Tag Archives: Domestic Terrorism

Dems Want A War on Domestic Terror


Dems Want A War on Domestic Terror – powered by ise.media

Now that the Neo-Liberal order has taken control of all branches of the Federal Government, media, big tech and academia, the new push for is a “war on domestic terror”. Plus, there is now talk of “deprogramming” Trump supporters. I speak with Gad Saad, author of The Parasitic Mind about how to overcome this. Saad explains that 10’s of millions of Americans must now channel their “inner honey badger.”

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Should We Expand The War on Terror to Oregon?

By Anya Parampil, Anchor/Correspondent at RT America

As the occupation by a group of armed, militia-style far-right activists led by Ammon Bundy dragged on at a federal wildlife refuge in rural Oregon, some began to demand that the mainstream media label the occupiers as “terrorists.” Commenters like Wajahat Ali at the Guardian and Janell Ross at the Washington Post homed in on the blanket descriptions of Muslims as potential violent extremists and black protesters as “thugs,” questioning why it didn’t apply the same sort of politically charged label to the white militia types carrying out a subversive action in Oregon.

Juliette Kayyem, a Department of Homeland Security Advisory Committee member and CNN National Security contributor, went a step further, arguing that the Oregon occupiers were terrorists “by any definition.” Kayyem did not offer any definition of terrorism, however, nor did she put forward a coherent strategy for flushing out those guilty of such a grave federal crime. While warning against a disproportionate Waco-style raid on the wildlife refuge, Kayyem simultaneously argued for a “show of federal force.” Despite having promoted herself as a “Security Mom,” it seemed that Kayyem had not fully thought through the consequences of designating a motley band of armed rightists as terrorists, or how such a label would lead to a favorable outcome.

Someone who knows through first-hand experience the consequences of expanding the definition of terrorism to advance the state’s short-term political imperatives is Will Potter. An experienced environmental activist and acclaimed investigative journalist, Potter testified before Congress in 2006 about the anti-democratic impact of the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act, which labeled many animal rights activists who engaged in direct action against factory farms and laboratories that practiced animal testing as terrorists. He argued that the law, which was the product of heavy lobbying by the agricultural industry, would do nothing to deter radical animal rights activism while needlessly ruining the lives of committed activists, dooming them to decades in prison for crimes that harmed no one.

On January 6, I interviewed Potter on RT America about the wildlife refuge occupation in Oregon and asked him about the potential consequences of the media, and by extension, the federal government designating Bundy and his men as “terrorists.”

“If there’s anything I walked away with [in writing my book],” Potter remarked to me, “it’s that the term [terrorist] is always used as a political weapon against the enemy of the hour. It’s a malleable term that can be manipulated and distorted based on the whims of whoever is in power… those power systems can change. And when people in power have the authority to label animal rights and environmental activists as terrorists and also label militia groups or others because of their politics it just expands that scope even further.”

“It can redefine people within the prison system,” Potter says of the term, and can lead to them being sent to “experimental prison units for people classified as ‘terrorists.’” Potter has identified the war on terror as a revival of the Red Scare, explaining how McCarthyite tactics are used to identify leftist dissidents and Muslim activists as terrorists— and how they are ultimately jailed together at maximum security federal Communications Management Units. He is the only investigative journalist to gain access to CMUs.

Potter went on to urge journalists to exercise restraint in using the word “terrorist,” rather than expanding it in an attempt to undermine the ranchers in Oregon. Potter explained that “the media coverage of the standoff has failed in the regard that it hasn’t been describing these armed militia groups as what they are,” which he described as “an armed resistance movement.”

Watch my full interview with Potter here:

New Report Finds Homegrown Radicals Greater Threat Than Radical Muslims

A new report from a Washington-based research center found that the majority of terror attacks since September 11, 2001 have come from so-called “homegrown” extremists rather than radical Muslims.

New America has found that nearly twice as many people were killed by individuals espousing white supremacist and anti-government rhetoric than by those preaching radical Islam. The report calculates that 48 people were killed by non-Muslim extremists, and 26 were killed by self-proclaimed jihadists.

Non-Muslims have launched 19 attacks since 9/11, while Islamic extremists launched 7 lethal attacks for the same time period. The New York Times reported that a new survey to be published this week found that police have a greater fear of domestic extremism versus radical Islam. Researchers with the University of North Carolina and  Duke University took a survey of 382 police and sheriff’s departments nationwide and found that 74 percent believe anti-government violence is the greatest threat to their safety. The survey found that only 39 percent of the departments fear “Al Qaeda-inspired” violence.

In February, Truth In Media reported on an intelligence report produced by the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Bureau of Investigations which called attention to an apparent domestic terror threat from ”right-wing sovereign citizen extremists.” The mainstream media was all over the report, complete with headlines proclaiming the growing “right-wing” threat. However, it was found that CNN and other outlets did not read the actual report.

Despite CNN claiming that the threat from sovereign citizens was greater than ISIS and included “right-wing” extremists, the report does not state that at all. In fact, the entire report does not even use the term “right-wing” or even mention the Islamic State. Statements on the alleged danger of right-wing extremists came from a separate report and quotes from the Southern Poverty Law Center, not the actual report itself.

[RELATED: CNN Lied About “Right-Wing” Extremism Threat Greater Than ISIS]

Whether a creation of the mainstream media or a reality check for tyrants, government agencies are, without a doubt, spreading the idea that homegrown, domestic civilians are to be feared.

In June 2014, Truth In Media reported on the creation of a new Department of Justice task force to combat “escalating danger” from “homegrown” terrorists in the United States. At the time of the announcement, Attorney General Eric Holder said, “We face an escalating danger from self-radicalized individuals within our own borders.”

The DOJ is not alone in monitoring domestic activity, however. Jay Syrmopoulos elaborated on the increasing focus on “domestic” or “homegrown” extremists:

First there was the MIAC report, which claimed that potential terrorists include people who own gold, Ron Paul supporters, libertarians, and even people who fly the U.S. flag.

Then in 2012, there was a leaked Homeland Security study that claimed Americans who are “reverent of individual liberty,” and “suspicious of centralized federal authority” are possible “extreme right-wing” terrorists.

More recently, there is a Department of Defense training manual, obtained by Judicial Watch, using a FOIA request, which lists people who embrace “individual liberties” and honor “states’ rights,” among other characteristics, as potential “extremists” who are likely to be members of “hate groups.”

This document goes on to call the Founding Fathers extremists, stating, “In U.S. history, there are many examples of extremist ideologies and movements, “ including, ‘The colonists who sought to free themselves from British rule.'”

So what’s the truth?

Do groups like ISIS pose a threat to the liberty of the American people? Is the “threat” from “domestic” or “homegrown” extremists truly increasing? And to whom are they a threat ? The people or the government?

Perhaps the greatest threat to Liberty lies in the people issuing these reports and passing laws that work to limit the freedom of the people.

Pentagon Boosts Security Level, Citing ISIS

No Specific Threat, Spokesman Confirms

by Jason Ditz, May 08, 2015

Citing the “environment” of threat created by ISIS, the Pentagon has announced an increase in its FPCON security level from Alpha to Bravo. Spokesmen confirmed there is no specific threat.

The Pentagon had previously done this in September 2011, in the lead-up to the 10-year anniversary of 9/11, on the theory that al-Qaeda would probably like to do something then.

The FPCON levels dictate the level of security at military bases in different theaters of operation. The move from Alpha to Bravo means that two military base IDs must be shown to enter, and that there will be more intense inspections of vehicles entering the base.

The next step up, Charlie, only happens if an attack is imminent, and dramatically restricts traffic to bases. There is a further level, Delta, which is in place only during an actual attack.

The theoretical FPCON Normal level is below Alpha, and puts the base on a security level similar to an ordinary US city, with security only of the level meant to stop the average criminal. With the Pentagon pretty much always talking up some threat or other, Normal is not likely to be declared.

Atty. Gen. Holder Announces “Homegrown” Terrorist Task Force

Washington, D.C.– On Monday, Attorney General Eric Holder announced the formation of a Department of Justice task force to combat “escalating danger” from “homegrown” terrorists in the United States.

In a video statement posted on the DOJ website, Holder claimed it was time to focus on terrorism here in the U.S. The video has since been removed.

“We face an escalating danger from self-radicalized individuals within our own borders,” said Holder.

He went on to cite the Fort Hood shootings in 2009 and the Boston Marathon bombings in 2013 as examples of “the danger we face from these homegrown threats.”

This newly minted task force, the “Domestic Terrorism Executive Committee,” is in essence a reconstituted version of a now defunct task force created by former Atty. Gen. Janet Reno after the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995. The task force will consist of leaders from the FBI, the Justice Department’s National Security Division and U.S. attorneys.

The task force under Reno focused mainly on right-wing extremism, while Holder’s version will reportedly focus on Internet radicalization.

“As the nature of the threat we face evolves to include the possibility of individual radicalization via the Internet, it is critical that we return our focus to potential extremists here at home,” said Holder.

With the recent characterization of the Bundy supporters as “domestic terrorists,” by Senator Harry Reid, and the revelation that President Obama considered using military force against those that stood in support of the Bundy Ranch under a Department of Defense directive, it begs the question as to who will actually be targeted by this task force.

As previously reported here at BenSwann.com, last month the FBI began an investigation into the militia and supporters that stood with Cliven Bundy during the standoff at his ranch.

Could this task force simply be the continuation and culmination of a narrative that has been forwarded by the government for a number of years?

First there was the MIAC report, which claimed that potential terrorists include people who own gold, Ron Paul supporters, libertarians, and even people who fly the U.S. flag.

Then in 2012, there was a leaked Homeland Security study that claimed Americans who are “reverent of individual liberty,” and “suspicious of centralized federal authority” are possible “extreme right-wing” terrorists.

More recently, there is a Department of Defense training manual, obtained by Judicial Watch, using a FOIA request, which lists people who embrace “individual liberties” and honor “states’ rights,” among other characteristics, as potential “extremists” who are likely to be members of “hate groups.”

This document goes on to call the Founding Fathers extremists, stating, “In U.S. history, there are many examples of extremist ideologies and movements, “ including, “The colonists who sought to free themselves from British rule.”

With the continual militarization of executive agencies and local law enforcement, and the refocusing on “domestic threats,” it seems that the nebulous term of “extremist” can be applied to virtually anyone that questions the status quo or stands up against authoritarian systems of power.

 

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