Censored, Surveilled, Watch Listed and Jailed: The
Absurdity of Being a Citizen in the American Police
State
By John W.
Whitehead
April 26, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "Ron
Paul Institute"-
In
the American police state, the price to be paid for
speaking truth to power (also increasingly viewed as
an act of treason) is surveillance, censorship, jail
and ultimately death.
However, where many Americans go wrong is in
assuming that you have to be doing something illegal
or challenging the government’s authority in order
to be flagged as a suspicious character, labeled an
enemy of the state and locked up like a dangerous
criminal.
In fact, as I point out in my book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People, all you
really need to do is use certain trigger words, surf
the internet, communicate using a cell phone, drive
a car, stay at a hotel, purchase materials at a
hardware store, take flying or boating lessons,
appear suspicious, question government authority, or
generally live in the United States.
With the help of automated eyes and ears, a growing
arsenal of high-tech software, hardware and
techniques, government propaganda urging Americans
to turn into spies and snitches, as well as social
media and behavior
sensing software, government agents are spinning
a sticky spider-web of threat
assessments, flagged “words,” and “suspicious”
activity reports aimed at snaring potential enemies
of the state.
It’s the American police state’s take on the
dystopian terrors foreshadowed by George Orwell,
Aldous Huxley and Phillip K. Dick all rolled up into
one oppressive pre-crime and pre-thought crime
package.
What’s more, the technocrats who run the
surveillance state don’t even have to break a sweat
while monitoring what you say, what you read, what
you write, where you go, how much you spend, whom
you support, and with whom you communicate.
Computers now do the tedious work of trolling social
media, the internet, text messages and phone calls
for potentially anti-government remarks—all of which
is carefully recorded, documented, and stored to be
used against you someday at a time and place of the
government’s choosing.
While this may sound like a riff on a bad joke, it’s
a bad joke with “we the people” as the punchline.
The following activities are guaranteed to get you
censored, surveilled, eventually placed on a
government watch list, possibly detained and
potentially killed.
Laugh at your own peril.
Use harmless trigger words like cloud, pork
and pirates: The Department of Homeland
Security has an expansive list of keywords and
phrases it uses to monitor social networking sites
and online media for signs of terrorist or other
threats such as SWAT,
lockdown, police, cloud, food poisoning, pork, flu,
Subway, smart, delays, cancelled, la familia, pirates,
hurricane, forest fire, storm, flood, help, ice,
snow, worm, warning or social media.
Use a cell phone: Simply by using a
cell phone, you make yourself an easy target for
government agents—working closely with
corporations—who can listen in on your phone calls,
read your text messages and emails, and track your
movements based on the data transferred from,
received by, and stored in your cell phone. Mention
any of the so-called “trigger” words in a
conversation or text message, and you’ll get flagged
for sure.
Drive a car: Unless you’ve got an
old junkyard heap without any of the gadgets and
gizmos that are so attractive to today’s car buyers
(GPS, satellite radio, electrical everything, smart
systems, etc.), driving a car today is like wearing
a homing device: you’ll be tracked from the moment
you open that car door thanks
to black box recorders and vehicle-to-vehicle
communications systems that can monitor your
speed, direction, location, the number of miles
traveled, and even your seatbelt use. Once you add
satellites, GPS devices, license plate readers, and
real-time traffic cameras to the mix, there’s
nowhere you can go on our nation’s highways and
byways that you can’t be followed.
Attend a political rally: Enacted
in the wake of 9/11, the Patriot Act redefined
terrorism so broadly that many non-terrorist
political activities such as protest marches,
demonstrations and civil disobedience were
considered potential terrorist acts, thereby
rendering anyone desiring to engage in protected
First Amendment expressive activities as suspects of
the surveillance state.
Express yourself on social media:
The FBI, CIA, NSA and other government agencies are
investing in and relying on
corporate surveillance technologies that can mine
constitutionally protected speech on social
media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and
Instagram in order to identify potential extremists
and predict who might engage in future acts of
anti-government behavior.
Serve in the military: Operation
Vigilant Eagle, the brainchild of the Dept. of
Homeland Security, calls for surveillance of
military veterans returning from Iraq and
Afghanistan, characterizing them as extremists and
potential domestic terrorist threats because they
may be “disgruntled, disillusioned or suffering from
the psychological effects of war.”
Disagree with a law enforcement official:
A growing number of government programs are aimed at
identifying, monitoring and locking up anyone
considered potentially “dangerous” or mentally ill
(according to government standards, of course). For
instance, a homeless man in New York City who
reportedly had a history of violence but no signs of
mental illness was forcibly
detained in a psych ward for a week after arguing
with shelter police.
Call in sick to work: In Virginia,
a so-called police
“welfare check” instigated by a 58-year-old man’s
employer after he called in sick resulted in a
two-hour, SWAT team-style raid on the man’s
truck and a 72-hour mental health hold. All of this
was done despite the fact that police
acknowledged they had no legal basis nor probable
cause for detaining the man, given that he had
not threatened to harm anyone and was not mentally
ill.
Limp or stutter: As a result of a
nationwide push to certify a broad spectrum of
government officials in mental
health first-aid training (a 12-hour course
comprised of PowerPoint presentations, videos,
discussions, role playing and other interactive
activities), more Americans are going to run the
risk of being reported for having mental health
issues by non-medical personnel. For instance, one 37-year-old
disabled man was arrested, diagnosed by police
and an unlicensed mental health screener as having
“mental health issues,” apparently because of his
slurred speech and unsteady gait.
Appear confused or nervous, fidget, whistle
or smell bad: According to the
Transportation Security Administration’s 92-point
secret behavior watch list for spotting terrorists,
these are among some
of the telling signs of suspicious behavior:
fidgeting, whistling, bad
body odor, yawning, clearing your throat, having
a pale face from recently shaving your beard,
covering your mouth with your hand when speaking and
blinking your eyes fast.
Allow yourself to be seen in public waving a
toy gun or anything remotely resembling a gun, such
as a water nozzle or a remote control or a walking
cane, for instance: No longer is it unusual
to hear about incidents in which police shoot
unarmed individuals first and ask questions later.
John Crawford was shot by police in an Ohio
Wal-Mart for
holding an air rifle sold in the store that he
may have intended to buy. Thirteen-year-old Andy
Lopez Cruz was shot
7 times in 10 seconds by a California police
officer who mistook the boy’s toy gun for an assault
rifle. Christopher Roupe, 17, was shot
and killed after opening the door to a police
officer. The officer, mistaking the Wii remote
control in Roupe’s hand for a gun, shot him in the
chest. Another police officer repeatedly shot 70-year-old
Bobby Canipe during a traffic stop. The cop saw
the man reaching for his cane and, believing the
cane to be a rifle, opened fire.
Appear to be pro-gun, pro-freedom or
anti-government: You might be a domestic
terrorist in the eyes of the FBI (and its network of
snitches) if you: express
libertarian philosophies; exhibit Second
Amendment-oriented views; read survivalist
literature, including apocalyptic fictional books;
show signs of self-sufficiency (stockpiling food,
ammo, hand tools, medical supplies); fear an
economic collapse; buy gold and barter items; voice
fears about Big Brother or big government; or expound
about constitutional rights and civil liberties.
Attend a public school: Microcosms
of the police state, America’s public schools
contain almost every aspect of the militarized,
intolerant, senseless, overcriminalized, legalistic,
surveillance-riddled, totalitarian landscape that
plagues those of us on the “outside.” Additionally,
as part of the government’s so-called ongoing war on
terror, the FBI—the nation’s de facto secret police
force—is now recruiting
students and teachers to spy on each other and
report anyone who appears to have the potential to
be “anti-government” or “extremist” as part of its “Don’t
Be a Puppet” campaign.
Speak truth to power: 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 activists
such as Martin Luther King Jr. and John Lennon who
were being singled out for daring to speak truth to
power. These men and others like them had their
phone calls monitored and data files collected on
their activities and associations. For a little
while, at least, they became enemy number one in the
eyes of the US government.
There’s always a price to pay for standing up to the
powers-that-be.
Yet as this list shows, you don’t even have to be a
dissident to get flagged by the government for
surveillance, censorship and detention.
All you really need to be is a citizen of the
American police state.
Reprinted with permission
from the
Rutherford Institute. |