Blindspot!
Fear
Nurturing collective fears
can directly affect the right of individuals, and equality of treatment.
Centres of power (political, economic, military-industrial or
media-based) sometimes decide to fuel, or even create, threats and
dangers for national, international, economic and/or geostrategic
reasons. The climate of fear and insecurity makes citizens accept
measures that restrict the rights they have won, or even differential
forms of treatment that are justified by the threat itself. There is
nothing new about this strategy, but its strength is amplified by the
power of modern means of communication. An enemy is created, his ability
to do harm is demonized and the public is encouraged to draw the
logical consequences from the situation: ‘You are afraid. We will
guarantee your security, but in order to do that we must take
exceptional measures – keep you under surveillance, keep the enemy under
surveillance – and may sometimes have to encroach upon your rights,
dignity or equality.’ The exceptional nature of the threat justifies the
suspension of existing laws: fear is indeed the enemy of law.
All dictators have, to varying degrees, used – and use – this method to
justify their policies. What we are witnessing today with the ‘war on
terrorism’ is of a similar nature and produces similar consequences: when
fear rules and when security is under threat, rules no longer apply and
rights can be reconsidered, personal integrity can be violated.
Equality becomes a matter of wishful thinking, and the majority of the
population, which is subjected to psychological and media brainwashing,
gradually comes to accept the implications of the threat.
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