The Framework for Suppressing Information: Public Opinion in America's
21st Century Police State
by James F. Tracy
Global Research
The police
states framework for suppressing information and opinion arguably
threatens all forms of independent thought and appears poised to
intensify as the war on terror continues. As the recent
emergence of US plans for indoctrination in reeducation camps reveals,
Western governments actual enemy is the capacity for a people
to exercise critical thought en route to intervening in and altering
political-economic processes.
Public opinion
defined by 19th century English political thinker William
MacKinnon as that sentiment on any given subject which is
entertained by the best informed, most intelligent, and most moral
persons in the community is fundamentally at odds with
police state prerogatives also exemplified in recent US Department
of Homeland Security documents.
The technocratic
mindset of agencies such as the DHS and Federal Bureau of Investigation
that oversee federal, state, and local policing procedures seeks
to short-circuit and quell dissent by identifying transgressive
thought that deviates from an assumed normalcy, then interlinking
it with perceived threats or violent actions against the state.
In a grand governmental exercise of Freudian-style projection, the
DHSs usage of inflammatory terms such as terrorist
and extremist are routinely utilized to emphasize the
nature and degree of various activist groups alleged deviant
ideologies. This practice proceeds in light of the fact that most
every terrorist act within the US since 9/11 has been
carefully guided by the FBI or, as was the case with the initial
underwear bomber, Western intelligence agencies likely working
in concert.
A November
2011 DHS document, Domestic Terrorism and Homegrown Violent
Extremism Lexicon, is the agencys recent codification
of terms intended to instruct and aid government officials in recognizing
threats of terrorism against the United States by facilitating
a common understanding of the terms and conditions that describe
terrorist threats to the United States [sic].
Then, in a
fashion that will be familiar to those who understand the tactics
of groups such as the Southern Poverty Law Center, an untenable
array of activist pursuits spanning the political spectrum
Anarchist Extremists, Animal Rights Extremists,
Anti-Abortion Extremists, Environmental Rights
Extremists are libelously lobbed together and defined
alongside designations including Racist Skinhead Extremists,
Homegrown Violent Extremist, Radicalization,
and Terrorism.
As with the
phalanx of totalitarian-like legislation such as the PATRIOT Acts
that potentially pit the militarized security state against the
US population, through intentional ambiguity Homeland Securitys
definitions of terrorism and radicalization
come perilously close to classifying critical thought and expression
of almost any sort as terrorism.
Terrorism
is defined as any act that is dangerous to human life, critical
infrastructure, or key resources
and appears to be intended
to intimidate or coerce a civilian population to influence the policy
of a government by intimidation or coercion [sic] (authors
emphasis). Under such a definition social protest speech
protected under the First Amendment is impermissible. After
all, any effective protest seeks through various ways to effectively
petition authorities for a redress of grievances.
The curious
term radicalization will be of special interest to academics
and journalists capable of engaging with and examining controversial
issues and concerns that their students or readers may become passionate
enough to weigh in on in some consequential way. According to DHS,
a person is radicalized through indoctrination from
a non-violent belief system to a belief system that includes the
willingness to actively advocate, facilitate, or use violence as
a method to effect societal or political change.
Alongside DHSs
vague definition of terrorism and the broader prerogatives of police
state ideology and practice, violence may be conceived
in a number of ways, such as a person with of a certain racial demarcation
peacefully sitting in the front of a segregated bus, or a concerned
citizen occupying the lobby of a zombie bank.
In reality
the actual target of such policing metrics is the small percentage
of the population that have somehow escaped the enforced process
of de-radicalization those who, in other words,
still possess the capacity to think and act critically on meaningful
political matters.
Indeed, it
is not beyond reason to point out that America is one serious terrorist
attack or mass civil disturbance away from the implementation of
policies to seriously limit or curtail the traffic of ideas, made
all the more easy for authorities through the internets centralized
configuration. Society will then be left with the corporate media
and their custom inability (or refusal) to honestly examine and
publicize the corrupt nature and practices of the national security
state.
With alternative
media outlets providing a broad spectrum of analyses and perspectives
the tiny demarcation between critical thinking and terrorism outlined
in the governments missives is understandable. Minds not fully
regulated and that risk awakening (radicalization) through an intellectual
epiphany triggered by a professor, journalist, or author prone to
encouraging thought crimes may become "radicalized" and
carry out terrorist activities. They may, for example,
recognize and critique the war on terror as an extravagant
and monstrous deception.
Moreover, individuals
capable of possessing, articulating, and acting upon meaningful
ideas and information of exercising an informed and self-determined
opinion in furtherance of their shared security and welfare
have no need for a police state to "protect" them, which
in all likelihood is why critical thought and public opinion are
the New World Orders greatest enemies.
Reprinted
from Global Research.
June
12, 2012
James F.
Tracy is Associate Professor of Media Studies at Florida Atlantic
University.
Copyright ©
2012 James F. Tracy
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