There
will be no swastikas this time but seas of red, white
and blue flags and Christian crosses. There will be
no stiff-armed salutes, but recitations of the Pledge
of Allegiance. There will be no brown shirts but nocturnal
visits from Homeland Security.
-
Chris
Hedges, “How Democracy Dies: Lessons from a Master”
A
few weeks ago, I came across an ad inviting college graduates
to consider working for Homeland Security. For the college
graduate, strapped with negotiating the repayment of student
loans while struggling with minimum wages as servers at
McDonalds, the starting salary of 35,000 is appealing
and even more so for those with specialized skills in
technology.
These
college graduates are often not war bound as are their
less fortunate “undereducated” and “unskilled” contemporaries.
It is not hard to envision an entry level or managerial
position with Homeland Security.
A
lack of history is the unstated requirement. No Daniel
Ellsberg (after or before the Pentagon Papers) need apply.
And Homeland Security does not have to worry. No Daniel
Ellsberg of any kind will apply—and they know it!
Orwellian
grown-up-children only!
Fairly
familiar with the story of how this government targeted
activists for justice for the purposes of neutralizing
social change, I realized after viewing the documentary
Cointelpro 101 that the Left rarely has presented
the Puerto Rican, the Chicano/Mexicano, Indigenous, and
Black as efforts on the part of the government to destabilize
and silence people of color. The government’s COINTELPRO
program was nothing short of an assault and that assault,
Cointelpro 101 makes clear, was direct, brutal,
and criminal. And why not?
The
collection of campaigns to neutralize the democratic progress
in the U.S., COINTELPRO, is an extension of this nation’s
involvement in the practice of genocide, conquest, colonization,
and enslavement. The continued incarcerations of freedom
fighters after 20 or 30 years as well as the incarceration
of millions of Indigenous, Black, and Chicano/Mexicano
and even the recent FBI raids in Chicago and Minneapolis
targeting predominantly white activists are examples of
the continuation of COINTEPRO today.
The
goal of COINTELPRO was to “sow division and distrust”
among citizens in a nation claiming for itself a model
nation of democracy. COINTELPRO, as this film shows—was/is
not only the criminal activities of a paranoid president
or an even more bizarre FBI chief.
The
producers of Cointelpro 101 (Freedom
Archives, 2010) have assembled documentary footage,
photos, and commentaries from Jose Lopez, Priscilla Falcon,
Ward Churchill, Kathleen Cleaver, Geronimo Pratt, and
others to present the historical and often simultaneous
implementation of U.S. war strategies beginning in the
1950s to conquer the hearts and minds of the core Left
in this nation. Cointelpro 101 does not preach—but
it teaches.
Beginning
(as the film admits) with the “lesser known” story of
the Puerto Rican movement for independence, the U.S. government
since its conquest of Puerto Rico in 1898, sought to eliminate
the peoples’ struggle against colonization and imperialism.
The film’s unflinching representation of the tactics used
by the government leaves no doubt that U.S. citizens were
under attack from within the Empire. Originally, the FBI
targeted the Puerto Rican National Liberation Movement.
But, as Cointelpro 101 shows, what began in Puerto
Rico in the 1950s expanded to include Puerto Rican grassroots
leaders and organizations in major Northern urban areas.
The FBI compiled 165,000 files against Puerto Rican leaders
and organization members. As the Puerto Rican Cultural
Center activist Jose Lopez explains, the FBI had free
reign to infiltrate organizations, blacklist, and arrest,
incarcerate, and kill activists who attempted to protest
against U.S. colonial policies.
By
the early 1970s, the FBI targeted American indifference.
With the aid of the media, the FBI created a red-alert
narrative warning that the “minorities” are coming! Indifference
took a stance against marauders! In turn, as Cointelpro
101 shows, the government green-lighted a pogrom of
infiltrating, wiretapping, framing, and incarcerating
activists groups everywhere and anywhere in the U.S.
The
Chicano/Mexicano struggle for farmer’s and immigration
rights did not begin in the 1960s but an extension of
the conquest of Mexico by the U.S. government. Thanks
to the goodwill of local law enforcement and (yes)
right-winged vigilante groups, the FBI build up its attack—with
willing bedfellows. (The KKK, other pre-Tea Party citizens,
and law enforcement, were, not many years ago, one and
the same militia force, with individuals members of both
groups). As activists Ricardo Romero, Francisco “Kiko”
Martinez, and Professor Falcon comment, this joint operation
became an effective killing machine. Cointelpro 101
presents us with names and photos of freedom fighters,
one after another, (Linda Montoya, an educator, Rito Conales
and Antonio Cordoba, both “riddled” with bullets, Ricardo
Falcon, 22 years old, and six young activists blow to
bits in a car bomb)—outright murdered—most all in the
early 1970s. What crime did these young people commit?
The
“American public” has yet to confront this nation’s practice
of genocide against Indigenous peoples, and few understand
how the government’s assault on the people at Wounded
Knee ultimately resulted in more oppression and the framing
of American Indian Movement members, including Leonard
Peltier. Fewer still understand how the U.S. government
trained and funded “goon squads” to orchestra a reign
of terror predominantly against the elderly leaders and
women and children. (How different is this war tactic
from the one in which citizens in Chile, Guatemala, for
example, are trained at the School of the Americas to
return to their homeland as military and police officials
charged with terror and murder). When young AIM members
were called in to protect the people, the U.S. government
speeded to the reservations with armored tanks and high-powered
weaponry—in support of its hired goon squads—not the elderly,
women, and children. The Constitutional Rights of Indigenous
people was, states Professor Ward Churchill, suspended.
Cointelpro
101 challenges the viewer to recognize the connections
as well-planned and, most important, as Churchill states,
“illegal” destructive strategy to eliminate people, a
strategy no less horrifying than that one executed by
the Nazis in the 1930s and 1940s. In America, Churchill
states, the government waged a counterinsurgent war against
activists. Counterinsurgency, anti-war activist, Laura
Whitehorn added, on U.S. soil is “supposed to be illegal.”
--Not
in America!
But
in America, the strategy to eliminate activists engaged
in the fight for justice and social change had to also
target the American public with a campaign labeling these
activists criminals, conspirators against innocent Americans
and the red, white, and blue. In other words, the American
public had to be eternized by the language government
officials and the media employed to demonize Puerto Rican,
Chicano-Mexicano, Indigenous, and Black activists and
their communities.
Take
cover in your homes while we battle these monsters in
the streets and in their adobes.
COINTELPRO,
the film insists, the U.S. government inflicted violence
and used terror on U.S. citizens (long before 9-11) as
is its strategy against what it perceives as a threat
to its racial, social, and economic dominance anyone else
in the world.
Inspired
by the Civil Rights movement on the Left, these movements
in Puerto Rico, in the Chicano-Mexicano communities, on
Indigenous’ lands challenged their right to free speech,
to organize, and to protest for social change, and the
government’s response involved massive efforts on the
part of hundreds of FBI agents, local law enforcement
operations, and informants. A drugged-out-on-fear American
public did not notice and did not care if the government
cleaned the treasury to pay for an insurgency against
American citizens of color.
The
movement that began in the South, that is, the Hoover
movement, spread throughout the country. J. Edgar Hoover’s
fear of the Civil Rights Movement and its leaders, Malcolm
X and Dr. Martin Luther King, spread, too, to win the
hearts and minds of white America. Because the Civil
Rights Movement, Cointelpro 101 shows, had
the “ability to bring unity and to transform grassroots
movements” into national campaigns, Black leaders had
to be “neutralized.” To understand U.S. history is to
recognize that enslavement of Africans and their descendents
was but one phase in the relationship between Blacks and
the U.S. government. The elimination of an enslaved Black
was costly and therefore employed as a strategy to instill
terror in the masses of Black workers and remove the treat
of terror in the white community. But the effort to neutralize
Black Americans began the minute Southerner confederate
soldiers understood change in the South was on its way,
and free-roaming Blacks on the landscape was not the change
Southern citizens could live with and thrive. The official
policy that spread throughout the U.S. then became one
that encouraged the servitude or the neutralization of
Black Americans.
In
the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, African Americans were the
most visible and vocal population calling for social change.
The work of Stokely Carmichael (Kwame Ture) and Fannie
Lou Hamer drew the attention of the FBI’s COINTEPRO, who,
as former Black Panther Geronimo Pratt explained, organized
an assault that began with SNCC. Other targets of COINTELPRO
included the Black Panthers and RAM. Leaders were expunged—shot
dead—in the streets, in their homes, or in the prisons
as the FBI infiltrated these organizations with agent
provocateurs and informants. Many under surveillance
were framed, charged with “crimes,” and forced to fight
erroneous charges as “criminals.”
The
Department of Justice, according to an ex-FBI agent, “learned
everything and about people in a political organization.”
In 1968, while protesters took to the streets. The Chicago
Police department was organizing the “Red Squad,” and,
as police footage reveals, the function of the Red Squad
was to watch and ultimately infiltrate suspicious Black,
Latino as well as anti-war organizations in order to neutralize
leaders. Former Black Panther Kathleen Cleaver recalls
the Key Agitator Index, in other words, a list of grassroots
and organization leaders the FBI targeted for an early
death.
There
is a moment in Cointelpro 101 when a juror from
the Geronimo Pratt case, faces the camera: “We had no
clue,” she admits, as to what the government could do
or what they did do even tough Vietnam was going on.
You couldn’t believe that your own government was doing
that at home to one of its own citizens, to one of its
own veterans.
Geronimo
Pratt, a Vietnam veteran, joins and the Black Panthers
and becomes an instant target of COINTELPRO.
That
was America then…and this is America now…
Homeland
Security!
“When
those kinds of people are making decisions on what is
politically appropriate for the citizens to do, then we
don’t have a democracy,” states Kathleen Cleaver. COINTELPRO
used taxpayers’ money to operate illegal and criminal
activities, explains Pratt, to declare victims enemies
of the people. Today, taxpayers fund the government’s
strategy to continue expanding its surveillance of an
ever-expanding number of activists and organizations within
its borders and without while it attempts to win the hearts
and minds of the “American public” with narratives profiling
the “enemy.”
The
message: “If you dare to go out and make social change,
you will be punished” (Priscilla Falcon).
Today,
the operation is more sophisticated, states activist attorney
Bob Doyle. “It doesn’t have to be secret anymore.” As
Cointelpro 101 shows, anyone can be charged as
a terrorist today if engaged in radical politics. With
the Patriot Act, adds Cleaver, there need not be a crime.
“People are just investigated, whisked off to prison,
[then] interrogated and tortured.” What was illegal under
COINTELPRO is now legal. “Now, that’s the law.”
Cointelpro
101 shows that the discovery of COINTEPRO files and the
Frank Church investigation barely fazed the government.
How does the government take it upon itself “the supervising
of what is allowed politically and what isn’t allowed
politically?” asked Cleaver.
The
“shoot to kill” suspected American “terrorists” did not
begin under the Obama administration, but Obama’s selection
assured the FBI and other law enforcement agencies that
the business of murdering justice and democracy will progress.
To what? What is that future envisioned by these fellow
citizens?
All
the voices who contribute to Cointelpro 101 agree
in one voice that the U.S. government’s practice of injustice
must be “dismantled” and replaced “with something that
reflects our interests, concern with our well-being, and
reflects a certain sort of respect for the dignity of
our communities and traditions, and us as individuals.”
I
watched COINTELPRO 101 thinking of the students
who, while preparing cover letters and resumes to send
to Homeland Security, inherited a perception of the terrorists
homeland propaganda.
Students
need to view this film.
Cointelpro
101 is a riveting recall of history for anyone who wants
to be inspired to work toward an end to the U.S. practice
of terrorism. Because it was not then: it is happening
still in America!
BlackCommentator.comEditorial Board member, Lenore Jean Daniels, PhD, has a Doctorate
in Modern American Literature/Cultural Theory.Clickhereto contact Dr. Daniels.
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