Orwell Was A Prophet

Government Is At War With American Citizens

The following article is more evidence that America has become a police state. Police don’t protect us … rather they are hired by the state to protect the state from us. There is no longer any difference between the domestic police forces and the military. They dress alike, they use similar weapons, they train alike, and their methods are alike when they attack “the enemy” — and the public is their enemy.

Police consider the public their biggest problem. America has more civilians in jails than any other nation. Police are at war with the people, but the people don’t realize it … yet.

It is estimated there will be 10,000 civilian drones operating in America in 5 years – 30,000 by 2020. For this to be true it means that large weapons-technology companies are currently working full-speed in production of these devices as ordered and funded by government. The Air Force has 65,000 – 70,000 people working to process all of the data and footage it is currently collecting from drones, and says it needs 100,000 to deal with the flood of data pouring in from drones. This, along with many other evidences, clearly show the government’s enthusiasm about drones as their new first line approach to warfare and surveillance both abroad and domestically. It isn’t difficult to realize their intention toward American citizens.

The US Government is conducting unlawful and unprovoked war upon innocent people in several countries, including inside America. Government is at war against the common people … but the American people are still naive and oblivious, largely because Americans have forgotten how to define freedom. -ed

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We’re living Orwell’s “1984”

Big BrotherIt appears that the police now have a device that can read license plates and check if a car is unregistered, uninsured or stolen. We already know that the National Security Agency can dip into your Facebook page and Google searches. And it seems that almost every store we go into these days wants your home phone number and ZIP code as part of any transaction.

So when Edward Snowden — now cooling his heels in Russia — revealed the extent to which the NSA is spying on Americans, collecting data on phone calls we make, it’s not as if we should have been surprised. We live in a world that George Orwell predicted in “1984.” And that realization has caused sales of the 1949, dystopian novel to spike dramatically upward recently — a 9,000% increase at one point on Amazon.com.

Comparisons between Orwell’s novel about a tightly controlled totalitarian future ruled by the ubiquitous Big Brother and today are, in fact, quite apt. Here are a few of the most obvious ones.

Telescreens — in the novel, nearly all public and private places have large TV screens that broadcast government propaganda, news and approved entertainment. But they are also two-way monitors that spy on citizens’ private lives. Today websites like Facebook track our likes and dislikes, and governments and private individuals hack into our computers and find out what they want to know. Then there are the ever-present surveillance cameras that spy on the average person as they go about their daily routine.

The endless war — In Orwell’s book, there’s a global war that has been going on seemingly forever, and as the book’s hero, Winston Smith, realizes, the enemy keeps changing. One week we’re at war with Eastasia and buddies with Eurasia. The next week, it’s just the opposite. There seems little to distinguish the two adversaries, and they are used primarily to keep the populace of Oceania, where Smith lives, in a constant state of fear, thereby making dissent unthinkable — and punishable. Today we have the so-called war on terror, with no end in sight, a generalized societal fear, suspension of certain civil liberties, and an ill-defined enemy who could be anywhere, and anything … and anyone who protests is labeled anti-American or a terrorist sympathizer.

Doublethink — Orwell’s novel defines this as the act of accepting two mutually contradictory beliefs as correct. It was exemplified by some of the key slogans used by the repressive government in the book: War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength. (ed. — The US Gov’t is conducting genocidal wars on a massive scale around the world, killing and enslaving millions of innocent people under the pretext of promoting democracy and freedom. By keeping its activities secret from the American public, the US Government claims that keeping Americans ignorant makes them strong and safe. This is “doublethink.”)

Police are tracking where you drive – (click here)

Newspeak — the fictional, stripped down English language, used to limit free thought. OMG, RU serious? That’s so FUBAR. LMAO.

Memory hole — this is the machine used in the book to alter or disappear incriminating or embarrassing documents. Paper shredders had been invented, but were hardly used when Orwell wrote his book, and the concept of wiping out a hard drive was years in the future. But the memory hole foretold both technologies.

So what’s it all mean? In 1984, Winston Smith, after an intense round of “behavior modification” — read: torture — learns to love Big Brother, and the harsh world he was born into. Jump forward to today, and it seems we’ve willingly given up all sorts of freedoms, and much of our right to privacy. Fears of terrorism have a lot to do with this, but dizzying advances in technology, and the ubiquity of social media, play a big part.

There are those who say that if you don’t have anything to hide, you have nothing to be afraid of. But the fact is, when a government agency can monitor everyone’s phone calls, we have all become suspects. This is one of the most frightening aspects of our modern society. And even more frightening is the fact that we have gone so far down the road, there is probably no turning back. Unless you spend your life in a wilderness cabin, totally off the grid, there is simply no way the government won’t have information about you stored away somewhere.

What this means, unfortunately, is that we are all Winston Smith. And Big Brother is the modern surveillance state.

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