By Ben Tripp
The Men in Charge are making lists again. Lists
of Americans who may not fly on airplanes. Lists of Americans
who visit libraries, and what books they read. Lists of Americans
who attend protests, and lists of Americans with names similar
to the names of convicted felons, or who were born around
the same time.
Most Americans aren’t concerned: they don’t
fly on airplanes. They don’t visit the library or read books.
They sure as hell don’t go to protests, and they’ve never
gotten a felon’s birthday card by mistake.
What’s the problem?
The problem is lists are like rat’s teeth: they
never stop growing. Our nation learned this once when the
Red Scare happened, and anybody with the faintest affiliation
to anything even remotely a gauche of center ended up on a
list. It could be a list of members of the Pasadena Lawn Bowling
Club, didn’t matter. You ended up on one of those lists, and
the next thing your application for credit at the mattress
store was turned down. “We don’t bed Reds,” the clerk would
darkly intone, and there you were, sleeping on the davenport
without any idea why.
You think you can’t end up on one of these lists,
or that it doesn’t matter even if you do? Anybody can end
up on a list. You take a local check at your yard sale from
a swarthy guy who claims to be collecting old Patti LaBelle
LPs. What if that guy is on the FBI Swarthy Guy list? What
if he spends his spare time making anthrax? You may never
know, but the FBI will add you to their list of People He
Has Transactions With. How about if you’re behind him in line
at the 7-11 when a surveillance team takes his photo?
Agent 1: “Who’s the person behind him? The one
picking her nose?”
Agent 2: “She could be passing microfilm to
him, concealed inside nose potatoes. Let’s put her on the
list.”
Even if you agree with everything the Administration
is doing, you can end up on a list (for example the list of
people born without cerebrums). And if you’re on a list, and
that list intersects with another list, you will end up on
two lists, and that makes you somebody to watch: you’re a
connected dot. Maybe you’re somebody whose computer needs
examining while you’re away.
Maybe your boss will be told about you, or your
bank. All kinds of things can happen, because nobody really
knows what all of the lists are for. The people who use them
are just looking for patterns. According to chaos dynamics,
they will find the patterns they are looking for, just as
conspiracy theorists do. But this isn’t conspiracy theory.
These lists are real, and they are in use today.
Twenty Wisconsin anti-war activists (not an
inherently violent group) were recently detained and searched
at an airport because they were on a “No Fly” list. Did you
know there is a “No Fly” list? The activists missed their
flight; ironically they were going to meet with their congressional
representatives, who did not see fit to search them when they
finally showed up. Nobody knows who maintains this list; it’s
just there, and names are added to it all the time.
Dozens of other Americans have been detained
in a similar manner in recent months. They’re all on two lists
now: the list that got them detained at the airport to begin
with, and another list of people who were detained at airports,
and probably a third list of people who show up on at least
two other lists. The cycle never ends.
And it’s not just a question of having to take
the bus instead of an airplane: what if you once hosted a
birthday party at which a kid named José Padilla showed up?
Kind of moody boy, kept gnawing the lawn furniture, but he
was in your daughter’s class at school, so. . . Mr. Padilla
has gone to permanent, no-trial prison. You bet his derriere
was on a list or two, and once they get done researching his
past, your derriere will be on a list as well. A scary list.
A suspicious derriere list.
Will you wake up one morning to discover your
free life is over, and you now have no right to a trial, or
your family, or anything, ever again? You think being on the
Reader’s Digest mailing list is bad, try the José Padilla
list.
“But,” you chuckle, “I would never allow my
child to consort with ethnic children of any stripe.”
It doesn’t matter.
Maybe you have the same birthday as him, or
you were on the same airplane one day. Lists get longer and
longer. They multiply. They feed on names.
Just remember this: Santa Claus has a list of
who’s been naughty and nice, and it has been verified on two
separate occasions. If the Feds get hold of that list, there
may be a nasty surprise waiting for you on Christmas morning.
Source: CounterPunch