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"YOU HAVE NO RIGHTS." Read about it here


Guest Joe S.

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Guest Joe S.

QUOTE

 

Matthew Rothschild walked up to me, introduced himself, and handed me a

fresh-off-the-presses copy of his new book, You Have No Rights. We get an

average of 6 to 8 books a day in the mail (our mail is about a cubic foot a

day, in part because of all the books), and people are always handing me

books at public events, but I remembered Matthew from all the great articles

he's written and his work as editor of the Progressive, and so was both glad

to meet him and curious about what he'd written.

I started reading it on the plane back to Oregon from Washington, DC, and

couldn't put it down.

 

If we don't begin to expose the horrors in this book in a real, meaningful,

national, and highly visible way, democracy is in even worse trouble that I

thought. And, as I said, I thought I knew how bad it really was.

 

It's worse.

 

As the publisher, The New Press, notes in their summary of the book:

 

"I'm very liberal and sometimes my friends say I'm giving them some kind

of paranoid, nutty stuff, and I agree, but then the FBI show up." -- Marc

Schultz, reported to the FBI for reading an article called "Weapons of Mass

Stupidity: Fox News hits a new lowest common denominator" while he stood in

line at a coffee shop.

 

In West Virginia, Renee Jensen put up a yard sign saying "Mr. Bush: You're

Fired." She's questioned by the Secret Service.

 

In Alabama, Lynne Gobbell put a Kerry/Edwards bumper sticker on her car.

She's fired from her job.

 

In Vermont, Tom Treece had his high school students write essays and make

posters either defending or criticizing the Iraq War. After midnight, the

police entered his classroom and took photos of the student artwork.

 

Near Albany, New York, Stephen Downs went to a mall with his son Roger,

and the two of them bought shirts in a T-shirt shop. Downs put his shirt on,

went to eat in the food court -- and was arrested. The T-shirt's message?

"Peace on Earth."

 

Most of these stories don't have the crackling immediacy of the Kent State

shootings or the MSU campus shutdown or Watts burning, but in some ways

they're even more sinister, because they reflect a fundamental change in the

assumptions held by average people of what America is.

 

We're no longer the land of the free and the home of the brave; we're the

land of the fearful and the home of Big Brother. We're no longer the shining

beacon of democracy that inspired nascent democracies for over 200 years;

we're now the example repressive dictatorships use to justify espionage

against and torture of their own citizens. We're no longer a land of laws

governed by We, The People, protected from our government by our

Constitution; we're now a land of "leaders" who claim they owe "no

accountability" to Congress or the people who elect them.

 

Very quickly, under the radar but in a deep and real way, we're moving from

being a liberal democracy to a conservative theocratic corporatist/fascist

state.

 

Because these stories lack the violence of the 1960s, they are all the more

shocking. The subtlety of this transformation is so very Orwellian, so very

much like that imagined by Huxley, that warned of by William Shirer and

Milton Mayer.

 

In a previous book review, I suggested a Rex Stout novel about the private

detective Nero Wolfe, written in the 1950s, in large part because it showed

how back then a citizen could say through a locked door to the police, "Go

away if you don't have a warrant." Today TV shows glorify militarized police

squads kicking in doors, and citizens are arrested for filming police

activity.

 

The America of 2007 is not the America I was born into in 1951, and with

startling rapidity it's not even the America it was in the last year of the

Clinton/Gore presidency just six short years ago. It highlights the banality

of evil.

 

Which is why it's so important for us all to read Matthew Rothschild's book

.... and so vital that we pass it along to those who haven't yet pulled back

the curtain and seen what's going on in the shadows not covered by our

infotainment industry. Buy a copy of this book to read yourself, by all

means, but buy a second to pass along. It's that good.

 

http://www.buzzflash.com/articles/hartmann/016

 

END QUOTE

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