WHAT TO DO IN A POLICE STATE

In a police state, which is a government’s systematic, pervasive surveillance and repression of citizens who oppose an authoritarian ruler, it’s as important to know what you should do as what you shouldn’t do. Of course, the autocrat insists on everyone’s complete obedience to his or her goals, objectives and whims. Beyond that acquiescence, the person and agents who control a police state want to instill fear and intimidation. And “true believers” who support the autocrat can expect rewards, which means informants who snitch on opponents of the regime can be highly motivated.

The following recommendations are drawn from the experiences of early associates of The Guard Rail Society living or working under police state regimes in Idi Amin’s Uganda, apartheid South Africa, Brazil’s military dictatorship in the 1960s and 70s and the ongoing ayatollah theocracy of Iran.

 

 

 

 

 

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DISCLAIMER:

MEMBERSHIP OR AFFILIATION CONFIDENTIAL: No roster of Guard Rail Society members or affiliating individuals is maintained. Steps have been taken to maintain confidentiality of participants, given some citizens’ reasonable concerns about retaliation despite Constitutional protections. Participants’ experience derives from life in China, Iran and Venezuela, among other known centers of police state repression.

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