Showtrials and Scarecrows: 'Ecoterrorism'
and the War on Dissent
“We are committed to working with our
partners to detect, disrupt, and dismantle these movements, and
to bring to justice those who commit crime in the name of animal
or environmental rights.” John Lewis, Deputy Assistant Director,
Federal Bureau of Investigation
On May 18 2005, the Senate Environment and Public
Works Committee (EPWC) met to discuss the burning topic of “ecoterrorism.”
This hearing was prompted by the fact that direct action groups
such as the Animal Liberation Front (ALF), the Earth Liberation
Front (ELF), and Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty (SHAC) are increasingly
active and effective in their efforts to attack the property and
profits of corporations who exploit animals and the earth. Without
harming individuals, the ALF and ELF have inflicted millions of
dollars of property damage on animal and earth exploitation industries,
whereas the aboveground organization SHAC poses an even greater
economic threat to corporate profits through its ability to impede
the global pharmaceutical-biotechnology research complex that
relies heavily on animal experimentation. The Committee assembled
also to discuss the alleged relations between the illegal underground
activities of the ALF and ELF and legal aboveground organizations
such as the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), People
for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), and the Physician’s
Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM). It met, in other words,
as one offensive in the overall war waged by the corporate-state
complex on any and all facets of resistance to its pogrom on the
natural world, whether these forces operate through illegal or
legal means, with Molotov cocktails or mass mailing campaigns.
John Lewis, Deputy Assistant Director of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, Dr. David Skorton, President
of the University of Iowa, and David Martosko, director of research
for the Center for Consumer Freedom (CCF) were among the “witnesses”
called to advise the Committee on the growing dangers of “extremism”
in the animal and environmental activist movements. I myself was
“invited” to “submit” to an interview
by the Committee -- coercive requests they punitively forwarded
to the President of my university and to the entire University
of Texas Board of Regents -- but I impolitely declined. Repeatedly.
With some irony, I listened to the live broadcast
of the hearings from an Internet cafe in Prague, the city that
spawned Franz Kafka’s bureaucratic nightmare visions. Expecting
to be a nodal object rather than featured subject of the digital
transmission, I was astounded to hear myself demonized as a champion
of the “terrorist” actions of the ALF and accused
of using my academic position to recruit students into the criminal
underground. Suddenly, McCarthyism -- persecutorial spectacles,
political lynching, character assassination, and “naming
names” -- hit home in a sickeningly concrete manner.
The Trial
”Every revolution evaporates and leaves
behind only the slime of a new bureaucracy.” Franz Kafka
"It is time to take a look at the culture
and climate of support for criminally based activism like ELF
and ALF and do something about it.” Senator James Inhofe
during the EPWC hearing
Prague has nothing on the US when it comes to
the "Kafkaesque," for, tragically, within the dark reign
of Bush II, our nation has reverted to the witch hunts of the
1950s. Once again, the U-SS-A is in the frenzied throes of McCarthyism.
The chilling atmosphere of the House Un-American Activities Committee
(where citizens who expressed or were alleged to express dissenting
or liberal views were vilified as “communists") has
been revived in the Environment and Public Works Committee. Senator
James Inhofe (R-Okla.) presides in place of Senator Joseph McCarthy,
The bogeyman of "communism" has become that of "terrorism."
The Red Scare has morphed into a "Green Scare" where
bands of radical environmental and animal rights activists, allegedly
propped up by mainstream “front groups, are alleged to be
the main threats to homeland security.
Throughout the spectacle, Agent Inhofe led the
way. Inhofe has the proper credentials for the job, with a long
record of zealous opposition to environmental causes. He opened
with a bumbling, mumbling monologue as frightening as it was tedious.
Throughout the hearing, Inhofe emphasized two chilling points.
First, he assured all good Americans, no doubt lying awake at
night in fear of an ALF strike on their homes and children, that
the “investigation” is ongoing. Like Bush’s
“war on terror,” Inhofe’s war on dissent has
no end in sight, draws on unlimited (taxpayer) resources, deploys
an unqualified and illegitimate exercise of power, and has zero
accountability to citizens or to the truth. Second, Inhofe’s
fervent goal is to destroy not only the illegal underground forces
of the ALF and ELF, but also their aboveground supporters.
By “supporters” Inhofe means those
who aid the underground in any way -- whether through economic,
financial, or legal assistance, or even through “rhetorical
support.” “As with any other criminal enterprise,”
Inhofe said during the hearing, “we can not allow individuals
and organizations to, in effect, aid and abet criminal behavior
or provide comfort to them after the fact.” According to
Inhofe there is “a growing network of support for extremists
like ELF and ALF,” and he singled out PETA for giving financial
support to both groups, along with yours truly for lending a rhetorical
hand. Clearly perturbed that both Ingrid Newkirk, President of
PETA, and myself refused to dignify the show trial with our appearance,
Inhofe threatened to subpoena both of us to star in a future episode.
FBI Deputy Assistant Director John Lewis made
clear the institution’s intentions to destroy the animal
rights and environmental direct action movements. While ignoring
the real threats of violence that stem from right-wing hate groups,
he ludicrously boasted of the resources the FBI has committed
in its priority war on ecoterrorism: “Currently, 35 FBI
offices have over 150 pending investigations associated with animal
rights/eco-terrorist activities.” In lockstep with animal
exploitation industries, Lewis complained that existing laws against
animal rights activists – such as the 1992 Animal Enterprise
Terrorism Act – are inadequate to stop groups like SHAC
who are legally savvy and know how to play hardball politics in
the Age of the Internet. As Lewis told the Committee:
On the legislative front, we are interested in
working with you to examine federal criminal statutes, specifically
18 USC 43, `Animal Enterprise Terrorism.’ The statute provides
a framework for the prosecution of animal rights extremists, but
in practice, it does not cover many of the criminal acts that
extremists have committed. Additionally, the statute only applies
to criminal acts committed by animal rights extremists, but does
not address criminal activity related to eco-terrorism. Therefore,
the existing statutes may need refinements to make them more applicable
to current animal rights/eco-extremist actions and to give law
enforcement more effective means to bring criminals to justice.
Martosko of the CCF took the State reaction to
direct action militancy a quantum leap further in his cunning
conflation of underground and aboveground organizations, and his
call for a blitzkrieg on any form of dissent against the industries
he represents, including not only PETA, but also HSUS:
Mr. Chairman, I urge this Committee to fully
investigate the connections between individuals who commit crimes
in the name of the ALF, ELF, or similar phantom groups, and the
above-ground individuals and organizations that give them aid
and comfort. I would also urge members of this Committee to prevail
upon their colleagues to re-examine the tax-exempt status of groups
that have helped to fund—directly or indirectly—these
domestic terrorists …. HSUS, PETA, and PETA’s quasi-medical
affiliate, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM),
are troubling examples of animal-rights charities which have connections
to their movement’s militant underbelly. In some cases,
the line between the direct-action underground and more `mainstream’
protest groups is quite blurry.
This is paranoiac, ghost-chasing, persecutorial
McCarthyism at its best/worst, based on a McCarthyesque illogic
of guilt-by-association. In perfect McCarthyesque form, Matosko
collapses all distinctions, sees evil and conspiracy schemes everywhere,
demonizes all forms of dissent, and recklessly hurls false and
slanderous charges against individuals and organizations, all
the while promoting a fundamentalist lassie-faire policy that
demands industries the right to operate without government regulation.
The sad but predictable response of some mainstream animal advocacy
and environmental organizations was to dance to the tune of the
State. They scrambled to send the Senate Committee letters that
repudiate all acts of “violence,” including those
committed in the name of animal and environmental advocacy, while
saying nothing against McCarthyesque tactics themselves.
Using factual fragments taken out of context;
misrepresented, twisted, and distorted to suit his agenda; Martosko
mounts a hysterical attack against PETA, HSUS, and me. Using McCarthyesque
logic of guilt-by-association, for example, he takes the fact
that PETA gave thousands of dollars for ALF activist Rodney Coronado’s
legal defense and transmogrifies it into the ALF-ization of PETA.
The fact that HSUS currently employs a former ALF supporter (who
now renounces their tactics) becomes evidence that HSUS is really
a terrorist outfit, rather than, in truth, a leading opponent
of direct action from within the animal advocacy movement.
I can best destroy the credibility of Martosko
by exposing the outrageous lies he spewed about me, slanderous
fictions enthusiastically and uncritically swallowed whole by
Inhofe. On live TV, before powerful people in Congress and the
FBI, Martosko stated that: “Dr. Best is at the epicenter
… of the organizational aspects of what the ALF is doing.
Dr. Best is part cheerleader, part recruiter. He uses his classroom
freely and openly to indoctrinate adolescents with ambitions and
simultaneously praises the ALF and ELF … He is a conduit
for terrorism to the mainstream.” When asked by Inhofe about
my alleged influence in the ALF, Martosko smugly replied, “He
closes the deal, he seals the deal.” When asked by Inhofe
if he believes I “advocate criminally-based activity,”
Martosko gravely intoned, “It is a fact.”
For the record, Herr Martosko, Herr Inhofe, and
other Brown Shirt agents of persecution: I defend the ALF only
in words, never deeds. I work for animal rights only in legal
ways, never illegal ways, and I operate openly in the aboveground
movement and never clandestinely in the underground movement.
Despite your paranoid fantasies that put HSUS on par with Al Qaeda,
I am not a member of the ALF, nor do I know or communicate with
anyone in the ALF. My relation to the ALF as an outside sympathizer
is entirely peripheral, and hardly stems from a command post at
its “epicenter,” a ludicrous metaphor for a decentralized
movement. And although I commend and support the just and courageous
actions of the ALF, I have never attempted to recruit students
into its ranks. Sorry to disappoint the snarling dogs of denigration,
but I guess that makes me something less than a “conduit
of terror” to the mainstream.
Shreds of Sanity
“In our time political speech and writing
are largely defense of the indefensible.” – George
Orwell
Though equally vehement in their excoriation
of the ALF and ELF, some Democratic lawmakers objected that the
committee's focus was selective, politically motivated, meant
to smear legitimate environmental and animal welfare groups by
associating them with extremists and criminals, and displayed
warped priorities by prioritizing a war on the ALF and ELF over
the far greater danger of right-wing extremist groups.
Dr. David Skorton, President of the University
of Iowa whose Psychology Department animal laboratories were targeted
by the ALF in a daring November 2004 raid, resisted Herr Inhofe’s
bullying attempts to characterize the strike as “terrorism.”
In an interview published after the hearing, Skorton said: “I
called this a criminal act and I am always careful with the words
I choose. It is criminal because it broke laws.” It is unarguable
that the ALF is a “criminal” organization in the strict
legal sense that it breaks laws, but not in an ethical sense that
entails moral wrongness and dishonor. Harriet Tubman, the suffragettes,
Mohandas Gandhi, Nelson Mandela, Rosa Parks, and Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. were also “criminals. While Skorton refuses to
“dignify” the ALF by putting it in such esteemed company,
he at least prefers a legally accurate and sufficient term to
characterize ALF actions over the vague, vacuous, and politically
charged discourse of “terrorism” that says more about
the accusers than the accused.
Upon expressing agreement that ALF and ELF activists
are “criminals” who must be stopped, for example,
Senator Barack Obama (D-Ill.), in a written statement submitted
to the record, expressed some important reservations and raised
potential dangers with a witch hunt on animal and environmental
activism. “In our quest to apprehend these criminals,”
Obama said,
I hope we are not headed down the path of infringing
on the ability of legitimate advocacy organizations to express
their opinions and to raise funds in order to do so. I do not
want Americans to equate groups that advocate violence with mainstream
environmental organizations.
We also need to put these violent acts into context.
The FBI has indicated a downward trend in the number of crimes
committed by these groups – approximately 60 in 2004. While
I want these crimes stopped, I do not want people to think that
the threat from these organizations is equivalent to other crimes
faced by Americans every day. According to the FBI, there were
over 7,400 hate crimes committed in 2003 – half of which
racially motivated. More directly relevant to this committee,
the FBI reports 450 pending environmental crimes cases involving
worker endangerment or threats to public health or the environment.
So, while I appreciate the Chairman’s interest
in these fringe groups, I urge the Committee to focus its attention
on larger environmental threats, such as the dangerously high
blood lead levels in hundreds of thousands of children. With all
due respect, Mr. Chairman, I believe the Committee’s time
would be better spent learning why EPA has not promulgated regulations
to deal with lead paint in remodeled homes. Such an oversight
hearing could have a significant impact on improving the lives
of children all over the country.
Obama cogently questions the rationality of prioritizing
an assault on activists who threaten some corporate interests
and have never committed violent attacks against anyone over menacing
groups armed to the teeth and with a proven track record of violence,
while neglecting an endless array of urgent social problems such
as the well-being of children needlessly poisoned due to government
negligence. Martosko’s priorities, in contradistinction,
are not with human health and happiness but rather with corporate
profits, such that his misnamed organization is far better characterized
as the Center for Corporate Freedom. It is with some irony, therefore,
that Martosko and the CCF accuse animal rights activists of being
anti-human.
Like Skorton, and unlike the zealous Senator
David Vitter who sounded the drumbeat against menacing domestic
terrorists in masks, Senator Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ) resisted
promiscuous use of the T-word, understanding that it is abused
as a weapon of persecution. "I deplore as much as anybody
here these violent acts,” Lautenberg said, “but I
am against this loose characterization that takes innocent people
and throws them in with a bunch of thugs.” He drew important
distinctions between criminal acts done by murderers, terrorists,
and religious extremists, and political fanatics, and those committed
by “terrorists.” He deplored the ALF as a criminal
element, but refused to call them terrorists. He cleverly caught
the FBI Czar in a contradiction, where Lewis mechanically applied
the T-word to the ALF and ELF actions, but paused and stumbled
when asked if he would also apply the term to right wing anti-abortionists
who used arson tactics.
Like Obama, Lautenberg argued that:
We need to keep things in perspective. …
the Oklahoma City bombing killed 168 people. The attacks of 9/11
killed 3,000. Since 1993, there have been at least five fatal
attacks on doctors who performed legal abortions. Eric Rudolph
recently pleaded guilty to placing a bomb in a public area during
the Olympic Games in 1996, as well as bombing a Birmingham women’s
clinic and a gay nightclub.
All of these cases involved the loss of human
life. To date, not a single incident of so-called environmental
terrorism has killed anyone. It’s wrong to destroy property
and intimidate people who are doing their jobs – and those
who commit these crimes must be brought to justice.
Lautenberg thereby questioned the sanity of targeting
animal rights and environmental militants who have never harmed
anyone rather than right-wing extremists – from militia
men and neo-Nazis to Christian extremists of all disgusting flavors
-- who spew bigotry and hatred and implement their values with
guns and bombs. Left unmentioned by all parties, however, is the
growing threat of international gangs, or “supergangs,”
who enter the US through the border with Mexico and settle into
areas such as East Los Angeles. With no allegiance to anything
but power, violence, drugs, and money, many fear that these gangs
may help smuggle foreign terrorists into the US along with drugs
(a major source of foreign terrorists’ capital) and weapons.
Yet the state’s focus remains on those who defend animals
and the earth from predatory violence.
Given the priorities of the corporate-state complex,
for which property is sacred and life is profane, it is a more
serious crime in this nation to threaten the profits of a corporation
than to blow up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma
City (killing 168 people and wounding more than 500); set off
a bomb at the Atlanta Olympics (killing one person and injuring
100) and to assassinate doctors who perform abortions. It is more
heinous to smash the computers of animal abusers than to murder
blacks, Jews, and immigrants. It is a greater terrorist offense
to possess bolt cutters than to stockpile weapons of mass destruction
such as anthrax, sodium cyanide bombs, machine guns, several hundred
thousand rounds of ammunition, and remote-control explosive devices.
Jeffery “Free” Leurs got a 22 year prison sentence
for torching a few SUVs, whereas one can murder and rape in this
country and receive far lighter penalties.
This crazed illogic is comprehensible only when
we consider two factors. First, Bush and the republican lawmakers
who control the game are themselves overwhelmingly extreme right-wing
in their political orientation, and naturally relate far more
to those preaching fundamentalism, racism, homophobia, and “pro-life”
values than those espousing anarchism and philosophies of liberation.
Second, since corporate forces such as animal and earth exploitation
industries control Congress and the legal system and bend it to
serve their profits and priorities, politicians and judges enforce
their agendas, whatever they may be. Besides the influence demonstrated
at the hearing I am describing, this phenomenon was also clearly
at work in May 2004 when John Lewis of the FBI, a giant fast food
industry (Yum! Brands Inc.), Chiron Corporation (aligned with
notorious animal testing company Huntingdon Life Sciences), and
the Yerkes Primate Center held sway over a Senate Committee on
the Judiciary hearing to demand new laws be passed against militant
animal rights and environmental activists.
One would think that given the catastrophic “intelligence”
failures of the FBI that allowed the tragedy of 9/11 to happen
despite screaming warning signals, as well as the plethora of
existing vulnerabilities in the nation’s security from additional
foreign terrorist attacks (on our ports, airlines, nuclear power
plants, chemical storage facilities, railways, bus lines,. and
so on), and in the grim aftermath of the July 2005 terrorist attacks
in London, that the FBI would not dare to squander a minute, person,
or dollar hounding the animal rights and environmental movements.
It is pathetic and tragic that the federal government is wasting
precious resources on persecuting activists defending animals
and the earth from attack, while leaving our nation unprotected
from real foreign and domestic terror threats, none greater than
the U-SS state itself. Let no one forget these warped, corporate-driven
priorities when the next skyscraper on American soil crashes to
the ground in a fiery heap.
One important critic was silenced, as Inhofe
refused to hear or admit testimony from Representative Bennie
G. Thompson (D-MS), ranking member of the House Committee on Homeland
Security. Inhofe’s’ Gestapo tactics marked the first
time that a member of Congress was denied permission to testify
before a Committee after formally requesting to do so. Thompson
intended to address a recent Homeland Security document that exaggerated
the threat posed by the ALF and ELF while downplaying the far
greater dangers posed by right-wing extremists. In his formal
rebuke to Inhofe, Thompson argued that:
[H]arm to critical infrastructure is posed by
both left-wing and right-wing "special interest" domestic
terror groups. For example, 35 homes under construction in the
Maryland subdivision of Hunters Brooke were partially or entirely
destroyed by arson in December, 2004. The perpetrators torched
the entire subdivision because they believed many of the families
who would move in were African American. This arson attack was
characterized as 'the worst arson in Maryland history,' and this
one incident caused approximately $10 million in damage -- almost
1/10th the damage alleged to have been caused by ALF and ELF --
and all other environmental extremist groups -- in the last 14
years. Right-wing domestic terror groups are also responsible
for the destruction of other infrastructure such as abortion clinics,
minority houses of worship, and federal buildings. The fact that
we just commemorated the 10th anniversary of the Oklahoma City
bombing is a sad testament to the fact that right-wing groups
have, and will continue to, use any means to achieve their political
goals, regardless of whether innocent civilians are killed.
Domestic terrorism that destroys property is
terrible -- whether committed by leftwing or right-wing "special
interest" domestic terrorists. Equally terrible is your failure
to address this serious topic in a thorough and non- partisan
manner.
May I Reproach the Bench?
“Bush's War on Terrorism is no longer
limited to Al Qaeda or Osama Bin Laden… The rounding up
of activists should set off alarms heard by every social movement
in the United States: This `war’ is about protecting corporate
and political interests under the guise of fighting terrorism.”
Will Potter
“Bless our nation of laws.” Senator
Frank Lautenberg during the EPWC hearing
Despite the small measures of dissent to the
persecutorial nature of the hearing expressed by Skorton and Lautenberg,
everyone present – none more than Skorton and Lautenberg
themselves – celebrated the virtues of democracy and science.
All down the line, the band of merry men praised the miracles
that modern capitalism and biomedical research supposedly bring
to the lives of all. They deplored the “criminal actions”
of the ALF and ELF as abominations unsuited for an open, pluralistic
society where supposedly the Lady of Justice wears a mask that
blinds her to special interests. Skorton pontificated about the
vital role of animal experimentation for medical progress and
vacuously boast about the alleged professional treatment animals
enjoy in their cages at University of Iowa laboratories. No one
discussed the corruption of American “democracy” by
corporate monopolies, oligarchic structures, campaign contributions
and mass media, an ever-growing gap between the rich and poor
and hardening class stratification system. Left unmentioned were
the stunning failures of vivisection that held back medical progress
time and time again and the corrupt relationship between the FDA
and the pharmaceutical industries its serves.
For years, despite various punitive consequences,
I have openly expressed support for the courageous and just actions
of the ALF. Similar to the Underground Railroad of the 19th century
abolitionist movement, the ALF -- our own 21st century abolitionist
movement -- breaks into laboratories, frees captive animals, and
provides them with much-needed veterinary care, and provides them
with loving homes. Unlike those who torture, exploit, and kill
animals for profit and dubious "research" purposes,
the ALF does not fit any viable definition of terrorism. They
seek to destroy the property of those who exploit animals, but
in over three decades of actions in twenty countries, they have
never harmed a living being.
After 9/11, President Bush said that, "A
nation has a right to defend itself against terror" I believe
this is true of the animal nations too. But since they cannot
defend themselves, animal rights activists come to their aid.
I call this concept extensional self defense. Whereas legal approaches
can reduce the suffering of animals, they can never by themselves
eliminate it as the state is controlled by powerful corporate
interests, including the animal exploitation industries
This Senate “investigation” underscores
some of the most exquisitely excruciating ironies of the day.
While strident voices from the corporate-state complex traduce
“terrorists” who use despicable tactics of threats
and intimidation, the entire televised charade was meant to threaten
and intimidate anyone who would dare question authority of any
kind. Everyday, the state, urged, aided and abetted by corporate
interests, seeks to intimidate activists with surveillance and
questioning, threatens them with jail and punishment, and tries
to promote fear and terror among those with a strong conscience
and will to protect the earth from violent assault. The White
Christians and Corporate Titians excoriate activists who maneuver
outside their corrupt institutions while they routinely flout
legal norms through influence peddling, back-room deals, bribes,
and campaign contributions.
The true criminals never tire of warning that
“someday someone will get hurt” while billions of
animals suffer and die, species slide toward oblivion, rainforests
fall to powersaws and bulldozers, glaciers melt into nothingness,
and the Antarctic ice shelves crash into the sea, as the planet
heats up catastrophically to accommodate the interests of the
fossil fuel industry. An extreme anti-environmentalist and toadying
bootlicker for the Masters of War, Inhofe presides over this devastation
as a leading criminal and intolerable threat to the planet. If
Inhofe is looking for terrorists, he need look no farther than
the mirror.
I understand that my views are controversial
and unpopular, but they are protected by the Constitution, a document
that theoretically still guides government and social life. In
essence, the First Amendment is designed to protect challenging,
critical, and controversial speech acts, not banal exchanges at
the bus stop or praise for the status quo. Contemptuous of democracy,
Herr Inhofe, however, sees it a different way. Inhofe claims that
I have “crossed the line” from legitimate free speech
to advocating and inciting violence. I invite him to define the
term “violence” in a satisfactory way, and to contemplate
the difference between defending the ALF and “advocating
and inciting violence,” as well as the distinction between
advocating and inciting violence. One can advocate violence without
inciting it, and so long as that line is not crossed, even advocacy
of violence falls under the protection of the First Amendment.
But these are constitutional niceties no longer
respected. The First Amendment right to express one’s political
views has been targeted for a semantic regime change, and is now
called “rhetorical support” for criminal activities,
as well as advocating and inciting violence. In the U-SS-A, it
is increasingly the case that the Constitution is little but a
historical document, a political simulacrum eclipsed by the fascist
policies of the Corporate Panopticon Police State regulated by
the Patriot Act and its sundry supplements.
In a sane and humane Washington, the legislative
branch of government would be holding hearings on how to eradicate
animal suffering and exploitation and deal with the catastrophic
threat of global warming, rather than scheming how to perpetuate
agony and destruction on this planet. It would give its utmost
respect and attention to advocates of animal rights, veganism,
and ecology and throw corporate exploiters and their puppet propagandists
in the same pen with other criminals who violate ethics and life.
It would attend to the real domestic terrorist threat -- that
posed by extreme right wing hate groups -- not the ALF, ELF, or
SHAC. In a sane and humane world, the ALF, ELF, and SHAC would
not even be necessary.
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