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You can read many more dispatches and join our mailing list so they come
directly to your e-mail inbox daily by visiting TomDispatch.com, your
antidote to the mainstream media.

posted September 5, 2004 at 11:09 am

Tomgram: Nick Turse on the new Homeland Security State
http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=1786

On the third night the Republican Convention was in town, I attended a
modest demonstration against the imperial broadcast media -- there's
nothing like hundreds of people chanting about breaking up media
conglomerates while looking at the blank, skyscraping faces of darkened,
semi-deserted buildings. But who had time to look for CNN or Time Warner or
Fox News (where the march was destined to end) when the most visible --
overwhelming and intimidating -- presence on the street was the police. The
"march," which you might want to imagine as a serpentine creature heading
south on New York's Sixth Avenue, had actually been chopped into a series
of one-block long segments by the New York Police Department. Each small
segment was penned on its sides by moveable wooden barricades and on either
end by the wheel-to-wheel bikes of a seemingly endless supply of mounted
policemen backed up by all manner of police vehicles. Though the
photographing of protestors is an old practice, ! it once had a somewhat
surreptitious quality to it. Not here (or anywhere else in the city that
week) -- police in uniform were openly videoing the crowd. To "march," that
is, actually meant to step from pen to pen, hemmed in everywhere, your
protest at the mercy of the timing, tactics, and desires of the police. It
was one of many sobering moments that week, a small reminder of what we've
already lost, thanks to the "war on terror" as it's being played out in our
still-in-formation Homeland Security State.

Nick Turse offered a preview of what New York had in store for its
demonstrators in a piece he did for Tomdispatch some weeks before the
Republicans arrived. I asked him, in the wake of the Convention -- and with
his own experiences as a demonstrator in mind -- to return to the subject. Tom



The Rise of the Homeland Security State

Fortress Big Apple, Revisited
By Nick Turse

Prior to the Republican National Convention, I thought I knew all about the
militarization of Manhattan -- the transformation of the island into a
"homeland-security state" -- and about New York City as the paradigm for
the security culture that increasingly grips American society. After all, I
wrote about it in
<http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=1574>"Fortress Big Apple." It
turns out I didn't know the half of it. Only after writing that piece did I
discover that the New York Police Department (NYPD) had purchase two
experimental sound weapons known as Long Range Acoustic Devices (LRADs)
which I had once described in writing about
<http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=1338>U.S. experimental weapons
research in Iraq. I had then termed the deployment of an LRAD here during
the convention "improbable" -- yet there it was out on the very same
streets I was walking. I also looked out my window and caught sight of the
ultimate blendin! g of corporatism and the police-state -- the Fuji blimp
-- now emblazoned with a second logo: "NYPD." This spy-in-the-sky,
outfitted with the latest in video-surveillance equipment, had been
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,-4462474,00.html>loaned
free of charge to the police all week long.

But even finding out about these new high-tech tools of the homeland
security-state didn't make things clear to me; nor did the ever-present
roar of helicopter rotors as those of us in the streets during the RNC were
surveilled from above; or even when
<http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/news/gopcon/wabc_083104_nypdflight.html>Brendan
Galligan of the NYPD Aviation Unit bluntly told a reporter from the local
ABC TV affiliate: "I'm looking for any kind of crime on the grou[nd]. In
this case, we're looking for roving mobs of people traveling in unison,
that might indicate some sort of problem for the ground troops." "People
traveling in unison" a crime? "Ground troops"? I should have fully
understood then, but I didn't.

I didn't quite get it when I saw the stone-faced feds out on the streets
with those ever-present ear-pieces piping in commands from who knows where;
nor as I scuttled between concrete barricades and metal fences in the area
around Madison Square Garden while remote cameras tracked my every move;
nor when a march I was in was flanked by a phalanx of bicycle-riding
police; nor when a corps of plainclothes cops on scooters trolled the
streets near Times Square. You would think that I would have understood it
when the peaceful group of activists I was with were pushed off the
sidewalk by police in front of us, while the cops in back ordered us onto
the sidewalk; or when, left with no options, we tried to escape by crossing
Broadway only to have some of our number caught in the NYPD's literal
dragnet -- rolls of
<http://www.fotolog.net/nickturse3/?photo_id=8184305>orange plastic netting
which were repeatedly unfurled all across the city, snagging protesters, !
press, legal observers, pedestrians, and bystanders alike. I can't
understand why I didn't get it when I looked up from watching some cops
press a man's head to the pavement to see a hoard of police on
<http://www.fotolog.net/nickturse/?photo_id=8180547>horseback heading down
the street towards me; or when officers from the NYPD's Technical
Assistance Response Unit (TARU) filmed me, apparently for walking in a park
or perhaps for what I might do, prompting a young woman to sidle up next to
me and whisper "they're tailing you" --making me wonder, was the warning
sincere or could she be with them too?

I witnessed the fleets of black SUVs with police escorts roar down
virtually empty city streets near the Madison Square Garden bubble. On
numerous occasions, I saw flatbed police trucks filled with the very
interlocking metal barriers that a
<http://www.nyclu.org/rnc_ruling_071904.html>judge had ruled could no
longer be used to pen in protesters (as the NYPD had been doing for about a
decade) -- and I saw those metal barricades pressed back into action on
multiple occasions. I witnessed a black van door slide open, revealing
tactical-gear clad troops of some sort, brandishing automatic rifles. I
witnessed cops and feds on rooftops with binoculars and cameras trained on
me and/or my compatriots. I saw cops peering through the near-blacked out
windows of unmarked cars and noticed the NYPD's
<http://www.nyc.gov/html/nypd/html/pct/esu.html>"radio emergency patrol
vehicles" wherever protesters seemed to gather.

I repeatedly walked through gauntlets of blue-uniformed cops and
white-shirted brass to and from the subway in Union Square Park -- where
the three guys in jeans and untucked button-down shirts (which every so
often showed the outlines of their guns) graciously smiled one evening as I
snapped a picture of their undercover activities. Much less jolly were the
secret service agents, one clad in polo shirt and khaki pants, who moved in
behind me prompting a legal observer at an event to collect my name and
contact information in case I should be snatched off the street; even less
jolly was the beefy NYPD officer with no visible badge or name tag who made
it a point to shove me as I attempted to take a picture of an orange-net
arrest before offering a less-than-convincing "excuse me!" as he strode away.

Police vans with netting over the windows; helmeted riot gear-clad cops;
NYPD "paddy wagons"; constant sirens; cops who shoved at us with
<http://www.fotolog.net/nickturse4/>their night-sticks; armed park police
filming with camcorders; radios crackling information to uniformed officers
outside almost any subway stop, on street corners, on subway platforms, and
on the trains themselves; even those menacing, or sometimes just
weary-looking, ultimate conscripts of the homeland security army, the
police attack dogs on street patrol, didn't fully hammer home the reality
of Fortress Big Apple. What did was the 10' by 20'
<http://nyc.indymedia.org/feature/display/114761>chain-link pen with razor
wire over the top that I found myself in after being arrested for the crime
of trying "to change trains,"
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A50658-2004Aug31.html>as a
Washington Post reporter wrote, after sitting "silently on a subway tr! ain
going uptown" to "protest deaths in wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere."

The floors of the
<http://newstandardnews.net/content/?action=show_item&itemid=942>pen were
covered with a layer of grime -- a mix of what might have been oil, grease,
battery acid, transmission fluid, antifreeze, diesel fuel, and possibly
leaded gasoline; the pipes overhead gave the appearance of incomplete
asbestos abatement; the rotting food and old milk cartons behind the
detention pens helped to further drive it home.
<http://www.motherjones.com/news/update/2004/09/09_404.html>Like so many
<http://www.theunionleader.com/articles_showa.html?article=43307>others, I
was illegally arrested and taken to a makeshift detention center set up by
the city especially for the protesters. It was the old municipal bus garage
which bears the name "Marine and Aviation Pier 57" but has now been dubbed
<http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0435/ferguson3.php>"Guantanamo on the
Hudson." Of course, being incarcerated in New York's own Gi! tmo (before
being packed off to central booking and then a cell in the infamous
"Tombs") rather than in America's
<http://www.tomdispatch.com/indexprint.mhtml?pid=1416>"offshore archipelago
of injustice" -- Abu Ghraib, the actual Guantanamo, or "Camp Justice" on
the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia, to name but a few -- means I fared
infinitely better than most victims of America's security culture run amok.
Still, the visible abrasions on my wrists from the plastic cuffs (fastened
so purposefully tight) that restricted the blood flow to my hands while I
was in transit to jail aboard a corrections bus, or the tears of the woman
in a cage on the same bus suffering from also too-tight
<http://www.batons.com/res/index.htm>hand restraints (which left the cops
in a joking mood), do show the bare traces of the Abu Ghraib mentality
alive in America's security forces, at home as well as abroad.

Of course, in communities of color and poor neighborhoods, such tactics,
and worse, are old hat -- as my cell-mates behind the arraignment courtroom
were quick to point out. But now the NYPD is field-testing new tactics and
tools to use against us all. Perhaps most distressing, they've established
a precedent and the tacit acceptance of the public as well. Most New
Yorkers either left town or failed to vigorously protest the chilling
effect of the growth of the homeland-security complex.

I heard first hand of seemingly baseless preemptive arrests and
intimidation by federal agents -- an activist en route to work grabbed off
the street by the feds; another apparently tailed by a black SUV and
shadowed by plainclothes agents. The question is: Will this stop now that
the RNC has left town or will it simply become the accepted way of doing
things in New York City and elsewhere around the country?

The RNC gave the NYPD (coordinating with the feds) a perfect opportunity to
stockpile weapons systems, high-tech equipment, and surveillance devices.
It allowed them to refine, perfect, and implement new tactics (someday,
perhaps, to be thought of as the "New York model") for use penning in or
squelching dissent. It offered them the chance to write up a playbook on
how citizens' legal rights and civil liberties may be abridged,
constrained, and violated at their discretion. In short, it gave them a
free hand to transform New York City into a true homeland security statelet.

Nick Turse writes regularly for Tomdispatch on the
military-industrial-entertainment complex. He was jailed by the
homeland-security state when he dared to ride the subway with a
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A50658-2004Aug31.html>"war
dead" placard around his neck (scroll down to photo). He asks that you
consider donating to the <http://www.rncnotwelcome.org/jailsol.html>NYC
Legal Work Fund Collective for RNC Arrestees and/or the
<http://www.nlg.org/contribute/contribute.htm>National Lawyers Guild who
saved him more than once during the protests.

Copyright C2004 Nicholas Turse

-----------------------------------------------
The Psychology of Revolution by Gustave le Bon
<http://www.encyclopediaindex.com/b/psrev10.htm>http://www.encyclopediaindex.com/b/psrev10.htm

The aim of these considerations is to recall to the reader the fact that
the outward events of revolutions are always a consequence of invisible
transformations which have slowly gone forward in men's minds.

Any profound study of a revolution necessitates a study of the mental soil
upon which the ideas that direct its course have to germinate.

         -Gustave le Bon



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==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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