American Vision News
John Whitehead writes for the Rutherford Institute
For those like myself who have studied emerging police states, the sight of a city placed under martial law—its citizens under house arrest (officials used the Orwellian phrase “shelter in place” to describe the mandatory lockdown), military-style helicopters equipped with thermal imaging devices buzzing the skies, tanks and armored vehicles on the streets, and snipers perched on rooftops, while thousands of black-garbed police swarmed the streets and SWAT teams carried out house-to-house searches in search of two young and seemingly unlikely bombing suspects—leaves us in a growing state of unease.
Mind you, these are no longer warning signs of a steadily encroaching police state. The police state has arrived.
Equally unnerving is the ease with which
Americans welcomed the city-wide lockdown, the routine invasion of their
privacy, and the dismantling of every constitutional right intended to
serve as a bulwark against government abuses. Watching it unfold, I
couldn’t help but think of Nazi Field Marshal Hermann Goering’s remarks
during the Nuremberg trials. As Goering noted:
It is always a simple matter to drag
people along whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a
parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people
can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. This is easy. All
you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the
pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It
works the same in every country.
As the events in Boston have made clear,
it does indeed work the same in every country. The same propaganda and
police state tactics that worked for Adolf Hitler 80 years ago continue
to be employed with great success in a post-9/11 America. . . .
Clearly, the outlook for civil liberties
under Obama grows bleaker by the day, from his embrace of indefinite
detention for U.S. citizens and drone kill lists to warrantless
surveillance of phone, email and internet communications, and
prosecutions of government whistleblowers. Most recently, capitalizing
on the nation’s heightened emotions, confusion and fear, government
officials used the Boston Marathon tragedy as a means of extending the
reach of the police state, starting with the House of Representatives’
overwhelming passage of the controversial Cyber Intelligence Sharing and
Protection Act (CISPA), which opens the door to greater internet
surveillance by the government.
These troubling developments are the
outward manifestations of an inner, philosophical shift underway in how
the government views not only the Constitution and the Bill of Rights,
but “we the people,” as well. What this reflects is a move away from a
government bound by the rule of law to one that seeks total control
through the imposition of its own self-serving laws on the populace.
All the while, the American people remain
largely oblivious to the looming threats to their freedoms, eager to be
persuaded that the government can solve the problems that plague
us—whether it be terrorism, an economic depression, an environmental
disaster or even a flu epidemic. Yet having bought into the false notion
that the government can ensure not only our safety but our happiness
and will take care of us from cradle to grave—that is, from daycare
centers to nursing homes, we have in actuality allowed ourselves to be
bridled and turned into slaves at the bidding of a government that cares
little for our freedoms or our happiness.
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