In fascist America, thought crimes are prosecutable
By Bev Conover
Online
Journal Editor & Publisher
Jul 11, 2006, 01:01
Engage in certain types of talk and you can be arrested for
thought crimes.
Whether they are gathered in a Miami warehouse or an
Internet chatroom, if males, especially those of swarthy complexions, engage in
big talk about doing evil things, even if they have neither the means nor
expertise to carry them out, they stand the chance of being arrested and
charged with being terrorists by US authorities.
On the other hand, if an estranged husband or boyfriend
threatens to kill his wife or girlfriend, police maintain they can do nothing
until he takes action, which oftentimes means the woman winds up brutally
beaten or dead. In the meantime, the only recourse the woman has is to seek a
restraining order that, as often as not, turns out to be meaningless.
Does that mean a woman's life has less value than groups of
males who titillate themselves with talk of blowing up the Sears Tower in
Chicago or the Holland Tunnel connecting New York and New Jersey?
Oh, says the Bushies, we can't wait to find out if these
guys are going to carry out their plots and never mind that we send in
infiltrators to encourage their pipe dreams.
"We don't wait until someone has lit the fuse to step
in," Homeland [In]Security Secretary Michael Chertoff was quoted by the New York Times as
saying at a news conference last Friday about the "New York plot."
Of course, they don't call them "thought crimes"
arrests. They call them "preemptive action." And while it's viewed as
a feather in George W.'s bogus "war on terror" cap if those arrested
are convicted of something -- and a number of the 261 "preemptively"
arrested and charged have been "persuaded" to cop pleas to some
lesser charge, which still makes the "terrorist" label stick --
convictions are not all that important.
Why Rep. Peter King (R-NY), chairman of the House Homeland
[In]Security Committee, told the Associated
Press (AP), "You may end up not winning it in court, but you get a bad
guy off the street."
A bad guy? A person who hasn't done anything but shoot off
his mouth?
The AP reported, "Law enforcers, they said, are now
willing to act swiftly against al-Qaida sympathizers, even if it means grabbing
wannabe terrorists whose plots may be only pipe dreams."
Ah yes, "al CIAduh sympathizers." Now that's
enough to give any red-blooded American the chills.
If swarthy men can be arrested for pipe dreams, what about
that emaciated blond, who shall remain nameless to deprive her of more
publicity, that has repeatedly called for the death of people and even went so
far as to say it was a shame Timothy McVeigh didn't blow up the New York Times
Building? Hmm? What about the not so good reverends, Falwell and Robertson, who
have called for all sorts of madness and mayhem? Roberston even called for the
assassination of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. And the list goes on and on
. . . What about them, huh? Are theirs approved "pipe dreams?"
Oh my, lawyers have the audacity to question the arresting
of people for thought crimes.
New York defense lawyer Martin R. Stolar told the Times,
"Talk without any kind of an action means nothing. You start to
criminalize people who are not really criminals."
Golly gee, no kidding? We have been criminalizing people for
nonsense for years. Remember when you could have your property confiscated if a
passenger dropped a marijuana seed in your car? And when we weren't arresting
them for that, we were arresting the cash they were carrying if law enforcement
thought the amount was too much (they had to be planning to spend it on
something not good, right?).
Congress even passed a law making it a crime to threaten the
president (back when we had one). Like the average person can walk right up to
a prez. But shoot off your mouth in public about how you'd like to do some
bodily harm to the occupant of the Oval Office and some upstanding citizen will
be on the phone to the Secret Service who will come and whisk you away.
University of Richmond (Va.) law professor Carl W. Tobias
wonders if there is politics is a factor in arresting pipe dreamers on
terrorism charges.
Tobias told the Times, "There is some kind of public
relations gained by making Americans on the one hand feel concerned that the
Sears Tower in Chicago or some tunnel in Manhattan is targeted yet on the other
hand feel comforted that the government is on top of it."
That's called playing the fear card, professor. It's a great
diversionary tactic. The first Homeland [In]Security secretary, Tom Ridge, was
very good at it with his color-coded "terror" alerts, which he raised
and lowered in accordance with the amount of doo-doo Bush stepped in at a given
time. His successor, Chertoff, is even better at it.
Instead of fooling around with color-coded alerts, Chertoff
goes for raw meat: arresting a bunch of loose talking dreamers who would love
to harm us, but lack the money, the tools and the ability to do so. But it
plays well to the flag-waving, "God Bless America" crowd and keeps
the rest of the clueless in check so they don't notice how the arrests of
"wannabe terrorist" coincide with Bush's poll numbers.
Face it, folks, Larry Pinkney
is right. Fascism is an American reality. Today, it's mostly swarthy men being arrested
for thought crimes. Tomorrow, it can be you.
Remember
former White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer warned that Americans "need
to watch what they say, watch what they do."
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