There is enough fear to go around.
There is fear of the indescribable horror when the ICE men and women,
their faces hidden by masks, grab a suspected illegal immigrant. Their
grab could come at the person's home or place of work, while picking up a
child from school or standing in the hallway of a courthouse.
That person knows fear as never before. That person's life, for
practical purposes, may be over: loved ones left behind, hope shredded.
He or she may be shipped to a place where they won't be able to survive.
Fear is there because, maybe decades ago, they sought a better life and voted for it with their feet.
There is no time to argue, no time to ask why, no time to say goodbye.
No time to prove your innocence or your U.S. citizenship. It is raw fear
— the fear that secret police have always used.
There is the fear of those who work in government — once one of the
securest jobs in the country — that they will be fired because their
legitimate work in another administration is an affront to this one.
This hammer has come down in the Department of Justice, the FBI, the
Department of Homeland Security and the Pentagon. The crime: supposedly
being on the wrong side of history.
There is fear in the universities. Once a babel of free, even outrageous
speech, they are cowed. Mighty Harvard, one of the shiniest stars in
the education firmament, is dulled, and other universities fear they
will be next. Everywhere academics worry that what they say in their
classrooms might be reported as inappropriate — their careers ended.
There is fear in the law firms. A new concept is at work: an advocate is
somehow guilty because of whom they defended. This violates the whole
underpinning of law and advocacy, dating back to Mesopotamia, ancient
Greece and Rome, now asunder in the United States.
Media is afraid. Disney, CBS and The Washington Post have bent before
the fear of retribution, the fear that other aspects of their business
will pay the price for freedom of speech. Journalists fear the First
Amendment is abridged and won't protect them.
There is fear, albeit of a lower order, across corporate America as it
has become apparent that the government can reach deep down into almost
any company, canceling contracts, withholding loan guarantees and,
worse, ordering an "investigation." That is a punishment that costs
untold dollars and shatters good names, even if no prosecution follows.
Elected officeholders have reason to feel fear. President Donald Trump
has suggested that Gov. JB Pritzker of Illinois and Mayor Brandon
Johnson of Chicago should be in jail. Is his compliant DOJ working on
that? Fear is unleashed for the elected. Doing your job is no
protection.
If you have expressed an opinion that could be judged as subversive, the
state could come after you. Suppose you walk in a demonstration,
exercising your constitutional right to assemble and petition? Suppose
you wrote something on social media, so easily traced with AI, which is
now out of step with the times? Satire? Opinion? News? Facts that are
out of fashion? If you have posted, be afraid.
If you take a flight these days, the TSA will ask you to look into a
camera. Then government has a fresh picture of you in its active system,
ready for facial recognition software to identify you. It will ID you
if you should be walking in a demonstration or just be near one. Your
own picture, so easily captured by modern technology, can convict you.
What is the purpose of that picture? It has no bearing on the flight you
are about to take. The same thing is true when you reenter the country
from abroad. Smile for Big Brother.
Surveillance is a favored tool of the authoritarian state. I have seen
it at work in Cuba, in apartheid South Africa and in the Soviet Union.
Successive U.S. administrations have been quick to criticize the
increasing use of technology for surveillance in China. No more.
Troops are being ordered into cities where the locals don't want them.
They come under the promiscuous use of the Insurrection Act of 1807.
Does America fear insurrection? No, but there is fear of federal troops in our cities.
On X: @llewellynking2
Bluesky: @llewellynking.bsky.social
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