The Police State Is Upon Us
The Police State Is Upon Us
Guest Column by John W. Whitehead
By John W. Whitehead
February 08, 2016
“If you can’t say ‘Fuck’ you can’t say, ‘Fuck the
government.’” ― Lenny Bruce.
Not only has free speech become a four-letter
word—profane, obscene, uncouth, not to be uttered in so-called public
places—but in more and more cases, the government deems free speech to be
downright dangerous and in some instances illegal.
The U.S. government has become particularly intolerant
of speech that challenges the government’s power, reveals the government’s
corruption, exposes the government’s lies, and encourages the citizenry to push
back against the government’s many injustices.
Indeed, there is a long and growing list of the kinds
of speech that the government considers dangerous enough to red flag and
subject to censorship, surveillance, investigation and prosecution: hate
speech, bullying speech, intolerant speech, conspiratorial speech, treasonous
speech, threatening speech, incendiary speech, inflammatory speech, radical
speech, anti-government speech, right-wing speech, extremist speech, etc.
Yet by allowing the government to whittle away at
cherished First Amendment freedoms—which form the backbone of the Bill of
Rights—we have evolved into a society that would not only be abhorrent to the
founders of this country but would be hostile to the words they used
to birth this nation.
Don’t believe me?
Conduct your own experiment into the government’s
tolerance of speech that challenges its authority, and see for yourself.
Stand on a street corner—or in a courtroom, at a city
council meeting or on a university campus—and recite some of the rhetoric used
by the likes of Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, John Adams and Thomas Paine
without referencing them as the authors.
For that matter, just try reciting the Declaration of Independence, which rejects tyranny, establishes Americans as
sovereign beings, recognizes God as a Supreme power, portrays the government as
evil, and provides a detailed laundry list of abuses that are as relevant today
as they were 240 years ago.
My guess is that you won’t last long before you get
thrown out, shut up, threatened with arrest or at the very least accused of
being a radical, a troublemaker, a sovereign citizen, a conspiratorialist or an
extremist.
Try suggesting, as Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin
Franklin did, that Americans should not only take up arms but be prepared to
shed blood in order to protect their liberties, and you might find yourself
placed on a terrorist watch list and vulnerable to being rounded up by
government agents.
“What country can preserve its liberties if their
rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit
of resistance. Let them take arms,” declared Jefferson. He also concluded that
“the tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of
patriots and tyrants.” Observed Franklin: “Democracy is two wolves and a lamb
voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the
vote!”
Better yet, try suggesting as Thomas Paine, Marquis De
Lafayette, John Adams and Patrick Henry did that Americans should, if
necessary, defend themselves against the government if it violates their
rights, and you will be labeled a domestic extremist.
“It is the duty of the patriot to protect his country
from its government,” insisted Paine. “When the government violates the
people’s rights,” Lafayette warned, “insurrection is, for the people and for
each portion of the people, the most sacred of the rights and the most
indispensable of duties.” Adams cautioned, “A settled plan to deprive the
people of all the benefits, blessings and ends of the contract, to subvert the
fundamentals of the constitution, to deprive them of all share in making and
executing laws, will justify a revolution.” And who could forget Patrick Henry
with his ultimatum: “Give me liberty or give me death!”
Then again, perhaps you don’t need to test the limits
of free speech for yourself. One such test is playing out before our very eyes
in Portland, Oregon, where radio “shock jock” Pete Santilli, a new media
journalist who broadcasts his news reports over YouTube and streaming internet
radio, is sitting in jail.
Santilli, notorious for his controversial topics,
vocal outrage over government abuses, and inflammatory rhetoric, is not what
anyone would consider an objective reporter. His radio show, aptly titled
“Telling You the Truth...Whether You Like It or Not,” makes it clear that
Santilli has a viewpoint (namely, that the government has overstepped its
bounds), and he has no qualms about sharing it with his listeners.
It was that viewpoint that landed Santilli in jail.
In early January 2016, a group of armed activists,
reportedly protesting the federal government’s management of federal lands and
its prosecution of two local ranchers convicted of arson, staged an act of civil disobedience by occupying the Malheur National Wildlife
Refuge in Burns, Oregon. Santilli, who has covered such protests in the past,
including the April 2014 standoff in Nevada between the Bundy ranching family
and the federal government over grazing rights, reported on the occupation in
Burns as an embedded journalist, albeit one who was sympathetic to the
complaints (although not the tactics) of the occupiers.
When asked to clarify his role in relation to the
occupation, Santilli declared, “My role is the same here that it was at the
Bundy ranch. To talk about the constitutional implications of what is going on
here. The Constitution cannot be negotiated.”
Well, it turns out that the Constitution can be
negotiated, at least when the government gets involved.
Long a thorn in the side of the FBI, Santilli was arrested by the FBI following its ambush and arrest of
key leaders of the movement. He was charged, along with the armed resistors,
with conspiracy to impede federal officers from discharging their duties by use
of force, intimidation, or threats—the same charge being levied against those
who occupied the refuge—which carries a maximum sentence of six
years in prison.
Read between the lines and you’ll find that what the
government is really accusing Santilli of is employing dangerous speech. As
court documents indicate, the government is prosecuting Santilli solely as a
reporter of information. In other words, they’re making an example of him,
which is consistent with the government’s ongoing efforts to intimidate members
of the media who portray the government in a less than favorable light.
This is not a new tactic.
During the protests in Ferguson, Missouri, and
Baltimore, Maryland, numerous journalists were arrested while covering the regions’ civil unrest and the
conditions that spawned that unrest. These attempts to muzzle the press were
clearly concerted, top-down efforts to restrict the fundamental First Amendment
rights of the public and the press.
The Obama administration's treatment of reporters has
caused controversy before. In 2009, the Department of Justice targeted a Fox News reporter in an investigation. Three years later,
DOJ seized Associated Press reporters’
phone records. After
that, former Attorney General Eric Holder ordered a review of the Justice Department's news media policies.
DOJ employees must consult with a unit within the Criminal Division before
they arrest someone when there is a “question regarding whether an individual
or entity is a ‘member of the news media,’” according to a January 2015 memo from Holder to DOJ employees.”
The message is clear: whether a journalist is acting
alone or is affiliated with an established news source, the government has no
qualms about subjecting them to harassment, arrest, jail time and trumped up
charges if doing so will discourage others from openly opposing or exposing the
government.
You see, the powers-that-be understand that if the
government can control speech, it controls thought and, in turn, it can control
the minds of the citizenry.
Where the government has gone wrong is in hinging its
case against Santilli based solely on his incendiary rhetoric, which is
protected by the First Amendment and which bears a striking resemblance to
disgruntled patriots throughout American history.
Now compare that with the call to action from Joseph
Warren, a leader of the Sons of Liberty and a principal figure within the American
Revolution: “Stain not the glory of your worthy ancestors, but like them
resolve never to part with your birthright; be wise in your deliberations, and
determined in your exertions for the preservation of your liberties. Follow not
the dictates of passion, but enlist yourselves under the sacred banner of
reason; use every method in your power to secure your rights.”
Indeed, Santilli comes across as relatively docile
compared to some of our nation’s more outspoken firebrands.
Santilli: “I’m not armed. I am armed with my mouth. I’m armed with my live
stream. I’m armed with a coalition of like-minded individuals who sit at home
and on YouTube watch this.”
Now compare that to what George Washington had to say:
“Unhappy it is, though, to reflect that a brother's sword has been sheathed in
a brother's breast and that the once-happy plains of America are either to be
drenched with blood or inhabited by slaves. Sad alternative! But can a virtuous
man hesitate in his choice?”
And then there was Andrew Jackson, a hothead if ever
there was one. He came of age in the early days of the republic, served as the
seventh president of the United States, and was not opposed to shedding blood
when necessary: “Peace, above all things, is to be desired, but blood must
sometimes be spilled to obtain it on equable and lasting terms.”
This is how freedom rises or falls.
There have always been those willing to speak their
minds despite the consequences. Where freedom hangs in the balance is when “we
the people” are called on to stand with or against individuals who actually
exercise their rights and, in the process, push the envelope far enough to get
called out on the carpet for it.
Do we negotiate the Constitution, or do we embrace it,
no matter how uncomfortable it makes us feel, no matter how hateful or ugly it
gets, and no matter how much we may dislike its flag-bearers?
Comedian Lenny Bruce laid the groundwork for the
George Carlins that would follow in his wake: foul-mouthed, insightful,
irreverent, incredibly funny, and one of the First Amendment’s greatest
champions who dared to “speak the unspeakable” about race, religion, sexuality and politics. As Village
Voice writer Nat Hentoff attests, Bruce was “not only a paladin of
free speech but also a still-penetrating, woundingly hilarious speaker of truth to the powerful and
the complacent.”
Bruce died in 1966, but not before being convicted of
alleged obscenity for challenging his audience’s covert prejudices by
brandishing unmentionable words that, if uttered today, would not only get you
ostracized but could get you arrested and charged with a hate crime. Hentoff,
who testified in Bruce’s defense at his trial, recounts that Lenny used to say,
“What I wanted people to dig is the lie. Certain words were suppressed to
keep the lie going. But
if you do them, you should be able to say the words.”
Not much has changed in the 50 years since Bruce died.
In fact, it’s gotten worse.
What we’re dealing with today is a government that
wants to suppress dangerous words—words about its warring empire, words about
its land grabs, words about its militarized police, words about its killing,
its poisoning and its corruption—in order to keep its lies going.
As I document in my book Battlefield America: The War on the
American People, what
we are witnessing is a nation undergoing a nervous breakdown over this growing
tension between our increasingly untenable reality and the lies being
perpetrated by a government that has grown too power-hungry, egotistical,
militaristic and disconnected from its revolutionary birthright.
The only therapy is the truth and nothing but the
truth.
Otherwise, there will be no more First Amendment.
There will be no more Bill of Rights. And there will be no more freedom in
America as we have known it.
As the insightful and brash comedian George Carlin
observed:
“Rights aren’t rights if someone can take them away.
They’re privileges. That’s all we’ve ever had in this country, is a bill of
temporary privileges. And if you read the news even badly, you know that every
year the list gets shorter and shorter. Sooner or later, the people in this
country are gonna realize the government does not give a fuck about them! The
government doesn’t care about you, or your children, or your rights, or your
welfare or your safety. It simply does not give a fuck about you! It’s
interested in its own power. That’s the only thing. Keeping it and expanding it
wherever possible.”
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