A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State
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non-lethal weapons
usage
Surveillance. See Real-time surveillance
cameras
displacement effect
usage
drones, sighting
state
increase
system (NYPD)
Suspicious activity, liberal application
SWAT callouts, warrant service
SWAT team
collateral damage
deployment
impact
mania
members, legal restraints
no-knock warrants, usage
origination
reliance, increase
usage
weaponry
SWAT team raids
error-related casualties
Guerena killing
impact
innocent people, death
Jones killing
Marine killing
mistakes
number, increase
possibility
Swire, Peter
Switchblade, usage
Swollen Members (lyrics)
T
Tangipahoa Parish (Louisiana), police blood
draws
Tanks, presence
Tarantino, Leila (traffic stop)
Tasers
bracelets
drive-stun mode
examples
lethality
non-lethal weapons
usage
excess
Taylor, Nicholas (school discipline)
Tea Party members, surveillance
Tear gas
canisters, Oakland police usage
usage
Technology
development, increase
emergence
fallibility
gadgets
integration
Tecknisolar Seni
Telephone calls
government agent surveillance
monitoring
Telephone communication (Telecom)
companies, FBI harassment
Television, control (ability)
Tenth Amendment
Program
Congress approval
usage
Terahertz Imaging Detection, usage
Terror
attacks, impact. See 9/ terror attacks.
impact. See War on terror.
Terrorism
impact
Patriot Act redefinition
war, necessity
Terrorism Liaison Officers (TLOs)
criteria
impact
Terrorists
attack scenario
profile
TSA intimidation
Terror Tuesday meetings, They Live (Carpenter),
Third Amendment
impact. See Privacy.
Third Reich, medical experiments
Thompson, Hunter S.
Thoreau, David
Thorn, Robert {Soylent Green character)
Thought crimes (political correctness)
Thoughts, reading (Emotiv Corporation)
Three-strike laws, THX (Lucas)
Tice, Russ (NSA, impact)
TLOs. See Terrorism Liaison Officers Tolstoy, Leo
Torture
Total control society
Total information awareness
Totalitarian corporate state
Totalitarianism
control
ideologies, impact
oppression, contrast
perspective (Arendt)
ramifications
Tracking
eye-tracking technology, implementation
fact/fiction
Traffic cameras, usage
Traffic jams, monitoring
Transportation Security Administration
(TSA)
activity, chilling effect
airport screenings
body scanners, usage
harassment
inspection, problems
searches, impact
targeting/intimidation, clarity (absence)
Trapwire
NGI, combination
Trespass Bill. See Federal Restricted
Buildings and Grounds
Improvement Act Troublemakers, challenge
Truth-in-sentencing legislation
TSA. See Transportation Security
Administration
Hour Fitness, fingerprint scans (usage)
: A Space Odyssey (Clarke/Kubrick)
Tyranny. See also British crown
instruments
U
UAVs. See Unmanned aerial vehicles
UDC See Utah Data Center
Unarmed citizens, SWAT team raids
(possibility)
United Nations, Code of Conduct for Law
Enforcement Officials, United States v. Jones (U.S. Supreme Court
decision)
Universal Face Workstation (NGI)
University of Maryland students, tear gas
(police usage)
University of North Dakota, drone degree
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs)
Unreasonable searches/seizures
Fourth Amendment protection
impact
U.S. Constitution
balance
philosophical shift
protection level, reduction
violations
U.S. Supreme Court
Brooks v. City of Seattle
Citizens United v. Federal Election
Commission
Florence v. Burlington
Kentucky v. King ruling
Reichte v. Howards
United States v. Jones
U.S. v. Jones
warrantless raid sanction
U.S. v. Jones
USA Patriot Act
bank transaction analysis
Bill of Rights impact
lone wolf provision
Obama renewal
passage
provisions, renewal
roving wiretaps provision
Section, renewal
usage. See Domestic surveillance; Law
enforcement.
Utah Data Center (UDC)
target
technological capabilities
V
Vanatta, Konnor (school trouble)
Vein recognition scans
Veterans, surveillance. See Military veterans
Vfor Vendetta (film)
Video cameras, usage
Violence, pleasure
VIPR. See Visible Intermodal Prevention
and Response
Virtual strip searches, invasiveness
Visible Intermodal Prevention and Response
(VIPR)
arrests, problems
goal
illogic
personnel, ban
searches, impact
strikes
task forces, components
teams
rollout
searches
training exercise
W
WAJAC. See Washington Joint Analytical
Center
Walt Disney World, ticket holders
(fingerprint usage)
War, psychological effects
War on crime
War on drugs
fear, impact, War on Kids, The (Soling)
War on terror, impact
Warrantless arrests
Warrantless home invasions, justification
Warrantless raid, U.S. Supreme Court
sanction
Warrants, usage (ruling)
Washington Joint Analytical Center
(WAJAC)
Watched/watchers
Water cannons, usage
Watson, Paul Joseph
Weisenthal, Joe
Wheeler, Richard
White Slave Traffic Act, FBI enforcement
Wiener, Jon
Wil
l, George
Williamson, Acelynne (death)
Williamson, Glen (raid)
Winnefeld, Jr. James
Wireless network sniffers, usage
Wiretaps, warrants (absence)
Wolf, Naomi
Women, tasering
Woodlock, Douglas
Wright, Kenneth (SWAT team raid)
X
X Taser shotgun, usage
Z
Zero tolerance
Zimbardo, Phillip
Zinn, Howard
Zucchino, David
About the Author
John Whitehead is an attorney and author who has written, debated, and practiced widely in the area of constitutional law, human rights, and popular culture. Widely recognized as one of the nation's most vocal and involved civil liberties attorneys, Whitehead's approach to civil liberties issues has earned him numerous accolades and accomplishments, including the Hungarian Medal of Freedom and the 2010 Milner S. Ball Lifetime Achievement Award for "[his] decades of difficult and important work, as well as [his] impeccable integrity in defending civil liberties for all."
As nationally syndicated columnist Nat Hentoff observed about Whitehead: "John Whitehead is not only one of the nation's most consistent and persistent civil libertarians. He is also a remarkably perceptive illustrator of our popular culture, its insights and dangers. I often believe that John Whitehead is channeling the principles of James Madison, who would be very proud of him."
Whitehead's concern for the persecuted and oppressed led him, in 1982, to establish The Rutherford Institute, a nonprofit civil liberties and human rights organization headquartered in Charlottesville, Virginia. Deeply committed to protecting the constitutional freedoms of every American and the integral human rights of all people, The Rutherford Institute has emerged as a prominent leader in the national dialogue on civil liberties and human rights and a formidable champion of the Constitution. Whitehead serves as the Institute's president and spokesperson.
Whitehead writes a weekly commentary for The Huffington Post and LewRockwell.com, which is also carried by daily and weekly newspapers and web publications across the country and is available on The Rutherford Institute's website (www.rutherford.org). Whitehead is the author of some twenty books, including The Freedom Wars (2010), The Change Manifesto (2008), and Grasping for the Wind (HarperCollins/Zondervan, 2001), the companion documentary series to the book of the same name, which also received critical acclaim. The series was awarded two Silver World Medals at the New York Film and Video Festival.
Born in 1946 in Tennessee, John W Whitehead earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Arkansas in 1969 and a Juris Doctorate degree from the University of Arkansas School of Law in 1974. He served as an officer in the United States Army from 1969 to 1971. He lives in Charlottesville, Virginia.