Obedient Slaves Have
Nothing to Fear
By Kurt Nimmo
02/24/06 "ICH"
-- -- It has nothing to do with the Bill of Rights
or the right to be left alone in peace, unmolested and free from
harassment, but rather it has to do with suspicion, with guilt
before innocence, with mistrust and intrusion, and the roving eye of
Big Brother.
“If you’re not doing anything wrong, what do you have to worry
about,” Chicago Alderman Ray Suarez told
USA Today when asked about a plan by Mayor Richard Daley to
install surveillance cameras in “corner taverns and swanky
nightclubs” in addition to those already “aimed at government
buildings, train platforms and intersections.”
Suarez, like far too many Americans, does not understand that the
government has no right to tell people what to do except in areas
specifically authorized in the Constitution, as spelled out by the
Ninth and Tenth Amendments.
“The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall
not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the
people,” and “The powers not delegated to the United States by the
Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to
the States respectively, or to the people,” in other words the
government has no right to put a camera on a pole in my
neighborhood, a bad idea “paid for in part by federal homeland
security funds.”
On July 4, 1776, John Hancock, Sam and John Adams, Thomas
Jefferson, and a handful of others signed something entitled the
Declaration of Independence, stating “that whenever any form of
government becomes destructive of [life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness], it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it,
and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such
principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall
seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness.”
Of course, in 2006, if you were actually to attempt to abolish
the government, you would be considered a terrorist and, at best,
arrested and incarcerated, and at worst barbequed like the babies of
Waco. Most Americans, entirely ignorant of the Constitution and what
it declares the government can or cannot do, don’t have a problem
with surveillance cameras and microphones in their neighborhoods
because if they’re “not doing anything wrong” there is nothing to
“worry about.”
Get used to surveillance gadgets mounted above every intersection
or inside every store. Soon enough, surveillance cameras will be “on
downtown streets and in apartment complexes, shopping malls and even
private homes to fight crime during a shortage of police officers,”
as presaged by
Houston Police Chief Harold Hurtt.
The eventual idea—divorced from crime or security—is as Orwell
envisioned it some sixty years ago:
“There was of course no way of knowing whether you were being
watched at any given moment. How often, or on what system, the
Thought Police plugged in on any individual wire was guesswork. It
was even conceivable that they watched everybody all the time. But
at any rate they could plug in your wire whenever they wanted to.
You had to live—did live, from habit that became instinct—in the
assumption that every sound you made was overheard, and, except in
darkness, every movement scrutinized.”
Our government is less concerned with terrorism, which it creates
after all, than constructing a global Panopticon, a high-tech prison
where every sound and motion is not only heard and observed but
recorded, a terrible and fearsome place where all memory of the
Constitution, the Bill of Rights, Thomas Jefferson, and all the
others who signed the Declaration of Independence are relegated to
Orwell’s memory hole.
Kurt Nimmo is the author of Another Day in the Empire: Life in
Neoconservative America. Visit his blog at
www.kurtnimmo.com