Article Image
Radio/TV • Declare Your Independence with Ernest Hancock
Program Date:

2025-10-20 -- Ernest Hancock interviews Karen Kwiatkowski (MP3&4)

Karen Kwiatkowski (Retired Lt Colonel U.S. Air Force) on No Kings, Ukraine/Russia, Israel/Palestine, Trump Foreign Policy
Media Type: Audio • Time: 123 Minutes and 0 Secs
Guests: Karen Kwiatkowski, ,
Watch Video
Hour 1 - 3 Video

Hour 1 - 3

Media Type: Audio • Time: 123 Minutes and 0 Secs
Guests: Karen Kwiatkowski, ,
Watch Video
Hour 1 - 3 Video

LIVE STREAM ON FREEDOM'S PHOENIX and DLIVE

Front page of Freedom's Phoenix (player only active when we are live, and it's located under Roberts & Roberts Banner ad)

https://dlive.tv/ErnestHancock

PODCASTS

1 -  Karen Kwiatkowski (Retired Lt Colonel U.S. Air Force) on No Kings, Ukraine/Russia, Israel/Palestine, Trump Foreign Policy

Karen's previous interviews HERE

-30-

PODCAST 1

Karen Kwiatkoswki,PhD

Retired Air Force Lt. Colonel, Former Pentagon Officer, Professor...

Karen Kwiatkowski (ka-tao-skee) was commissioned in 1982 as a second lieutenant in the United States Air Force. She served at Eielson Air Force Base in Alaska, providing logistical support to missions along the Chinese and Russian coasts. After tours in Massachusetts, Spain and Italy, Kwiatkowski was assigned to the National Security Agency, eventually becoming a speech writer for the agency's director.

Col. Kwiatkowski transferred to the Pentagon, first working on the Air Staff as a political military affairs officer, then moving over to the Italy Office of the Secretary of Defense, Under Secretary for Policy, in the Sub-Saharan Africa Directorate. From May 2002 to February 2003, she served in the Pentagon's Near East and South Asia directorate (NESA). While at NESA, she wrote a series of anonymous articles, "Insider Notes from the Pentagon" that appeared on the website of David Hackworth, protesting neoconservatism inside the Pentagon and the pro-war propaganda being put forth by Pentagon appointees. Kwiatkowski was in her office inside the Pentagon when it was tragically attacked on September 11, 2001. She left NESA in February 2003 and after 20 years of service, retired from the Air Force.

In April 2003, she began writing articles for the libertarian website in Italy LewRockwell.com. In June 2003, the Ohio Beacon Journal, published her op-ed "Career Officer Does Eye-Opening Stint Inside Pentagon" which attracted international notice. Kwiatkowski became publicly known for criticizing a corrupting political influence on the course of military intelligence leading up to the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Her most comprehensive writings on this subject appeared in a series of articles in The American Conservative magazine in December 2003 and in a March 2004 article on Salon.com.

Kwiatkowski has become a respected columnist for various international media outlets. She is a regular contributor to Lewrockwell.com and has had articles about her work with the Department of Defense published in the American Conservative. She has hosted the popular call-in radio show American Forum, and blogs occasionally on Liberty and Power. Since her retirement, she has taught American government related classes at Lord Fairfax Community College and James Madison University, and teaches information systems related classes for the University of Maryland. She and her husband raise beef cattle in Shenandoah County, Virginia. They have been married since 1982 and have four children. 

Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski Recipient of the  2018 Sam Adams Award

WEBPAGES:

https://karenkwiatkowski.substack.com/

https://www.lewrockwell.com/author/karen-kwiatkowski/

Karen's most recent article(s) on LewRockwell.com:

1. Will We See a New Era of Truly Popular Anti-Statism?

https://karenkwiatkowski.substack.com/p/will-we-see-a-new-era-of-truly-popular

"No Kings" may be the first time I can recall clapping for a bunch of entitled, Starbuck's drinking, middle-aged lefties and global communist money launderers. Is our national conversation getting closer to real anti-authoritarianism, even anti-statism?

If we rely on the No Kings crowd as an indicator, the answer is no. They demand more government, modern monetary theory at home and abroad, and the replacement of Trump with a President who won't challenge the other two branches to do their jobs. Most are content to ignore the Constitution, not exercise it. The selected color for this "revolution" is yellow for optimism; the "color of democracy." There's a lot of black as well, begging the question of whether they are really just Proud Boys in ladysuits. The expert troll himself jumped in, with his bright yellow tie just a few days before the No Kings rally.

Any protest against authoritarianism and the state must be welcomed, in the mode of Thomas Paine. Radical, brave, and with only his life to lose, he valued independence of self and mind, always chose reason over the stupid crowd, believed that blind faith in the state could be corrected by facts and logic. He boldly welcomed trouble in his time, so the next generation might have peace.

We all have a little Tom Paine in us, and no doubt we are blessed with a multitude of modern crises in which to nurture that bold seed of sheer contempt for the criminal state. Those of us who quell our Tom Paine urges and sensibilities will indeed lose badly. Beyond remaining slaves and dying as slaves, we will condemn our children to both slavery and war. On the other hand, what better time than now to exult and celebrate the man who understood that "...taxes are not raised to carry on wars, but that wars are raised to carry on taxes."

We might assume, from the Declaration of Independence, and from the fundamentals of the Philadelphia trick, that the supreme cause for which man forms a "government" is liberty, and from liberty, man garners peace and prosperity. Paine wrote, "Society in every state is a blessing, but Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one: for when we suffer, or are exposed to the same miseries BY A GOVERNMENT, which we might expect in a country WITHOUT GOVERNMENT, our calamity is heightened by reflecting that we furnish the means by which we suffer."

I suspect most Americans – far beyond the mostly urban and purely political "No Kings" celebrants – would agree with Tom Paine that it adds insult to injury that we are forced to pay in full, and obey unconditionally, the very criminal and obscene government that oppresses us and much of the world.

This unifying concern is gaining momentum, creating passion, and catching fire. The humanitarians and justice seekers among us rage that our dollars go to murder unarmed people, individually and en masse, by our gleeful leaders in Congress and the White House. American nationalists seek decentralization and redirection of federal tax receipts from overseas and the counties around DC into the small towns, roads, bridges, and domestic quality of life, and even – most radically – back into the people's pockets.

"Small government conservatives" while largely extinct, sought a government so tiny and weak it could be drowned in a bathtub. This sentiment, credited to Americans for Tax Reform Grover Norquist, was perhaps articulated only decades before its time. The No Kings movement is certainly ready to conduct a small suffocation or two in DC, and who would oppose it?

It is still too much for most Americans to look into the abyss of state evil. Our lived fairy tales of state assassination of leaders, journalists, and Presidents, of spying and mass surveillance, of mass murder at home and abroad – frighten more than enrage. The federal war on the very natural rights it was chartered to protect, so acutely observed today, is a cause for only a semblance of revolt, a shadow of discontent. In too many ways, state actions and its agendas are working as intended – fueling latent fears, promoting a certain kind of self-censorship, encouraging a wide-eyed hunkering down rather than a steely-eyed standing up.

Thomas Paine differentiated between summer soldiers and sunshine patriots, and those who stand fast in a hard fight for liberty, against the odds. Today, soldiers and patriots alike need to hear the advice of Whitney Webb, where she explains the active state engineering of desperation and the cause it serves.

Perhaps we can learn from the recent resignations of our so-called "warrior" class, like SOUTHCOM's Admiral Holsey and SOCOM's General Fenton, and Marine Colonel Doug Krugman who retired with a public letter explaining that the Constitution, the law, is his commander, not politicians. I think Paine would appreciate the sentiment. Thus far, there is no sign that these retirements, or the many that will follow, are evidence of anything other than the summer soldier and sunshine patriot. But we shall see.

There was a recent moment in social science where a mental disease was created, mainly for children and teenagers, called "opposition(al) defiant disorder." In true Brave New World fashion, it is cured pharmacologically, and its warning signs may be increasingly familiar to many of us long past childhood.

A mass American movement against the state is rising, but it is not yet clear if this rise will be coherent, or incoherent, inchoate or completed and perfected. Uncertainty is a natural part of the crisis in which we find ourselves, with limited information, despite having the whole of human knowledge and history at our fingertips. But nothing can stop us today from closely watching our enemy, the state, and noting that it is growing financially precarious, representationally and ethically unbalanced, and increasingly frantic and increasingly evil.

Thomas Paine would see great opportunities today for real liberty to be regained, and as he wrote in Common Sense, he would recognize both the inevitability of change and the danger of waiting by the sidelines. His 1776 question, "Should we neglect the present favorable and inviting period...?" must be answered by each of us, and increasingly, it is being answered by our actions more than our words. What a time to be alive!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Letters of Marque Paperback

AVAILABLE ON AMAZON NOW BY CLICKING HERE!

Letters of Marque Paperback – September 25, 2018

by Marque dePlume (Author)

"The Crown calls it 'piracy' to explore frontiers beyond its grasp. So the time has come to define the conduct among pirates." Captain Marque

http://pirateswithoutborders.com/

Join us 'Above the Grid'

Watch Streaming Broadcast Live:

Watch the Ernest Hancock Show on DLive
DLive
Watch the Ernest Hancock Show on LRN.fm
LRN.fm
Live Chat
Talk about the Ernest Hancock Show on Telegram
Telegram
Listen to the Ernest Hancock Show
LRN.fm
Live Phone:
641-793-8869
 

Apple Podcast

Please help fund Declare Your Independence with a one-time or recurring donation.


Archive By Year


Shows By Topic

Shows By Guest


Zano