Orwell’s jeremiad on the corruption of the English language and its
corrosive effect on a democracy was written two years before his novel
1984
spelled out in chilling detail the danger of Newspeak, which renders
citizens incapable of independent thought by depriving them of the
words necessary to form ideas other than those promulgated by the state.
After its opening “tribute” to Orwell, H.R 1955 is strategically
peppered with Newspeak regarding the establishment of a National
Commission and university-based Centers of Excellence to “examine and
report upon the fact and causes of violent radicalization, homegrown
terrorism, and ideologically based violence in the United States” and
to make legislative recommendations for combating it.
The “sheer cloudy vagueness” of H.R 1955, as well as its terror factor,
may account for its bipartisan 404-6 House vote but how, in an era
informed by the Bush-Cheney administration’s egregious assault on the
Bill of Rights, can the phrase “other purposes” fail to raise the
“National Terror Alert” from its current threat level of “elevated” to
“severe.”
Future “other purposes” will undoubtedly be justified by the Act’s use
of the term “violent radicalization,” which it defines as “the process
of adopting or promoting an
extremist belief system for the purpose of facilitating
ideologically based violence . . .” or by the folksy, Lake Wobegonesque “homegrown terrorism,” defined as “the use, planned use, or threatened use,
of force or violence by a group or individual born [or] raised . . . within the United States . . . to
intimidate or coerce the United States, the civilian population . . . or any segment thereof . . . [italics added].”
In the service of some self-serving “other purposes,” will “extremist
beliefs” become any belief the temporary occupants of the White House
consider antithetical and threatening to their political agenda?
Will “ideologically based violence” or the use of “force” become little
more than the mayhem resulting after a peaceful protest, daring to move
beyond the barbed wire of the free speech zone, is attacked by a
truncheon-wielding riot squad armed with tear gas, German Shepard dogs
and water cannons?
Will the unarmed, constitutionally protected dissenters who are fending
off blows or dog bites, or who are striking back in self-defense become
“homegrown terrorists” and suffer draconian sentences for their attempt
to “intimidate or coerce” the state with free thought and free speech?
A clue to future “other purposes” may lie in the Act’s parentage. The
proud House “mother” of the Patriot Act’s evil twin is Rep. Jane Harmon
(D-CA), chair of the Homeland Security Intelligence Subcommittee. Rep.
Harmon has admitted to a long and productive relationship with the RAND
Corporation, a California based think-tank with close ties to the
military-industrial-intelligence complex. RAND’s 2005 study, “Trends in
Terrorism,” contains a chapter titled, “Homegrown Terrorist Threats to
the United States.” Is this Act a bastard child?
Keep in mind that the RAND Corporation was set up in 1946 by Army Air
Force General Henry “Hap” Arnold as “Project RAND” sponsored by the
Douglas Aircraft Company. Keep in mind also that Donald Rumsfeld was
its chairman from 1981 to 1986 and Lewis “Scooter” Libby, Dick Cheney’s
felonious former chief of staff, and Condoleezza Rice were trustees.
Enough said!
RAND maintains that “homegrown terrorism” will not be the result of
jihadist sleeper cells. Rather, it will result from anti-globalists and
radical environmentalists who “challenge the intrinsic qualities of
capitalism, charging that in the insatiable quest for growth and
profit, the philosophy is serving to destroy the world’s ecology,
indigenous cultures, and individual welfare.”
Further, RAND claims that anti-globalists and radical environmentalists
“exist in much the same operational environment as al Qaida” and pose
“a clear threat to private-sector corporate interests, especially large
multinational business.” Therein lies the real “other purposes.”
Predictably then, H.R. 1955 is not about protecting homegrown
Americans. That protection is only incidental to its “other purposes”
of protecting homegrown corporate interest and its unconscionable
manipulation of the American political process to fill its coffers. Any
thought or speech or action — however protected it might be by the Bill
of Rights — that threatens corporate hegemony and profit will no doubt
suffer the “other purposes” clause of the Homegrown Terrorism
Prevention Act.
Anyone doubting the Orwellian nature of a “bastard child” that equates
anti-globalists and environmentalists with al Qaida terrorists will do
well to read Orwell’s “Politics and the English Language” and to
acquaint themselves with the fate of Winston Smith in
1984.
Robert Weitzel is a freelance writer whose essays appear in The Capital
Times in Madison, WI. He has been published in the Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel, Skeptic Magazine, Freethought Today, and on popular liberal
websites. He can be contacted at:
robertweitzel@mac.com