America's Authoritarian Turn
JOHN MINCHILLO
Ever since the rise of Occupy, corporatist authorities have been trying to figure how to squash our emerging social movement. First they tried a media blackout, but when over 700 nonviolent meme warriors were arrested on the Brooklyn Bridge our Gandhian ferocity catalyzed a thousand encampments and the 1% could ignore us no more. Next elites tried the Bloomberg model of midnight paramilitary raids backed up by excessive force and sometimes-lethal munitions. That worked well to evict encampments in New York City, Oakland and nationwide … but it backfired when occupiers became diffuse, appearing at scripted events and interrupting the spectacle of corporate-funded politics with mic checks of truth. Now they are trying the new tactic of “lawfare” – using draconian laws to squash free speech in a last ditch effort to put an end to people power.
A week before the G8 Backdown, the US House of Representatives voted in near unanimous consensus in favor of an authoritarian law, H.R. 347, that makes it a federal crime to disrupt “Government business or official functions” or to enter any building where a “person protected by the Secret Service is or will be temporarily visiting.” In other words, to mic check Obama is now a federal crime punishable by a year in prison. And so too is the banner drop if it takes place in any building that a “protected” person might be visiting in the future, even if jammers don’t know it. And so is the anti-globalization tactic of blocking road access to a meeting of world elites, there is a special clause about that too. Obama signed the bill into law on March 9.
History shows that using authoritarian laws to silence the authentic, legitimate concerns of the people always boomerangs into a fatal loss of legitimacy. Governments derive their authority and right to exist from the people and when the people are ignored and beaten back regimes fall.
Read more about H.R. 347 at the dailyagenda.org and the lawfareblog.com and then brainstorm below on how Occupy can outmaneuver this new tactic of repression.
97 comments on the article “America's Authoritarian Turn”
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Anonymous
Alright, it's time to focus our efforts in order to engage those who would participate if they could see the direction we were going and it's effectiveness. There are many extraneous problems and needs not met due to our government and it's collusion with big business. These certainly are due our notice but not our effort at this time. What is the root we must pull? The control of our government and more precisely it's lack of control by us. To gain control we must loosen the bands of slavery we've allowed to shackle our government. Namely, the Federal reserve, Wall Street Banks and Investment Firms, the Elite through Corporations, and Religious Institutions (vs individual religion). We can kill two birds with one stone if we use the tactics we try to get around (or through) these new restrictions while weakening or positioning ourselves to weaken these holds.
Remember the Salt March? Ghandi choose salt because it was necessary for everyone in India and therefore would recieve the most far reaching notice. The above list of controlers can be divided arguably into those who control our money and those who control us via using money for government control. I'd suggest keeping our efforts on Wall Street and Banks to engage more people (more are noticably abused by banks than the others on the list). I'd suggest focusing our efforts on Election honesty and abuse while working to limit Corporate personhood and Corporate lobbist activities.
Instead of mass arrests I've a thought. Each of us are individuals with separate voices. Yet also we are each other's keeper. Let us look like it by wearing shirts and carrying signs which say " 'Brother's' or 'Sister's' Keeper"Let them arrest us one at a time, in succession, spread apart in time or space for the same untenable reason (there are so many but just one should be picked at at time) News agencies will have time to document the abuse of law. The public will see among those arrested individual's who seem like some loved one or themselves and begin to relate. Maybe even join in. One event after another to be expected.
Anonymous
All is vanity and a striving after the wind.
Anonymous
All is vanity and a striving after the wind.
lee mulcahy
all is vanity? no it's not. tell that to desmond tutu or martin luther king. witness the beginnings of the union between the right and the left:
http://www.libertynewsonline.com/article_301_31616.php
Congress gives President new domestic powers to suppress free speech. H.R. 347/S. 1794 passed.
03-12-2012 3:15 am - Jeff Lewis
The Intolerable Acts ACTION CENTER ALERT! (March 12, 2012)
“It is hardly too strong to say that the Constitution was made to guard the people against the dangers of good intentions. There are men in all ages who mean to govern well, but they mean to govern. They promise to be good masters, but they mean to be masters.”
-Daniel Webster
Congress just eviscerated a decades-old law which was intended to protect the implementation of United States policy and interests. The existing law (18 USC 1752) was designed to protect the individuals, under certain circumstances and at certain times, who are carrying out these policies, and the “orderly conduct of Government business or official functions.”
Congress altered the intent of the existing law by authorizing the President to direct protection to “individuals” who may not be involved in implementing U.S. policy at all, to include for example, individuals who are the President’s affiliates, or who are engaged in carrying out his personal political agenda. This would allow the President to use the power of the federal government as a perk of crony capitalism, placing them in a protective bubble, thereby protecting them from public embarrassment and inconvenience of being confronted by the citizenry.
Some of the modifications made to 18 USC 1752, The PRESIDENTIAL AND PRESIDENTIAL STAFF ASSASSINATION, KIDNAPPING, AND ASSAULT ACT by H.R. 374, “The Federal Restricted Buildings and Grounds Improvement Act of 2011” are akin to what became known as “The Sedition Act” of July 14, 1798.
Both the ‘‘Federal Restricted Buildings and Grounds Improvement Act of 2011,’’ and “The Sedition Act” allow[ed] the President to protect his personal political interests by suppressing opposing political speech.
This newly established domestic power of our nation’s “leader” certainly gives rise to the specter of his quashing the 1st Amendment Rights of U.S. citizens by either intimidating against or denying them their constitutionally-protected right to voice their opinions in the “public square.”
One Member of Congress who voted against H.R. 347, stated,
“The bill expands current law to make it a crime to enter or remain in an area where an official is visiting even if the person does not know it's illegal to be in that area and has no reason to suspect it's illegal.”
“Some government officials may need extraordinary protection to ensure their safety. But criminalizing legitimate First Amendment activity — even if that activity is annoying to those government officials — violates our rights,” -Rep. Justin Amash
What Congressman Amash did not address is that the expansion of the President’s domestic power, which doesn’t require that the “individuals” he can expand protection to be “government officials,” or even that they are serving in the country’s interest.
“Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.”
- George Santayana, American philosopher
Under the omitted law, the President could only extend such protections to “…distinguished foreign visitors to the United States and official representatives of the United States performing special missions abroad...”
H.R. 347 expands the authority of the President to significantly increase the responsibilities of the Secret Service in that it grants the President the power to designate “other person[s]” to be afforded Secret Service protections that were not previously authorized.
This expanded the authority of the President to shield these new domestic “protectees” from the public by criminalizing what was previously protected 1st Amendment activity.
Even worse, it exposes a citizen to potentially face criminal charges under the revisions of “The Federal Restricted Buildings and Grounds Improvement Act of 2011” in that a person exercising his or her 1st Amendment right may not even be aware that the person, or event they are protesting has among its participants, a person that the President has granted this ‘extraordinary domestic’ protection.
H.R. 347 was marketed to Congress in the same fashion as the NDAA. The drafters and promoters of both bills represented that only non-substantive changes were being made to existing law. H.R. 347 was marketed to Congress “To correct and simplify the drafting of section 1752...,” and the NDAA legislation as simply affirming the pre-existing authority in the 2001 AUMF.
In reality, both bills made substantive changes that greatly expanded the scope of their application and gave additional power to the President to use domestically. The Secret Service protecting the President is a good thing. The President having the authority to use the Secret Service to protect his cronies is a bad thing.
Senators Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and Claire McCaskill (D-MO) have launched a bi-partisan investigation into “taxpayer-funded spin” by the Obama Administration. A March 01, 2012 Fox News article references a 2010 House Oversight and Government Reform Committee report which explores the nature and lawfulness of undercover activities by the Obama Administration, and includes these revelations:
“The Obama Administration frequently used federal resources to promote the President’s agenda.”
“…using the resources of the federal government to activate a sophisticated propaganda and lobbying campaign is an abuse of office and a betrayal of the President’s pledge to create “an unprecedented level of openness in Government.”
“Many of the Obama Administration’s propaganda activities are unlawful because they are covert. Furthermore, several programs closely resemble those decried by Democrats and ruled unlawful by GAO during the Bush Administration.”
Certainly, the President can, and may assert in a signing statement that accompanies H.R. 347, that he will not abuse this newly acquired authority, just as he did in his NDAA signing statement in regard to the “indefinite detention” of U.S. citizens. That would likely satisfy many trusting individuals, but it begs the following questions:
If we entrust our current President with extraordinary and extra-constitutional powers, would we trust those same powers in the hands of his successor?
Should the President have these powers in the first place, regardless of his intent to use them?
Perhaps we would be better served by listening to the wisdoms of our Founding Fathers instead of being so trusting of our leaders. The blind trust in men has led to the eventual downfall of every great nation in world history.
The author of the Declaration of Independence said the following:
“In matters of power, let no more be heard of the confidence in man, but bind them down from mischief with the chains of the Constitution.”
-Thomas Jefferson
Jeff Lewis
National Director, Patriot Coalition
for The Intolerable Acts ACTION CENTER
http://theintolerableacts.org
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Anonymous
What judges or juries will every enforce this bullshit? It reminds me of Proudhoun, we know what law is, law is crime.
Anonymous
I agree. It's a very narrowly construed bill.
If you mic-check Obama, as this article suggests, you would most likely only get a fine. Yes, there's the possibility of receiving UP TO a year in jail, but no judge is going to give a defendant that simply for yelling during a speech (also, let's remember that a person yelling during a speech also has the potential to receive a disruption of the peace, which is also a misdemeanor with the same ability to have up to a year in jail).
Anonymous
I believe y'all are being quite naive. There are PLENTY of judges who don't like us, who favor their own positions of power and the system in which they're established, and will not hesitate to bring the gavel down -- HARD. We at Occupy Atlanta have had people arrested for simple things like disorderly conduct -- not even a misdemeanor, just a city ordinance violation, or littering (dropping flyers), and they've PUT US IN JAIL, gave us absurd bonds like $700 for something that is a $50 fine. And we KNOW we're not the only ones.
Furthermore, with laws like NDAA, they can ignore habeus corpus, or right to jury or speedy trial, so once people are arrested, they can rot away in their cells til who knows when. Half the problem is the arrest and going to jail itself -- who knows when you will see a judge? And God help you if you can't make your bail....
-Robert, Occupy Atlanta
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