What I Don’t Like About Life in the American Police State

By John W. Whitehead
July 14, 2014

“A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government.”Edward Abbey, American author

There’s a lot to love about America and its people: their pioneering spirit, their entrepreneurship, their ability to think outside the box, their passion for the arts, etc.  Increasingly, however, as time goes by, I find the things I don’t like about living in a nation that has long since ceased to be a sanctuary for freedom are beginning to outnumber the things I love.

Here’s what I don’t like about living in the American police state: I don’t like being treated as if my only value to the government is as a source of labor and funds. I don’t like being viewed as a consumer and bits of data. I don’t like being spied on and treated as if I have no right to privacy, especially in my own home.

I don’t like government officials who lobby for my vote only to ignore me once elected. I don’t like having representatives incapable of and unwilling to represent me. I don’t like taxation without representation.

I don’t like being bullied by government bureaucrats, vigilantes masquerading as cops, or faceless technicians. I don’t like being railroaded into financing government programs whose only purpose is to increase the power and wealth of the corporate elite. I don’t like being forced to pay for wars abroad that serve no other purpose except to expand the reach of the military industrial complex.

I don’t like being subjected to scans, searches, pat downs and other indignities by the TSA. I don’t like VIPR raids on so-called “soft” targets like shopping malls and bus depots by black-clad, Darth Vader look-alikes. I don’t like fusion centers, which represent the combined surveillance efforts of federal, state and local law enforcement.

I don’t like being treated like an underling by government agents who are supposed to be working for me. I don’t like being threatened, intimidated, bribed, beaten and robbed by individuals entrusted with safeguarding my rights. I don’t like being silenced, censored and marginalized. I don’t like my movements being tracked, my conversations being recorded, and my transactions being catalogued.

I don’t like how the presidency has developed into a neo-monarchy replete with all the luxury and lasciviousness of the feudal lords of old.

I don’t like politicians who spend most of their time running for office, fundraising and enjoying being feted by lobbyists and corporations alike. I don’t like being kept at a distance from my elected representatives, including the president (a.k.a. the Emperor). I don’t like free speech zones, roving bubble zones and trespass laws that restrict Americans’ First Amendment rights.

I don’t like laws that criminalize Americans for otherwise lawful activities such as holding religious studies at home, growing vegetables in their yard, and collecting rainwater. I don’t like the NDAA, which allows the president and the military to arrest and detain American citizens indefinitely. I don’t like the Patriot Act, which opened the door to all manner of government abuses and intrusions on our privacy.

I don’t like the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which has become America’s standing army in direct opposition to the dire warnings of those who founded our country. I don’t like military weapons such as armored vehicles, sound cannons and the like being used against the American citizens. I don’t like government agencies such as the DHS, Post Office, Social Security Administration and Wildlife stocking up on hollow-point bullets. And I definitely don’t like the implications of detention centers being built that could house American citizens.

I don’t like the fact that since President Obama took office, police departments across the country “have received tens of thousands of machine guns; nearly 200,000 ammunition magazines; thousands of pieces of camouflage and night-vision equipment; and hundreds of silencers, armored cars and aircraft.”

I don’t like America’s infatuation with locking people up for life for non-violent crimes. There are over 3,000 people in America serving life sentences for non-violent crimes, including theft of a jacket, siphoning gasoline from a truck, stealing tools, and attempting to cash a stolen check. I don’t like paying roughly $29,000 a year per inmate just to keep these nonviolent offenders in prison.

I don’t like having my hard-earned taxpayer dollars used against me.

I don’t like the partisan nature of politics today, which has so polarized Americans that they are incapable of standing in unity against the government’s abuses. I don’t like the entertainment drivel that passes for news coverage today.

I don’t like the fact that those within a 25-mile range of the border are getting a front row seat to the American police state, as Border Patrol agents are now allowed to search people’s homes, intimately probe their bodies, and rifle through their belongings, all without a warrant.

I don’t like public schools that treat students as if they were prison inmates. I don’t like zero tolerance laws that criminalize childish behavior. I don’t like a public educational system that emphasizes rote memorization and test-taking over learning, synthesizing and critical thinking.

I don’t like police precincts whose primary purpose—whether through the use of asset forfeiture laws, speed traps, or red light cameras—is making a profit at the expense of those they have sworn to protect. I don’t like militarized police and their onerous SWAT team raids.

I don’t like Department of Defense and DHS programs that transfer surplus military hardware to local and state police. I don’t like government programs that reward cops for raiding homes and terrorizing homeowners. I don’t like local police dressing and acting as if they were the military while viewing me as an enemy combatant.

I don’t like being treated as if I have no rights.

I don’t like cash-strapped states cutting deals with private corporations to run the prisons in exchange for maintaining 90% occupancy rates for at least 20 years. I don’t like the fact that American prisons have become the source of cheap labor for Corporate America.

I don’t like feeling as if we’ve come full circle back to a pre-Revolutionary era.

I don’t like answering to an imperial president, who operates above the law. I don’t like the injustice that passes for justice in the courts. I don’t like prosecutors so hell bent on winning that they allow innocent people to suffer for crimes they didn’t commit.

I don’t like the double standards that allow government officials to break laws with immunity, while average Americans get the book thrown at them. I don’t like cops who shoot first and ask questions later. I don’t like police dogs being treated with more respect and afforded more rights than American citizens.

I don’t like living in a suspect society. I don’t like Americans being assumed guilty until they prove their innocence. I don’t like the fact that 38 states require that a property owner prove his innocence when police have laid claim to it in a civil forfeiture proceeding, whether or not that individual has done anything wrong.

I don’t like technology being used as a double-edged sword against us. I don’t like agencies like DARPA developing weapons for the battlefield that get used against Americans back at home. I don’t like the fact that drones will be deployed domestically in 2015, yet the government has yet to establish any civil liberties protocols to prevent them from being used against the citizenry.

Most of all, I don’t like feeling as if there’s no hope for turning things around.

Now there are those who would suggest that if I don’t like things about this country, I should leave and go elsewhere. And there are certainly those among my fellow citizens who are leaving for friendlier shores. However, I happen to come from a long line of people who believe in the virtue of hard work and perseverance and in the principle that nothing worthwhile comes without effort.

So I’m not giving up, at least not anytime soon. But I’m also not waiting around for the government to clean up its act. I’m not making any deals with politicians who care nothing about me and mine. To quote Number Six, the character in the British television series The Prisoner: “I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed, or numbered! My life is my own!”

I plan to keep fighting, writing, speaking up, speaking out, shouting if necessary, filing lawsuits, challenging the status quo, writing letters to the editor, holding my representatives accountable, thinking nationally but acting locally, and generally raising a ruckus anytime the government attempts to undermine the Constitution and ride roughshod over the rights of the citizenry.

As I make clear in my book A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State, we’re at a crisis point in American history. If we don’t get up off our duffs and get involved in the fight for freedom, then up ahead the graveyard beckons. As Martin Luther King Jr. warned, “The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who in a period of moral crisis maintain their neutrality.”

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8 Comments
TE
TE
July 14, 2014 3:02 pm

Mr. Whitehead, thank you and amen.

The saddest part is that I could sit and think and add another dozen or so paragraphs to his list.

They hate us for our freedoms, indeed.

harry p.
harry p.
July 14, 2014 6:24 pm

J whitehead needs to get with the program, its not the militarized copfuks, its the anti-govt extremists’ fault, why cant some people just grow to love their oppressors and the police state like bb.

http://news.yahoo.com/online-rants-rightwing-extremism-fuel-fears-for-us-cops-225012920.html

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
July 14, 2014 7:00 pm

I HATE having to get a permit to pee in my own back yard .

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
July 14, 2014 7:07 pm

True Story :

Had a friend who lived in a nice sub-division . He had a concrete slab patio and decided he wanted a enclosed porch. He talked to the HOA and they told him to present plans for the patio. He CADed up prints at work and presented the plans. They were approved by the HOA. He went to Lowe’s bought the materials and built the enclosed porch. About 6 months later a person from the building commission presented him with a fine and a summons to…tear down the porch . Why ” He didn’t have the necessary permits and inspections . The building inspector stated at the hearing that the building was built way beyond the building codes but it didn’t matter, the porch had to come down. And so he tore it down, then they told he could re-build it with the proper permits etc .

Eddie
Eddie
July 14, 2014 8:17 pm

They’re trying to send a 19 year old kid with no previous record to prison for life here for selling pot brownies.

http://www.wfmynews2.com/story/news/nation/2014/06/21/life-sentence-pot-brownies-jacob-lavoro-texas/11218483/

harry p.
harry p.
July 14, 2014 9:23 pm

So life sentence is possible for pot/hash brownies but a pigfuk theows a flash grenade into an infants crib and he sees no charges.
And people dont understand why so many dislike what cops have become.

harry p.
harry p.
July 15, 2014 10:09 am

Another reason it is rarely good to interact with cops/police or the so-called justice system

http://www.guns.com/2014/07/15/philly-mother-of-two-facing-felony-charges-for-entering-nj-with-legally-owned-firearm-video/

John Coster
John Coster
July 15, 2014 11:07 am

The Founders might not have been able to predict television and the internet, but they did understand many of the mechanisms by which societies become corrupt and destructive, first to the individual and then to the whole social fabric. All of these mechanisms are presently grinding away, and government, the institution that is supposed to embody and protect the social contract, the US Constitution, has become the juggernaut, rolling over and crushing the very system of laws from which it derives its power. The most egregious violations have of course flourished in the post 9/11 era: illegal wars, the militarization of police forces, mass spying, the creation of a de facto standing army in DHS and, with NDAA, the official abandoning of the right to a trial by a jury of one’s peers. Needless to say, these changes are not really changes in law, they are abrogations of the Constitution and hence are nothing more than illegal actions taken by those in power, primarily to protect the various special interests running the government.

It is worth noting that, however flawed we have always been, 9/11 marks a turning point, a moment at which America’s descent begins to accelerate. I don’t know exactly who did what on that fateful day, but it is absolutely certain that a bunch jihadists with box cutters did not make three massive buildings in NY collapse symmetrically into their own footprint by hitting two of them with airplanes. Nor did these individuals disable the US Air Force and render the Pentagon helpless against a slowly approaching commercial airliner. I, like most Americans, am repelled by the thought that people high up in the American government could commit such a horrible act of treason, but I have never heard any other plausible explanation for the events of that day. Indeed, the mystery is: why such a transparent false flag attack ? It would have been so easy to blow up a couple of malls or commit any number of terrorist acts that jihadists could easily have done. I suspect there were other incentives for choosing the target, destroying SEC documents, stealing gold, the spectacular theatrical nature of the whole operation. Please spare me the moronic canard that non sanctioned views of 9/11 can be dismissed as “conspiracy theories”, as if history were not full of conspiracies, a point lost on historically illiterate. people. It is quite clear that we as a people have turned a blind eye to a horrible crime and that some of the perpetrators still have immense influence over our lives and the lives of people world wide. It seems pointless to list all the wasted resources and assaults on our better traditions without recognizing that the coup against the US government has included a violent attack against the population as well as the myriad garden varieties of corruption that always thrive in the shadows of government. I have this terrible feeling that until we do dislodge the criminal cabal that pulled off this extraordinary crime, we are all collaborating with the enemy, and at some point other nations may step in and do the clean up work for us. I really don’t know how we can turn the country around, but I don’t see how we can continue on thee present course either.