Problems with U.S. government require us to take action

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There are days I wake up, and I’m not sure what country I live in any more.
There are days I wake up and want to go right back to sleep in the hopes that this surreal landscape of government-sanctioned injustice, corruption, and brutality, is just a really bad dream.
There are days I am so battered by the never-ending wave of bad news that I have little outrage left in me: I am numb.
And then I get hold of myself, shake myself out of the doldrums, and remind myself that it’s not yet time to give up: America needs our outrage and our alertness and our tenacity and our fierce determination to remain a free people in a land where justice matters.
This is still our country.
Don’t just sit there.
Do something!
When you hear that the U.S. government lost 1,475 migrant children within its care over a three-month period, in some cases handing them off to human traffickers, don’t just chalk it up to incompetent bureaucrats.
• Act. It doesn’t matter what your politics are or where you stand on immigration issues. There are some lines that should never be crossed, some government actions that should never be tolerated or justified, no matter what the end goal might be, and this is one of them. Demand that Congress stop playing politics and endangering children’s lives.
When you read that attorney general Jeff Sessions wants police to use stop and frisk tactics randomly against Americans without even the need for reasonable suspicion, don’t just shake your head disapprovingly.
• Act: Call the Justice Department, 202-353-1555, and read them the Fourth Amendment.
After you watch the video of how the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), unfailingly tone deaf to the spirit of the Fourth Amendment, subjected a 96-year-old World War II veteran in a wheelchair to a patdown that left no part of her body untouched, don’t just seethe in silence.
• Act: Contact your representative in Congress and file a complaint on the TSA’s egregious practices.
When you find out that Amazon is selling police real time facial recognition software that can scan hundreds of thousands of faces, identify them, track them, and then report them to police, don’t just shrug helplessly.
• Act: Harness the power of your wallet to urge Amazon to favor freedom principles over profit motives. It’s only a matter of time before these programs are used widely here in the U.S.. They are already being used and abused abroad.
When you hear Sessions bragging about how much he loves civil asset forfeiture, which allows the government to seize Americans’ personal property, money, cars, homes, and other valuables, without having to first prove that any criminal conduct has taken place, don’t just take his word for it.
• Act: Do your own research. You’ll soon discover that because of the corruption that surrounds this abusive program, countless innocent Americans have been robbed blind by government agents out to get rich at their expense. Billions of dollars have been taken without probable cause.
When you hear about armed Denver police pulling a gun on a school official and conducting a classroom-to-classroom search for a missing student at a Denver area high school, don’t just thank your lucky stars your childhood was more idyllic.
• Act: Say enough is enough to government-sponsored violence. The systemic violence being perpetrated by agents of the government has done more collective harm to the American people and our liberties than any single act of terror or mass shooting.
When you read about how 28-year-old Andrew Finch answered a 5 p.m. knock on his front door only to be shot in the head and killed 10 seconds later by a police SWAT team responded to a prank “swatting” phone call, don’t just tsk-tsk over the senseless tragedies arising from militarized and police and overzealous SWAT teams.
• Act: Demand accountability. If any hope for police reform is to be realized, especially as it relates to how SWAT teams are deployed and holding police accountable for their actions, it must begin at the community level, with police departments and governing bodies, where citizens still, with sufficient reinforcements, can make their voices heard.
When you find out that police and other law enforcement agencies are gaining access the DNA shared with genealogical websites and using it to identify possible suspects, don’t offer up your DNA without some assurance of privacy protections.
• Act: Protect your privacy. It’s not just yourself you have to worry about, either. It’s anyone related to you who can be connected by DNA. These genetic fingerprints, as they’re called, do more than just single out a person. They show who you’re related to and how. As biomedical researcher Yaniv Erlich warns, “If it’s not regulated and the police can do whatever they want … they can use your DNA to infer things about your health, your ancestry, whether your kids are your kids.”
Finally, when you hear someone talking about how two American citizens in Montana were detained by a Border Patrol agent because he overheard them speaking Spanish at a gas station, don’t just shake your head in disgust.
• Act: Remind yourself, and those around you, that despite the polarizing, racially-charged rhetoric being tossed about by president Donald Trump, we are a nation whose strength derives from the diversity of its people and from the immigrants who have been seeking shelter on our shores since the earliest days of our Republic.
I make clear in my book, “Battlefield America: The War on the American People,” if the freedoms enshrined in the Bill of Rights, the first 10 amendments to the U.S. Constitution, are to mean anything any more, if they are to stand for anything ever again, then we the people have to stand up for them.
We cannot allow ourselves to be divided and distracted and turned into warring factions.
We cannot sell out our birthright for empty promises of false security.
We cannot remain silent in the face of ugliness, pettiness, meanness, brutality, corruption, and injustice.
We cannot allow politicians, corporations, profiteers, and war hawks to whittle our freedoms away until they are little more than empty campaign slogans.
We must stand strong for freedom.
We must give voice to moral outrage.
We must do something—anything—everything in our power to make America free again.
President Ronald Reagan recognized, “If we lose this way of freedom, history will record with the great astonishment that those who had the most to lose did the least to prevent its happening.”
—The Rutherford Institute

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