By John W. Whitehead
July 17, 2017
“Monsters in movies are us, always us, one way or the other. They’re us
with hats on. The zombies in George Romero’s movies are us. They’re hungry.
Monsters are us, the dangerous parts of us. The part that wants to destroy. The
part of us with the reptile brain. The part of us that’s vicious and cruel. We
express these in our stories as the monsters out there. The zombies are back.
They are hungry. And they are lurking around every corner.”—Filmmaker John
Carpenter
RIP George Romero (1940-2017).
Romero—a filmmaker hailed as the architect of the zombie genre—is dead at the age of 77,
but the zombified police state culture he railed against lives on.
Just take a look around you.
“We the
people” have become the walking dead of the American police state.
We’re still plagued by the socio-political evils of cultural apathy,
materialism, domestic militarism and racism that Romero depicted in his Night
of the Living Dead trilogy.
Romero’s zombies have taken on a life of their own in pop culture, as
well.
Indeed, you don’t have to look very far anymore to find them lurking
around every corner: wreaking havoc in movie blockbusters, running for their lives in
5K charity races, and putting government agents through their paces in mock military drills arranged
by the Dept. of Defense (DOD) and the Center for Disease Control (CDC).
In fact, the CDC put together a zombie apocalypse preparation kit “that
details everything you would need to have on hand in the event the living dead
showed up at your front door.”
Zombies also embody the government’s paranoia about the citizenry as
potential threats that need to be monitored, tracked, surveilled, sequestered,
deterred, vanquished and rendered impotent.
More than anything, Fear the Walking Dead is a drama
about occupation, the breakdown of society, and the ease with which seemingly
decent people can decide that might makes right. Like any dystopian fiction,
it’s easy to dismiss as fantasy, but remove the zombies and Fear could
be taking place in dozens of real-world locations… This is happening here … but
it could happen anywhere.
Why the fascination with zombies?
Writing for the New York Times, Terrence Rafferty notes:
In the case of zombie fiction, you have to wonder whether our
21st-century fascination with these hungry hordes has something to do with a
general anxiety, particularly in the West, about the planet’s dwindling
resources: a sense that there are too many people out there, with too many
urgent needs, and that eventually these encroaching masses, dimly understood
but somehow ominous in their collective appetites, will simply consume us. At
this awful, pinched moment of history we look into the future and see a tsunami
of want bearing down on us, darkening the sky. The zombie is clearly the right
monster for this glum mood, but it’s a little
disturbing to think that these nonhuman creatures, with their slack, gaping
maws, might be serving as metaphors for actual people—undocumented immigrants,
say, or the entire populations of developing nations—whose only offense, in most
cases, is that their mouths and bellies demand to be filled.
In other words, zombies are the personification of our darkest fears.
Fear and paranoia have become hallmarks of the modern American
experience, impacting how we as a nation view the world around us, how we as
citizens view each other, and most of all how our government views us.
Fear is the method most often used by politicians to increase the power
of government. And, as most social commentators recognize, an atmosphere of
fear permeates modern America: fear of terrorism, fear of the police, fear of
our neighbors and so on.
The propaganda of fear has been used quite effectively by those who want
to gain control, and it is working on the American populace.
Despite the fact that we are 17,600 times more likely to die from heart
disease than from a terrorist attack; 11,000 times more likely to die from an
airplane accident than from a terrorist plot involving an airplane; 1,048 times
more likely to die from a car accident than a terrorist attack, and 8 times more likely to be killed by
a police officer than by a terrorist,
we have handed over control of our lives to government officials who treat us
as a means to an end—the source of money and power.
We have
allowed ourselves to become fearful, controlled, pacified zombies.
Most everyone keeps their heads down these days while staring
zombie-like into an electronic screen, even when they’re crossing the street.
Families sit in restaurants with their heads down, separated by their screen
devices and unaware of what’s going on around them. Young people especially
seem dominated by the devices they hold in their hands, oblivious to the fact
that they can simply push a button, turn the thing off and walk away.
Given that the majority of what Americans watch on television is
provided through channels controlled by six mega
corporations, what we watch is now
controlled by a corporate elite and, if that elite needs to foster a particular
viewpoint or pacify its viewers, it can do so on a large scale.
We are
being controlled by forces beyond our control.
This is how the police state takes charge.
As the Atlantic notes, “The villains of [Fear the
Walking Dead] aren’t the zombies, who rarely appear, but the U.S. military,
who sweep into an L.A. suburb to quarantine the survivors. Zombies are, after
all, a recognizable threat—but Fear plumbs drama and horror
from the betrayal by institutions designed to
keep people safe.”
What we are experiencing is a betrayal of the very core values—a love
of freedom, an adherence to the rule of law, a spirit of democracy, a
commitment to accountability and transparency, and a recognition that civilian
rule must always trump military methods—that have guided this nation from its
inception.
The
challenge is not whether we can hold onto our freedoms in times of peace and
prosperity, but whether we can do so when all hell breaks loose.
Fear the
Walking Dead drives this point home by setting
viewers down in the midst of societal unrest not unlike our own current events
(“a bunch of weird incidents, police protests, riots, and … rapid social
entropy”). Then, as Forbes reports, “the military showed up
and we fast-forwarded into an ad
hoc police state with no glimpse at
what was happening in the world around our main cast of hapless survivors.”
Anyone who has been paying attention knows that it will not take much
for the government—i.e., the military—to lock down the nation in
the event of a national disaster.
The government is not out to keep us safe by monitoring our
communications, tracking our movements, criminalizing our every action,
treating us like suspects, and stripping us of our means of defense while
equipping its own personnel with an amazing arsenal of weapons.
No, this is not security. It is an ambush. And it is being carried out
in plain sight.
The zombie exercises appeared to be kitschy and fun—government agents
running around trying to put down a zombie rebellion—but what if the zombies in
the exercises are us, the citizenry, viewed by those in power as
mindless, voracious, zombie hordes?
Consider this: the government started playing around with the idea of
using zombies as stand-ins for enemy combatants in its training drills right
around the time the Army War College issued its 2008 report,
warning that an economic crisis in the U.S. could lead to massive civil unrest
that would require the military to intervene and restore order.
That same year, it was revealed that the government had amassed more than 8 million names of Americans
considered a threat to national security,
to be used “by the military in the event of a national catastrophe, a
suspension of the Constitution or the imposition of martial law.” The program’s
name, Main Core,
refers to the fact that it contains “copies of the ‘main core’ or essence of
each item of intelligence information on Americans produced by the FBI and the
other agencies of the U.S. intelligence community.”
In 2009, the Dept. of Homeland Security issued its reports on Rightwing and Leftwing Extremism,
in which the terms “extremist” and “terrorist” were used interchangeably to
describe citizens who were disgruntled or anti-government.
In 2015, the Obama administration hired a domestic terrorism czar whose
job is to focus on anti-government American “extremists” who have been
designated a greater threat to America than ISIS
or al Qaeda. As part of the
government’s so-called war on right-wing extremism, the Obama administration
agreed to partner with the United Nations to take part in its Strong Cities Network program,
which is training local police agencies across America in how to identify,
fight and prevent extremism.
In other words, those who believe in and exercise their rights under
the Constitution (namely, the right to speak freely, worship freely, associate
with like-minded individuals who share their political views, criticize the
government, own a weapon, demand a warrant before being questioned or searched,
or any other activity viewed as potentially anti-government, racist, bigoted,
anarchic or sovereign), are now at the top of the government’s
terrorism watch list.
Earlier this year, it was revealed that the Pentagon has been using a dystopian
training video to prepare armed
forces to solve future domestic political and social problems which they
anticipate arising by 2030. It’s only five minutes long, but the military
training video says a lot about the government’s mindset, the way its views the
citizenry, and the so-called “problems” that the military must be prepared to
address in the near future, which include criminal networks, illicit economies,
decentralized syndicates of crime, substandard infrastructure, religious and
ethnic tensions, impoverishment, economic inequality, protesters, slums, open
landfills, over-burdened sewers, and a “growing mass of unemployed.”
Even more troubling, however, is what this military video doesn’t say
about the Constitution, about the rights of the citizenry, and about the
dangers of using the military to address political and social problems.
Noticing a pattern yet?
“We the people” or, more appropriately, “we the zombies” are the enemy
in the eyes of the government.
So when presented with the Defense Department’s battle plan for
defeating an army of the walking dead,
you might find yourself tempted to giggle over the fact that a taxpayer-funded
government bureaucrat actually took the time to research and write about
vegetarian zombies, evil magic zombies, chicken zombies, space zombies,
bio-engineered weaponized zombies, radiation zombies, symbiant-induced zombies,
and pathogenic zombies.
However, in an age of extreme government paranoia, this is no laughing
matter.
The DOD’s strategy for dealing with a zombie uprising, outlined in “CONOP 8888,”
is for all intents and purposes a training manual for the government in how to
put down a citizen uprising or at least an uprising of individuals “infected”
with dangerous ideas about freedom.
Rest assured that the tactics and difficulties outlined in the “fictional training scenario”
are all too real, beginning with martial law.
So how does the military plan to put down a zombie (a.k.a. disgruntled
citizen) uprising?
The strategy manual outlines five phases necessary for a
counter-offensive: shape, deter, seize initiative, dominate, stabilize and
restore civil authority. Here are a few details:
Phase 0 (Shape): Conduct general zombie awareness training.
Monitor increased threats (i.e., surveillance). Carry out military drills.
Synchronize contingency plans between federal and state agencies. Anticipate
and prepare for a breakdown in law and order.
Phase 1 (Deter): Recognize that zombies cannot be deterred or
reasoned with. Carry out training drills to discourage other countries from
developing or deploying attack zombies and publicly reinforce the government’s
ability to combat a zombie threat. Initiate intelligence sharing between
federal and state agencies. Assist the Dept. of Homeland Security in
identifying or discouraging immigrants from areas where zombie-related diseases
originate.
Phase 2 (Seize initiative): Recall all military personal to their
duty stations. Fortify all military outposts. Deploy air and ground forces for
at least 35 days. Carry out confidence-building measures with nuclear-armed
peers such as Russia and China to ensure they do not misinterpret the
government’s zombie countermeasures as preparations for war. Establish
quarantine zones. Distribute explosion-resistant protective equipment. Place
the military on red alert. Begin limited scale military operations to
combat zombie threats. Carry out combat
operations against zombie populations within the United States that were
“previously” U.S. citizens.
Phase 3 (Dominate): Lock down all military bases for 30 days.
Shelter all essential government personnel for at least 40 days. Equip all
government agents with military protective gear. Issue orders for military to
kill all non-human life on sight. Initiate bomber and missile strikes against
targeted sources of zombie infection, including the infrastructure. Burn all
zombie corpses. Deploy military to lock down the beaches and waterways.
Phase 4 (Stabilize): Send out recon teams to check for remaining
threats and survey the status of basic services (water, power, sewage
infrastructure, air, and lines of communication). Execute a counter-zombie ISR
plan to ID holdout pockets of zombie resistance. Use all military resources to
target any remaining regions of zombie holdouts and influence. Continue all
actions from the Dominate phase.
Phase 5 (Restore civil authority): Deploy military personnel to
assist any surviving civil authorities in disaster zones. Reconstitute combat
capabilities at various military bases. Prepare to redeploy military forces to
attack surviving zombie holdouts. Restore basic services in disaster areas.
Notice the similarities?
Surveillance. Military drills. Awareness training. Militarized police
forces. Martial law.
Mind you, the government is not being covert about any of this. It’s
all out in the open.
If there is any lesson to be learned, it is simply this: as I point out
in my book, Battlefield America: The War on the
American People, whether the threat to
national security comes in the form of actual terrorists, imaginary zombies or
disgruntled American citizens infected with dangerous ideas about freedom, the
government’s response to such threats remains the same: detect, deter and
annihilate.
It’s time to wake up, America, before you end up with a bullet to the
head (the only proven means of killing a zombie).
As television journalist Edward R. Murrow warned in a 1958 speech:
We are currently wealthy, fat,
comfortable and complacent. We have currently a
built-in allergy to unpleasant or disturbing information. Our mass media
reflect this. But unless we get up off our fat surpluses and recognize that
television in the main is being used to distract, delude, amuse, and insulate
us, then television and those who finance it, those who look at it, and those
who work at it, may see a totally different picture too late.
WC: 2946
ABOUT JOHN W. WHITEHEAD
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