Censorship and the Decline of Civilization
By Jon Rappoport
We can understand why leaders and rulers want to censor certain
ideas and views. But why do large chunks of the citizenry want to go along with
it? How do you comprehend their ignorance?
Censorship is made possible when the majority of people live
by what they like and don’t like—“I like this, I don’t like him, I like her, I
don’t like them…”
When those preferences become the paramount elements of
life, then censorship is a minor concern. Grasping the essence of the 1st
Amendment and free speech requires a different level of mind. It requires
defending free speech for those one doesn’t like. Such an idea is entirely
foreign to the person who asserts: “WHY WOULD I POSSIBLY CARE ABOUT THE RIGHTS
OF SOMEONE I DON’T LIKE?”
Exactly. That’s what separates a political moron from an
aware citizen.
There are now large numbers of people who think they’re
making a political advance, even a breakthrough, by demanding the censorship of
those individuals they don’t like, when in fact, they’re moving backwards into
a more primitive political climate.
There is another vital factor which permits people to
register no objection to censorship. The factor is: vast frustration with their
own lives. This is usually concealed, as if it were a secret not to be shared.
The frustration, at the core, has to do with a perceived lack of freedom.
In which case, the actions of life take on a mechanical
character, which becomes the heavy cover, the lid over the flame of
frustration—and in that state of being, a person actually wants others who
speak out and go against the grain to be silenced and censored.
Stop him! Keep him from speaking and writing!
Yes, keep the free individual from reminding the mechanical
liver of life that he is not free.
The Mechanical Person wants to bury all signals that carry a
flavor of originality. He wants the constant hum that tells him routine and
repetition are firmly in place as the guidance system of existence.
The Mechanical Person often goes to work for a Destroyer—as
I described in a poem I wrote in 1962, published in The Massachusetts Review
(1966):
Burned flowers of the field
My noon is over, growing old,
Everything I love is finally sold;
Sewed designs for men with money
Thinking it was duty,
To watch them lead the world to war
From my little field of beauty.
Interesting that, 20 years later, one of the first pieces I
wrote as a journalist involved PR man Bill Perry, who quit his plum job at
Lawrence Livermore Labs, where they design nuclear weapons. One day, Perry told
me, a researcher was complaining to him about the need for more budget money,
and Bill said, “We already have enough weapons to blow up the whole world four
times, why do you need more money?” To which the scientist replied: “You don’t
understand. This is a PHYSICS PROBLEM.”
Yes it is, in the frozen rigid river of anti-life…
Where rebels are just machines that need to be turned off.
About the Author
Jon Rappoport is the author of three explosive collections,
THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon
was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29thDistrict of California.
He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is
the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he
has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on
politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine,
Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has
delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative
power to audiences around the world.
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