Is It Too Late
for Nonviolent Means to Restore American Liberty?
Is It Too Late for Nonviolent Means to Restore American Liberty?
“It is perfectly possible for a man to be out of prison and yet not
free—to be under no physical constraint and yet be a psychological captive,
compelled to think, feel and act as the representatives of the national state,
or of some private interest within the nation wants him to think, feel and act.
. . . To him the walls of his prison are invisible and he believes himself to
be free.” — Aldous Huxley
John W. Whitehead says don’t give up on America, fight for her return
to a land of liberty.
“There’s absolutely no evidence to support the statement that [America
is] the greatest country in the world. We’re 7th in literacy, 27th in math,
22nd in science, 49th in life expectancy, 178th in infant mortality, 3rd in
median household income, number 4 in labor force and number 4 in exports. We
lead the world in only three categories: number of incarcerated citizens per
capita, number of adults who believe angels are real and defense spending,
where we spend more than the next 26 countries combined, 25 of whom are allies…
“[America] sure used to be [the greatest country in the world ]… We
stood up for what was right. We fought for moral reason. We passed laws, struck
down laws, for moral reason. We waged wars on poverty, not on poor people. We
sacrificed, we cared about our neighbors, we put our money where our mouths
were and we never beat our chest. We built great, big things, made ungodly
technological advances, explored the universe, cured diseases and we cultivated
the world’s greatest artists AND the world’s greatest economy. We reached for
the stars, acted like men. We aspired to intelligence, we didn’t belittle it.
It didn’t make us feel inferior. We didn’t identify ourselves by who we voted
for in the last election and we didn’t scare so easy. We were able to be all
these things and do all these things because we were informed… by great men,
men who were revered. First step in solving any problem is recognizing there is
one. America is not the greatest country in the world anymore.” ― Aaron Sorkin, The Newsroom (Episode 1)
Life in America has become a gut-wrenching, soul-sucking,
misery-drenched, demoralizing existence.
We have managed to survive crackdowns, clampdowns, shutdowns,
showdowns, shootdowns, standdowns, knockdowns, putdowns, breakdowns, lockdowns,
takedowns, slowdowns, meltdowns, and never-ending letdowns.
We’ve been held up, stripped down, faked out,
photographed, frisked, fracked, hacked, tracked, cracked, intercepted,
accessed, spied on, zapped, mapped, searched, shot at, tasered, tortured,
tackled, trussed up, tricked, lied to, labeled, libeled, leered at, shoved
aside, saddled with debt not of our own making, sold a bill of goods about
national security, tuned out by those representing us, tossed aside, and taken
to the cleaners.
We’ve had our freedoms turned inside out, our democratic structure
flipped upside down, and our house of cards left in a shambles.
We’ve had our children burned by flashbang grenades, our dogs
shot, and our old folks hospitalized after “accidental” encounters with
marauding SWAT teams. We’ve been told that as citizens we have no rights
within 100 miles of our own border, now considered “Constitution-free zones.”
We’ve had our faces filed in government databases, our biometrics
crosschecked against criminal databanks, and our consumerist tendencies
catalogued for future marketing overtures.
We’ve seen the police transformed from community peacekeepers to point
guards for the militarized corporate state. From Boston to Ferguson and every
point in between, police have pushed around, prodded, poked, probed,
scanned, shot and intimidated the very individuals—we the taxpayers—whose
rights they were hired to safeguard. Networked together through fusion
centers, police have surreptitiously spied on our activities and snooped
on our communications, using hi-tech devices provided by the Department of
Homeland Security.
We’ve been deemed suspicious for engaging in such dubious activities
as talking too long on a cell phone and stretching too long before
jogging, dubbed extremists and terrorists for criticizing the government
and suggesting it is tyrannical or oppressive, and subjected to forced
colonoscopies and anal probes for allegedly rolling through a stop sign.
We’ve been arrested for all manner of “crimes” that never used to be
considered criminal, let alone uncommon or unlawful, behavior: letting our
kids walk to the playground alone, giving loose change to a homeless
man, feeding the hungry, and living off the grid.
We’ve been sodomized, victimized, jeopardized, demoralized,
traumatized, stigmatized, vandalized, demonized, polarized and terrorized,
often without having done anything to justify such treatment. Blame it on a
government mindset that renders us guilty before we’ve even been charged, let
alone convicted, of any wrongdoing. In this way, law-abiding individuals have
had their homes mistakenly raided by SWAT teams that got the address
wrong. One accountant found himself at the center of a misguided police
standoff after surveillance devices confused his license plate with that of a
drug felon.
We’ve been railroaded into believing that our votes count, that we live
in a democracy, that elections make a difference, that it matters whether we
vote Republican or Democrat, and that our elected officials are looking out for
our best interests. Truth be told, we live in an oligarchy, politicians
represent only the profit motives of the corporate state, whose leaders know
all too well that there is no discernible difference between red and blue
politics, because there is only one color that matters in politics—green.
We’ve gone from having privacy in our inner sanctums to having nowhere
to hide, with smart pills that monitor the conditions of our
bodies, homes that spy on us (with smart meters that monitor our
electric usage and thermostats and light switches that can be controlled
remotely) and cars that listen to our conversations and track our
whereabouts. Even our cities have become wall-to-wall electronic
concentration camps, with police now able to record hi-def video of everything
that takes place within city limits.
We’ve had our schools locked down, our students handcuffed, shackled
and arrested for engaging in childish behavior such as food
fights, our children’s biometrics stored, their school IDs chipped, their
movements tracked, and their data bought, sold and bartered for
profit by government contractors, all the while they are treated like criminals
and taught to march in lockstep with the police state.
We’ve been rendered enemy combatants in our own country, denied
basic due process rights, held against our will without access to an attorney
or being charged with a crime, and left to molder in jail until such a time as
the government is willing to let us go or allow us to defend ourselves.
We’ve had the very military weapons we funded with our hard-earned tax
dollars used against us, from unpiloted, weaponized drones tracking our
movements on the nation’s highways and byways and armored vehicles,
assault rifles, sound cannons and grenade launchers in towns with little to
no crime to an arsenal of military-grade weapons and equipment given free
of charge to schools and universities.
We’ve been silenced, censored and forced to conform, shut up
in free speech zones, gagged by hate crime laws, stifled by political
correctness, muzzled by misguided anti-bullying statutes, and pepper
sprayed for taking part in peaceful protests.
We’ve been shot by police for reaching for a license during a
traffic stop, reaching for a baby during a drug bust, carrying a
toy sword down a public street, and wearing headphones that hamper
our ability to hear.
We’ve had our tax dollars spent on $30,000 worth of
Starbucks for Department of Homeland Security employees, $630,000 in
advertising to increase Facebook “likes” for the State Department, and
close to $25 billion to fund projects ranging from the silly to the
unnecessary, such as laughing classes for college students and programs
teaching monkeys to play video games and gamble.
We’ve been treated like guinea pigs, targeted by the government
and social media for psychological experiments on how to manipulate the masses.
We’ve been tasered for talking back to police, tackled for taking pictures of
police abuses, and threatened with jail time for invoking our rights.
We’ve even been arrested by undercover cops stationed in public
bathrooms who interpret men’s “shaking off” motions after urinating to be
acts of lewdness.
We’ve had our possessions seized and stolen by law enforcement agencies
looking to cash in on asset forfeiture schemes, our jails privatized
and used as a source of cheap labor for megacorporations, our gardens
smashed by police seeking out suspicious-looking marijuana plants, and
our buying habits turned into suspicious behavior by a government
readily inclined to view its citizens as terrorists.
We’ve had our cities used for military training drills, with Black Hawk
helicopters buzzing the skies, Urban Shield exercises overtaking our streets,
and active shooter drills wreaking havoc on unsuspecting bystanders in our
schools, shopping malls and other “soft target” locations.
We’ve been told that national security is more important than civil
liberties, that police dogs’ noses are sufficient cause to carry out warrantless
searches, that the best way not to get raped by police is to “follow
the law,” that what a police officer says in court will be given
preference over what video footage shows, that an upright posture and
acne are sufficient reasons for a cop to suspect you of wrongdoing, that
police can stop and search a driver based solely on an anonymous tip, and
that police officers have every right to shoot first and ask questions later if
they feel threatened.
Are you depressed yet? You should be.
More than depressed, however, you should be outraged at what has been
done to our country.
I’m outraged at what has been done to our freedoms.
We are no less prisoners than those who are incarcerated behind prison
walls.
As Aldous Huxley recognized in his foreword to A Brave New World
Revisited: “It is perfectly possible for a man to be out of prison and yet not
free—to be under no physical constraint and yet be a psychological captive,
compelled to think, feel and act as the representatives of the national state,
or of some private interest within the nation wants him to think, feel and act.
. . . To him the walls of his prison are invisible and he believes himself to
be free.”
The prison we inhabit may not be as bleak as the soul-destroying gulags
described by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in his masterpiece The Gulag
Archipelago, but that’s just a matter of aesthetics.
It’s time to stop waiting patiently for change to happen, stop waiting
for someone to rescue you, and stage a breakout.
Get mad, get outraged, get off your duff and get out of your house, get
in the streets, get in people’s faces, get down to your local city council, get
over to your local school board, get your thoughts down on paper, get your
objections plastered on protest signs, get your neighbors, friends and family
to join their voices to yours, get your representatives to pay attention to
your grievances, get your kids to know their rights, get your local police to
march in lockstep with the Constitution, get your media to act as watchdogs for
the people and not lapdogs for the corporate state, get your act together, and
get your house in order.
Appearances to the contrary, this country does not belong exclusively
to the corporations or the special interest groups or the oligarchs or the war
profiteers or any particular religious, racial or economic demographic.
This country belongs to all of us: each and every one of us—“we the people”—but
most especially, this country belongs to those of us who love freedom enough to
stand and fight for it.
As I point out in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American
People, we are fast approaching the point at which we will have nothing left to
lose.
Don’t wait for things to get that bad before you find your voice and
your conscience.
As Solzhenitsyn’s character reflects in The Gulag Archipelago:
“How we burned in the camps later, thinking: What would things have been like
if … during periods of mass arrests, as for example in Leningrad, when they
arrested a quarter of the entire city, people had not simply sat there in their
lairs, paling with terror at every bang of the downstairs door and at every
step on the staircase, but had understood they had nothing left to lose and had
boldly set up in the downstairs hall an ambush of half a dozen people with
axes, hammers, pokers, or whatever else was at hand?… The cursed machine would
have ground to a halt! If…if…We didn’t love freedom enough. And even more – we
had no awareness of the real situation…. We purely and simply deserved
everything that happened afterward.”
Take your stand now—using every nonviolent means at your disposal—while
you still can.
Don’t wait to reflect back on missed opportunities to push back against
tyranny.
Don’t wait until you’re the last one standing.
Time is running out.
ABOUT JOHN W. WHITEHEAD
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.
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