The Tyranny
at Standing Rock:
The
Government’s Divide-and-Conquer Strategy Is Working
By John W. Whitehead
“We
must, indeed, all hang together, or assuredly we
shall all hang separately.”— Benjamin Franklin, as
quoted in The Works of
Benjamin Franklin
Divide and
conquer.
It’s one of the
oldest military strategies in the books, and it’s proven
to be the police state’s most effective weapon for
maintaining the status quo.
How do you
conquer a nation?
Distract them
with football games, political circuses and Black Friday
sales. Keep them focused on their differences—economic,
religious, environmental, political, racial—so they can
never agree on anything. And then, when they’re so
divided that they are incapable of joining forces
against a common threat, start picking them off one by
one.
What we’re
witnessing at Standing Rock, where
activists have gathered to protest the Dakota Access
Pipeline construction on Native American land, is
just the latest incarnation of the government’s battle
plan for stamping out any sparks of resistance and
keeping the populace under control: battlefield tactics,
military weaponry and a complete suspension of the
Constitution.
Militarized
police. Riot and camouflage gear. Armored vehicles. Mass
arrests. Pepper spray. Tear gas. Batons. Strip searches.
Drones.
Less-than-lethal weapons unleashed with deadly force.
Rubber bullets. Water cannons. Concussion grenades.
Arrests of journalists. Intimidation tactics. Brute
force.
This is what
martial law looks like, when a government disregards
constitutional freedoms and imposes its will through
military force.
Only this is
martial law without any government body having to
declare it.
This is martial
law packaged as law and order and sold to the public as
necessary for keeping the peace.
These
overreaching, heavy-handed lessons in how to rule by
force have become standard operating procedure for a
government that communicates with its citizenry
primarily through the language of brutality,
intimidation and fear.
What Americans
have failed to comprehend is that the police state
doesn’t differentiate.
In the eyes of
the government—whether that government is helmed by
Barack Obama or Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton—there is
no difference between Republicans and Democrats, between
blacks and whites and every shade in the middle, between
Native Americans and a nation of immigrants (no matter
how long we’ve been here), between the lower class and
the middle and upper classes, between religious and
non-religious Americans, between those who march in
lockstep with the police state and those who oppose its
tactics.
This is all
part and parcel of the government’s plan for dealing
with widespread domestic unrest, no matter the source.
A 2008
Army War College report revealed that “widespread
civil violence inside the United States would force the
defense establishment to reorient priorities in
extremis to defend basic domestic order and human
security.” The 44-page report goes on to warn that
potential causes for such civil unrest could include
another terrorist attack, “unforeseen economic
collapse, loss
of functioning political and legal order, purposeful
domestic resistance or insurgency, pervasive public
health emergencies, and catastrophic natural and human
disasters.”
Subsequent
reports by the Department of Homeland Security call on
the government to identify, monitor and label right-wing
and
left-wing activists,
military veterans and
sovereign citizens as extremists (the words
extremist and terrorist are used interchangeably in the
reports).
These reports
indicate that for the government, anyone seen as
opposing the government—whether they’re Left, Right or
somewhere in between—is labeled an extremist.
Divide and
conquer.
What the
government has figured out is that as long as its
oppression is focused on one particular group at a time—inner
city blacks,
gun-toting ranchers, environmental activists,
etc.—there will be no outcry from the public at large.
The liberal
left will not speak up for the conservative right.
The rightwing
will not speak up for the leftwing.
The economic
elite will not speak up for the economically
disadvantaged and vice versa.
The ranchers
will not speak up for the environmentalists, and the
environmentalists will not speak up for the ranchers.
The Democrats
will not criticize endless wars, drone killings,
militarized police, private prisons, etc., when
sanctioned by their candidate. Same goes for the
Republicans.
Are you
starting to get the picture?
What we’re
dealing with is a full-blown case of national hypocrisy.
For too long
now, the American people have allowed their personal
prejudices and politics to cloud their judgment and
render them incapable of seeing that the treatment being
doled out by the government’s lethal enforcers has
remained consistent, no matter the threat.
The
government’s oppressive tactics have not changed.
The same
martial law maneuvers and intimidation tactics used to
put down protests and muzzle journalists two years ago
in
Ferguson and Baltimore are being used to
flat-line protesters and journalists at Standing
Rock this year.
The same
infiltration and surveillance of ranch activists
opposing the Bureau of Land Management in
Oregon and Nevada over the past several years were
used against nonviolent
anti-war protesters more than a decade ago. That
same mindset was embodied in the use of surveillance
against those who gathered for
Barack Obama’s inauguration eight years ago.
The same
brutality that was in full force 20-plus years ago when
the
government raided the Branch Davidian religious compound
near Waco, Texas—targeting residents with loud
music, bright lights, bulldozers, flash-bang grenades,
tear gas, tanks and gunfire, and leaving 80 individuals,
including two dozen children, dead—were on full display
more than 50 years ago when
government agents unleashed fire hoses and police dogs
on civil rights protesters, children included.
The more things
change, the more they stay the same.
The sticking
point is not whether Americans must see eye-to-eye on
these varied issues but whether they can agree that no
one should be treated in such a fashion by their own
government.
Our greatest
defense against home-grown tyranny has always been our
strength in numbers as a citizenry.
America’s
founders hinted at it again and again. The
Declaration of Independence refers to “one people.”
The preamble to the
Constitution opens with those three powerful words:
“We the People.” Years later, the
Gettysburg Address declared that we are a
“government of the people, by the people, for the
people.”
Despite these
stark reminders that the government exists for our
benefit and was intended to serve our needs, “We the
People” have yet to marshal our greatest weapon against
oppression: our strength lies in our numbers.
Had 318 million
Americans taken to the streets to protest the
government’s SWAT team raids that left innocent children
like
Aiyana Jones or
Baby Bou Bou dead or scarred, there would be no
80,000 SWAT team raids a year.
Had 318 million
Americans raised their voices against police shootings
of unarmed citizens such as
Alton Sterling and Walter Scott, there would be far
less use of excessive force by the police.
Had 318 million
Americans stood shoulder-to-shoulder and rejected the
ruling oligarchy, pork barrel legislation, profit-driven
prisons, endless wars and asset forfeiture schemes,
government corruption would be the exception rather than
the rule.
Had 318 million
Americans told the government to stop drilling through
sacred Native American lands, stop spraying protesters
with water cannons in below-freezing temperatures, stop
using its military might to intimidate and shut down
First Amendment activity, and to stop allowing Corporate
America to dictate how the battle lines are drawn, there
would be no Standing Rock.
Unfortunately,
318 million Americans have yet to agree on anything,
especially the source of their oppression.
This is how
tyrants come to power and stay in power.
Authoritarian
regimes begin with incremental steps.
Overcriminalization, surveillance of innocent citizens,
imprisonment for nonviolent—victimless—crimes, etc.
Slowly, bit by bit, the citizenry finds its freedoms
being curtailed and undermined for the sake of national
security.
No one speaks
up for those being targeted. No one resists these minor
acts of oppression. No one recognizes the indoctrination
into tyranny for what it is.
As I point out
in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American People,
historically this failure to speak truth to power
has resulted in whole populations being conditioned to
tolerate unspoken cruelty toward their fellow human
beings, a bystander syndrome in which people remain
silent and disengaged—mere onlookers—in the face of
abject horrors and injustice.
Time has
insulated us from the violence perpetrated by past
regimes in their pursuit of power: the crucifixion and
slaughter of innocents by the Romans, the torture of the
Inquisition, the atrocities of the Nazis, the butchery
of the Fascists, the bloodshed by the Communists, and
the cold-blooded war machines run by the military
industrial complex.
We can
disassociate from such violence. We can convince
ourselves that we are somehow different from the victims
of government abuse. We can treat news coverage of
protests such as Standing Rock and the like as just
another channel to flip in our search for better
entertainment. We can continue to spout empty campaign
rhetoric about how great America is, despite the
evidence to the contrary. We can avoid responsibility
for holding the government accountable. We can zip our
lips and bind our hands and shut our eyes.
In other words,
we can continue to exist in a state of denial.
Whatever we do
or don’t do, it won’t change the facts: the police state
is here.
“There comes a
time,” concluded Martin Luther King Jr., “when silence
is betrayal.”
The people of
Nazi Germany learned this lesson the hard way.
A German pastor
who openly opposed Hitler and spent the last seven years
of Nazi rule in a concentration camp, Martin Niemoller
warned:
First they
came for the Socialists, and I did not speak
out—Because I was not a Socialist. Then they came
for the Trade Unionists, and I did not speak
out—Because I was not a Trade Unionist. Then they
came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—Because I
was not a Jew. Then they came for me—and there was
no one left to speak for me.
The people of
the American Police State will never have any hope of
fighting government tyranny if we’re busy fighting each
other.
When all is
said and done, the only thing we really need to agree on
is that we are all Americans.
So if this
isn’t your fight—if you believe that authority is more
important than liberty—if you don’t agree with a
particular group’s position on an issue and by your
silence tacitly support the treatment meted out to
them—if you think you’re a better citizen or a more
patriotic American—if you want to play it safe—and if
don’t want to risk getting shot, tased, pepper-sprayed,
struck with a baton, thrown to the ground, arrested
and/or labeled an extremist—then by all means, remain
silent. Stand down. Cower in the face of the police.
Turn your eyes away from injustice. Find any excuse to
suggest that the so-called victims of the police state
deserved what they got.
But remember,
when that rifle (or taser, or water cannon, or bully
stick) finally gets pointed in your direction—and it
will—when there’s no one left to stand up for you or
speak up for you, remember that you were warned.
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 (SelectBooks,
2015) is available online at www.amazon.com. Whitehead
can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
Arrests of Journalists at
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