Fear and Loathing in America

Josh Ebert

Orwell would be scared today. In our time, the government's exploitation of public fear has reached Oceanian proportions. Between the hasty inception of the PATRIOT Act and its grave implications on our countries' civil rights and the unashamed sidestepping of the Constitution by the current president, is heading in an Orwellian spiral to its ruin.

Not since the Red Scare in the 1950s and its "communist menace" has the government's blatant exploitation of the public been so evident. Vague threat warnings are given out to keep everyone alert for the menace that has somehow failed to seriously threaten our nation since the events of September 11. But we all still must stay vigilant, and pay attention to the Terror Alert Level, a fancy color-coded way for the American public to see that terrorism still lurks in the shadows.

Polls are taken on the corporate-owned media that ask questions about terrorism, and the airwaves are full of people bantering about the topic for hours on end. Keep it in play, control the public's knowledge, and ride it out for all it's politically worth. It sounds a lot like 1954 to me.

Everyone knows the phrase "history repeats itself," but we complacently disregard this fact when we excuse the current administration. 50 years after Joseph McCarthy conducted his witch hunts, the government is at it again. Vague terms like "communist sympathizers" have been replaced by the more modern-sounding and important "domestic terrorist". But this time it's serious.

With the saturation of technology into modern society and large corporations owning huge media conglomerates, the government has found all the information control it needs. News of Bush's unprecedented use of signing statements gets brushed aside without a thought, and instead the media focuses on more entertaining stories about mass murderers, sports, and of course, the constant threat of terrorism.

Before, McCarthy could shout at "Communist sympathizers" as loud and as much as he wanted, and through the HUAC he ruined hundreds of honest American's lives. But this time, the McCarthy of our era is in a position to scratch out the Constitution and put laws on the books that will seriously affect the civil rights and freedoms of the American public.

Since its inception in a 2000 election that can only be described as ambiguous, this administration has set its course directly towards the elimination of the American public's voice in government. Section 803a of the PATRIOT Act reads as follows:

"The term 'domestic terrorism' means activities that appear to be intended to influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion…"

Quite ambiguous, but I suppose that's the point. Make a broad net to allow for the capture of the dangerous terrorists, and slide a bit down that slippery slope towards the complete erosion of our nation's core principles. If the public is a little disconcerted about this violation, you gently remind them that terrorism still lurks.

A few months later, the government pushes for a little more power to eliminate it, I mean, so what if the civil rights the legislation eviscerates have successfully guided this nation since it's inception, we wouldn't use our newfangled powers against honest Americans, honest…we're the government.
And by then, it's too late. If we don't stop it, the Orwellian spiral could start here, and I don't want to fathom where it could end.

Published by Josh Ebert

I'm a senior English major at UW-Milwaukee who writes far too seldom.  View profile

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