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The
big story is who took the lead here, who created the
story of the crime that was going to ensue, and who
made it happen.�
-
Karen Greenberg, from New York University�s Center on
Law and Security on Democracy Now!
The
world is a dangerous place, not because of those who
do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing.
The
teenaged William O�Neal in 1968 could avoid a felony charge
for interstate care theft and for impersonating a federal
officer if he agreed to assist in the construction of
a narrative, agreed to be a reliable narrator.
So the young O�Neal joins the Black Panthers in Chicago,
and moves through the ranks to become Director of Chapter
Security�and the bodyguard of the chapter�s chairman,
Fred Hampton. O�Neal is the informant who not only drugged
Hampton, but also provided the FBI with a floor plan of
the apartment.
Years
after the police raid on the apartment where Fred Hampton
was murdered in his sleep, the 40-year old O�Neal in 1990
ran from his uncle�s apartment onto the westbound lane
of the Eisenhower Express and was struck by a car. �His
death was ruled a suicide� (Chicago Reader, January
25, 1990). The young nephew, his uncle told the press,
witnessed the carnage in the aftermath of the police raid,
the morning after, and he was shocked: �Bill just stood
there in shock. He never thought it would come to all
this.� He just thought he would cooperate �to reduce his
own potential jail time.� But he was �way over his head�
and�forever tortured by the guilt.�
Similar
characters like O�Neal, from California to Pine Ridge
to New York, vulnerable and petty criminals, had been
useful as reliable narrators for the criminal justice
system in the U.S., collaborating to fine tune the terrorist
narrative of reliable protagonists among targeted
antagonists.� Maybe most lived their lives tortured
by guilt.
But
then 9-11�
The
�American public,� spectators to the arrest, the conviction,
and the incarceration of antagonists, are presented a
narrative of a nation in perpetual danger from homegrown
terrorists�Black, Indigenous, and Latino/a resisters,
anti-war activists, environmentalists, attorneys for Islamic
antagonists. Be on the look out for terrorists among family
members, neighbors, co-workers. Most important, in support
of the current narrative, pay particular interests in
members of the Islamic community. Antagonists today are
young Muslim men (Fort Dix Five) on a trip to Poconos
Mountain in Pennsylvania with family members, and the
first �informant,� a Circuit City clerk who sees �suspicious�
behavior on the family�s video tape of the trip.
In
such an atmosphere, greed fuels a heightened sense of
paranoia.� Rely on the machismo of successive presidents
from Truman to Obama, disseminate narratives of the protagonists
and antagonists for the �American public,� and let the
war-minded-corporations confirm the contracts and tally
the billions.
Anjali
Kamat�s investigative report (�Entrapment or Foiling Terror�)
for Democracy Now!, October 6, 2010, includes an
interview with former FBI agent,� James Wedick. The informant,
today, he states, wants to get rich, fast, and the targeted
community, today, is desperate for cash:
What
they�re looking for is money, because they�re desperate.
They�re looking for a job. They�re looking for some way
to feed their family. And so, they�re there because this
informant is flashing money around, driving a fancy car,
and maybe living in a fancy apartment. And they, too,
want part of that prize.
That
prize: money, apartments with big screen televisions and
state-of-the-art stereo systems and cars equals devotees
of the fantasy that terrorism is without, external.�
More
often, today, the informants, anything but reliable,
are selected from poor communities, individuals struggling
to find employment in this current recession but who are
not predisposed to engaging in terrorist acts�and neither
are the selected antagonists.
The
defense lawyer for the four young men charged with terrorism
in the Newburgh case rightly painted the picture of an
informant who �earned his keep by scoring mosques for
easy targets.� The informant, he adds, �proposed, directed,
supplied, funded and facilitated every aspect of the �terrorist�
plot� (New York Times,� June 15, 2010). Whatever
it takes. Machismo.� Get the job done!
�Terrorist
plot� is placed in quotations, and why not, when plot
and terrorists are manufactured in most of these alleged
attempts to terrorize and kill Americans.� The homegrown
terror narrative deflects attention away from terror
and killing.� Out safety is in jeopardy, so we are
told. Americans are socialized to accept and to acknowledge
these narratives as evidence of the truth about
terrorism.
How
else to continue war and spend trillions on maintaining
�democracy� in the U.S. and on securing �democracy� in
Afghanistan, Iraq, and Pakistan? Terrorism is profitable
for corporations in the war on terrorism business. Whose
narrative controls government policies and lobbies for
their interests in terrorist agencies and their operatives?
Ironically, the antagonists in the Newburgh case
are charged with conspiracy and the attempt �to use weapons
of mass destruction and antiaircraft missiles� (New
York Times). This is the �American Dream� dying in
a halo of confusion and agony�
�And
the death of capitalism is not far behind. We simply cannot
continue this way!�
Concluding
his interview with Democracy Now! journalist, Kamat,
Wedick argues against the informant industry in the U.S.
He states,
You
just can�t continue to, you know, to get a select group
of people who are responsible for petty crimes, give them
huge amounts of money, and send them into a small minority
community� and not expect an explosion to happen, because
they�re desperate for money and the informant is offering
huge rewards.
�Desperate
because of the recession,� Wedick adds, desperate because
they are out of work, people�neighbors, co-workers, family
members�are forced to manufacture crimes under the command
of government workers who, themselves, want to hold on
to jobs and careers�because, as they echo now,
�because of the recession.�
Truth,
as Tiokasin Ghosthorse, (WBAI, First Voices host)
noted, is no longer considered a power in and of itself.�
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Lenore Jean Daniels, PhD, has a Doctorate
in Modern American Literature/Cultural Theory. Click here to contact Dr. Daniels.
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Oct 14, 2010 - Issue 397 |
is
published every Thursday |
Est. April 5, 2002 |
Executive Editor:
David A. Love, JD |
Managing Editor:
Nancy Littlefield, MBA |
Publisher:
Peter Gamble |
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