The Land of the Silent and the Home of the Fearful
By Dave Lindorff
I was a speaker last night at an anti-war event sponsored by the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Monmouth County, Progressive Democrats of America and Democrats For America in Lincroft, NJ, near the shore. It was a great group of activist Americans who want to see this country end the Iraq War, turn away from war as a primary instrument of policy, and start dealing with the pressing human needs of the country and the world.
Yet even in this group of committed people, one woman stood up during the question-and-answer session and said, “I want to get involved in writing emails to members of Congress urging them to cut off funding for the war and other things, but if I do that won’t I end up getting put on a `watch list’” or something?”
I told her the short answer was yes, she probably would. In George Bush’s and Dick Cheney’s America, no one is safe from such spying, and even from harassment, as witness Tom Feeley, the man behind the website Information Clearing House, who had armed men invade his house at night and threaten his wife complaining about his First Amendment-protected effort to publicize important stories on the Internet.
But I also told her that it didn’t matter. She should defend her freedom of speech and her right to petition for redress of grievances, just as she was defending her freedom of assembly by attending last night’s event.
The only demonstrably true statement George Bush has made in his sorry eight years in office is that the Constitution is “just a goddamned piece of paper.” While it wasn’t the point he was making, when he reportedly shouted this at a couple of Republican members of Congress who were questioning the constitutionality of some of his actions, he was right that the nation’s founding document is only worth the parchment and ink it’s composed of, unless people use it and defend it.
There is a remarkable and palpable fear abroad in this land—not a fear of terrorism, but a fear of speaking up, a fear of being labeled as “different” or as a “troublemaker.”
People will lean over and whisper their opinions, if they think they are anti-Establishment, as though someone might be listening. People write me after some of my columns run, praising me for my “courage,” though why it should be perceived as requiring courage to merely write something in America is beyond me.
The worst thing is that every time someone says she or he is afraid, or acts afraid to speak or write what she or he is thinking, five more acquaintances become equally scared and silenced.
The corollary, though, is that each time someone forgets or ignores or rejects that fear, five people gain courage the do the same thing.
Now I’m not saying that there aren’t people monitoring, and reporting on, what we say. I know our government is busy doing that. I assume that my Internet activities are being monitored by the National Security Agency. I assume my phones are tapped. I assume there was some agent or informant among the fine people at the church last night. But these Stasi wannabes have no power if we don’t let them frighten us into silence and inaction.
What I find discouraging is the widespread acceptance, even on the left, of this effort to intimidate us, and the pervasive attitude of fear that has grown up around us. I spent a year and a half living in a truly fascistic society in China, where there are real, concrete threats to life and liberty faced by those who stand up and say what they are thinking, and yet sometimes I think that ordinary people I met in China were braver about stating their minds than many, or even most Americans are. I’m not talking here about saying things like that you think the Post Office is dysfunctional, or that you think federal bureaucrats are corrupt or that taxes are too high. I’m talking about questioning the system, or challenging the war, or protesting military spending. Chinese people would tell me all the time that the Chinese Communist Party was a corrupt gang of thugs or that you could not get justice in a Chinese court. Chinese people are closing down factories that short them on their pay. They have rallied in the thousands and burned down police stations when corrupt police have raped, killed and then covered up the death of a young girl. They have marched in massive impromptu protests at the theft of their homes through eminent domain.
If you want to see where we’re headed here in America, check out the workplace. There, we Americans have, through years of collective cowardice and unwillingness to stand together in organized labor unions, allowed our constitutional freedoms to be almost completely erased. Today, an American workplace is more akin to a police state than to a democratic society. Say what you’re thinking on the job, and you’re liable to lose it. Wear a shirt that says something the boss disagrees with, and you either remove that shirt or you are unemployed. Even that final refuge of free speech, the bumper sticker, can get workers in trouble if the wrong one shows up in the company parking lot. That loss of will and of freedom has in no small way contributed to the loss of jobs and the decline in living standards of American workers.
It’s time for all of us to put a stop to this creeping usurpation of our liberties.
The anxious woman who asked her question came up to me after the meeting and said proudly that she would not be afraid, and would start signing on to protest letter-writing and emailing campaigns.
We need lots more like her.
__________________
DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-based journalist and columnist. His latest book is “The Case for Impeachment” (St. Martin’s Press, 2006 and now available in paperback edition). His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net


Nonviolence: Twenty-Five Lessons from the History of a Dangerous Idea
A Force More Powerful: A Century of Nonviolent Conflict
Waging Nonviolent Struggle: 20th Century Practice and 21st Century Potential
A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings and Speeches of Martin Luther King, Jr.
The 35 Articles of Impeachment and the Case for Prosecuting George W. Bush
The Trial of Donald Rumsfeld
The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder
Cowboy Republic: Six Ways the Bush Gang Has Defied the Law
United States v. George W. Bush et al.
The Genius of Impeachment: The Founders' Cure for Royalism
Articles of Impeachment Against George W. Bush
The Impeachment of George W. Bush: A Practical Guide for Concerned Citizens
The Case for Impeachment
Impeach the President: The Case Against Bush and Cheney
George W. Bush versus the U.S. Constitution: The Downing Street Memos and Deception, Manipulation, Torture, Retribution, and Cover-ups in the Iraq War and Illegal Domestic Spying
Verdict and Findings of Fact
Impeach Bush: A Funny Li'l Graphical Novel About the Worstest Pres'dent in the History of Forevar
Pretensions to Empire: Notes on the Criminal Folly of the Bush Administration
The Twilight of Democracy: The Bush Plan for America




























www.VelvetRevolution.us
The entire country is cowed down and fearful, beaten, defeated..
this is the typical 'amerikan response' to being brow beaten and threatened. sit home, do a lot of hand wringing and muttering under your breath in the bathroom where you think there's no microphone hidden. barely talk to your spouse, you don't trust her, either. she may turn you in.
that's the Amerika that people live in now. fearful. defeated. utterly beaten and afraid of it's own shadow.
six men, knaves actually, not truly men, running this country from a shadow government, and the entire nation of 300 million, quaking and trembling in 'fear' that their government may retaliate against them.
and you thought LEMMINGS were stupid? not compared to the spineless and gutless miserable excuses for humanity that populate the north Amerikan continent.
"Permanently Disenfranchised" Is More Like It...
The American people have been so manipulated, terrorized, brow-beaten and victimized by those in the upper echelons of political, economic and legal power that they've been stripped of their ability to become a serious, powerful, and significant point of resistance against a government which owes its allegiance not to the Founders and the Constitutional principles upon which they stood, but to corporations, bankers and other oligarchs.
The primary desire of the oligarchs and their neo-con "slaves" is to silence and enslave the American people by any and all means necessary, including using threats of government retaliation, intimidation and playing up the hidden, childish fears which lurks within their subconscious -- including the fears of physical death and the fear of "losing" those things, persons, conditions, situations and circumstances which are viewed as personally valuable and precious.
This relentless campaign of intimidation, fear-mongering and other scare tactics, which has been waged against Americans for the past forty-odd years, has succeeded in transforming a once bold, courageous people into a nation of 300 million nervous, paranoid, quivering "Casper Milquetoasts" who are startled and terrified by the soft rustling of a leaf or by a fleeting glimpse of a mouse's shadow as it scampers across the floor.
In order to obtain "peace ... at any price", they willingly negotiated with the oligarchs to surrender their courage, their strength and their power in exchange for a broken, crippled life which the oligarchs and neo-cons have defined for them, which has left the American people so deeply impoverished and broken -- politically, economically, spiritually and legally -- that they couldn't strike a decisive blow against the oligarchs and their plans for a new-neo-feudal society in America even if they wanted to.
Americans have been beaten, impoverished and broken; permanently disenfranchised from reality, the future, and their nation's own history, having negotiated the terms of their own destruction, and meekly allowing themselves to be destroyed by the oligarchy, opening not their mouths as they're led to the slaughter, as the air around them is filled with meaningless platitudes and empty promises.
You just wanted to use the word "Milquetoasts" in a sentance...
I for one am non of the above....... It's kind of lonely.....
TO STEPHIE REF MIGHTY BIG WORD THERE "OLIGARCHS"
I never heard of that word before HELL OF A WORD im gonna go look that one up and intigrate into my rhetoric if possible.
HELL I HAD TO EDIT BACK IN
CASPER MILQUETOASTS
NOW, WHAT IN THE HAIL IS that MEAN? seriously now
now stephie, don't you be talkin dirty on thes here site...
Oligarch billboard by Jon Stewart?
I had to look it up too. You must have missed this posting by Chip.
http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/35651
speaking of meaningless platitudes, watch any CONVENTION b.s.??
going to the O'bombya H.Q. in my town here in Michigan today, nobody there could tell me why exactly it's okay for the police to use pepper spray and billy clubs on peaceful protesters who are out there exercising their FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS...
the mainstream blog fucks are declaring the PUMA problem as non-existent....but they haven't talked to fuckers like me who've frankly 'had it' with the dinocrat party and will not be voting for their 'chosen' boy if there is an election.
Damn, Stephie,
I feel what you write to be true, but have not given up. Have you? Hope not.
We need real change ....
The current administration has simply high jacked our system. The system itself is broken and has been for quite some time. Its pretty simple really. The president can choose his administration, and then many key posts in the W.H.
Congress is simply bought off. Corporate thugs meet with the congress folks and offer them millions of dollars in bribes which are hidden in offshore bank accounts.
Therefore there is no democracy, there is no acting body of government. The MSM is completely owned by the same corporate thugs that bribe the congressional folks.
Even if elections were not rigged, there is no functional government. And all the other stooges are just "doing their jobs".
I have repeated this many times before, and because I lack the knowledge, I do not know how to get it done. We need to pass laws at our lower levels of government. By this I mean we need to pass laws at the city, county, and state levels.
The new laws would force any elected official acting on behalf of the people to represent the people, or be removed from office.
This would include police, sheriff, judges, mayors, congressional constituents, hell even the dam city librarian.
It would be quite simple, each elected official represents a group of people. Those people would vote on actions that their elected officials had done. If the people vote against the action, the action would be corrected, changed, removed, reversed, or whatever you want to call it.
If a congressional constituent voted to fund more money for the war, and the represented body of people voted against it, that voted would then be reversed. If that elected official continued down that path, the people would perform a vote of no confidence on the acting official, and they would be removed from office.
Hands down, no more corporate lobbying, no more wars of aggression, no more funding illegal and immoral actions.
The power would be restored back to the people, as it should be.