The State
of the Nation: A Dictatorship Without Tears
By John W.
Whitehead
“There
will be, in the next generation or so, a
pharmacological method of making people love
their servitude, and producing dictatorship
without tears, so to speak, producing a kind of
painless concentration camp for entire
societies, so that people will in fact have
their liberties taken away from them, but will
rather enjoy it, because they will be distracted
from any desire to rebel by propaganda or
brainwashing, or brainwashing enhanced by
pharmacological methods. And this seems to be
the final revolution.”—Aldous Huxley
January 12,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- There’s a man who contacts me several times a week
to disagree with my assessments of the American
police state. According to this self-avowed
Pollyanna who is tired of hearing “bad news,” the
country is doing just fine, the government’s
intentions are honorable, anyone in authority should
be blindly obeyed, those individuals who are being
arrested, shot and imprisoned must have done
something to deserve such treatment, and if you have
nothing to hide, you shouldn’t care whether the
government is spying on you.
In other
words, this man trusts the government with his life,
his loved ones and his property, and anyone who
doesn’t feel the same should move elsewhere.
It’s
tempting to write this man off as dangerously
deluded, treacherously naïve, and clueless to the
point of civic incompetence. However, he is not
alone in his goose-stepping, comfort-loving,
TV-watching, insulated-from-reality devotion to the
alternate universe constructed for us by the
Corporate State with its government propaganda,
pseudo-patriotism and contrived political divisions.
While only
1 in 5 Americans claim to trust the government
to do what is right, the majority of the people are
not quite ready to ditch the American experiment
in liberty. Or at least they’re not quite ready to
ditch the government with which they have been
saddled.
As The
Washington Post concludes, “Americans hate
government, but
they like what it does.” Indeed, kvetching
aside, Americans want the government to keep
providing institutionalized comforts such as Social
Security, public schools, and unemployment benefits,
fighting alleged terrorists and illegal immigrants,
defending the nation from domestic and foreign
threats, and maintaining the national
infrastructure. And it doesn’t matter that the
government has shown itself to be corrupt, abusive,
hostile to citizens who disagree, wasteful and
unconcerned about the plight of the average
American.
For the
moment, Americans are continuing to play by the
government’s rules. Indeed, Americans may not
approve the jobs being done by their elected
leaders, and they may have little to no access to
those same representatives, but they remain
committed to the political process, so much so that
they are working themselves into a frenzy over the
upcoming presidential election, with
contributions to the various candidates nearing
$500 million.
Yet as
Barack
Obama’s tenure in the White House shows, no
matter how much hope and change were promised, what
we’ve ended up with is not only more of the same,
but something worse: an invasive, authoritarian
surveillance state armed and ready to eliminate any
opposition.
The state
of our nation under Obama has become more
bureaucratic, more debt-ridden, more violent, more
militarized, more fascist, more lawless, more
invasive, more corrupt, more untrustworthy, more
mired in war, and more unresponsive to the wishes
and needs of the electorate. Most of all, the
government, already diabolical and manipulative to
the nth degree, has mastered the art of “do what I
say and not what I do” hypocrisy.
For
example, the government’s arsenal is growing. While
the Obama administration is working to limit the
public’s access to guns by pushing for
greater gun control, it’s doing little to scale
back on the federal government’s growing arsenal of
firepower and militarized equipment.
In fact,
it’s not just the Department of Defense that’s in
the business of waging war. Government agencies
focused largely on domestic matters continue to
spend
tens of millions of taxpayer dollars to purchase
SWAT and military-style equipment such as body
armor, riot helmets and shields, cannon launchers
and police firearms and ammunition. The Department
of Veterans Affairs spent nearly $2 million on riot
helmets, defender shields, body armor, a “milo
return fire cannon system,” armored mobile shields,
Kevlar blankets, tactical gear and equipment for
crowd control. The Food and Drug Administration
purchased “ballistic vests and carriers.” The
Environmental Protection Agency shelled out $200,000
for body armor. And the Smithsonian Institution
procured $28,000 worth of body armor for its “zoo
police and security officers.”
The
national debt is growing. In fact, it’s
almost doubled during Obama’s time in office to
nearly $20 trillion. Much of this debt is owed to
foreign countries such as China, which have come to
exert an undue degree of influence on various
aspects of the American economy.
Meanwhile,
almost
half of Americans are struggling to save for
emergencies and retirement, 43% can’t afford to
go more than one month without a paycheck, and 24%
have less than $250 in their bank accounts preceding
payday.
On any
given night,
over half a million people in the U.S. are homeless,
and half of them are elderly. In fact, studies
indicate that the homeless are aging faster than the
general population in the U.S.
While the
U.S. spends more on education than almost any
other country, American
schools rank 28th in the world, below
much poorer countries such as the Czech Republic and
Vietnam.
The
American police state’s payroll is expanding.
Despite the fact that violent crime is at a
40-year-low, there are
more than 1.1 million persons employed on a
full-time basis by state and local law enforcement
in this country. That doesn’t include the more than
120,000 full-time officers on the federal
payroll.
While crime
is falling, the number of laws creating new crimes
is growing at an alarming rate. Congress creates, on
average,
more than 50 new criminal laws each year. This
adds up to more than 4,500 federal criminal laws and
an even greater number of state laws.
The prison
population is growing at an alarming rate. Owing
largely to overcriminalization, the nation’s prison
population has
quadrupled since 1980 to 2.4 million, which
breaks down to more than one out of every 100
American adults behind bars. According to The
Washington Post, it costs $21,000 a year to
keep someone in a minimum-security federal prison
and $33,000 a year for a maximum-security federal
prison. Those costs are expected to
increase 30 percent by 2020. Translation: while
the American taxpayer will be forced to shell out
more money for its growing prison population, the
private prison industry will be making a hefty
profit.
The
nation’s infrastructure—railroads, water pipelines,
ports, dams, bridges, airports and roads—is
rapidly deteriorating. An estimated $1.7
trillion will be needed by 2020 to improve surface
transportation, but with vital funds being siphoned
off by the military industrial complex, there’s
little relief in sight.
The expense
of those endless wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
will cost taxpayers $4 trillion to $6 trillion.
That does not include the cost of military
occupations and exercises elsewhere around the
globe. Unfortunately, that’s money that is not being
invested in America, nor is it being used to improve
the lives of Americans.
Government
incompetence, corruption and lack of accountability
continue to result in the loss of vast amounts of
money and weapons. A Reuters investigation revealed
$8.5 trillion in “taxpayer money doled out by
Congress to the Pentagon since 1996 that has never
been accounted for.” Then there was the
$500 million in Pentagon weapons, aircraft and
equipment (small arms, ammunition, night-vision
goggles, patrol boats, vehicles and other supplies)
that the U.S. military somehow lost track of.
Rounding
out the bad news,
many Americans know little to nothing about their
rights and the government. Only 31% can name all
three branches of the U.S. government, while one in
three says that the Bill of Rights guarantees the
right to own your own home, while one in four thinks
that it guarantees “equal pay for equal work.” One
in 10 Americans (12%) says the
Bill of Rights includes the right to own a pet.
If this
brief catalogue of our national woes proves anything
at all, it is that
the American experiment in liberty has failed,
and as political economist Lawrence Hunter warns, it
is only a matter of time before people realize it.
Writing for Forbes, Hunter
notes:
The
greatest fear of America’s Founding Fathers has
been realized: The U.S. Constitution has been
unable to thwart the corrosive dynamics of
majority-rule democracy, which in turn has
mangled the Constitution beyond recognition. The
real conclusion of the American Experiment is
that democracy ultimately undermines liberty and
leads to tyranny and oppression by elected
leaders and judges, their cronies and unelected
bureaucrats. All of this is done in the name of
“the people” and the “general welfare,” of
course. But in fact, democracy oppresses the
very demos in whose name it operates,
benefiting string-pullers within the
Establishment and rewarding the political
constituencies they manage by paying off special
interests with everyone else’s money forcibly
extracted through taxation. The Founding Fathers
(especially Washington, Jefferson, Franklin,
Adams, Madison, and James Monroe), as well as
outside observers of the American Experiment
such as Alexis de Tocqueville all feared
democracy and dreaded this outcome. But, they
let hope and faith in their ingenious
constitutional engineering overcome their fear
of the democratic state, only to discover they
had replaced one tyranny with another.
So are
there any real, workable solutions to the emerging
American police state?
A second
American Revolution will not work. In the first
revolution, the colonists were able to dispatch the
military occupation and take over the running of the
country. However, the Orwellian state is here and it
is so pervasive that government agents are watching,
curtailing and putting down any resistance before it
can get started.
A violent
overthrow of the government will not work.
Government agents are armed to the teeth and will
easily blow away any insurgency when and if
necessary.
Politics
will not help things along. As history has made
clear, the new boss is invariably the same as or
worse than the old boss—all controlled by a monied,
oligarchic elite.
As I make
clear in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American
People, there is only one feasible
solution left to us short of fleeing the country for
parts unknown: grassroots activism that strives to
reform the government locally and trickles up.
Unfortunately, such a solution requires activism,
engagement, vigilance, sacrifice, individualism,
community-building, nullification and a communal
willingness to reject the federal government’s
handouts and, when needed, respond with what Martin
Luther King Jr. referred to as “militant nonviolent
resistance.”
That means
forgoing Monday night football in order to actively
voice your concerns at city council meetings,
turning off the television and spending an hour
reading your local newspaper (if you still have one
that reports local news) from front to back, showing
your displeasure by picketing in front of government
offices, risking your reputation by speaking up and
disagreeing with the majority when necessary,
refusing to meekly accept whatever the government
dictates, reminding government officials—including
law enforcement—that they work for you, and working
together with your neighbors to present a united
front against an overreaching government.
Unfortunately, we now live in a ubiquitous Orwellian
society with all the trappings of Huxley’s A
Brave New World. We have become a society of
watchers rather than activists who are distracted by
even the clumsiest government attempts at
sleight-of-hand.
There are
too many Americans who are reasonably content with
the status quo and too few Americans willing to
tolerate the discomfort of a smaller, more
manageable government and a way of life that is less
convenient, less entertaining, and less comfortable.
It well may
be that Huxley was right, and that the final
revolution is behind us. Certainly, most Americans
seem to have learned to love their prison walls and
take comfort in a dictatorship without tears.
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) |