23 April 2011

How It Starts, and How it Becomes Too Much to Bear

Excerpt from an excellent article by Wm. Norman Grigg at Pro Libertate HERE, that explains why small infractions by government MUST be taken seriously before they metastasize into large infractions.  An important read, because right here in America it's a lot later than you think...

"When he was three years old, Mohammad Bouazizi's father died. As the oldest son of an indigent family living in Sidi Bouazid -- a town about 160 miles from the Tunisian capital, Tunis -- Mohammad was responsible to provide for his mother and two sisters. He earned a computer science degree, but found that it was of little use in Tunisia's deeply depressed economy.

For years, Bouazizi managed to eke out a living as an unlicensed street vendor, peddling fruits and vegetables from a pushcart. Like others who carried out commerce without official permission, Bouazizi endured harassment from shakedown artists employed by the State, who in the course of the typical visit would steal the equivalent of seven dollars as a "fine." 

As the song says, talk is cheap, but even nickels add up. Even a single nickel is sorely missed when it's extracted at gunpoint from someone barely managing to earn enough to survive. But the contemptuous, arrogant words emitted by the armed functionary to carries out that theft do damage as well. The cumulative effect of such indignities can be enough to drive a despairing man to do desperate things.

He was driven to fatal despair when a municipal police officer confiscated his merchandise

The matter could have been cleared up if the officer had accepted the seven-dollar fine for operating an unlicensed merchant stand. But the sadist insisted on berating Bouazizi, slapping him, spitting in his face, and insulting his dead father. Heartsick with inconsolable despair, the young man set himself on fire. Public outrage over this incident grew into a revolt that eventually unseated the U.S.-supported incumbent dictator.

"What happened to him?" The police "happened" to him.


Khaled Said was a 28-year-old businessman from Alexandria, Egypt. Last June, after Said posted a video he had captured of narcotics officers divvying up the proceeds of a drug bust, he was dragged out of an internet cafe, taken to a nearby police station, and beaten to death. A small bag of hashish of the sort used by police everywhere to plant evidence was stuffed down Said's throat.

News of this atrocity was quickly propagated throughout Egypt, engendering a protest movement that eventually grew into the rebellion at Tahrir Square and the still-unfinished effort to uproot Egypt's deeply entrenched, U.S.-subsidized police state.

In police states of the kind Washington has supported in Egypt, Tunisia, and elsewhere in the region, people have been willing to endure a great deal of abuse as long as there was some reasonable expectation that they would be able to feed themselves. It's not surprising to see that forbearance evaporate in the heat of the ongoing economic meltdown, which has left many people without the means to feed their families.  

The triggering incidents that set off revolutions in both Tunisia and Egypt were episodes of casual, arrogant abuse by police officers who considered themselves to be imperviously clothed in official privilege. Incidents of that kind are becoming more commonplace here in the putative Land of the Free, and the debt-prolonged illusion of prosperity that has long anesthetized public sensitivities is coming to an end.

Once again, it's not difficult to imagine a situation in which someone, somewhere is going to be pushed too far by an officious prig in a government-issued costume, an atrocity will result -- and then all hell will break loose. 

Given the perverse ingenuity police display in arranging opportunities to impart such abuse, this could happen nearly anywhere, at any time. Meanwhile, those of us who belong to the productive class should avail ourselves of every opportunity to share the following message with representatives of the State's coercive caste:

We don't need you.

We don't want you.

We don't respect you.

We won't tolerate you much longer."

Please click the link and read the rest.  Egypt's Mubarek was a CIA sock puppet from day one of his tyrannical reign.  Ditto for Tunisian thug Ben Ali.  The style of police state that Washington supports in these countries is the EXACT style of police state that's festering here, again supported by Washington and funded with your own money..

Think about this.  Please think.  Are these abuses, and the resulting despair, the product of a mentality that's materially different than the mentality of our own government?  I say they aren't.  In fact, if you're willing to follow the money, there's no denying that all these abuses, foreign and domestic, are US policy.  The one difference here at home is that we can still afford food.  For now.

The game isn't over yet.  It's still in your hands.  What kind of country will you leave to your children and Grandchildren?

2 comments:

SpaceWars said...

Great commentary, Fred! You've stated precisely what the politicians (and police leaders) in Las Vegas should be recognizing and acting upon. Either clean up the LV Metro department and rid it of killer-cops, or face the consequences of outraged citizens. Indeed, the hour is late....far later than the politicos and big-money elites in Las Vegas want to acknowledge.

Justice on Erik's behalf WILL be done.

survivethedive said...

Thanks, Bill. Yes, the hour is late. Whether it's unaccountable cops or unaccountable congresscritters, the common threads are that it's our government and they're UNACCOUNTABLE.

There's no way this ends well, unless we all get to work.