John Whitehead Explains the Defeat of Freedom
“Every day I ask myself the same question: How can
this be happening in America?” — Philip Roth
This Is How Tyranny Rises and Freedom Falls: The
Experiment in Freedom Is Failing
By John W. Whitehead
October 16, 2017
“Every day I ask myself the same question: How can
this be happening in America? How can people like these be in charge
of our country? If I didn’t see it with my own eyes, I’d think I was having a
hallucination.”—Philip Roth, novelist
It is easy to be distracted right now by the circus
politics that have dominated the news headlines for the past year, but don’t be
distracted.
Don’t be fooled, not even a little, no matter how tempting
it seems to just take a peek.
We’re being subjected to the oldest con game in the
books, the magician’s sleight of hand that keeps you focused on the shell game
in front of you while your wallet is being picked clean by ruffians in your
midst.
This is how tyranny rises and freedom falls.
What characterizes American government today is not so
much dysfunctional politics as it is ruthlessly contrived governance carried
out behind the entertaining, distracting and disingenuous curtain of political
theater. And what political theater it is, diabolically Shakespearean at times,
full of sound and fury, yet in the end, signifying nothing.
We are being ruled by a government of scoundrels,
spies, thugs, thieves, gangsters, ruffians, rapists, extortionists, bounty
hunters, battle-ready warriors and cold-blooded killers who communicate using a
language of force and oppression.
The U.S. government now poses the greatest threat
to our freedoms.
More than terrorism, more than domestic extremism,
more than gun violence and organized crime, even more than the perceived threat
posed by any single politician, the U.S. government remains a greater menace to
the life, liberty and property of its citizens than any of the so-called dangers
from which the government claims to protect us.
This has been true of virtually every occupant of the
White House in recent years.
Unfortunately, nothing has changed for the better
since Donald Trump ascended to the Oval Office.
Indeed, Trump may be the smartest move yet by the
powers-that-be to keep the citizenry divided and at each other’s throats,
because as long as we’re busy fighting each other, we’ll never manage to
present a unified front against tyranny in any form.
As American satirist H.L. Mencken predicted almost a
century ago:
In other words, nothing has changed, folks.
The facts speak for themselves.
We’re being robbed blind by a government of
thieves. Americans no longer have
any real protection against government agents empowered to seize private
property at will. For instance, police agencies under the guise of asset
forfeiture laws are taking Americans’ personal property based on little more
than a suspicion of criminal activity and keeping it for their own profit and
gain. In one case, police
seized $53,000 from the manager of a Christian rock band that was
touring and raising money for an orphanage in Thailand. Despite finding no
evidence of wrongdoing, police kept the money. Homeowners are losing their
homes over nonpayment of taxes (for as little as
$400 owed) and municipal bills such as water or sewer fees that amount to a
fraction of what they have invested in their homes. And then there’s the Drug
Enforcement Agency, which has been searching train and airline passengers
and pocketing
their cash, without ever charging them with a crime.
We’re being taken advantage of by a government of
scoundrels, idiots and cowards. Mencken
calculated that “Congress consists of one-third, more or less, scoundrels;
two-thirds, more or less, idiots; and three-thirds, more or less, poltroons.”
By and large, Americans
seem to agree. When you’ve got government representatives who spend a large
chunk of their work hours fundraising,
being feted by lobbyists, shuffling through a lucrative
revolving door between public service and lobbying, and making
themselves available to anyone with enough money to secure access
to a congressional office, you’re in the clutches of a corrupt oligarchy.
Mind you, these same elected officials rarely
read the legislation they’re enacting, nor do they seem capable of
enacting much legislation that actually helps the plight of the American
citizen. More often than not, the legislation lands the citizenry in worse
straits.
We’re being locked up by a government of greedy
jailers. We have become a carceral
state, spending three
times more on our prisons than on our schools and imprisoning close to
a quarter
of the world’s prisoners, despite the fact that crime is at an all-time low
and the U.S. makes up only 5% of the world’s population. The rise of
overcriminalization and profit-driven private prisons provides even greater
incentives for locking up American citizens for such non-violent “crimes” as
having an overgrown
lawn. As the Boston Review points out, “America’s
contemporary system of policing, courts, imprisonment, and parole … makes money through
asset forfeiture, lucrative public contracts from private service providers,
and by directly extracting revenue and unpaid labor from populations of color
and the poor. In states and municipalities throughout the country, the criminal
justice system defrays costs by forcing prisoners and their families to pay for
punishment. It also allows private service providers to charge outrageous fees
for everyday needs such as telephone calls. As a result people facing even
minor criminal charges can easily find themselves trapped in a
self-perpetuating cycle of debt, criminalization, and incarceration.”
We’re being spied on by a government of Peeping Toms. The government is watching everything you
do, reading everything you write, listening to everything you say, and
monitoring everything you spend. Omnipresent surveillance is paving the way for
government programs that profile citizens, document their behavior and attempt
to predict what they might do in the future, whether it’s what they might buy,
what politician they might support, or what kinds of crimes
they might commit. The impact of this far-reaching surveillance, according
to Psychology Today, is “reduced
trust, increased conformity, and even diminished civic participation.” As
technology analyst Jillian C. York concludes, “Mass surveillance without due
process—whether undertaken by the government of Bahrain, Russia, the US, or
anywhere in between—threatens to stifle and smother that dissent, leaving in
its wake a populace
cowed by fear.”
We’re being forced to surrender our freedoms—and those
of our children—to a government of extortionists, money launderers and
professional pirates. The American people
have repeatedly been sold a bill of goods about how the government needs more
money, more expansive powers, and more secrecy (secret courts, secret budgets,
secret military campaigns, secret surveillance) in order to keep us safe. Under
the guise of fighting its wars on terror, drugs and now domestic extremism, the
government has spent billions in taxpayer dollars on endless wars that
have notended terrorism but merely sown the seeds of blowback,
surveillance programs that have caught few terrorists while
subjecting all Americans to a surveillance society, and militarized police that
have done little to decrease crime while turning communities
into warzones. Not surprisingly, the primary ones to benefit from these
government exercises in legal money laundering have been the corporations, lobbyists
and politicians who inflict them on a trusting public.
We’re being held at gunpoint by a government of
soldiers: a standing army. As if it
weren’t enough that the American military empire stretches around the globe
(and continues to leech much-needed resources from the American economy), the
U.S. government is creating its own standing army of militarized police and
teams of weaponized bureaucrats. These civilian
employees are being armed to the hilt with guns, ammunition and
military-style equipment; authorized to make arrests; and trained in military
tactics. Among the agencies being supplied with night-vision equipment, body
armor, hollow-point bullets, shotguns, drones, assault rifles and LP gas
cannons are the Smithsonian, U.S. Mint, Health and Human Services, IRS, FDA,
Small Business Administration, Social Security Administration, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration, Education Department, Energy Department, Bureau
of Engraving and Printing and an assortment of public universities. There are
now reportedly more bureaucratic (non-military) government civilians armed with
high-tech, deadly weapons than U.S. Marines. That doesn’t even begin to touch
on the government’s arsenal, the transformation of local police into extensions
of the military, and the speed with which the nation could be locked down under
martial law depending on the circumstances.
Whatever else it may be—a danger, a menace, a
threat—the U.S. government is certainly no friend to freedom.
To our detriment, the criminal class that Mark Twain
mockingly referred
to as Congress has since expanded to include every government agency
that feeds off the carcass of our once-constitutional republic.
The government and its cohorts have conspired to
ensure that the only real recourse the American people have to hold the
government accountable or express their displeasure with the government is
through voting, which is no real recourse at all.
Consider it: the penalties for civil disobedience,
whistleblowing and rebellion are severe. If you refuse to pay taxes for
government programs you believe to be immoral or illegal, you will go to jail.
If you attempt to overthrow the government—or any agency thereof—because you
believe it has overstepped its reach, you will go to jail. If you attempt to
blow the whistle on government misconduct, you will go to jail. In some
circumstances, if you even attempt to approach your elected representative to
voice your discontent, you can be arrested and jailed.
You cannot have a republican form of government—nor a
democratic one, for that matter—when the government views itself as superior to
the citizenry, when it no longer operates for the benefit of the people, when
the people are no longer able to peacefully reform their government, when
government officials cease to act like public servants, when elected officials
no longer represent the will of the people, when the government routinely
violates the rights of the people and perpetrates more violence against the
citizenry than the criminal class, when government spending is unaccountable
and unaccounted for, when the judiciary act as courts of order rather than
justice, and when the government is no longer bound by the laws of the
Constitution.
For too long, the American people have obeyed the
government’s dictates, no matter now unjust.
We have paid its taxes, penalties and fines, no matter
how outrageous. We have tolerated its indignities, insults and abuses, no
matter how egregious. We have turned a blind eye to its indiscretions and
incompetence, no matter how imprudent. We have held our silence in the face of
its lawlessness, licentiousness and corruption, no matter how illicit.
Oh how we have suffered.
How long we will continue to suffer depends on how
much we’re willing to give up for the sake of freedom.
For the moment, the American people seem content to
sit back and watch the reality TV programming that passes for politics today.
It’s the modern-day equivalent of bread and circuses, a carefully calibrated
exercise in how to manipulate, polarize, propagandize and control a population.
As French philosopher Etienne de La Boétie observed
half a millennium ago:
“Plays, farces, spectacles, gladiators, strange
beasts, medals, pictures, and other such opiates, these
were for ancient peoples the bait toward slavery, the price of their liberty,
the instruments of tyranny. By these practices and enticements the ancient
dictators so successfully lulled their subjects under the yoke, that the
stupefied peoples, fascinated by the pastimes and vain pleasures flashed before
their eyes, learned subservience as naively, but not so creditably, as little
children learn to read by looking at bright picture books.”
The bait towards slavery. The price of liberty. The
instruments of tyranny.
Yes, that sounds about right.
“We the people” have learned only too well how to be
slaves. Worse, we have come to enjoy our voluntary servitude, which masquerades
as citizenship.
“Things fall apart,” wrote W.B. Yeats in his dark,
forbidding poem “The Second Coming.” “The centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is
loosed upon the world… Surely some revelation is at hand.”
Wake up, America, and break free of your chains.
Something wicked this way comes.
WC: 2312
ABOUT JOHN W. WHITEHEAD
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