2016: The Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Year

Guest Post by  John W. Whitehead

“What’s past is prologue.” ― William Shakespeare, The Tempest

What a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad year this has been.

Endless wars. Toxic politics. Violence. Hunger. Police shootings. Mass shootings. Economic downturns. Political circuses. Senseless tragedies. Loss. Heartache. Intolerance. Prejudice. Hatred. Apathy. Meanness. Cruelty. Poverty. Inhumanity. Greed.

Here’s just a small sampling of what we’ve suffered through in 2016.

After three years of increasingly toxic politics, the ruling oligarchy won andwe the peoplelost. Hillary Clinton won the popular vote but lost the election. Donald Trump won the White House while the American people lost any hope of ending the corporate elite’s grip on the government.

The government declared war on socalledfake newswhile continuing to peddle its own brand of propaganda. President Obama quietly re-upped the National Defense Authorization Act, including a provision that establishes a government agency to purportedly counter propaganda and disinformation.

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More people died at the hands of the police. Shootings of unarmed citizens (especially African-Americans) by police claimed more lives than previously estimated, reinforcing concerns about police misconduct and the use of excessive force. Police in Baton Rouge shot Alton Sterling. Police in St. Paul shot Philando Castile during a traffic stop. Ohio police shot 13-year-old Tyre King after the boy pulls out a BB gun. Wisconsin was locked down after protests erupt over a police shooting of a fleeing man. Oklahoma police shot and killed Terence Crutcher during a traffic stop while the man’s hands were raised in the air. North Carolina police killed Keith Lamont Scott, spurring two nights of violent protests. San Diego police killed Alfred Olango after he removed a vape smoking device from his pocket. Los Angeles police shot Carnell Snell Jr. after he fled a vehicle with a paper license plate.

We lost some bright stars this year. Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia’s death left the court deadlocked and his successor up for grabs. Joining the ranks of the notable deceased were Muhammad Ali, David Bowie, Fidel Castro, Leonard Cohen, Carrie Fisher, John Glenn, Merle Haggard, Harper Lee, George Michael, Prince, Nancy Reagan, Janet Reno, Elie Wiesel, and Gene Wilder.

Diseases claimed more lives. The deadly Zika virus spread outwards from Latin America and into the U.S.

The rich got richer. The Panama Papers leak pulled back the curtain on schemes by the wealthy to hide their funds in shell companies.

Free speech was dealt one knockout punch after another. First Amendment activities were pummeled, punched, kicked, choked, chained and generally gagged all across the country.

The debate over equality took many forms. North Carolina’s debate over transgender bathrooms ignited a nationwide fury. Meanwhile, the U.S. military opened its doors to transgender individuals. A unanimous Supreme Court affirmed a Texas law that counts everyone, not just eligible voters, in determining legislative districts. The nation’s highest court also upheld affirmative action, while declaring a Texas law on abortion clinics to be an unnecessary burden on women.

Environmental concerns were downplayed in favor of corporate interests. Flint, Michigan’s contaminated water was declared a state and federal emergency, while thousands protested the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline and its impact on water sources.

Technology rendered Americans vulnerable to threats from government spies, police, hackers and power failures. The Justice Department battled Apple in court over access to its customers’ locked, encrypted iPhones. Microsoft sued the U.S. government over its access to customers’ emails and files without their knowledge. Yahoo confirmed that over half a billion user accounts had been hacked. Police departments across the country used Stingray devices to collect cellphone data in real time, often without a warrant.

Police became even more militarized and weaponized. Despite concerns about the government’s steady transformation of local police into a standing military army, local police agencies continued to acquire weaponry, training and equipment suited for the battlefield.

Children were hurt. Police resource officers made schools less safe, with students being arrested, tasered and severely disciplined for minor infractions.

Computers asserted their superiority over their human counterparts, who were easily controlled by bread and circuses. Google’s artificial intelligence program, AlphaGo, defeated its human opponent in a DeepMind Challenge Match. Pokemon Go took the world by storm and turned users into mindless entertainment zombies.

Terrorism took many forms. Brussels was locked down in the wake of terrorist attacks that killed dozens and wounded hundreds. A shootout between a gunman and police wrought havoc on a gay nightclub in Orlando. Terrorists armed with explosives and guns opened fire in Istanbul Airport. Syria was ravaged by bomb strikes, terrorism and international conflict.

Science crossed into new frontiers. Doctors announced the birth of the first healthy three-parent baby created with DNA from three separate people. Elon Musk outlined his plan to populate Mars.

Tragedies abounded. An Amtrak train derailed outside of Philadelphia. A commuter train crashed through a barrier in New Jersey. Heatwaves swept the southwest, fueling wildfires. Flash floods and heavy rain devastated parts of Maryland and Louisiana.

The nanny state went into overdrive. Philadelphia gave the green light to a tax on sugary drinks. The FDA issued guidelines to urge food manufacturers and chain restaurants to reduce salt use.

The government waged a war on cash. The government’s war on cash is a concerted campaign to do away with large bills such as $20s, $50s, $100s and shift consumers towards a digital mode of commerce that can easily be monitored, tracked, tabulated, mined for data, hacked, hijacked and confiscated when convenient.

The Deep State reared its ugly head. Comprised of unelected government bureaucrats, corporations, contractors, paper-pushers, and button-pushers who are actually calling the shots behind the scenes, this government within a government is the hidden face of the American police state that has continued past Election Day.

The U.S. military industrial complexaided by the Obama administrationarmed the world while padding its own pockets. According to the Center for International Policy, President Obama has brokered more arms deals than any administration since World War II.

Now that’s not to say that 2016 didn’t have its high points, as well, but it’s awfully hard to see the light at the end of the tunnel right now.

Indeed, I frequently receive emails from people urging me to leave the country before the “hammer falls.” However, as I make clear in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People, there is nowhere in the world to escape from the injustice of tyrants, bullies and petty dictators.

So let’s not take the mistakes of 2016 into a new year with us. The election is over. The oligarchs remain in power. The police state is marching forward, more powerful than ever. All signs point to business as usual. The game continues to be rigged.

The lesson for those of us in the American police state is simply this: if there is to be any hope for freedom in 2017, it rests with “we the people” engaging in local, grassroots activism that transforms our communities and our government from the ground up.

Let’s get started.

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8 Comments
starfcker
starfcker
December 27, 2016 5:42 pm

Does this guy have any contact with the outside world? The sky is falling, AGAIN? “Let’s get started.” Doing exactly what, John? In the meantime, a bunch of guys have put their lives on hold to try to straighten this mess out, and you dismiss them? Shame on you, John. Fucking pretender.

Angus
Angus
December 27, 2016 5:50 pm

Every time a cop hater brays a lebtard social justice warrior gets his horns.

I do get sick of the cop haters.

TrickleUpPolitics
TrickleUpPolitics
December 27, 2016 5:50 pm

What a lot of crap.

KaD
KaD
December 27, 2016 6:10 pm

When is the “po’ black man” thing going to stop? Someone tell this dunce cops kill twice as many whites as blacks, in spite of the fact blacks commit crimes at a far greater rate.

James
James
December 27, 2016 7:03 pm

So,the Orlando nightclub massacre was now due to a shoot out between a cop and a club goer,and,not a attack with religious over tones?!Yes,understand the security at door was a cop working security detail,and this is why club attacked and folks executed?!

I am getting sick of the militarized police and the BS laws they are enforcing.,that said,black lives matter(?)does choose criminals as examples when they want so called justice and not folks actually murdered by police,they really did would be a fair amount of white lives,guess they don’t matter.

BB
BB
December 27, 2016 7:27 pm

It wasn’t all bad this year.I got a tax refund for the first time in 7 years .The Government sent me a letter telling me I paid to much and a check for 647.00 dollars.Thank God Christ in heaven for his tender mercies.

Rdawg
Rdawg
  BB
December 27, 2016 8:22 pm

Damn, BB! That’ll fund truck-stop BJs all year long. Thank God Christ in heaven, indeed.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
December 27, 2016 8:57 pm

Yeah……..I don’t need to read that. Despite the discovery of my father’s health situation, and in many ways because of it, 2016 was a pretty damn good year for my wife and I.

We’re still securely employed, receiving raises and bonuses and living below our means. My wife is about to transfer jobs to one that she has sought for quite some time and it will bring more income while maintaining all of her benefits.

I’m a positive pessimist. I expect the absolute worst in every situation (which is rare) and when that doesn’t happen I focus on the good or the silver lining in the bad. I’d certainly like to end 2016 with quite a bit less stress in my life but that’s not in the cards.

To top it off it’s been snowing like the dickens around here with no let up in sight and I love everything about snow including shoveling the stuff!