Dangerous Anti-government Revolutionaries

Lumi

LOKI
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Dangerous Anti-government Revolutionaries

Milo Nickels

Activist Post
January 19, 2011

Anti-government sentiment is not cause for fear, a sign of insanity, or a precursor of tragedy. Quite the contrary. Anti-government sentiment signifies attentiveness, understanding, and a love of liberty. If you truly value freedom, then you absolutely must distrust and despise government with every fiber of your being.

Why? Government has no ability, whatsoever, to give freedom to anyone. Government can only take freedoms away. Our founding fathers fully understood this fundamental truth. They did not view government as a potential source of good, but as a necessary evil. Although they understood that limited government would be necessary to protect individual citizens from each other, they also understood that the Constitution would be necessary to protect all citizens from the government. Our founding fathers knew that if they did not restrain the government with the constitution, then nothing would stop it from taking all of our liberties away. This is simply the nature of the beast.

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Our founding fathers did not view government as a potential source of good, but as a necessary evil.

Many people mistakenly believe that the first Amendment grants us freedom of speech. This is dead wrong. The first amendment tells the government that they are not allowed to take that freedom away. Many people mistakenly believe that the second amendment exists only to protect hunters so that they can feed their families. They are dead wrong once again. Our founding fathers expected our government to overstep its bounds, and the second amendment was intended to be our insurance policy to rise against those encroachments. The second amendment is a direct extension of the Declaration of Independence where it states:
?to secure [our unalienable] rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, ? That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it?
How do we abolish a government without arms? Our founding fathers were not liberal, government-loving, boot-lickers; they were revolutionaries. They completely and necessarily distrusted the government and hated tyranny. They expected that government would always try to steal freedom, and they expected people to rise up against the government whenever that happens. Indeed, our government was founded on the expectation that it couldn?t be trusted.

Look at where we are now. Our government wants to pass laws where we can?t speak out against it, wants to limit our second amendment rights, and they use the mainstream media to convince the masses that hating the government makes people crazy. If our founding fathers were alive today, they would be labeled as dangerous, extremist threats to our national security.

In a recent AP article titled, Dangerous Loners Hard to Catch Before They Act, Eileen Sullivan does all she can to illustrate cases where violent acts were committed by insane loners who held anti-government views. The obvious insinuation is that holding anti-government views makes one crazy and/or dangerous. Here are several excerpts from Sullivan?s article:
The gunman accused of trying to assassinate Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and killing six others, Jared Lee Loughner, was not on any government watch list that might have warned someone not to sell him a gun or caused police to investigate his unstable behavior.
It turns out there is not a list in the United States for people like Loughner.
Obviously, Sullivan is implying that there should be a list for ?people like Loughner?. The term ?people like Loughner,? however, could mean a million-and-one things. When Sullivan refers to ?people like Loughner,? she could be referring to white males, gun owners, crazy people, disruptive students, illogical bloggers, pot heads, fans of the Communist Manifesto, people who distrust the government, etc. etc. etc. Heck, just to be safe, we should place all of those groups on watch lists! Although I?m being sarcastic, I have no doubt that hacks like Sullivan would be okay with that.
The same goes for Joseph Stack, who flew his plane into an IRS office in Austin, Texas, last February. Stack left behind a 3,000-word, rambling screed about his problems with the U.S. tax code.
Less than a month later, John Patrick Bedell shot two Pentagon guards. He left behind anti-government writings and cited conspiracy theories involving the U.S. military.
Richard Poplawski, too, left an online trail of racist rants and paranoid thoughts about President Barack Obama imposing a gun ban before he allegedly shot and killed three police officers in the Pittsburgh area in April 2009.
In the past two years, there have been at least six incidents in which disgruntled Americans, acting alone, have taken violent action into their own hands. In many of the cases, signs of government distrust and paranoia wouldn?t have been enough to justify law enforcement intervention.

Six incidences in two years? SIX?!?! Of all the thousands upon thousands of violent crimes, murders, rapes, assaults, robberies, and atrocities that happened in America in the last two years, is Sullivan implying that these six are somehow symptomatic of a grand problem or a major threat? It appears to me that being unhappy with the government leads to violence far less often than being unhappy with one?s marriage. Maybe we should place people who attend marriage counseling on watch lists too.
There are scores of domestic groups with members who oppose paying taxes, disagree with the government and voice their opinions eagerly. But their rights are protected by the First Amendment, and opposing taxes alone is not enough to trigger an investigation.
Pay close attention to the language and tone Sullivan uses here. She is careful to use the term ?domestic groups? when describing people who oppose taxes, disagree with the government, or (god forbid) voice their opinions. Sullivan is fully aware that, thanks to the mainstream media constantly warning us about ?domestic terrorists,? we?re being gradually conditioned to believe that any ?domestic group? has evil and violent intentions. The word ?terrorist? follows the word ?domestic? just as readily as ?jelly? follows ?peanut butter.? I wonder if Sullivan would ever point out that the girl scouts, the NAACP, and congress are all ?domestic groups? as well. Also pay close attention to the second part of that passage. Sullivan actually bemoans that people?s rights are protected by the first amendment, and implies that ?opposing taxes alone? should be enough reason to trigger an investigation.

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I would love to ask Sullivan her opinion of our founding fathers. Would she have wanted Thomas Jefferson and George Washington placed on watch lists because they opposed government, believed in gun ownership, spoke out against taxes, and even endorsed violent revolution as a necessary part of perpetuating liberty against the threat of tyranny? As I reread Sullivan?s article, I can?t help but notice one bit of irony. Sullivan points out John Patrick Bedell because he ?left behind anti-government writings.? Our founding fathers also ?left behind anti-government writings.? We know them today as the United States Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.

Milo Nickels began blogging and cartooning about politics in the year 2000. After achieving some notoriety at that time, Milo took a break. Now, Milo has launched a new website, Five Cent Revolution where he continues to write about political issues. In particular, Milo focuses on constitutionalism, critiques of modern liberalism and progressivism, and defends individual liberty above all else. Milo wants the government out of our wallets, out of our business, and out of our lives to the greatest extent possible.
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Lumi

LOKI
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Aug 30, 2002
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In the shadows
Will Corporate Media Blame Spokane MLK Bomb on Tea Party?

Will Corporate Media Blame Spokane MLK Bomb on Tea Party?

Will Corporate Media Blame Spokane MLK Bomb on Tea Party?
Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
January 19, 2011

Rachel Maddow has yet to pin blame for a bomb left along a Martin Luther King parade route in Spokane, Washington, on the Tea Party, but NPR suggests white supremacists may be responsible.


?The Spokane region and adjacent northern Idaho have had numerous incidents of anti-government and white supremacist activity in the past three decades,? writes NPR. ?The most visible was by the Aryan Nations, whose leader, Richard Butler, gathered racists and anti-Semites at his compound for two decades. Butler was bankrupted and lost the compound in a civil lawsuit in 2000 and died in 2004.?

As the case of Hal Turner demonstrates, the government and the FBI heavily infiltrated such groups and in many instances actually run them.
?The FBI budgeted at least $100,000 to pay for Turner?s performances, both on his radio program and in public speeches,? notes William Norman Grigg.

Grigg mentions David Gletty and his book Undercover Nazi: The FBI Infiltration of Extremist Groups in America. ?Gletty says that many details of his work as a paid FBI snitch remain ?classified.? He claims to have been recruited in 2000 when, as the leader of a constitutional militia, he came across a plot by an Appalachian white supremacist to set off a string of radiological bombs in collaboration with al-Qaeda,? writes Grigg.

The Church Committee revealed that more than a quarter of all active Klan members in the 1960s were FBI agents or informants. Many were ?active participants in beatings, bombings and murders that claimed the lives of some 50 civil rights activists by 1964,? according to research published in COINTELPRO, The Untold Story.

In Codename Greenkil: The 1979 Greensboro Killings, Elizabeth Wheaton documents the infiltration of the Klan by the FBI. The FBI ?boasted that it had enough Klansmen on its payroll in North Carolina to elect that state?s Grand Dragon: At one point, 7 of the 8 members of a Charlotte Klan chapter reportedly were FBI assets informing on the klavern?s sole non-federal employee,? writes Grigg.

The American Nazis were also compromised by the FBI. George Lincoln Rockwell?s American Nazi Party was thoroughly compromised through the FBI?s COINTELPRO. According to Hate: George Lincoln Rockwell and the American Nazi Party, the late Nazi leader Rockwell was patsy for the FBI or some other intelligence agency.

?We?re certainly approaching it as a potential domestic terrorism event at this point,? said the FBI after the Spokane incident. ?Whether the motive was racial or an individual was being targeted, it?s too soon to say.?

The corporate media continues to repeat unsubstantiated reports that the Tea Party movement is rife with racists. Last July, the NAACP adopted a resolution condemning ?racist elements? in the Tea Party and called on leaders to disavow bigotry, despite claims from Tea Partiers that the measure is just a political ploy, Fox News reported.

?The time has come for them to accept the responsibility that comes with influence and make clear there is no place for racism and anti-Semitism, homophobia and other forms of bigotry in their movement.,? stated NAACP president Benjamin Todd Jealous, despite the fact there is no evidence the Tea Party movement is racist.

The NAACP had commissioned a report, Tea Party Nationalism: A Critical Examination of the Tea Party Movement and the Size, Scope, and Focus of Its National Factions, produced by the Institute for Research & Education on Human Rights, claiming the Tea Party is chock full of racists.

Earlier this month, Rep. Anthony Miller, the only black district chairman for the Republican party in Arizona, resigned after citing threats issued against him by the Tea Party. ?A lot of people told me ?You?re not a conservative, you?re a RINO.? In my mind, that?s just as bad as being called an n??, honestly. When you call someone a n??, it?s saying they?re less than, and RINO is the same thing,? said Miller.

Calling somebody a RINO ? Republican In Name Only ? and the n-word are two different things, but the incident reveals how well the stigma of racism produced by the establishment to discredit the Tea Party is working.

The corporate media has yet to blame the Spokane incident ? readily characterized as domestic terrorism ? on the Tea Party. The incident, however, adds fuel to the hysteria whipped up following the shooting of Rep. Giffords and the murder of Judge Rolls less than two weeks ago. Following the shooting, the corporate media immediately blamed the Tea Party and elements on the right side of the false right-left paradigm.

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Constitutionalist and patriot groups may also be blamed for placing the backpack containing explosives, described by the media as an IED. The Department of Homeland Security, in its now infamous report on rightwing extremism, has characterized the movement as racist and opposed to Barry Obama primarily because he is a black man. It warns that racism on the so-called right may result in violence and terrorism.
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