With
an administration in Washington that is hell-bent on curbing any
influence that the people might have on national policy, the powers
that be are having some trouble carrying out their full program of
oppressive actions.
What
to do? Why, just allow the states to do their dirty business for
them. For example, just recently, Wyoming became the third state to
consider a bill that would criminalize protests against pipelines.
The genesis of the anti-First Amendment legislation was the bravery
of the water protectors of the Standing Rock Reservation and the
thousands of their supporters who came from all parts of the country.
The right-wing politicians (most of the Republicans and some
Democrats) became alarmed that the people, defending what it theirs,
could bring to a (temporary) halt the grinding of industrial
America’s monstrous wheels and resolved to put a stop to it.
The other two states that have criminalized protest and protection
are Iowa and Ohio, with the former having already enacted a law
against “impeding” the progress of gigantic oil, gas, and
other mineral corporations.
State
and the federal government have come up with a name for the citizenry
who dare to challenge the power of corporations: “ecoterrorists.”
By designating demonstrating citizens as terrorists, all bets are
off. The world has seen what America has done to “terrorists”
in other countries, where the people have tried to resist the plunder
of their countries’ resources by the U.S. and other rich
nations. Often in recent years, in many countries, the U.S. has
taken out innocent people under the guise of killing terrorists. And
it has been done in the tens of thousands. Think of Iraq,
Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria, Yemen, Libya, and many other
places where the military and CIA have detected terrorists. Much of
the killing done, whether by U.S. forces or American surrogates, is
considered “collateral damage.” The elderly, the sick,
and the children just happen to be in the wrong place at the wrong
time.
The
Wyoming legislation is taken from the model bill that was prepared by
the American Legislative Exchange Council, the right-wing
organization that is funded by billionaires and millionaires, who
have been working to gain control over the electoral and legislative
processes of the U.S. Funded by the likes of Charles Koch and David
Koch of Koch Industries, one of the richest and most polluting
corporations in the country, ALEC has spread their benefactors’
wealth around, hired researchers and PR people and sent their
lobbyists with bags full of money to Congress, to state politicians
and to more local levels of government.
ALEC’s
financial largesse has paid off in places of power in many states,
the proposed Wyoming law being just one example. There are many
examples in other states, where corporations wish to nullify many of
the regulations that protect citizens and their environment, just so
they can keep piling up profits. Since they have a very good
deregulating friend in the White House, they expect that they will
continue to destroy protective regulations that have taken citizen
groups decades to achieve. With the stroke of a pen (and lots of
lobbying money), they will have their way with both the environment
and the people.
According
to DeSmogBlog, Wyoming’s protestor-terrorist
law “makes ‘impeding critical infrastructure…a
felony punishable by imprisonment for not more than ten (10) years, a
fine of not more than one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000), or
both.’” Two GOP senators who sponsored the bill, Nathan
Winters and Eli Bebout are ALEC members and helped it pass
unanimously out of the Judiciary Committee and it is about to move to
the full floor. If passed, as is, there are even some Republican
lawmakers who are wary of such a draconian measure. It’s bad
enough that there might be such heavy punishments in fines and
imprisonment, but what will the result and the attitude of enforcers
be on the line, when the police (or the military) are confronted by a
crowd of “terrorists.” Rubber bullets and tear gas can
kill, too, but the prospect of using live ammunition on demonstrators
is always a possibility, especially when there is a law that can be
used to say, “Those people are terrorists.”
What
the authorities say is that the Standing Rock demonstrations involved
violence, and some were armed with knives and guns. It’s easy
to see how that argument can be so easily raised, given the habit of
police and other law enforcement agencies of acting as provocative
agents in groups that they wish to eliminate. One of the first that
comes to mind is the Black Panthers. The test of the new law will be
the first time a large group gathers to try to stop yet another
pipeline or fracking field in an ecologically sensitive area. One of
the banners that was held up by the Standing Rock protestors said,
“Defend the Sacred.” Anyone can see that, in the eyes of
the current administration, the Republican Party, and Corporate
America, nothing is sacred.
In
another expected attack on freedom of speech and freedom of
association is the annual conference this week of the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), which is meeting in Washington,
D.C. The Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) describes AIPAC’s number
one policy priority as “silencing you and me by jamming through
the Israel Anti-Boycott Act, which would further criminalize
boycotts, an essential tool for creating free and democratic
societies, here in the U.S., and in Palestine/Israel.”
JVP
describes the speaker list as a “Who’s Who of the
American and Israeli far right,” featuring such officials as
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Vice President Mike Pence,
U.S. Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, and U.N. Ambassador Nikki
Haley. These are people who wield great power to curb the rights of
people, both through influence and legislation and they are working
on killing the BDS movement (Boycott, Divest, and Sanction) that is
attempting to stop the gross human rights violations that occur as
policy by Israel against the Palestinians.
Many
lawmakers in the U.S. have wanted to pass a law that would
criminalize participation or support of BDS by an individual or
organization. The Intercept (theintercept.com) had this to say about
such a law last summer:
“The
criminalization of political speech and activism against Israel has
become one of the gravest threats to free speech in the West. In
France, activists have been arrested and prosecuted for wearing
T-shirts advocating a boycott of Israel. The U.K. has enacted a
series of measures designed to outlaw such activism. In the U.S.,
governors compete with one another over who can implement the most
extreme regulations to bar businesses from participating in any
boycotts aimed even at Israeli settlements, which the world regards
as illegal.
“On
U.S. campuses, punishment of pro-Palestinian students for expressing
criticisms of Israel is so commonplace that the Center for
Constitutional Rights refers to it as ‘the Palestine Exception’
to free speech.”
Politicians
of every stripe are accepting such laws as routine business,
disregarding the disruption to the lives of ordinary citizens to take
a political stand, when such draconian punishments are meted out to
people who have to work for a living and have little or no extra
money to spend on lawyers and court costs or fines. One example of
this is the sweep of the demonstrations in Washington during the
inauguration of Donald Trump. Hundreds were detained and many of
them charged, even if they never participated in violent or
destructive behavior during the rallies. Many, if not most, of them
were released, but many continued to be charged with serious crimes,
including some reporters, and a year later, are awaiting trials.
Even though, in a just world, they would be found innocent, their
lives have been disrupted for a year.
That
this is being carried out at all is an indication that both law
enforcement and elected officials, including the Congress and the
White House, hope that actions like this in violation of the
constitutional rights of citizens will serve as a warning to the
public at large that they should be very hesitant to express their
First Amendment rights: Freedom of Speech, Freedom of the Press,
Freedom to Associate, Freedom to Petition the Government for Redress
of Grievances. And, perhaps most important of all, Freedom to
Protest in the streets, since that is the only place they are able to
confront politicians and officials who are responsible for their
grievances. Those same officials and politicians are protected by
layers of underlings and the security-heavy “hallowed halls”
of the legislative buildings, federal, state, and local.
What’s
in a name? Last summer a leaked FBI document surfaced and provided a
new name for what they might see as persons to be watched (or more),
“black identity extremist” (BIE), an FBI designation
describing allegedly violent black civil liberty activism. It
remains to be seen whether the appellation was designed specifically
for the Black Lives Matter movement, but it looks a lot like that,
such that the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement
Executives has said that the FBI’s designation is “ill
advised.” In sum, it is another way to dampen or eliminate the
BLM movement participants in their exercise of First Amendment
rights.
Finally,
since this is just skimming the surface of the trashing of American
citizens’ constitutional rights, this week’s case before
the Supreme Court, Janus v. AFSCME, is just the latest battle
in Corporate America’s war on workers and their unions. The
case involves a worker who does not want to pay his fair share to the
union, although he benefits from the work that the union has done to
bring him his pay, health care, paid vacations, paid sick leave, paid
holidays, and so much more. He (through his lawyers and his rich
corporate backers) has said that a requirement that he pay a “fair
share” or equivalent of dues, even though he refuses to be a
member, is a violation of his First Amendment rights.
Corporate types know
that, if the U.S. Supreme Court rules that Janus’s First
Amendment rights are compromised by the collection of a fair share,
it might open the flood gates of workers who also want to be free
riders on the backs of those who pay dues. That’s why the
rich, corporations, and right-wing politicians have relentlessly
pursued their war against the workers, always claiming that they are
just protecting them from the unions. Unions are the epitome of the
people’s First Amendment right to associate and work for better
pay, benefits, and pensions, as well as safer working conditions.
That is what is at stake.
(Disclosure:
I was a staffer for AFSCME International for many years.)
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