Waco and the Bipartisan Police State
by Anthony Gregory
http://www.lewrockwell.com/gregory/gregory117.html
Every year around this time, I find it worthwhile to reflect on
the siege at Mt. Carmel, just outside of Waco, Texas, which
began on February 28, 1993, when an ATF publicity stunt went
awry, and ended 51 days later on April 19 with about 80
civilians killed.
Waco is still important, because it illustrates the violent
nature of the state, the fact that political power flows from
the barrel of a gun, and the scary truth that the U.S.
government is ultimately no different from all others in this
respect. Many people, including many libertarians, would just as
soon forget the debacle. But we must remember.
Thirteen years ago the federal government of the United States
ended its altercation with a group of peaceful religious
separatists – a conflict the government had initiated – by
driving a tank through the Branch Davidians’ home and church,
pumping the interior with poisonous gas, and keeping the fire
engines at a distance while the building and the people inside
burned.
For many Americans, Waco represented the nightmare their
government had become. In those days, it was the right that
spoke out against unchecked government power, erosions of the
Bill of Rights, and the imperial executive. Such criticism was
tempered in its radicalism over the next decade, for a variety
of reasons. The most dramatic was probably the bombing of the
Alfred P. Murrah building in Oklahoma City, which occurred on
Waco's two-year anniversary, saving the Clinton presidency from
a populace becoming wary of government power as its partisans
successfully blamed the terrorist attack on anti-government
attitudes. We were to believe that even the mild criticism of
government heard on mainstream conservative radio was aiding the
terrorists. In more recent times, as I discussed a year ago in
my article “Waco, Oklahoma City, and the Post-9/11 Left-Right
Dynamic,” we have seen a similar trend going in the opposite
direction, with the right siding with the omnipotent state and
accusing the left of siding with those who want to destroy
America.
Yet Waco is neither a leftwing nor rightwing issue. It is
instead an issue that transcends such political categories and
cuts to the most profound of questions as to what kind of
country this is, what kind it should be, and the very meanings
of liberty and tyranny.
At Waco, the U.S. government treated the Branch Davidians as any
total state might treat its most alienated subjects. It broke
into their home aggressively, shot at them recklessly and
mockingly defiled their graves. It blocked off their water and
their communications with family, counsel and the press. It
waged psychological warfare on them. It showed no mercy on the
little children that it gassed. It imprisoned the survivors,
including one man who wasn’t even in the building during the
siege. The Davidians were effectively dehumanized by the central
state's lapdog press, and so all too few voices, even on the
hyper-sensitive left, came to their defense when Clinton and
Reno’s federal police stampeded them under their weight.
There are always groups that receive less sympathy when they go
head to head with the state, and the ruling class knows it and
thrives off it. During the 1990s, there was more hatred of the
militia types and more fear of the rightwing separatists.
Nowadays, the scapegoat is Arabs and Muslims. For years, in
different ways and to varying extents, it’s also been illegal
drug users, non-citizens, foreigners, gun owners, home-schoolers,
prostitutes, tobacco smokers, divorced fathers, and independent
entrepreneurs among others. It can be one group that endures the
jackboot today and a seemingly opposing group that suffers
tomorrow.
But the primary concern for a free society is not which kinds of
people should have their freedom smashed. The real concern is
liberty for all. The capacity of the state to divide peaceful
people into groups and set them against one another is its
capacity to oppress. When anyone is victimized by the state, all
who believe in and love the universal values of freedom, as well
as the finer principles on which America was founded, have a
moral obligation to oppose it.
A government than can get away with what it did at Waco is
essentially unleashed, constrained only by its own whim. Waco is
a reflection of a greater problem. Look at the many laws and
policies in America leading up to Waco, and Waco shouldn’t be
any surprise. Look at Waco, and Bush’s fascist policies all fall
into place.
The continuity between the Clinton and Bush presidencies on
issues of civil liberties demonstrates something that many
people don’t want to wrap their minds around. America’s police
state is utterly bipartisan. It is designed to persist and
indeed extend its reach with each administration, no matter the
party in charge. In fact, the political party illusion serves to
distract people from the real issues, the state’s trampling of
our liberties, and instead devote their hopeful attention and
energy to getting one dictatorial gang elected rather than the
other.
Both Clinton and Bush have gotten away with massive
prosecutorial abuses, federal police brutality and dramatic
attacks on due process for the accused, all while the people
have argued over which side is the worse liar and central
manager and not how best to restore liberty in America. So
Bush’s Patriot Act is condemned by the left while Clinton’s
assaults on privacy were ignored or encouraged. The right called
Clinton’s seizure of Elian Gonzalez tyrannical, but think Bush
has the “inherent authority” to detain and abuse people without
trial or due process. The left laments how loyally the
mainstream media toed Bush’s line on WMD in Iraq, but wasn’t
nearly as critical when the media parroted Clinton’s Kosovo war
propaganda. Clinton’s gun grabbing was decried as totalitarian
by the right, whereas the Bush federal government got away with
door-to-door gun confiscations in New Orleans after Katrina.
(The federal response to Katrina alone should have lost Bush all
of his support among those who found Waco unacceptable. Or is
the militarization of domestic policy and law enforcement only a
nuisance if its instigator is a known liar about his past with
sex and drugs?)
The worst of this problem of the bipartisan police state is seen
in the “they did it, so why can’t we?” form of argument. How
many times in the last four or five years have we heard Bush’s
defenders cite something horrifying that Clinton did or said as
evidence that Bush's actions aren't as beyond the pale as his
critics claim, after all? This is a disingenuous line of
argument coming from those who lambasted Clinton last decade.
But it is effective so long as Americans care more about their
team winning the electoral championship every four years than
about the fact that the whole game is fixed.
If Clinton's officials conducted a large civilian massacre on
American soil, should Bush be allowed to as well? One
interesting thought experiment is to ponder what would have
happened if it had been Bush who torched the Branch Davidian
home. My guess is that he’d get away with it just as Clinton
did. In contrast, however, the American right would not be
nearly as outraged as it was, or pretended to be, in the early
1990s. The left, on the other hand, would be quite enraged, far
more than it actually was 13 years ago. It might even point out
that half of Bush’s victims at the Waco siege were persons of
color. As it actually happened, the left didn’t even notice the
demographics of the slaughtered. You see, the establishment left
typically saves the race card to play in partisan games.
America’s had this bipartisan police state for a long time. It
was Republican Abraham Lincoln who waged war on half the country
and suspended the Bill of Rights in the other half. It was
Democrat Woodrow Wilson who really honed the art of imprisoning
dissenters. It was the Republicans in the 1920s who adamantly
enforced alcohol prohibition. Democrat Franklin Roosevelt tossed
the Japanese Americans in concentration camps. When Republicans
turned the heat on leftists during the Cold War, they were only
emulating their Democrat predecessors' surveillance and
harassment of Old-Right and far-left dissenters in the 30s and
40s. The war on drugs has been advanced, expanded and
internationalized by members of both parties. Both Republicans
and Democrats are fervently pro-gun control. Neither party has
ever done anything significant to rein in the IRS. And just as
Clinton’s men helped to whitewash the massacre at Ruby Ridge,
which occurred on the first Bush's watch, Republican fixers were
eager to cover up the Clinton administration’s wrongdoing at
Waco.
The trend continues today. We can make a strong case that Bush
and his cadre have set some precedents, but the Democratic
opposition offers little hope. Bush spies on Americans with no
regard for the Bill of Rights or even the meager statutory
restraints imposed on him, and all the Democrats do is whine
that they weren’t in on the snooping, and that next time they
want to be informed. Of course, they have an interest in keeping
the police state healthy and strong. The idea that Hillary
Clinton would be more sensitive to civil liberties if she were
at the empire’s helm is too absurd for words.
Waco should remind us that Democrats are no more restrained than
the Republicans when it comes to being “tough on crime,” if all
that entails is using the bludgeon of state power against all
social elements the ruling class has deemed less than human. It
should also remind us that that bludgeon is no more surgically
precise or benevolent no matter who wields it, and how
corrupting it is for those who do. This should really be obvious
by now, as the Bush government has turned Iraq into one big
Branch Davidian compound and now appears poised to give the Waco
treatment to Tehran.
If ever Americans are to have their rightful liberty, a
political realignment must emerge that shatters the dishonest
and distracting constructs of left and right, Democrat and
Republican, and focuses instead on liberty versus the state.
Asking a liberal what he thinks of Waco might give you an idea
of whether he tends toward liberty or statism. Asking a
conservative about Iraq may provide similar illumination. The
atrocity apologists on left and right should be seen as on the
same side on the general issue of absolute power. And those of
us who oppose mass murder should work together against the
bipartisan police state.
April 19, 2006
Anthony Gregory [send him mail] is a writer and musician who
lives in Berkeley, California. He is a research analyst at the
Independent Institute. See his webpage for more articles and
personal information.
Copyright © 2006 LewRockwell.com
=======================================
WACO: 13th Anniversary April 19, 2006
http://www.apfn.net/pogo.htm
You do NOT use military force against our own citizens,
especially women and children!!
WACO: 911 Tapes 02/28/93
Waco Police Dept Recordings (Wayne Martin to LT. Lynch W.S.D.,
Koresh to LT. Lynch (cellular)
The following tapes have not been edited. They are the original
tapes and have some 'static only' blank spots. Please stand
by.........
Tape1
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L001I060304140238-WACO-TAPES1.MP3(7.01MB)
30 Min 32Sec
Tape2
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L002I060304143736-WACO-TAPES2.MP3(6.92MB)
30 Min 12 Sec
Tape3
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L003I060304154014-WACO-TAPES3.MP3(7.2MB)
30 Min 29 Sec
Tape4
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L004I060304164626-WACO-TAPES4.MP3(7MB)
30 Min 34 Sec
Tape5
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L005I060304172309-WACO-TAPES5.MP3(3.52MB)
15Min 24Sec
Tape6
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L006I060304173902-WACO-TAPES6.MP3(7.21MB)
31Min 30Sec
Tape7
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L007I060304185042-WACO-TAPES7.MP3(6.35MB)
27Min 44Sec
Tape8
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L008I060304192051-WACO-TAPES8.MP3(6.91MB)
30Min 13Sec
Transcription from 911 calls during Waco raids
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/calls.htm
David Koresh Tape:
Audio:
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L009I060304202416-DAVID-KORESH.MP3
(3.85MB) 16Min 50Sec
WACO: The F.L.I.R. Project
"Did Federal Agents kill the Branch Davidians at Waco?"
Who was responsible for the deaths of the Branch Davidians on
April 19, 1993? The government claims the Davidians committed
mass suicide by gunshot and by fire. But in two acclaimed
documentaries "Waco: The Rules of Engagement" and "Waco: A New
Revelation" independent experts saw gunfire pouring into Mt.
Carmel from the outside, gunfire that would have prevented the
Davidians from fleeing the burning building. Janet Reno
appointed a Special Counsel to discover the truth. His
conclusion: allegations against the government are false; no
federal agent fired a weapon on that fateful day.
In "The F.L.I.R. Project" Emmy Award winning investigative
journalist Michael McNulty proves that the Special Counsel was
wrong! This powerful film demonstrates beyond a reasonable doubt
that federal agents fired into Mt. Carmel as men, women and
children were burning to death inside the building. It is
unflinching indictment of the government and it's continuing
cover-up.
http://web.archive.org/web/20020204033914/http://www.flirproject.com/index3.html
Audio:
http://www.apfn.net/audio/M004I060304121407-WACO-FLIR-PROJECT.MP3
(7.8MB)30Min 58Sec
C.O.P.S. Productions, LLC
1001-A East Harmony Rd. #353
Fort Collins, CO, USA 80525
970-204-6914
4/20/03 Mike Mc Nulty producer of "Waco: The Rules of
Engagement" and other projects.
From Charles Heller's show, Liberty Watch Radio, Tuscon, AZ
Audio:
http://www.apfn.net/audio/mcnulty.MP3
http://www.libertywatchradio.com/listen
Getting Milk to the Children (2 min. 55 sec.)
(David Koresh and Sheriff Jack Harwell)
Audio:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/waco/audio/milk.ram
listening devices, bugs buried inside the milk cartons and their
styrofoam containers
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/waco/wacotranscript.html
Transcript
David Koresh's Last Words with FBI on 4/18/93
Audio:
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L001I060324084324-Koresh-FBI-4-18-93.MP3
ADDITIONAL FILES ON:
WACO 'POGO RADIO YOUR WAY'
http://www.apfn.net/waco-pogo.htm