Source: Boiling Frogs Post and Cobett Report
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TRANSCRIPT AND SOUCES:
A TV station in Boston airs a story about a library that sent a police sergeant to collect overdue library books from a 5-year-old girl.
The Associated Press reports
on a 70 year old woman in Utah who was wrestled to the ground and
arrested for failing to maintain her lawn in accordance with city
standards.
The Auto-Tech blog of MSNBC runs a public interest story
about the latest must-have gadget for local police stations around the
country: 10-person, 16,000 pound armor plated tanks that are paid for by
the federal government.
One of the greatest problems in talking about the police state is
that all such discussion of the subject is hampered by the lack of a
clear-cut definition.
Given the public’s own ignorance of the true nature and function of a
police state, story after story after story of intolerable levels of
official oppression, secret illegal surveillance, and increasingly
sophisticated technology for tracking, apprehending, incapacitating and
even killing dissenters can be dismissed because these stories are
reported one at a time, in a contextless and therefore meaningless way
that invites the interpretation that these stories are only warnings of
what is to come instead of sign posts of a reality that is already here.
Those who seek to sew discord amongst the potential opposition to the
growing control of the state over every aspect of the public’s lives
can confuse and distract those opponents by engaging them in endless
dialogues fretting about what a police state is, whether our society is
becoming one, and what the hallmarks of such a state might be.
Distracted in this way, the public can be tricked into believing that
the police state is some imaginary future possibility, one that will
only be realized when menacing troops in brown shirts, red arm bands and
jack boots goose step people into internment camps against their will.
The technique is devastatingly effective because people can become
caught up in pointing at this or that story of police brutality or
government surveillance as signs of a police state that onlookers are
always expecting.
In reality, the police state is already here, and to understand this
we need look only at the decades-long history documenting the step by
step construction of this system.
For many, the classical image of a police state come from works of
dystopic science-fiction. These imagined police states tended to contain
certain key elements that immediately let the reader or viewer know
that the characters exist in a totalitarian society.
They are ruled over by powerful, authoritarian governments.
Surveillance, spying and snitching are used as ways to keep people from rebelling against the government.
Laws are arbitrary and punishments immediate.
And the laws are enforced by a menacing, militarized police force.
In the United States, the militarization of the police force began in
earnest in 1969, when the LAPD deployed the first SWAT team in a shoot
out with the Black Panthers. Since that point, SWAT teams have evolved
into paramilitary forces equipped with tanks, stun grenades, and
submachine guns. Although they were originally touted for their ability
to respond to extremely dangerous and unusual situations such as hostage
takings and counter-terror operations, they are now routinely deployed
for everything from domestic disturbances to gambling raids.
The willingness of police departments to use their SWAT teams has even led to a new form of prank called “swatting” where people call in fake emergencies to get SWAT forces deployed on their victims.
Also in the 1960s the US government began working on a series of
Continuity of Government plans to ensure order during times of so-called
civil disturbances. One of the best known such plans from that era, Operation Garden Plot,
envisaged military and National Guard members being deployed to police
the American public in the event of a riot or uprising. This plan became
the template for future contingency planning, carried on in the 1980s
by Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney at the behest of the Reagan
Administration. This led to Readiness Exercise 1984, a plan to round up and arrest vast numbers of US citizens during a national emergency. REX84 was famously exposed during the Iran-Contra hearings.
In February 1995, Joe Biden introduced a bill called the Omnibus Counterterrorism Act of 1995.
Proposing sweeping changes to American law enforcement, it allowed for
secret evidence to be used in prosecutions, expanded wiretapping by the
government, and the creation of “terrorism” as a federal crime that
could be invoked to allow the use of US military in domestic law
enforcement in direct violation to long-standing laws against such
measures. The Clinton Administration was unable to get the bill passed
in the wake of the Oklahoma City Bombing tragedy, but it returned in
2001 as the PATRIOT Act. Senator Biden even bragged
that his 1995 bill was in large part the PATRIOT Act’s forerunner. In
the wake of the PATRIOT Act, all crimes and even misdemeanors could be
treated as acts of terrorism, and civil liberties were greatly eroded.
Meanwhile, the Bush Administration was setting up the Department of Homeland Security and expanding a covert surveillance program that illegally captured the personal phone calls, faxes, and emails of ordinary Americans.
In 2007, the Bush White House issued National Security Presidential Directive 51,
a national continuity policy giving the President sweeping new powers
in the event of a national emergency, itself declared by the President.
When asking to see the classified version of the plan to understand
precisely what powers the President was claiming for himself,
Representative Peter DeFazio of the US House Committee on Homeland
Security was told he did not have clearance to read the document.
In 2008 it was revealed that InfraGard,
an FBI program started in 1996, had deputized over 23,000 members of
private industry to work with the Department of Homeland Security in
“protecting national infrastructure” against terrorist threats. Two
program whistleblowers testified that they had been given shoot to kill powers in the event of martial law.
In 2009 it was revealed that Boy Scouts were being trained by US Customs and Border Patrol in simulated terrorism drills, and border confrontations.
In 2010, the Department of Homeland Security announced an expansion
of its campaign, “If You See Something, Say Something,” which includes televised messages being played in department stores and hotels across the country encouraging members of the public to snitch on each other.
Seen in this context,we can properly understand that the police state
is not some distant far off possibility. On the contrary, the legal,
technical and bureaucratic infrastructure for a system of outright state
control under a unitary executive has been carefully laid over the
course of decades, not just in America but in country after country
around the globe.
And it is only in this context, with the police state as a present
reality rather than a future possibility, that we can start to assemble
the pieces of the police state puzzle that have been scattered out in front of us over the past 10 years.
The picture that is painted when one really looks at this information
is bleak, but it is far better to understand the police state reality
that exists than to fret about whether or not it is coming.
For in reality the police state is not an entity, not some monolithic
thing or a state of existence that only has an “on” and an “off”
position, but a process, a spectrum, something that always exists to one
extent or another.
Once this process is understood for what it is, the question is no
longer whether or not this or that atrocity against liberty is a sign of
a police state, but why we would ever tolerate such atrocities in the
first place.
And this is the real key to dismantling the police state, since all
such authoritarian structures rest on the fundamental illusion that a
few people at the top of the pyramid hold all the power and the masses
at the bottom are all under their thrall.
The truth, as always and in every society, is that the people hold
all the power, and no amount of illegal surveillance or police state
gadgets could ever hold back an engaged, informed public that recognized
their own power over the public officials they support with their tax
dollars and the elected representatives that they vote into power and
the corporate giants that they buy from every single day.
Once that illusion is shattered, and the people realize that the
pyramid is inverted, with the mass of the people threatening to crush
the few at the apex at any given moment, the police state loses its
power.