News Link • Free Speech
Would Orwell Be Branded a Terrorist? The Government's War on Thought Crimes
• https://www.rutherford.org, John & Nisha WhiteheadThey actually believed that we could be trusted to make up our own minds in the whirl of differing ideas. That we could be trusted to remain free, even when there were very, very seductive voices—taking advantage of our freedom of speech—who were trying to turn this country into the kind of place where the government could tell you what you can and cannot do."—Nat Hentoff
The Trump administration is taking its war on free speech into the realm of thought crimes.
This is more than politics.
In declaring "Antifa"—a loose ideology based on opposition to fascism—as a domestic terrorist organization, the government has given itself a green light to treat speech, belief, and association as criminal acts. With this one executive order, political dissent has been rebranded as terrorism and free thought recast as a crime.
Critics will argue that "Antifa" means rioting and property destruction. But violent acts are already crimes, handled under ordinary law.
What's new—and dangerous—is punishing people not for violence, but for what they believe, say, or with whom they associate. Peaceful protest, political speech, and nonviolent dissent are now being lumped together with terrorism.
Violence should be prosecuted. But when peaceful protest and dissent are treated as terrorism, the line between crime and thought crime disappears.
When the government polices political belief, we're no longer talking about crime—we're talking about thought control.
This opens the door to guilt by association, thought crimes, and McCarthy-style blacklists, making it possible for the government to treat peaceful protesters, critics, or even casual sympathizers as terrorists.
Protesters who identify with anti-fascist beliefs—or who, under this administration, simply challenge its power grabs and overreaches—can now be surveilled, prosecuted, and silenced, not for acts of violence but for what they think, say, or believe.




