America - Soon To Be The
Largest Police State Ever

By Doreen Miller
YellowTimes.org Columnist (US)
7-24
America, humility has never   been thy forte! We are the arrogant masters of the game of one-upmanship in a   nation known for their excess where bigger is better and having more is a   measure of personal status. We are a land of super-sized fries; giant soft   drinks, king-sized burgers and overall superfluous portions, and we have the   mega-sized waistlines to prove it!
We drive the biggest, most wasteful,   gas-guzzling vehicles on the planet. The world's most gluttonous consumers of   natural resources, we spew forth the most pollution of any nation. We live in   homes that are virtual palaces compared to the living quarters of most of the   population in the rest of the world.
We own gargantuan-sized   TV's purchased in city-sized shopping malls. We have many of the world's   tallest skyscrapers and are home to mammoth, predatory corporations. We brag   of having the largest military equipped with the world's most extensive   arsenal of high-tech weapons of mass destruction bar none.
Today, we are standing on   the threshold of the addition of yet another superlative to our long, dubious   list of boasts: soon we are to be the largest police state that has ever   existed. Our government, under the pretext of homeland security, is in the   process of creating a division of secret informants whose scope promises to   far surpass the level of spying achieved by the Stasi, secret police, in   former Communist East Germany.
Brainchild of the   Department of Justice, the Terrorism Information and Prevention System,   otherwise known as Operation TIPS, falls under the Citizen Corps division of   the USA Freedom Corps established earlier this year by executive order.   According to the Citizen Corps website (www.citizencorps.gov), Operation TIPS   will be "a nationwide program giving millions of American truckers,   letter carriers, train conductors, ship captains, utility employees, and   others a formal way to report suspicious terrorist activity."
The pilot stage, set to   begin this August, will be set up in 10 cities across the nation and will   involve 1 million workers whose jobs place them in the unique position to go   where regular law enforcement officials routinely cannot enter without   permission or a warrant - namely, into the homes of unsuspecting U.S.   residents.
Based upon their training   on what to observe and listen for with regards to suspicious and potentially   terrorist-related activities, these volunteers, using a toll-free hotline   number, are expected to report back to the appropriate law enforcement   authorities anything they may have seen or overheard. This information will   then be entered into a database available to the Justice Department, related   agencies and local police forces for future reference or action without the   targeted individuals ever having been made aware of either the existence or   the contents of such a report.
While Operation TIPS is  said to be an expansion and extension of Neighborhood Watch, a popular crime   prevention program in place in many communities throughout the nation, it   ventures far beyond the spirit of any well-intended vigilance against crime   by cutting right into the very sphere and heart of privacy expressed in the   commonly accepted phrase, My home is my castle.
The next cable TV or   dishwasher repairperson who enters your home could now very possibly be a  government spy. Who is to say that your kid's science project - replete with   wires, switches, metal tubes and batteries - laid out on the dining room   table will not be mistaken for the makings of some sort of terrorist bomb? Or   that a copy of The International Socialist Review, a Journal of  Revolutionary Marxism, on one's coffee table will not raise a  suspicious eyebrow and unfounded fears of potentially subversive, unpatriotic   behavior?
Our government officials   have twisted the Miranda Rights which advise you upon arrest that  anything you say, can and shall be used against you in a court of   law to include anything suspicious  you may say, do, listen  to, or read in the privacy of your own home can and will be used against you!
Several civil liberties   groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the   Rutherford Institute, are very much alarmed by the prospect of Operation TIPS  serving to further undermine our Constitutional rights currently under attack   by the USA Patriot Act. In an interview conducted by Bill Berkowitz, ACLU   President Nadine Strossen warns of "potential ethnic and religious scapegoat,"   destructive "fear-mongering, and the erosion of basic civil   liberties in the name of unproven security measures.
The unproven security  measures she is speaking about perhaps refer back to the track record   of the Neighborhood Watch program on which Operation TIPS is based. The   results of most research concerning the effectiveness of Neighborhood Watch   in reducing crime rates have been mixed at best. Although some studies show   some level of success, specifically in terms of burglary and property crimes,   more extensive studies conducted in Chicago came up inconclusive, with some   areas showing decreases, some increases, and some showing no change.   Extensive research done in Minneapolis in the late 80's also found no   significant differences in crime rates.
There is also the strong   possibility that by unproven security measures; Strossen is   alluding to the problems inherent in relying on informants for one's  information. Cited in a July 15 article by Ritt Goldstein, a 1992 report by   Harvard University's Project on Justice calls into serious question the  accepted practice of using informants: The accuracy of informant   reports is problematic, with some informants having embellished the truth,   and others suspected of having fabricated their reports.
Representative Dennis  Kucinich's quote in The Progressive should be regarded not merely as a  statement of observation but as the warning it is: It appears we are   being transformed from an information society to an informant society.  A discerning look back into history reveals that such informant systems have   been the tool of choice among non-democratic states in controlling and   eliminating undesirables within the populace.
At least one branch of our  government service agencies refuses to be part and parcel to this invasion of   our homes and privacy. According to a Bloomberg release in the local Metro   paper, Officials of the U.S. Postal Service have refused to have mail  carriers participate in a government program.... proposed by President Bush as   part of a terrorism prevention program. Even the Washington Post has  voiced its reservations about this highly questionable spy program, It is easy to imagine how such a program might produce little or no useful  information but would flood law enforcement with endless suspicions that   would divert authorities from more promising investigative avenues.
While vigilance is  generally a commendable practice, especially if carried out by caring   neighbors who know and speak to one another and are attuned to the daily  routines within their own neighborhood, Operation TIPS runs the danger of   turning trusted family members, friends, neighbors, hired workers, and public   employees into cynical spies seeking to augment their own egos by being  declared the next U.S. hero for doing their part to turn in   suspicious, unpatriotic, anti-American "terrorists. After all, who among us would not like to be a real, honest-to-goodness,   American hometown hero? No doubt, there are millions of our fellow citizens out there just itching at the chance to be an official spy for Uncle Sam.
More and more, under the  pretense of security measures as dictated by the ever-expanding  reach of the Office of Homeland Security, the USA is becoming a mirror image of   the dreadful, freedom less society so eloquently described in George Orwell's   1984.
It is all the more  imperative that we remain vigilant and outspoken against any and all measures  our government is undertaking to intrude into the private lives of its  citizens, lest we, too, like 1984's Winston Smith, find ourselves one day   furtively writing in a forbidden journal: You had to live - did live,   from the habit that became instinct - in the assumption that every sound you   made was overheard, and, except in darkness, every movement   scrutinized.
Doreen Miller lived,   studied, worked and traveled abroad for several years, and is currently a  Senior Lecturer and educator of international students. She dedicates part of   her time to serving the elderly and Alzheimer patients. Mother, musician and   poet, she pursues an avid interest in Buddhist and Eastern philosophy. She   advocates human rights, social justice, fair trade, and environmental   protection. Doreen lives in the United States.
Doreen Miller encourages   your comments: dmiller@YellowTimes.org
YellowTimes.org encourages   its material to be reproduced, reprinted, or broadcast provided that any such   reproduction must identify the original source, http://www.YellowTimes.org.   Internet web links to http://www.YellowTimes.org are appreciated.
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