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Thread: Sheep Led to the Slaughter: The Muzzling of Free Speech in America

  1. #1

    Sheep Led to the Slaughter: The Muzzling of Free Speech in America

    Sheep Led to the Slaughter: The Muzzling of Free Speech in America

    “If the freedom of speech be taken away, then dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep to the slaughter.”—George Washington

    The architects of the American police state must think we’re idiots.

    With every passing day, we’re being moved further down the road towards a totalitarian society characterized by government censorship, violence, corruption, hypocrisy and intolerance, all packaged for our supposed benefit in the Orwellian doublespeak of national security, tolerance and so-called “government speech.”

    Long gone are the days when advocates of free speech could prevail in a case such as Tinker v. Des Moines. Indeed, it’s been 50 years since 13-year-old Mary Beth Tinker was suspended for wearing a black armband to school in protest of the Vietnam War. In taking up her case, the US Supreme Court declared that students do not “shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate.”

    Were Tinker to make its way through the courts today, it would have to overcome the many hurdles being placed in the path of those attempting to voice sentiments that may be construed as unpopular, offensive, conspiratorial, violent, threatening or anti-government.

    Consider, if you will, that the US Supreme Court, historically a champion of the First Amendment, has declared that citizens can exercise their right to free speech everywhere it’s lawful—online, in social media, on a public sidewalk, etc.—as long as they don’t do so in front of the Court itself.

    What is the rationale for upholding this ban on expressive activity on the Supreme Court plaza?

    “Allowing demonstrations directed at the Court, on the Court’s own front terrace, would tend to yield the…impression…of a Court engaged with — and potentially vulnerable to — outside entreaties by the public.”

    Translation: The appellate court that issued that particular ruling in Hodge v. Talkin actually wants us to believe that the Court is so impressionable that the justices could be swayed by the sight of a single man, civil rights activist Harold Hodge, standing alone and silent in the snow in a 20,000 square-foot space in front of the Supreme Court building wearing a small sign protesting the toll the police state is taking on the lives of black and Hispanic Americans.

    My friends, we’re being played for fools.

    The Supreme Court is not going to be swayed by you or me or Harold Hodge.

    For that matter, the justices—all of whom hail from one of two Ivy League schools (Harvard or Yale) and most of whom are now millionaires and enjoy such rarefied privileges as lifetime employment, security details, ample vacations and travel perks—are anything but impartial.

    If they are partial, it is to those with whom they are on intimate terms: with Corporate America and the governmental elite who answer to them, and they show their favor by investing in their businesses, socializing at their events, and generally marching in lockstep with their values and desires in and out of the courtroom.

    To suggest that Harold Hodge, standing in front of the Supreme Court building on a day when the Court was not in session hearing arguments or issuing rulings, is a threat to the Court’s neutrality, while their dalliances with Corporate America is not, is utter hypocrisy.

    Making matters worse, the Supreme Court has the effrontery to suggest that the government can discriminate freely against First Amendment activity that takes place within a government forum. Justifying such discrimination as “government speech,” the Court ruled that the Texas Dept. of Motor Vehicles could refuse to issue specialty license plate designs featuring a Confederate battle flag because it was offensive.

    If it were just the courts suppressing free speech, that would be one thing to worry about, but First Amendment activities are being pummeled, punched, kicked, choked, chained and generally gagged all across the country.

    The reasons for such censorship vary widely from political correctness, safety concerns and bullying to national security and hate crimes but the end result remains the same: the complete eradication of what Benjamin Franklin referred to as the “principal pillar of a free government.”

    Officials at the University of Tennessee, for instance, recently introduced an Orwellian policy that would prohibit students from using gender specific pronouns and be more inclusive by using gender “neutral” pronouns such as ze, hir, zir, xe, xem and xyr, rather than he, she, him or her.

    On many college campuses, declaring that “America is the land of opportunity” or asking someone “Where were you born?” are now considered microaggressions, “small actions or word choices that seem on their face to have no malicious intent but that are thought of as a kind of violence nonetheless.” Trigger warnings are also being used to alert students to any material or ideas they might read, see or hear that might upset them.

    More than 50 percent of the nation’s colleges, including Boston University, Harvard University, Columbia University and Georgetown University, subscribe to “red light” speech policies that restrict or ban so-called offensive speech, or limit speakers to designated areas on campus. The campus climate has become so hypersensitive that comedians such as Chris Rock and Jerry Seinfeld refuse to perform stand-up routines to college crowds anymore.

    What we are witnessing is an environment in which political correctness has given rise to “vindictive protectiveness,” a term coined by social psychologist Jonathan Haidt and educational First Amendment activist Greg Lukianoff. It refers to a society in which “everyone must think twice before speaking up, lest they face charges of insensitivity, aggression or worse.”

    This is particularly evident in the public schools where students are insulated from anything—words, ideas and images—that might create unease or offense. For instance, the thought police at schools in Charleston, South Carolina, have instituted a ban on displaying the Confederate flag on clothing, jewelry and even cars on campus.

    Added to this is a growing list of programs, policies, laws and cultural taboos that defy the First Amendment’s safeguards for expressive speech and activity. Yet as First Amendment scholar Robert Richards points out, “The categories of speech that fall outside of [the First Amendment’s] protection are obscenity, child pornography, defamation, incitement to violence and true threats of violence. Even in those categories, there are tests that have to be met in order for the speech to be illegal. Beyond that, we are free to speak.”

    Technically, Richards is correct. On paper, we are free to speak.

    In reality, however, we are only as free to speak as a government official may allow.

    Free speech zones, bubble zones, trespass zones, anti-bullying legislation, zero tolerance policies, hate crime laws and a host of other legalistic maladies dreamed up by politicians and prosecutors have conspired to corrode our core freedoms.

    As a result, we are no longer a nation of constitutional purists for whom the Bill of Rights serves as the ultimate authority. As I make clear in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People, we have litigated and legislated our way into a new governmental framework where the dictates of petty bureaucrats carry greater weight than the inalienable rights of the citizenry.

    It may seem trivial to be debating the merits of free speech at a time when unarmed citizens are being shot, stripped, searched, choked, beaten and tasered by police for little more than daring to frown, smile, question, challenge an order, or just breathe.

    However, while the First Amendment provides no tangible protection against a gun wielded by a government agent, nor will it save you from being wrongly arrested or illegally searched, or having your property seized in order to fatten the wallets of government agencies, without the First Amendment, we are utterly helpless.

    It’s not just about the right to speak freely, or pray freely, or assemble freely, or petition the government for a redress of grievances, or have a free press. The unspoken freedom enshrined in the First Amendment is the right to think freely and openly debate issues without being muzzled or treated like a criminal.

    Just as surveillance has been shown to “stifle and smother dissent, keeping a populace cowed by fear,” government censorship gives rise to self-censorship, breeds compliance and makes independent thought all but impossible.

    In the end, censorship and political correctness not only produce people that cannot speak for themselves but also people who cannot think for themselves. And a citizenry that can’t think for itself is a citizenry that will neither rebel against the government’s dictates nor revolt against the government’s tyranny.

    The end result: a nation of sheep who willingly line up for the slaughterhouse.

    The cluttered cultural American landscape today is one in which people are so distracted by the military-surveillance-entertainment complex that critical thinkers are in the minority and frank, unfiltered, uncensored speech is considered uncivil, uncouth and unacceptable.

    That’s the point, of course.

    The architects, engineers and lever-pullers who run the American police state want us to remain deaf, dumb and silent. They want our children raised on a vapid diet of utter nonsense, where common sense is in short supply and the only viewpoint that matters is the government’s.

    We are becoming a nation of idiots, encouraged to spout political drivel and little else.

    In so doing, we have adopted the lexicon of Newspeak, the official language of George Orwell’s fictional Oceania, which was “designed not to extend but to diminish the range of thought.” As Orwell explained in 1984, “The purpose of Newspeak was not only to provide a medium of expression for the world-view and mental habits proper to the devotees of IngSoc [the state ideology of Oceania], but to make all other modes of thought impossible.”

    If Orwell envisioned the future as a boot stamping on a human face, a fair representation of our present day might well be a muzzle on that same human face.

    If we’re to have any hope for the future, it will rest with those ill-mannered, bad-tempered, uncivil, discourteous few who are disenchanted enough with the status quo to tell the government to go to hell using every nonviolent means available.

    However, as Orwell warned, you cannot become conscious until you rebel.
    http://www.rutherford.org/publicatio...ech_in_america



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  3. #2
    Here's one I never understood:

    "No campaigning within 100 feet of polling place."

    At 101 feet away, you can hold up a campaign sign, and you're just dandy. At 100 feet or less you're breaking the law.

    Now, I'm sure you wouldn't want someone sitting in the polling booth with you trying to tell you what button to press, but the distance thing seems so arbitrary.

    Hurry sway their votes before they cross the 100 foot line!!!!! HUURRRRRRYYYY!!! . . . Nooooo!!!! He tagged base! He's in the safe zone.
    Quote Originally Posted by timosman View Post
    This is getting silly.
    Quote Originally Posted by Swordsmyth View Post
    It started silly.
    T.S. Eliot's The Hollow Men

    "One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors." - Plato

    We Are Running Out of Time - Mini Me

    Quote Originally Posted by Philhelm
    I part ways with "libertarianism" when it transitions from ideology grounded in logic into self-defeating autism for the sake of ideological purity.

  4. #3
    While I am personally happy that I have not been locked up, tortured, or murdered as a result of my public criticism of the government, I think that free speech is nearly useless as a check on government power. It hasn't done much so far, has it? The professional predators who use government as a tool of plunder figured out long ago that free speech was no threat to their scam. Indeed, they use it to their own advantage. Free speech only works if people listen, think, and act. The truth is that the vast majority do none of the three.

    Free speech and democracy are now the hallmarks of a free society, but they are just as often the tools of tyranny as not.
    Last edited by Acala; 09-03-2015 at 09:39 AM.
    The proper concern of society is the preservation of individual freedom; the proper concern of the individual is the harmony of society.

    "Who would be free, themselves must strike the blow." - Byron

    "Who overcomes by force, hath overcome but half his foe." - Milton

  5. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by nobody's_hero View Post
    Here's one I never understood:

    "No campaigning within 100 feet of polling place."

    At 101 feet away, you can hold up a campaign sign, and you're just dandy. At 100 feet or less you're breaking the law.

    Now, I'm sure you wouldn't want someone sitting in the polling booth with you trying to tell you what button to press, but the distance thing seems so arbitrary.

    Hurry sway their votes before they cross the 100 foot line!!!!! HUURRRRRRYYYY!!! . . . Nooooo!!!! He tagged base! He's in the safe zone.
    That was to prevent people being mobbed while trying to get in the door. Have you ever gone abroad and been surrounded by pickpockets? It's enough to convince some people that voting is too much trouble.

    Quote Originally Posted by Acala View Post
    While I am personally happy that I have not been locked up, tortured, or murdered as a result of my public criticism of the government, I think that free speech is nearly useless as a check on government power. It hasn't done much so far, has it? The professional predators who use government as a tool of plunder figured out long ago that free speech was no threat to their scam. Indeed, they use it to their own advantage. Free speech only works if people listen, think, and act. The truth is that the vast majority do none of the three.

    Free speech and democracy are now the hallmarks of a free society, but they are just as often the tools of tyranny as not.
    Oh, free speech used to work extremely well, before the rise of media empires and the perfection of Television As Brainwasher. And before money somehow became speech, and corporations somehow got more right to speak freely than citizens do.

    Just because something doesn't seem to be working now does not mean it never did. Take the long view. If something used to work, then stopped working, don't throw it out. First see what's interfering with it these days, and see if you can remove that and make it work again.
    Quote Originally Posted by Swordsmyth View Post
    You only want the freedoms that will undermine the nation and lead to the destruction of liberty.

  6. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by acptulsa View Post
    Oh, free speech used to work extremely well.
    When was that exactly? It certainly would have to be well before the American Civil War.
    The proper concern of society is the preservation of individual freedom; the proper concern of the individual is the harmony of society.

    "Who would be free, themselves must strike the blow." - Byron

    "Who overcomes by force, hath overcome but half his foe." - Milton

  7. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by nobody's_hero View Post
    Here's one I never understood:

    "No campaigning within 100 feet of polling place."

    At 101 feet away, you can hold up a campaign sign, and you're just dandy. At 100 feet or less you're breaking the law.

    Now, I'm sure you wouldn't want someone sitting in the polling booth with you trying to tell you what button to press, but the distance thing seems so arbitrary.

    Hurry sway their votes before they cross the 100 foot line!!!!! HUURRRRRRYYYY!!! . . . Nooooo!!!! He tagged base! He's in the safe zone.
    It IS arbitrary. The other option is a law like "you must keep a reasonable and prudent distance from the voters", which would just end up with confusion, followed by court cases, followed by some arbitrary number (like, say, 100 feet?) being decided by a judge who has to decide a rule for what "reasonable and prudent" means.
    The more prohibitions you have,
    the less virtuous people will be.
    The more weapons you have,
    the less secure people will be.
    The more subsidies you have,
    the less self-reliant people will be.

    Therefore the Master says:
    I let go of the law,
    and people become honest.
    I let go of economics,
    and people become prosperous.
    I let go of religion,
    and people become serene.
    I let go of all desire for the common good,
    and the good becomes common as grass.

    -Tao Te Ching, Section 57

  8. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by jonhowe View Post
    It IS arbitrary. The other option is a law like "you must keep a reasonable and prudent distance from the voters", which would just end up with confusion, followed by court cases, followed by some arbitrary number (like, say, 100 feet?) being decided by a judge who has to decide a rule for what "reasonable and prudent" means.
    And the whole dispute comes off as being really important - balancing the sacred right to vote against the sacred right to speech. False gods, I say!!!!
    The proper concern of society is the preservation of individual freedom; the proper concern of the individual is the harmony of society.

    "Who would be free, themselves must strike the blow." - Byron

    "Who overcomes by force, hath overcome but half his foe." - Milton

  9. #8
    Wow!! Nail on head...
    BEWARE THE CULT OF "GOVERNMENT"

    Christian Anarchy - Our Only Hope For Liberty In Our Lifetime!
    Sonmi 451: Truth is singular. Its "versions" are mistruths.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:ChristianAnarchist

    Use an internet archive site like
    THIS ONE
    to archive the article and create the link to the article content instead.



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