In the 60s there was a literal paramilitary war conducted against the Black Liberation Movement and the Civil Rights Movement. See for example Ward Churchill's Agents of Repression: The FBI's Secret Wars Against the Black Panther Party and the American Indian Movement. It outlines, I think very accurately (i.e. without excessive embellishment) the use of the Federal police in a literal para-military war conducted against political factions considered dangerous and therefore warranting suppression.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Mon Oct 10, 2022 10:57 amSo the speculation among some on the right is that those who brought Nazi flags to the Unite the Right rally were actually trying to undermine the people who were rallying? That sounds a bit like speculation among some on the left that vandalism at their demonstrations is sometimes the work of "counter-demonstrators" trying to undermine the movement.
Calling the FBI America's political police, this book examines the agency's harassment, surveillance, and disruption of black and Native American groups in the 1960s and 1970s, and shows how it sought to maintain the sociopolitical status quo within the country. The authors demonstrate how the FBI's covert counter-intelligence program known as COINTELPRO, which was set up to undermine liberal groups, came to symbolize the whole context of "clandestine political repression activities.
These wars were necessary, from the perspective of the ruling factions, in order to confront and defeat sixties radicalism. I refer to The Spirit of the Sixties: The Making of Postwar Radicalism as a sourcebook to understand this movement (it is written from a very progressive and supportive stance). It is not possible to understand the present progressive-left movement and position unless one studies the views and ideas that inform it.This study gives a chilling account of the government attack against the American Indian Movement and the Black Panther Party, placed in the context of the traditional use of the FBI for domestic political repression. It is a powerful indictment, with far–reaching implications concerning the treatment of political activists, especially those that are Black or Native American, and the functioning of our political institutions generally.
— Noam Chomsky
I seem to be getting myself into some ideological trouble because I demonstrate my resolve to speak clearly, fairly and in a non-partisan manner about contemporary events. By taking this stance I am seen as *suspect* or *complicit*. But my retort is that those who do this, reflexively, reveal just how much they are bound up in partisan positions. I am not criticizing being bound up in a partisan position, but I am suggesting that it is better (in my view) to approach our examination of current events from a position of distance and dispassion.
If you accept that the US in now a cultural war, in the context of developing world-struggles (verging into fourth generation warfare) and if you then take into consideration the function of America's political police in disrupting or eliminating movements that were understood as posing a threat to the continuity of the US and of the 'health of the nation' as a giant economic-cultural machine, then you will have a means to understand the that any faction that disrupts the continuity of the nation as a giant enterprise must be confronted by police force, federal police force, and para-military force.
Presently, but very very unusually, the federal police (FBI acting as political police) has taken aim at the Republican Right. This is unprecedented! The Republican Right (to use a general term) is being vilified and its activists are being arrested, charged, as well as being associated with Nazism and terrorism.
Thus there is an obvious internal war going on. It is a war of consequence given what is at stake.
There was definitely Democrat support and encouragement of rioting, looting and burning, and all the violence of the summer of 2021. It would be naive to assume that there were not also intelligence operations and operatives. Again, if you accept that the FBI and other agencies are political police and have a role in defeating movements that threaten the 'continuity'.
Similarly, all of the events of Charlottesville, and the media-narrative and the propaganda-narrative, have to be examined from a more removed and dispassionate perspective. Having made this effort (by reading material that does not enter the mainstream) I am aware that events there were manipulated for specific purposes. And certainly intelligence agencies and operatives had a role in all of that.
You and others may not want to hear this but those who came to Charlottesville (there were 40 different groups, more or less) came from the grassroots mostly in the South. These are people who have their perspective and have a sense of their 'way of life' and their values. More will be got from understanding them, and them in the context of the present, than in simply decrying their existence.
