The
Collaborators Song
by
William Norman Grigg
by William Norman Grigg
The
scene
is one familiar to many, if not most, American males of a certain
age.
Colonel Ernesto
Bella, the Cuban military ruler of Soviet-occupied Calumet, Colorado,
is patiently interrogating Mayor Bates, who since he poses no
threat is permitted the continued use of his official title (even
though Bella has appropriated the Mayor's limousine).
The subject
is the whereabouts of Bates' son, Daryl, and several other local
teenagers suspected of staging guerrilla attacks on the occupation
troops. "Daryl, he wouldn't hurt a fly," Bates insists in a voice
heavily flavored with the bogus bonhomie that comes naturally to
politicians. "I know my son, Colonel. He's not the guerrilla type."
Col. Bella
is not convinced. "According to records, Mayor, your son is a prominent
student leader," the Cuban points out. "Yes, well, he's a leader,
but not in a violent or physical way," Bates stammers. "He's more
of a politician, like his father. He's not a troublemaker "
"Then who is?"
interjects Col. Bella, who, weary of Bates's piscine
floundering, skewers him with a barbed look.
After taking
a moment to catch his breath and collect his scattered wits, Bates
offers an answer he knows will please his masters, and probably
lead to the death of some former friends.
"Well, let's
just say it runs in some of the families," he replies as he contorts
his face into a caricature of a politician's confident smile.
Bella, not
even attempting to hide his disgust, responds with a derisive chuckle.
"This community
is indeed fortunate to have a shepherd like him," Bella comments
to his aide-de-camp, scorn oozing from every syllable.
Deflated yet
determined to play out his chosen role, Bates tries to clothe his
naked collaboration in the robes of respectable "moderation": "Well,
I just want to see this thing through, Colonel."
Shortly thereafter
we see Bella presiding over the execution of a large group of "troublemakers,"
who are gunned down in a ditch at the outskirts of town. They remain
defiant to their last mortal breath, which they use to hurl the
strains of "America the Beautiful" into the face of their murderers.
Standing, appropriately
enough, at Bella's side or, more exactly, at his heel is Mayor
Bates, who had been dragged along to see his handiwork primarily
as an object lesson regarding his fate should be somehow manage
to overcome his canine servility.
The premise
of the movie from which those scenes are drawn, the 1984 jingo-fest
Red Dawn, is the conquest of the Midwestern United States
by a Soviet/Cuban/Nicaraguan invasion force. Wildly implausible
at the time, that storyline has not gained credibility over the
past quarter-century. However, the movie's depiction of young, athletic
mountain boys harrying and wearing down a vastly superior military
force through guerrilla tactics in some ways foretold the eventual
defeat of Soviet forces in Afghanistan, and Washington's impending
defeat there as well.
In addition
to presenting a creditable dramatization of fourth generation warfare,
the movie also offers some valid insights regarding the tactics
employed by totalitarian rulers and those who oppose them.
While it's
profoundly doubtful that Americans will be ground beneath the heel
of a Russian-led occupation force, there's a growing likelihood
that the government ruling us a quasi-socialist kleptocracy supported
by a militarized proto-police state will metastasize into undisguised
totalitarianism.
Every totalitarian
system, whether imposed through military conquest or internal subversion,
requires the services of people like the gelatinous Mayor Bates
those who have spent their lives seeking power and the favor of
those who exercise it, and are willing to betray anybody and everybody
in order to remain personally secure once power is in the hands
of those who are utterly ruthless.
The common
refrain of such people the Collaborator's Song, as it were is
always some variation on the theme of "I just want to see this thing
through."
A different
take on that treacherous tune was performed by the character of
Max Detweiler in The Sound of Music, a melodramatic adaptation
of the true story of Austria's Trapp
Family.
Since that
film is tragically disfigured by song and dance numbers (guys prefer
battlefield choreography set to the music of gunfire, punctuated
by occasional explosions) its surprisingly strong message about
resistance to totalitarian subversion is largely unknown to the
male film audience.
The story is
set in Austria just prior to the Anschluss, an event anticipated
with dread by Austrian patriots such as Capt. von Trapp and
eagerness by the loathsome likes of Herr
Zeller, an arrogant little functionary who would become gauleiter
once the Nazis were in power. Caught in between were many like the
wealthy Herr Detweiler, the self-appointed promoter of the von Trapp
Family Singers.
Max was frustrated
by Capt. von Trapp's reluctance to permit his children to sing in
public, but terrified by his refusal to accommodate the Nazis in
any way once the betrayal of his country was consummated.
When the Nazis
sent the Captain a conscription notice, Max took aside Maria, the
family's once-time governess who became the Captain's wife, and
urged her to use her influence to moderate the Captain's views.
"He's got to
at least pretend to work with these people," Max admonished
Maria. "You must convince him."
"I can't ask
him to be less than he is," replied Maria with quiet pride.
To his credit,
Max did aid the Captain and their large family in their escape from
their Nazi-dominated homeland. To his shame, Max like many thousands
of his countrymen helped make the betrayal of their homeland possible
by "pretending" to work with the enemy, rather than refusing to
cooperate.
Unabashed collaborators
like Mayor Bates or their real-life versions, like
the much-debated Malinche are relatively few in number. Those
of the Max Detweiler type are quite common, and many of them despite
their best efforts at maintaining the pretense of support for the
ruling power find their names written down on the lists compiled,
and dutifully turned in, by those whose collaboration is more overt,
and whose desire is to "see this thing through" at whatever cost
to other people.
What do such
unpleasant matters have to do with life in contemporary America?
The tragic answer to that question is: A great deal.
Many people
were shocked just a few weeks ago when we were given a reminder
that the government ruling us compiles a
roster of official enemies, and that the enforcement arm of
Leviathan's state-level affiliates is being trained to recognize
"danger signs" of political "extremism."
This reminder
came courtesy of the Missouri Information Analysis Center (MIAC),
which issued a
"strategic report" last February entitled "The Modern Militia Movement.
MIAC is one of more
than fifty counter-terrorism "fusion centers" that pockmark
the American landscape like syphilitic sores.
These
entities are jointly operated by state, local, and federal law
enforcement and intelligence agencies, with involvement by some
branches of the military and even a select few nominally private
sector entities.
Fusion centers
are more appropriately referred to as domestic intelligence soviets
policy
making "councils" designed to create and impose a ruling "consensus"
regarding the nature of the internal "threat." They tend to be highly
secretive, and operate
on the assumption that their activities are not subject to the Freedom
of Information Act or its state-level equivalents.
The "report"
itself is a product of the same congeries of left-wing
"watchdog" groups who have been laboring for decades to criminalize
everything but "progressive" opinion and activism. I would write
that MIAC simply "regurgitated" what it was fed by those people,
but the olfactory signature of the report in question suggests that
it exited the bureaucratic apparatus by way of a bodily orifice
other than the mouth.
As with all
such efforts at broad-brush civic excommunication, "The Modern Militia
Movement" was written by people of bad faith whose net gathers of
every kind but their own.
Where else
could we find militant white power agitators (a group whose ranks
are routinely replenished with an endless supply of federal provocateurs)
forced into unnatural association with the supporters of the late
Ron Paul presidential campaign, a multi-ethnic movement whose motto
was "Liberty, prosperity, and peace"?
It should be
understood that this document was written for the guidance of law
enforcement personnel, who are instructed that those displaying
the traits and attitudes described in the report consider law enforcement
to be "the Enemy.... They view the military, National Guard, and
law enforcement as a force that will confiscate their firearms and
place them in FEMA concentration camps."
Leaving aside
the matter of which
agency would run detention centers in the increasingly likely event
of full-scale martial law, we're left with a perfectly reasonable
question: Why shouldn't we view the State's armed enforcers
as "the Enemy"?
The typical
conduct of police during confrontations with civilians bears eloquent
testimony of the fact that they are indoctrinated to treat us as
the enemy, and to be prepared to disarm us when given the opportunity
for their own safety, of course. Why else would police ask motorists
if they were armed, or confiscate video and audio recording equipment
from witnesses whenever police are involved in potentially controversial
episodes of official violence?
The import
of the Missouri MIAC report was to prime state law enforcement agents
to perceive as potential terrorists anybody who displayed any of
the political sentiments listed therein. Thus bumper stickers announcing
support for Ron Paul or Chuck Baldwin would be regarded as warning
signs, as would the advertisement of hostility toward the FBI, ATF,
IRS, UN, or Federal Reserve. None of this is new.
The Missouri
document reads almost exactly like a police checklist created in
1995 and presented in Oklahoma City when the federally-facilitated
bombing of the Murrah Building by disgruntled former federal employee
Timothy McVeigh (and "others [conveniently still] unknown") was
still a raw and bloody memory.
During a presentation
on "Criminal Justice and Right-Wing Extremism in America," John
J. Nutter of the Ohio-based Conflict Analysis Group described that
political persuasion as a "lightning rod for the mentally disturbed"
and warned the 500 law enforcement personnel in attendance to be
wary of those displaying the symptoms of such alleged derangement.
Those symptoms
included, but were not limited to, opposition to the UN and the
above-mentioned federal alphabet agencies; "excessive" anger over,
or familiarity with, the federal atrocities at Waco and Ruby Ridge;
opposition to the Federal Reserve; a strong commitment to the right
of armed self-defense; unusual knowledge about the Constitution
and its history; a tendency to buy gold and silver; and possession
of various forms of "extremist" literature. I was particularly intrigued
by that last category, since it included the magazine for which
I was then employed, as well as the book I had just recently published.
The document
assumed that law enforcement agencies would have pretty detailed
intelligence on the political opinions, literature collections,
and personal habits of the people described as potential terrorist
threats. Like the more recent MIAC document, furthermore, Nutter's
little report was intended to fortify the assumption that such people,
rather than being active citizens in the tradition of Samuel Adams
and Thomas Paine, were a direct threat to the physical well-being
of law enforcement personnel.
Nutter's profile
was just one of many versions of the same official libel that was
reproduced in Missouri's MIAC report. The post-OKC bombing "Counter-terrorism
and Effective Death Penalty Act" appropriated several million dollars
to the federal Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) by
way of the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR) for
use in creating the State
and Local Anti-Terrorist Training program (SLATT). SLATT was
a conduit linking the Justice Department and state police agencies
directly into the demimonde of hard-left "watchdog" groups.
The program's
official literature (circa 1999) described its mission as providing
"pre-incident awareness ... preparation, prevention, and interdiction
training and information to state and local law enforcement personnel
in the areas of domestic anti-terrorism and extremist criminal activity....
The SLATT law enforcement training program focuses on the detection,
investigation and prosecution of extremist-based crimes, criminals,
and criminal activity."
Although SLATT's
emphasis changed to
reflect a pre-occupation with Middle Eastern terrorism following
the 9-11 attacks, it still presents training about "The Psychopathology
of Hate Groups" ("hate" groups are always right-wing, of
course and note the call-back here to Nutter's Soviet-flavored
idea that "right-wing" politics attract the "mentally disturbed")
and "Recognizing Terrorist Indicators and Warning Signs."
SLATT could
be considered the progenitor of today's "fusion centers." Indeed,
despite repeated disavowals of the fact, it
can be demonstrated that SLATT played a key role in creating the
FBI's tendentious 1999 Project Megiddo "strategic report" on domestic
"extremism" and potential terrorist threats. That document,
widely circulated among state and local police nation-wide identified
"religious motivation and the NWO [new world order] conspiracy theory"
as the "two driving forces behind the potential for millennial violence."
Both
SLATT and the archipelago of "fusion centers" are subsidiaries of
the FBI's
Terrorist Screening Center (TSC), which collects and disseminates
information about "listed threats" to state and local police. The
defamatory "intelligence product" distributed by Missouri's fusion
center the "strategic report" that listed supporters of Ron Paul
or the Constitution Party among potential terrorist threats is
not only of a piece with previous efforts by the likes of Nutter
and SLATT, it is all but certainly representative of the kind of
material being distributed to police nation-wide.
None of this
is the result of carelessness or ignorance. The effort to shoehorn
right-leaning activists into the role of "domestic terrorist threat"
has been going on for nearly a decade and a half, and the people
responsible for it certainly dispose of adequate resources to know
exactly what they are doing.
They taxonomize
us as terrorists and enemies of the state not because they have
misinterpreted our values and objectives, but because they honestly
regard us to be such, irrespective of our efforts to pursue the
vindication of our ideals through lawful and peaceful means. They
consider us to be the domestic enemy. We should be thankful for
their candor, and earnestly reciprocate that designation.
This means,
at the very least, that in our dealings with the State's agents,
particularly those employed by what the Russians call the "Organs
of State Security," we should follow Solzhenitsyn's advice:
"Don't believe them, don't fear them, don't ask anything of them."
We certainly should not support them, respect them, or seek to cultivate
a relationship with them. Doing so will inevitably lead to compromise
and collaboration.
And this brings
up a sad and unpleasant element of this subject I'm duty-bound to
address.
A few days
ago, just before the efforts of others led to the official retraction
of the Missouri MIAC report, the upper management of a "constitutionalist"
organization for
which I was once employed has instructed its members, and whatever
elements of the general public with which it has influence, to
cultivate a good "relationship" with their local Homeland Security
"fusion center": "The John Birch Society is urging members and
all constitutionalists to work on bettering relationships with local
police as well as the DHS Fusion Centers."(Emphasis added.)
I reiterate
that this was the voice of that organization's upper management.
I would assume that many within the rank-and-file membership have
a much sounder take on the issue.
Why should
constitutionalists seek to have a "relationship" of any kind with
a governmental entity that exists without constitutional warrant?
Fusion centers are designed to amalgamate law enforcement under
federal control, which would be entirely impermissible, from a constitutional
perspective, even if they were generating reliable intelligence
regarding legitimate terrorist threats.
Why
should any organization that advertises its supposed expertise regarding
Communist subversion embrace a course of action that could be summarized
in the slogan: "Support
your local Homeland Security Soviet"?
Is the intention
here to do what is necessary to "see this thing through," in the
style of the invertebrate Mayor Bates, or merely to "pretend to
work" with those who are building the New Order, as the duplicitous
Max Detweiler would put it?
The only principled
approach to dealing with the fusion centers, and the entire Soviet-style
"Homeland Security" apparatus, is to agitate for its abolition,
rather than helping to consolidate the power of that apparatus by
treating it as legitimate in any sense.
As
bad as things presently are, we're experiencing merely the overture
to what may become a bloody and violent historic tragedy. Opposing
the Organs of State Security now costs relatively little much
less than it will eventually cost when they have been "strengthen[ed]
... in exercise," and their roles become "entangle[d] in precedents,"
to adapt Madison's timeless language.
Yet we see
that even in these circumstances, some supposed defenders of "Freedom
and Family" are choosing collaboration rather than timely confrontation.
Rather than hacking at the roots of police state tyranny, or even
pruning some of the more conspicuous branches, they are helping
to water and fertilize the monstrosity in the name of maintaining
a good "relationship" with the enemy.
And all the
while the people who dictate that course of action can be expected
to sing in counterpoint to whichever version of the Collaborator's
Song they select the occasional hymn to their own sensible moderation.
As I said,
things will get much uglier than they are at present. Those who
choose to collaborate when the alternative is relatively painless
will either have to make some painful course corrections right
now, or they'll eventually find themselves standing metaphorically
at the elbow of Colonel Bella as his troops gun down the people
whose names were so thoughtfully provided to the Enemy in the
cause of maintaining that valued "relationship" and "seeing this
thing through," of course.
April
4, 2009
William
Norman Grigg [send him mail]
writes the Pro Libertate
blog.
Copyright
© 2009 William Norman Grigg
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