by John W. Whitehead
July 07,
2020
from
Rutherford Website
"In a
fully developed bureaucracy
there is nobody
left with whom one can argue,
to whom one can
present grievances,
on whom the
pressures of power can be exerted.
Bureaucracy is
the form of government
in which
everybody is deprived of political freedom,
of the power to
act;
for the rule by
Nobody is not no-rule,
and where all
are equally powerless,
we have a
tyranny without a tyrant."
Hannah Arendt
On Violence
What exactly
is going on?
Is this revolution?
Is this anarchy?
Is this a spectacle
engineered to distract us from the machinations of the police
state?
Is this a
sociological means of re-setting our national equilibrium?
Is this a
Machiavellian scheme designed to further polarize the populace
and undermine our efforts to stand unified against government
tyranny?
Is this so-called
populist uprising actually a manufactured race war and
election-year referendum on who should occupy the White House?
Whatever it is, this,
-
the racial
hypersensitivity without racial justice
-
the kowtowing to
politically correct bullies with no regard for anyone else's
free speech rights
-
the violent
blowback after years of government-sanctioned brutality
-
the mob mindset
that is overwhelming the rights of the individual
-
the oppressive
glowering of the Nanny State
-
the seemingly
righteous indignation full of sound and fury that in the end
signifies nothing
-
the partisan
divide that grows more impassable with every passing day,
...is not leading us
anywhere good.
Certainly it's not
leading to more freedom.
This draconian exercise in how to divide, conquer and subdue a
nation is succeeding.
It must be said:
the Black Lives
Matter protests have not helped...
Inadvertently or
intentionally, these protests - tinged with mob violence, rampant
incivility, intolerance, and an arrogant disdain for how an open
marketplace of ideas can advance freedom - have politicized what
should never have been politicized: police brutality and the
government's ongoing assaults on our freedoms.
For one brief moment in the wake of
George Floyd's death, it
seemed as if finally "we the people" might put aside our differences
long enough to stand united in outrage over the government's
brutality.
That sliver of unity
didn't last.
We may be worse off now than we were before.
Suddenly, no one seems to
be talking about any of the egregious governmental abuses that are
still wreaking havoc on our freedoms:
-
police shootings
of unarmed individuals
-
invasive
surveillance
-
roadside blood
draws
-
roadside strip
searches
-
SWAT team raids
gone awry
-
the military
industrial complex's costly wars
-
pork barrel
spending
-
pre-crime laws
-
civil asset
forfeiture
-
fusion centers
-
militarization
-
armed drones
-
smart policing
carried out by AI robots
-
courts that march
in lockstep with the police state
-
schools that
function as indoctrination centers
-
bureaucrats that
keep the Deep State in power...
The more things change,
the more they stay the same.
How do you persuade a populace to embrace totalitarianism, that
goose-stepping form of tyranny in which the government has all of
the power and "we the people" have none?
You persuade the people that the menace they face (imaginary or not)
is so sinister, so overwhelming, so fearsome that the only way to
surmount the danger is by empowering the government to take all
necessary steps to quash it, even if that means allowing government
jackboots to trample all over the Constitution...
This is how you use the
politics of fear to persuade a
freedom-endowed people to shackle themselves to a dictatorship.
It works the same way
every time (and almost everywhere)...
The government's
overblown, extended wars on terrorism, drugs, violence, illegal
immigration, and so-called domestic extremism have been convenient
ruses used to terrorize the populace into relinquishing more of
their freedoms in exchange for elusive promises of security.
Having allowed our fears to be codified and our actions
criminalized, we now find ourselves in a strange new world where
just about everything we do is criminalized, even our ability to
choose whether or not to
wear a mask in public during the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Strangely enough, in the face of outright corruption and
incompetency on the part of our elected officials, Americans in
general remain,
relatively gullible,
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 a global pandemic...
We have relinquished
control over the most intimate aspects of our lives to government
officials who, while they may occupy seats of authority, are neither
wiser, smarter, more in tune with our needs, more knowledgeable
about our problems, nor more aware of what is really in our best
interests.
Yet having bought into
the false notion that the government does indeed know what's best
for us and 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.
The lesson is this:
once a free people
allows the government inroads into their freedoms or uses those
same freedoms as bargaining chips for security, it quickly
becomes a slippery slope to outright tyranny...
Nor does it seem to
matter whether it's a Democrat or a Republican at the
helm anymore.
Indeed, the bureaucratic
mindset on both sides of the aisle now seems to embody the same
philosophy of authoritarian government, whose priorities are to milk
"we the people" of our hard-earned money (by way of taxes, fines and
fees) and remain in control and in power.
Modern government in general - ranging from the militarized police
in SWAT team gear crashing through our doors to the rash of innocent
citizens being gunned down by police to the invasive spying on
everything we do - is acting illogically, even psychopathically.
The
characteristics of a
psychopath include a,
"lack of remorse and
empathy, a sense of grandiosity, superficial charm, conning and
manipulative behavior, and refusal to take responsibility for
one's actions, among others."
When our own government no longer sees us as human beings
with dignity and worth but as things to be manipulated, maneuvered,
mined for data, manhandled by police, conned into believing it has
our best interests at heart, mistreated, and then jails us if we
dare step out of line, punishes us unjustly without remorse, and
refuses to own up to its failings, we are no longer operating under
a constitutional republic.
Instead, what we are
experiencing is a
pathocracy:
tyranny at the hands
of a psychopathic government, which "operates against the
interests of its own people except for favoring certain groups."
So where does
that leave us?
Having allowed the government to expand and exceed our reach, we
find ourselves on the losing end of a tug-of-war over control of our
country and our lives.
And for as long as we let
them, government officials will continue to trample on our rights,
always justifying their actions as being for the good of the people.
Yet the government
can only go as far as "we the people" allow.
Therein lies the
problem...
The pickle we find
ourselves in speaks volumes about the nature of the government beast
we have been saddled with and how it views the rights and
sovereignty of "we the people."
Now you don't hear a lot about sovereignty anymore. Sovereignty is a
dusty, antiquated term that harkens back to an age when kings and
emperors ruled with absolute power over a populace that had no
rights.
Americans turned the idea
of sovereignty on its head when they
declared their independence from
Great Britain and rejected the absolute authority of King George
III.
In doing so,
Americans claimed for
themselves the right to self-government and established
themselves as the ultimate authority and power.
In other words, in America, "we the people" - sovereign
citizens - call the shots.
So when the government acts, it is supposed to do so at our
bidding and on our behalf, because we are the rulers.
That's not exactly how it turned out, though, is it?
In the 200-plus years
since we boldly embarked on this experiment in self-government, we
have been steadily losing ground to the government's brazen power
grabs, foisted upon us in the so-called name of national security.
The government has knocked us off our rightful throne.
It has
usurped our rightful authority.
It has staged the ultimate coup.
Its
agents no longer even pretend that they answer to "we the people."
Worst of all, "we the
people" have become desensitized to this constant undermining of our
freedoms.
How do we reconcile
the Founders' vision of the government as an entity whose only
purpose is to serve the people with the police state's
insistence that,
-
the government is
the supreme authority
-
that its power
trumps that of the people themselves
-
that it may
exercise that power in any way it sees fit (that includes
government agents crashing through doors, mass arrests,
ethnic cleansing, racial profiling, indefinite detentions
without due process, and internment camps)?
They cannot be
reconciled. They are polar opposites...
We are fast approaching a moment of reckoning where we will be
forced to choose between the vision of what America was intended to
be (a model for self-governance where power is vested in the people)
and the reality of what it has become (a police state where power is
vested in the government).
This slide into totalitarianism - helped along by
over-criminalization, government surveillance, militarized police,
neighbors turning in neighbors, privatized prisons, and forced labor
camps, to name just a few similarities - is tracking very closely
with what happened in Germany in the years leading up to
Hitler's rise to power...
We are walking
a dangerous path right now
No matter who wins the presidential election come November, it's a
sure bet that the losers will be the American people.
Despite what is
taught in school and the propaganda that is peddled by
the media,
the 2020 presidential election is not a populist election for a
representative.
Rather, it's a gathering of shareholders to select
the next CEO, a fact reinforced by the nation's
archaic electoral college system.
Anyone who believes
that this election will bring about any real change in how the
American government does business is either incredibly naïve,
woefully out-of-touch, or oblivious to the fact that as an in-depth
Princeton University study shows,
we now live in an oligarchy that is,
"of the rich, by the rich
and for the rich"...
When a country
spends close to
$10 billion on elections to select what is, for all intents and
purposes, a glorified homecoming king or queen to occupy the White
House and fill other government seats, while,
...that's a country whose priorities are out of step with the needs of
its people.
Be warned, however:
the Establishment -
the Deep State and its corporate partners that
really run the show, pull the strings and dictate the policies, no
matter who occupies the Oval Office - is not going to allow anyone
to take office who will unravel their power structures.
Those who
have attempted to do so in the past have been effectively put out of
commission.
Voting sustains the
illusion that we have a democratic republic, but it is merely a
dictatorship in disguise, or what political scientists Martin Gilens
and Benjamin Page more accurately refer to as an "economic
élite domination."
In such an
environment, the economic elite (lobbyists, corporations, monied
special interest groups) dictate national policy.
As the Princeton
University oligarchy study indicates, our elected officials,
especially those in the nation's capital,
represent the interests of the rich and powerful rather than the
average citizen.
As such, the citizenry has little if any impact on
the policies of government.
We have been
saddled with a two-party system and fooled into believing that
there's a difference between the Republicans and Democrats, when in
fact, the two
parties are exactly the same.
As one commentator noted,
both parties support endless war, engage in out-of-control spending,
ignore the citizenry's basic rights, have no respect for the rule of
law, are bought and paid for by Big Business, care most about their
own power, and have a long record of expanding government and
shrinking liberty...
We're drowning
under the weight of,
too much debt, too many wars, too much power in
the hands of a centralized government run by a corporate elite, too
many militarized police, too many laws, too many lobbyists, and
generally too much bad news.
The
powers-that-be,
want us to believe that our job as citizens begins and ends on
Election Day.
They want us to believe that we have no right to
complain about the state of the nation unless we've cast our vote
one way or the other.
They want us to remain divided over politics,
hostile to those with whom we disagree politically, and intolerant
of anyone or anything whose solutions to what ails this country
differ from our own.
What they don't
want us talking about is the fact that,
-
the government is corrupt
-
the system is rigged
-
the politicians don't represent us
-
the
electoral college is a joke
-
most of the candidates are frauds,
...and as pointed
out in
Battlefield America - The War on the American People, we
as a nation are repeating the mistakes of history, namely,
allowing
a totalitarian state to reign over us...
Former
concentration camp inmate
Hannah Arendt warned against this when she
wrote,
"Never has our future been more unpredictable, never have we
depended so much on political forces that cannot be trusted to
follow the rules of common sense and self-interest - forces that
look like sheer insanity, if judged by the standards of other
centuries."
As we once again
find ourselves faced with the prospect of voting for the lesser of
two evils, "we the people" have a decision to make:
Do we simply
participate in the collapse of the American republic as it
degenerates toward a totalitarian regime, or do we take a stand and
reject the pathetic excuse for government that is being fobbed off
on us?
Never forget that
the lesser of two evils is still evil...
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