By John W. Whitehead and Nisha Whitehead
It is what we have been reduced to: A violent mob. A Nation on the brink of martial law. A populace under house arrest. A techno-corporate state wielding its power to immobilize huge swaths of the country. And a U.S. Constitution in tatters.
We are imploding on multiple fronts, all at once.
It is what happens when ego, greed and power are allowed to take precedence over liberty, equality, and justice.
Just to be clear, however: It is not a revolution.
It is a ticking time bomb!
There is absolutely no excuse for the violence that took place at the Capitol January 6.
Yet, no matter which way you look at it, the fallout from this attempted coup could make this worrisome state of affairs even worse:
• First, you’ve got the president, who has been accused of inciting a riot and now faces a second impeachment and a scandal that could permanently mar his legacy. At a minimum, Donald Trump’s actions and words, unstatesman-like and reckless, by any standards, over the course of his presidency and January 6 helped cause a simmering pot to boil over.
• Second, there were the so-called “patriots” who took to the streets because the jailer of their choice didn’t get chosen to knock heads for another four years. Those “Stop the Steal” protesters may have deluded themselves (or been deluded) into believing they were standing for freedom when they stormed the Capitol. However, there are limits to what can be done in the so-called name of liberty, and this level of violence, no matter who wields it, or what brand of politics, or zealotry motivate them, crossed the line.
• Third, you’ve got the tech giants, who meted out their own version of social justice by way of digital tyranny and corporate censorship. Yet there can be no freedom of speech if social media giants can muzzle whomever they want, whenever they want, on whatever pretext they want, in the absence of any real due process, review, or appeal. At a minimum, we need more robust protections in place to protect digital expression and a formalized process for challenging digital censorship.
• Fourth, you’ve got the police, who normally exceed the constitutional limits restraining them from brutality, surveillance and other excesses. Only this time, despite intelligence indicating that some of the rioters were planning for mayhem, police were outnumbered and ill-prepared to deal with the incursion. Investigations underway suggest that some police may even have colluded with the rioters. All that was missing January 6 was a declaration of martial law.
• Which brings us to the fifth point, martial law. Given that the Nation has been dancing around the fringes of martial law with each national crisis, it won’t take much more to push the country over the edge to a declaration and military lockdown. The rumblings of armed protests at all 50 state capitals and in Washington, D.C., will only serve to heighten tensions, double-down on the government’s military response, and light a match to a powder keg state of affairs.
• So where do we go from here?
That all of these events are coming to a head around Martin Luther King Jr. Day is telling.
More than 50 years after King was assassinated (April 4, 1968), America has become a ticking time bomb of racial unrest and injustice, police militarization, surveillance, government corruption and ineptitude, the blowback from a battlefield mindset and endless wars abroad, and a growing economic inequality between the haves and have-nots.
Making matters worse, modern America has compounded the evils of racism, materialism, and militarism, with ignorance, intolerance, and fear.
Callousness, cruelty, meanness, immorality, ignorance, hatred, intolerance, and injustice have become hallmarks of our modern age, magnified by an echo chamber of nasty tweets and government-sanctioned brutality.
This casual cruelty is made possible by a growing polarization within the populace that emphasizes what divides us: Race, religion, economic status, sexuality, ancestry, politics, rather than what unites us: We are all human.
It is what writer Anna Quindlen refers to as “the politics of exclusion, what might be thought of as the cult of otherness… It divides the country as surely as the Mason-Dixon line once did. And it makes for mean-spirited and punitive politics and social policy.”
It is more than meanness, however.
It is the psychopathic mindset adopted by the architects of the Deep State, and it applies equally whether Democrats or Republicans.
As an academic study into pathocracy concluded, “[T]yranny does not flourish because perpetuators are helpless and ignorant of their actions. It flourishes because they actively identify with those who promote vicious acts as virtuous.”
“We the people” have paved the way for this tyranny to prevail.
None of us who remains silent and impassive in the face of evil, racism, extreme materialism, meanness, intolerance, cruelty, injustice and ignorance gets a free pass.
Those among us who follow figureheads without question, who turn a blind eye to injustice and turn their backs on need, who march in lockstep with tyrants and bigots, who allow politics to trump principle, who give in to meanness and greed, and who fail to be outraged by the many wrongs being perpetrated in our midst, it is these individuals who must shoulder the blame when the darkness wins.
Freedom demands responsibility.
Freedom demands that we stop thinking as Democrats and Republicans and start thinking as human beings, or at the very least, Americans.
Martin Luther King, Jr. dared to dream of a world in which all Americans “would be guaranteed the unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”
He didn’t live to see that dream become a reality. It’s still not a reality. We haven’t dared to dream that dream in such a long time.
But imagine:
Imagine what this country would be like if Americans put aside their differences and dared to stand up, united, for freedom…
Imagine what this country would be like if Americans put aside their differences and dared to speak out, with one voice, against injustice…. Imagine what this country would be like if Americans put aside their differences and dared to push back, with the full force of our collective numbers, against the evils of government despotism.
I make clear in my book, “Battlefield America: The War on the American People,” tyranny wouldn’t stand a chance.
—The Rutherford Institute