No speculation is needed. Those who wield power
are demanding it. The only question is how much
opposition they will encounter.
By Glenn Greenwald
January 19, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - The last
two weeks have ushered in a wave of new
domestic police powers and rhetoric in the name
of fighting “terrorism” that are carbon copies
of many of the worst excesses of the first War
on Terror that began nearly twenty years ago.
This trend shows no sign of receding as we move
farther from the January 6 Capitol riot. The
opposite is true: it is intensifying.
We have witnessed an orgy of censorship from
Silicon Valley monopolies with calls for far
more aggressive speech policing, a visibly
militarized Washington, D.C. featuring a
non-ironically
named “Green Zone,” vows from the incoming
president and his key allies for a new
anti-domestic terrorism bill, and frequent
accusations of “sedition,” “treason,” and
“terrorism” against members of Congress and
citizens. This is all driven by a radical
expansion of the meaning of “incitement to
violence.” It is accompanied by
viral-on-social-media pleas that one work with
the FBI to turn in one’s fellow citizens (See
Something, Say Something!) and demands for
a new system of domestic surveillance.
Underlying all of this are immediate
insinuations that anyone questioning any of this
must, by virtue of these doubts, harbor sympathy
for the Terrorists and their neo-Nazi, white
supremacist ideology. Liberals have spent so
many years now in a tight alliance with neocons
and the CIA that they are making the 2002
version of John Ashcroft
look like the President of the (old-school) ACLU.
The U.S.
Department of Homeland Security website,
touting a trademarked phrase licensed to it
in 2010 by the City of New York, urging
citizens to report “suspicious activity” to
the FBI and other security state agencies
No Advertising - No Government
Grants
- This Is Independent Media
The more honest proponents of this new
domestic War on Terror are explicitly admitting
that they want to model it on the first one. A
New York Times reporter
noted on Monday that a “former intelligence
official on PBS NewsHour” said “that the US
should think about a ‘9/11 Commission’ for
domestic extremism and consider applying some of
the lessons from the fight against Al Qaeda here
at home.” More amazingly, Gen. Stanley
McChrystal — for years head of Joint Special
Operations Command in Iraq and the commander of
the war in Afghanistan — explicitly compared
that war to this new one,
speaking to
Yahoo News:
I did see a similar dynamic in the
evolution of al-Qaida in Iraq, where a whole
generation of angry Arab youth with very
poor prospects followed a powerful leader
who promised to take them back in time to a
better place, and he led them to embrace an
ideology that justified their violence. This
is now happening in America….I think we’re
much further along in this radicalization
process, and facing a much deeper problem as
a country, than most Americans realize.”
Anyone who, despite all this, still harbors
lingering doubts that the Capitol riot is and
will be the neoliberal 9/11, and that a new War
on Terror is being implemented in its name, need
only watch the two short video clips below,
which will clear their doubts for good. It is
like being catapulted by an unholy time machine
back to Paul Wolfowitz’s 2002 messaging lab.
The first video, flagged
by Tom Elliott, is from Monday morning’s
Morning Joe program on MSNBC (the show that
arguably did more to help Donald Trump become
the GOP nominee than any other). It features
Jeremy Bash — one of the
seemingly countless employees of TV news
networks who previously worked in Obama’s CIA
and Pentagon — demanding that, in response to
the Capitol riot, “we reset our entire
intelligence approach,” including “look[ing] at
greater surveillance of them,” adding: “the FBI
is going to have to run confidential sources.”
See if you detect any differences between what
CIA operatives and neocons were saying in 2002
when demanding the Patriot Act and greater FBI
and NSA surveillance and what this
CIA-official-turned-NBC-News-analyst is saying
here:
The second video features the amazing
declaration from former Facebook security
official Alex Stamos, talking to the very
concerned CNN host Brian Stelter, about the
need for social media companies to use the same
tactics against U.S. citizens that they used
to remove ISIS from the internet — “in
collaboration with law enforcement” — and that
those tactics should be directly aimed at what
he calls extremist “conservative influencers.”
“Press freedoms are being abused by these
actors,” the former Facebook executive
proclaimed. Stamos noted how generous he and his
comrades have been up until now: “We have given
a lot of leeway — both in the traditional media
and in social media — to people with a very
broad range of views.” But no more. Now is the
time to “get us all back in the same consensual
reality.”
In a moment of unintended candor, Stamos
noted the real problem: “there are people on
YouTube, for example, that have a larger
audience than people on daytime CNN” — and it’s
time for CNN and other mainstream outlets to
seize the monopoly on information dissemination
to which they are divinely entitled by taking
away the platforms of those whom people actually
want to watch and listen to:
(If still not convinced, and if you can
endure it, you can also
watch MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough and Mika
Brzezinski literally screaming that one needed
remedy to the Capitol riot is that the Biden
administration must “shutdown” Facebook.
Shutdown Facebook).
Calls for a War on Terror sequel — a domestic
version complete with surveillance and
censorship — are not confined to
ratings-deprived cable hosts and ghouls from the
security state. The Wall Street Journal
reports that “Mr. Biden has said he plans to
make a priority of passing
a law against domestic terrorism, and he has
been urged to create a White House post
overseeing the fight against ideologically
inspired violent extremists and increasing
funding to combat them.”
Meanwhile, Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA) —
not just one of the most dishonest members of
Congress but also one of the most militaristic
and authoritarian — has
had a bill proposed since 2019 to simply
amend the existing foreign anti-terrorism bill
to allow the U.S. Government to invoke exactly
the same powers at home against “domestic
terrorists.”
Why would such new terrorism laws be needed
in a country that already imprisons more of its
citizens than any other country in the world as
the result of a very aggressive set of criminal
laws? What acts should be criminalized by new
“domestic terrorism” laws that are not already
deemed criminal? They never say, almost
certainly because — just as was true of the
first set of new War on Terror laws — their real
aim is to criminalize that which should not
be criminalized: speech, association,
protests, opposition to the new ruling
coalition.
US Speaker of the House Nancy
Pelosi (D-CA) flanked by Rep.
Adam Schiff (D-CA) (R) and Rep.
Jerry Nadler (D-NY), speaks at a
press conference on Capitol Hill
(Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP
via Getty Images)
The answer to this question — what needs to
be criminalized that is not already a crime? —
scarcely seems to matter. Media and political
elites have placed as many Americans as they can
— and it is a lot — into full-blown fear and
panic mode, and when that happens, people are
willing to
acquiesce to anything claimed necessary to
stop that threat, as the first War on Terror,
still going strong twenty years later,
decisively proved.
=====
An entire book could — and
probably should — be written on why all of this
is so concerning. For the moment, two points are
vital to emphasize.
First, much of the alarmism and
fear-mongering is being driven by a deliberate
distortion of what it means for speech to
“incite violence.” The bastardizing of this
phrase was the
basis for President Trump’s rushed
impeachment last week. It is also what is
driving calls for dozens of members of
Congress to be expelled and even prosecuted on
“sedition” charges for having objected to the
Electoral College certification, and is also at
the heart of the spate of censorship actions
already undertaken and further repressive
measures being urged.
This phrase — “inciting violence” — was also
what drove many of the worst War on Terror
abuses. I spent years reporting on how numerous
young American Muslims were
prosecuted under new, draconian
anti-terrorism laws for uploading anti-U.S.-foreign-policy
YouTube videos or giving
rousing anti-American speeches deemed
to “incite violence” and thus
provide “material support” to terrorist
groups — the exact theory which Rep. Schiff is
seeking to import into the new domestic War on
Terror.
It is vital to ask what it means for speech
to constitute “incitement to violence” to the
point that it can be banned or criminalized. The
expression of any political viewpoint,
especially one passionately expressed, has the
potential to “incite” someone else to get so
riled up that they engage in violence.
If you rail against the threats to free
speech posed by Silicon Valley monopolies,
someone hearing you may get so filled with rage
that they decide to bomb an Amazon warehouse or
a Facebook office. If you write a blistering
screed accusing pro-life activists of
endangering the lives of women by forcing them
back into unsafe back-alley abortions, or if you
argue that abortion is murder, you may very well
inspire someone to engage in violence against a
pro-life group or an abortion clinic. If you
start a protest movement to object to the
injustice of Wall Street bailouts — whether you
call it “Occupy Wall Street” or the Tea Party —
you may cause someone to go hunt down Goldman
Sachs or Citibank executives who they believe
are destroying the economic future of millions
of people.
If you claim that George W. Bush stole the
2000 and/or 2004 elections — as many Democrats,
including members of Congress, did — you may
inspire civic unrest or violence against Bush
and his supporters. The same is true if you
claim the 2016 or 2020 elections were fraudulent
or illegitimate. If you rage against the racist
brutality of the police, people may go burn down
buildings in protest — or
murder randomly selected police officers
whom they have become convinced are
agents of a racist genocidal state.
The Bernie Sanders campaign volunteer and
hard-core Democratic partisan, James Hodgkinson,
who went to a softball field in June, 2017 to
murder Republican Congress members — and
almost succeeded in fatally shooting Rep. Steve
Scalise (R-LA) — had spent months listening to
radical Sanders supporters and participating in
Facebook groups with names like “Terminate the
Republican Party” and “Trump is a Traitor.”
Hodgkinson had heard over and over that
Republicans were not merely misguided but were
“traitors” and grave threats to the Republic. As
CNN
reported, “his favorite television shows
were listed as ‘Real Time with Bill Maher;’ ‘The
Rachel Maddow Show;’ ‘Democracy Now!’ and other
left-leaning programs.” All of the political
rhetoric to which he was exposed — from the
pro-Sanders Facebook groups, MSNBC and
left-leaning shows — undoubtedly played a major
role in triggering his violent assault and
decision to murder pro-Trump Republican Congress
members.
Despite the potential of all of those views
to motivate others to commit violence in their
name — potential that has sometimes been
realized — none of the people expressing those
views, no matter how passionately, can be
validly characterized as “inciting violence”
either legally or ethically. That is because all
of that speech is protected, legitimate speech.
None of it advocates violence. None of it urges
others to commit violence in its name. The fact
that it may “inspire” or “motivate” some
mentally unwell person or a genuine fanatic to
commit violence does not make the person
espousing those views and engaging in that
non-violent speech guilty of “inciting violence”
in any meaningful sense.
To illustrate this point, I have often cited
the crucial and brilliantly reasoned Supreme
Court free speech ruling in Claiborne v.
NAACP. In the 1960s and 1970s, the State of
Mississippi tried to hold local NAACP leaders
liable on the ground that their fiery speeches
urging a boycott of white-owned stores “incited”
their followers to burn down stores and
violently attack patrons who did not honor the
protest. The state’s argument was that the NAACP
leaders knew that they were metaphorically
pouring gasoline on a fire with their
inflammatory rhetoric to rile up and angry
crowds.
But the Supreme Court
rejected that argument, explaining that free
speech will die if people are held responsible
not for their own violent acts but for those
committed by others who heard them speak
and were motivated to commit crimes in the name
of that cause (emphasis added):
Civil liability may not be
imposed merely because an individual
belonged to a group, some members of which
committed acts of violence. . . .
[A]ny such theory fails for the simple
reason that there is no evidence — apart
from the speeches themselves -- that [the
NAACP leader sued by the State] authorized,
ratified, or directly threatened acts of
violence. . . . . To impose liability
without a finding that the NAACP authorized
— either actually or apparently — or
ratified unlawful conduct would
impermissibly burden the rights of political
association that are protected by the First
Amendment. . . .
While the State legitimately may impose
damages for the consequences of violent
conduct, it may not award
compensation for the consequences of
nonviolent, protected activity.
Only those losses proximately caused by
unlawful conduct may be recovered.
The First Amendment similarly
restricts the ability of the State to impose
liability on an individual solely because of
his association with another.
The Claiborne court relied upon the
iconic First Amendment ruling in
Brandenburg v. Ohio, which overturned
the criminal conviction of a KKK leader who had
publicly advocated the possibility of violence
against politicians. Even explicitly
advocating the need or justifiability of
violence for political ends is protected
speech, ruled the court. They carved out a very
narrow exception: “where such advocacy is
directed to inciting or producing imminent
lawless action and is likely to incite or
produce such action” — meaning someone is
explicitly urging an already assembled mob to
specific violence with the expectation that they
will do so more or less immediately (such as
standing outside someone’s home and telling the
gathered mob: it’s time to burn it down).
It goes without saying that First Amendment
jurisprudence on “incitement” governs what a
state can do when punishing or restricting
speech, not what a Congress can do in impeaching
a president or expelling its own members, and
certainly not social media companies seeking to
ban people from their platforms.
But that does not make these principles of
how to understand “incitement to violence”
irrelevant when applied to other contexts.
Indeed, the central reasoning of these cases is
vital to preserve everywhere: that if speech is
classified as “incitement to violence” despite
not explicitly advocating violence, it will
sweep up any political speech which
those wielding this term wish it to encompass.
No political speech will be safe from this term
when interpreted and applied so broadly and
carelessly.
And that is directly relevant to the second
point. Continuing to process Washington debates
of this sort primarily through the prism of
“Democrat v. Republican” or even “left v. right”
is a sure ticket to the destruction of core
rights. There are times when powers of
repression and censorship are aimed more at the
left and times when they are aimed more at the
right, but it is neither inherently a left-wing
nor a right-wing tactic. It is a ruling
class tactic, and it will be deployed
against anyone perceived to be a dissident to
ruling class interests and orthodoxies no matter
where on the ideological spectrum they reside.
The last several months of
politician-and-journalist-demanded Silicon
Valley censorship has targeted the right, but
prior to that and simultaneously it has often
targeted those perceived as on the left. The
government has frequently declared right-wing
domestic groups “terrorists,” while in the 1960s
and 1970s it was left-wing groups devoted to
anti-war activism which
bore that designation. In 2011, British
police
designated the London version of Occupy Wall
Street a “terrorist” group. In the 1980s, the
African National Congress was so designated.
“Terrorism” is an amorphous term that was
created, and will always be used, to outlaw
formidable dissent no matter its source or
ideology.
If you identify as a conservative and
continue to believe that your prime enemies are
ordinary leftists, or you identify as a leftist
and believe your prime enemies are Republican
citizens, you will fall perfectly into the trap
set for you. Namely, you will ignore your real
enemies, the ones who actually wield power at
your expense: ruling class elites, who really do
not care about “right v. left” and most
definitely do not care about “Republican v.
Democrat” — as evidenced by the fact that they
fund both parties — but instead care only about
one thing: stability, or preservation
of the prevailing neoliberal order.
Unlike so many ordinary citizens addicted to
trivial partisan warfare, these ruling class
elites know who their real enemies are: anyone
who steps outside the limits and rules of the
game they have crafted and who seeks to disrupt
the system that preserves their prerogatives and
status. The one who put this best was probably
Barack Obama when he was president, when he
observed — correctly — that the perceived
warfare between establishment Democratic and
Republican elites was mostly theater, and on the
question of what they actually believe,
they’re both “fighting inside the 40 yard line”
together:
A standard Goldman Sachs banker or Silicon
Valley executive has far more in common, and is
far more comfortable, with Chuck Schumer, Nancy
Pelosi, Mitch McConnell, Mitt Romney and Paul
Ryan than they do with the ordinary American
citizen. Except when it means a mildly
disruptive presence — like Trump — they barely
care whether Democrats or Republicans rule
various organs of government, or whether people
who call themselves “liberals” or
“conservatives” ascend to power. Some left-wing
members of Congress, including Rep. Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) and Ilhan Omar (D-MN) have
said they
oppose a new
domestic terrorism law, but Democrats will
have no trouble forming a majority by partnering
with their neocon GOP allies like Liz Cheney to
get it done, as they did earlier this year
to stop the withdrawal of troops from
Afghanistan and Germany.
Neoliberalism and imperialism do not care
about the pseudo-fights between the two parties
or the cable TV bickering of the day. They do
not like the far left or the far right. They do
not like extremism of any kind. They do not
support Communism and they do not support
neo-Nazism or some fascist revolution. They care
only about one thing: disempowering and crushing
anyone who dissents from and threatens their
hegemony. They care about stopping
dissidents. All the weapons they build and
institutions they assemble — the FBI, the DOJ,
the CIA, the NSA, oligarchical power — exist for
that sole and exclusive purpose, to fortify
their power by rewarding those who accede to
their pieties and crushing those who do not.
No matter your views on the threat posed by
international Islamic radicalism, huge excesses
were committed in the name of stopping it — or,
more accurately, the fears it generated were
exploited to empower and entrench existing
financial and political elites. The
Authorization to Use Military Force —
responsible for twenty-years-and-counting
of war — was approved by the House three
days after the 9/11 attack with
just one dissenting vote. The Patriot Act —
which radically expanded government surveillance
powers — was enacted a mere six weeks
after that attack, based on the promise that it
would be temporary and “sunset” in four years.
Like the wars spawned by 9/11, it is still in
full force, virtually never debated any longer
and predictably
expanded far beyond how it was originally
depicted.
The first War on Terror ended up being
wielded primarily on foreign soil but it has
increasingly been imported onto domestic soil
against Americans. This New War on Terror —one that is domestic in name from the start
and carries the explicit purpose of fighting
“extremists” and “domestic terrorists” among
American citizens on U.S. soil — presents the
whole slew of historically familiar dangers when
governments, exploiting media-generated fear and
dangers, arm themselves with the power to
control information, debate, opinion, activism
and protests.
That a new War on Terror is coming is not a
question of speculation and it is not in doubt.
Those who now wield power are saying it
explicitly. The only thing that is in doubt is
how much opposition they will encounter from
those who value basic civic rights more than the
fears of one another being deliberately
cultivated within us.
Glenn Greenwald is a
journalist, constitutional lawyer, and author of
four New York Times bestselling books on
politics and law. His most recent book, “No
Place to Hide,” is about the U.S. surveillance
state and his experiences reporting on the
Snowden documents around the world. Prior to
co-founding The Intercept, Greenwald’s column
was featured in The Guardian and Salon.
In accordance
with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational
purposes. Information Clearing House has no
affiliation whatsoever with the originator of
this article nor is Information ClearingHouse
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)