An intelligence unit of the California National Guard monitored anti-war
protesters who gathered at the state Capitol on Mother’s Day, the June 26
San Jose Mercury News reported. The article noted that press staff of
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger had given the Guard unit advance notice of
this demonstration.
The Guard, in turn, tapped a program dubbed "Information Synchronization,
Knowledge Management and Intelligence” to protect the public from possible
civil unrest as a result of the protest. The anti-war activists who were
spied on hailed from the women’s peace groups CodePink, Gold Star Families
for Peace and Raging Grannies.
At first glance, the Guard’s monitoring their protest from afar as a way to
pre-empt any potential trouble appears comical. But not if such an exercise
of government power is put into the context of Schwarzenegger’s political
agenda.
Its central feature is the weakening of the state’s regulatory and social
safety framework under the guise of “reform.” The state’s budget deficit,
largely a result of the stock market swoon, has been the main focus of the
governor’s reform drive.
Balancing the budget will restore California’s competitiveness, he claims.
Presumably, reigning in government over-spending will pave the way back to
prosperity.
Initially, the so-called war on terror enhanced the governor’s reform
agenda, as he hitched his wagon tighter to the White House’s post-Sept. 11
momentum. More recently, though, the poster boy for the state Republican
Party has seen his public approval ratings decline sharply.
Despite and because of that, the Guard’s recent monitoring of women’s peace
groups is likely the tip of the government surveillance iceberg. In
Schwarzenegger’s right-wing calculus, anti-war dissidents and labor
activists are malcontents who threaten his power and privilege, be they
peaceful grandmothers, or firefighters, nurses and teachers who have been
protesting his achieved and proposed labor reforms statewide.
Schwarzenegger, funded by corporate backers, is using a November 8, 2005,
special election partly to neuter public-sector labor unions by restricting
their ability to fund modern politics. The paycheck-protection initiative
would require union members to okay the spending of their dues in the
political arena.
Yet politics is more than elections. Politics between these electoral
exercises can also develop a social vision that engages the population in
ways that threaten the power structure.
Typically, government’s response is to try and destroy such popular
movements. This is a trend in U.S. history.
National Guard units mobilized against left-led labor unions that had a
progressive social vision during the Cold War years of political repression.
Then, conflict with a foreign demon, the former Soviet Union, gave the
U.S. government a pretext to join with commercial interests to co-opt and
disrupt the American labor movement in part by equating its radicalism with
communism.
With the fall of the fSU, such red-baiting to protect the vaunted American
way of life has lost its luster as a political tool. In its place, however,
is the so-called war on terrorism.
History, of course, does not repeat itself exactly. Yet it would be naïve
to presume that anti-war demonstrators are the only people being monitored
by the state security apparatus with a not so-Invisible Hand from
Schwarzenegger‘s administration.
Seth Sandronsky is a member of Sacramento Area Peace Action and a co-editor with Because People Matter, Sacramentos progressive paper. He can be reached at: ssandron@hotmail.com.
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