The U.S. Government Targets Free Speech by Labeling Those Who Reveal Election Fraud and Vaccine Dangers as Terrorist Threats
If you provide information about widespread election fraud or the ineffectiveness and dangers of the COVID-19 vaccines, you are contributing to the heightened threat of terrorism.
According to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS), if you disagree with the government and say anything that undermines public trust in the U.S. government, you are considered a terrorist threat. That is not hyperbole. On February 7, 2022, the DHS National Terrorism Advisory System (NTAS) issued a bulletin that said there was a heightened terrorism threat environment in the U.S. The advisory states that one of the key factors contributing to the increased threat of terrorism is:
The proliferation of false or misleading narratives, which sow discord or undermine public trust in U.S. government institutions:
For example, there is widespread online proliferation of false or misleading narratives regarding unsubstantiated widespread election fraud and COVID-19. (emphasis added)
The bulletin explicitly stated that the "threat to the Homeland" comes from both foreign and "domestic actors." According to the U.S. government, any information alleging that there has been widespread election fraud is, by definition, unsubstantiated and, therefore, false and misleading. If you provide information about widespread election fraud or the ineffectiveness and dangers of the COVID-19 vaccines, you are contributing to the heightened threat of terrorism. That makes you an instigator of terrorism, i.e., a terrorist. You should not be surprised that an administration installed through election fraud would then call those who reveal that fraud, terrorists.
If you disagree with the U.S. government and your evidence is compelling, it will necessarily “undermine public trust in U.S. government institutions.” Regardless of the truth of your allegation, what you are saying will be considered by the U.S. government to be “false or misleading” because of its propensity to undermine trust in the government. Indeed, the more convincing the evidence, the more likely it is to undermine “public trust in U.S. government institutions.” And it is the tendency for the truth of government malfeasance to undermine public trust in government that causes the government to consider it “false or misleading.” The NTAS bulletin is classic Orwellian doublethink. If what you say undermines trust in government, it is, ipso facto, false or misleading and thus would sow discord and, consequently, pose a threat of terrorism, regardless of whether the evidence of government wrongdoing is valid.
The bulletin does not target some secretive conspiracy of a powerful foreign country. The NTAS targets free speech. It explicitly states that the “primary” terrorist threat is the communications freely conveyed on the internet by individual U.S. citizens. The bulletin states:
The primary terrorism-related threat to the United States continues to stem from lone offenders or small cells of individuals who are motivated by a range of foreign and/or domestic grievances often cultivated through the consumption of certain online content.
According to the NTAS, if you “are motivated by a range of foreign and/or domestic grievances” against the U.S. government, your consumption on the internet of content about those grievances constitutes the “primary terrorism-related threat to the United States.” That statement by NTAS in its bulletin is a direct attack on all U.S. citizens’ right to free speech and to petition the government to redress grievances. The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution states:
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
According to NTAS if you publish your grievance against the government on the internet, you are cultivating the “primary terrorism-related threat” to the United States. NTAS opines that posting the misdeeds of the U.S. government online undermines "public trust in U.S. government institutions" and thus cultivates those who consume it to then engage in terrorist acts against the U.S. This NTAS terrorism bulletin justifies all manner of dystopian government censorship. It is the foundation for government oppression by targeting patriotic Americans who publicize the unconstitutional acts of the U.S. government in its conspiracy against God and man. Reading revelations about election rigging, vaccine mayhem, and genocide is now considered by the government the “primary terrorism-related threat to the United States.” The unstated but ineluctable conclusion from that bulletin is that such information must be censored to prevent terrorism. Before it is too late, you should read up on election fraud and the COVID-19 vaccine dangers before the information is censored from the internet.