Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Hidden Agendas


Day before yesterday, President Trump met with law officers on Long Island. He spoke about the brutal killings perpetrated by a gang known as MS 13, and encouraged tough enforcement of the law. And there were protests. His speech, to which they were not invited (it was for law officers only), was claimed by the protesters to be a justification of his immigration policy which would exclude undocumented aliens, especially criminals, a group to which most MS 13 members belonged. The President, proclaimed the demonstrators, should be acting on educational and social programs. Those programs may have merit, but they had nothing to do with the subject of the speech. And the problems they would address existed long before President Trump took office, but those involved didn't provoke the same kind of protest marches. Their real agenda, this time, had nothing to do with education but was an anti-Trump rally.

In the past few years there have been several protests and riots focused on the killing of blacks by police. “Black Lives Matter.” That was the message and the justification for the protests. But it's clear that the killing of blacks was irrelevant, since many times the number of those they cite are struck down in street violence and warfare in the communities, yet there are no protests or riots when that happens. Their agenda was actually resistance to the police and to authority in general, and they had neither knowledge, nor concern about the particular black individuals killed. They don't really matter, even if they're a useful tool for getting adherents.

And there are loud protests of the death penalty whenever its use is scheduled, although the same defenders of life don't speak out for defense of innocent fetuses when their lives are threatened by abortion. Life and death are not the issues. But a penalty imposed by those they elected is. They oppose our laws our government, and its officials, and the death penalty is their virtuous stalking horse.

There are other examples of the same problem every day. Protesters take advantage of current problems to oppose our government, to get publicity for their cause, or to incite violence. They take advantage of high profile situations to promote their own causes and to attract additional followers. And to vent their justified or unjustified rage.

That is the way it often is with mass movements. “Squeaky wheels” have an opportunity to stir up support for their cause with little consideration of the facts or of their relevance to the message advanced. And there are many individuals looking for a cause who don't analyze the words or implications of the movement's organizers – those who are seeking their support. Bodies, noise, and political influence are what the leaders look for, and “useful idiots” are of great advantage in promoting their causes.

I don't mean to say that I oppose free speech. The Constitution guarantees that right, and I am happy that we have it. Everyone and every group, including the ones I mentioned (but much more numerous), has the right and, the freedom to speak freely and openly, and to promote whatever message seems appropriate to the situation and their views. There are limitations , however, designed to prevent harm to others. We cannot incite riots or violence; we cannot yell “fire” in a crowded theater (although Abbie Hoffman maintained that “Free speech means the right to shout 'theater' in a crowded fire”). But equally important, though not covered by law, is the obligation to say what we mean, not for ideologues to cloak their ideas in some motto that will attract attention, even if it isn't the message that their actions convey to those aware of them. Truth will strengthen our democracy. Hypocrisy and hidden agendas will not.

How can we stop such subterfuge? We can't, except by listening, and analyzing their claims and goals. We're faced by many with agendas that are more palatable when they're supported by some virtuous (even if intentionally misleading) statements, and there are many people looking for a cause to support.

The anti-Trump protesters mentioned above clamored for greater attention to education, and they were right. But the education most in need of strengthening is education in critical analysis of what publicity hunters seek and what the media are eager to promote. The “supporters” of education had less interest in it, or in stopping murders like those perpetrated by MS 13, than in fomenting anger against our government and its leader. That should have been obvious to all who listened. Those who came to support educational and social programs, even if they had not done so when the same problems existed in the past, were simply statistics generated by protest organizers, and faces to appear in the media in favor of their cause.

And their cause was not education.


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