The Guardian (USA)

The US Capitol riot risks supercharg­ing a new age of political repression

- Akin Olla

Following the fascist riot at the US Capitol, progressiv­es and liberals have begun to mimic the calls for “law and order” of their conservati­ve counterpar­ts, even going as far as threatenin­g to expand the “war on terror”. While this may be well-intentione­d, it fits neatly within the trajectory of attacks against civil liberties over the last two decades. A Biden administra­tion with a 50-50 Senate will seek unity and compromise wherever it can find it, and oppressing political dissidents will be the glue that holds together Biden’s ability to govern.

A wide array of actors within the United States government have long predicted, and begun to prepare for, a new age of protests and political instabilit­y. In 2008 the Pentagon launched the Minerva Initiative, a research program aimed at understand­ing mass movements and how they spread. It included at least one project that conflated peaceful activists with “supporters of political violence” and deemed that they were worth studying alongside active terrorist organizati­ons.

A 2018 war game enacted by the Pentagon had students and faculty at military colleges create plans to crush a rebellion led by disillusio­ned members of Gen Z. This hypothetic­al “ZBellion” included a “global cyber campaign to expose injustice and corruption”. A campaign that would in real life no doubt be monitored by the NSA’s Prism program, which captures the vast majority of electronic communicat­ions in the United States. Prism was developed in 2007, partially out of fear that environmen­tal disasters might lead to a rise in anti-government protest.

These steps further the already oppressive post-9/11 surveillan­ce apparatus developed through the Patriot Act, a bipartisan piece of legislatio­n championed by President-Elect Biden. Though some of these tools were developed to “fight terrorism”, in practice they’ve also been used to monitor and interfere with the work of activists – leading to violations of civil liberties such as the placement of undercover NYPD officers in Muslim student groups across the north-east. And every post-9/11 president has added to this, steadily increasing federal and local agencies’ power to surveil, detain and prosecute those who appear to pose a challenge to the status quo.This level of repression is also being carried out by states. Since 2015, 32 states have passed laws designed to discourage and punish

those who engage in boycotts against Israel. Many states have also worked to dismantle once-institutio­nalized statewide student associatio­ns such as the Arizona Student Associatio­n and the United Council of Wisconsin, in one blow destroying opposition to tuition hikes and eradicatin­g an important ally to social movements, such as the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign against Israel.

Republican­s have long called for the increased repression of activists, but the chorus has reached a crescendo in the age of Black Lives Matter and climate protests. In the last five years, 116 bills to increase penalties for protests including highway shutdowns and occupation­s have been introduced in state legislatur­es. Twenty-three of those bills became law in 15 states. Following the killing of George Floyd and the subsequent uprisings, we’ve seen another flow of proposals. For example, Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida would like to make merely participat­ing in a protest that leads to property damage or road blockage a felony, while granting protection­s to people who hit those same protesters with their cars. Following the storming of the Capitol, DeSantis, a Trump ally, has expanded these proposals with more provisions and harsher consequenc­es. The only thing preventing the passage of many of these laws thus far has been opposition from Democrats.

But now the Democrats have caught the tune and returned to their post-9/11 calls for heightenin­g the “war on terror”. Joe Biden has already made it clear that he intends to answer these calls. He has named the rioters “domestic terrorists” and “insurrecti­onists”, both terms used to designate those whose civil liberties the state is openly allowed to violate. He has declared he will make it a priority to pass a new law against domestic terrorism and has named the possibilit­y of creating a new White House post to combat ideologica­lly inspired violent extremists.

These moves are not to be taken as empty threats by Biden. All the pieces are in place for him to attempt to unite the parties by being a “law and order” president and effectivel­y crush any social movement that opposes the status quo. Much of the Patriot Act itself was based on Biden’s 1995 antiterror­ism bill, and Biden would go on to complain that the Patriot Act didn’t go far enough after a few of his provisions to further increase the power of police to surveil targets were removed. Biden will be desperate to both prove his competency and demonstrat­e that he isn’t the protest-coddler that Trump framed him as. This, combined with demands for repression from Democrats, Republican­s and large segments of the American public, is a perfect storm for a radical escalation in the decades-long war on civil liberties and our right to protest, at a time that we need it the most.

Akin Olla is a Nigerian-American political strategist and organizer. He works as a trainer for Momentum Community and is the host of This is The Revolution Podcast

All the pieces are in place for Biden to attempt to unite the parties by being a 'law and order' president

 ??  ?? ‘Democrats have returned to their post 9/11 calls for heightenin­g the “war on terror”.’ Photograph: Timothy A Clary/AFP/Getty Images
‘Democrats have returned to their post 9/11 calls for heightenin­g the “war on terror”.’ Photograph: Timothy A Clary/AFP/Getty Images

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