people
who commit minor or nonviolent crimes such as
siphoning gasoline. Little surprise, then, that the
United States has 5% of the world’s population, but 25%
of the world’s prisoners.
More corruption.
If there is any absolute maxim by which the federal
government seems to operate, it is that the American
taxpayer always gets ripped off. This is true,
whether you’re talking about taxpayers being forced
to fund high-priced weaponry that will be used
against us, endless
wars that do little for our safety or our
freedoms, or bloated
government agencies such as the National Security
Agency with its secret budgets, covert agendas
and clandestine activities. Rubbing salt in the
wound, even monetary awards in lawsuits against
government officials who are found guilty of
wrongdoing are paid by the taxpayer.
More censorship.
First Amendment activities are being pummeled,
punched, kicked, choked, chained and generally
gagged all across the country. The reasons for such
censorship vary widely from political correctness,
safety concerns and bullying to national security
and hate crimes but the end result remains the same:
the complete eradication of what Benjamin Franklin
referred to as the “principal
pillar of a free government.” 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 have conspired to
corrode our core freedoms. As a result, we are no
longer a nation of constitutional purists for whom
the Bill of Rights serves as the ultimate authority.
We have litigated and legislated our way into a new
governmental framework where the dictates of petty
bureaucrats carry greater weight than the
inalienable rights of the citizenry.
More fascism. As
a Princeton University survey indicates, our
elected officials, especially those in the nation’s
capital, represent the interests of the rich and
powerful rather than the average citizen. We are
no longer a representative republic. With Big
Business and Big Government having fused into a
corporate state, the president and his state
counterparts—the governors, have become little more
than CEOs of the Corporate State, which day by day
is assuming more government control over our lives.
Never before have average Americans had so little
say in the workings of their government and even
less access to their so-called representatives.
More fear.
We’re being fed a constant diet of fear, which has
resulted in Americans adopting an “us” against
“them” mindset that keeps us divided into factions,
unable to reach consensus about anything and too
distracted to notice the police state closing in on
us.
James
Madison, the father of the Constitution, put it
best: “Take alarm,” he warned, “at the first
experiment with liberties.” Anyone with even a
casual knowledge about current events knows that the
first experiment on our freedoms happened long ago.
Worse, we have not heeded the warnings of Madison
and those like him who understood that if you give
the government an inch, they will take a mile.
Unfortunately, the government has not only taken a
mile, they have taken mile after mile after mile
after mile with seemingly no end in sight for their
power grabs.
If you’re
in the business of making New Year’s resolutions,
why not resolve that 2016 will be the year we break
the cycle of tyranny and get back on the road to
freedom? No matter what the politicians say about
the dire state of our nation, you can rest assured
that none of the problems that continue to plague
our lives and undermine our freedoms will be
resolved by our so-called elected representatives in
any credible, helpful way in the new year.
“We the
people”—the citizenry, not the politicians—are the
only ones who have ever been able to enact effective
change, and there is a lot that needs to change.
All of the
signs point to something nasty up ahead.
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 |