I read the text. The things you mentioned, using propaganda and false-flag operations and expanding the government's control in the name of something good aren't really exclusive to the Nazi regime, but have been widely used in most dictatorships. There is nothing really new about comparing current administrations to the Nazi regime or other dictatorships, and I think it actually kind of works against itself: the Nazi/Hitler card, for me, is a huge "turnoff" when reading argumentative texts. In my opinion it's much more effective to simply present facts about the PATRIOT act, for example, and let the reader make the connection (and any educated/intelligent reader probably will). Also, a final piece of criticism: having sources in your text doesn't automatically make it more convincing or reliable. Citing websites like blacklistednews.com actually makes it seem
less so.
Despite my criticisms of the text, however, I think the things you write about are indeed important and alarming. From what I know about the PATRIOT act, it's a very extreme example of the government infringing on peoples' constitutional rights and privacy in the name of something good or holy, but similar developments can be seen all over the western world. In Britain, they actually used
this poster as part of an advertising campaign for CCTV. How much more orwellian can you get? In my opinion, the scary part is not that the government is doing things like this, but that people are simply letting it happen without putting up any kind of a fight. Here in Finland, ever since we joined the EU, more and more of our legislation is being drafted AND voted through by people we did not elect and cannot change. People just don't care, they seem to be happy as long as there's beer and chips available.
After the massacre in Norway, several politicians, including ministers, have suggested limiting anonymity on the Internet to restrict "hate speech". I'm sure everyone here realizes the impossibility of such restrictions, so I won't get into that, but in any case the proponents of restrictions seem to greatly outnumber the defenders of free speech. People are panicing, and as you said in the text, in times of panic it's easy for politicians to push through whatever agenda they want. Many politicians feel strongly that the current hate speech legislation should be tightened, and the ombudsman for minorities has suggested that "even statements that do not fill the criteria of hate speech laws should be punishable". So basically anything she feels is offensive should be punishable, whether it's illegal or not. I'm sure everyone sees the similarities to the Soviet Union, where saying certain things or criticising certain groups or individuals publicly (or even privately) was a sure way of getting a one-way ticket to a labor camp in Siberia, regardless of how well founded the criticism was. This woman is now running for president, although thankfully she doesn't really have a realistic chance. Oh yeah, you criticized the media for not explaining why Ron Paul is "unelectable". I don't know much about American politics but I think it's kind of obvious why someone proposing the legalization of prostitution and marijuana would be considered unelectable.
Finally, I have to mention this hilarious (terrifying) thing I came upon yesterday. I found an ethics textbook targeted at 10-11-year-olds, published last year by the ministry of education itself. It included a section dealing with racism and oppression, and it had instructions for teachers on how to use the book. A quote from those instructions:
"Children's prejudices and racism can succesfully be influenced by taking the following simple but persistent actions:
1) highlighting positive examples and stories and
disregarding all negative experiences completely
2) highlighting examples of positive development and making impressive documentaries and big news stories out of positive experiences
3) this brings up more positive examples which are also given lots of publicity
4) thus we are collecting evidence for the fact that change in attitudes and behavior is possible, that there are positive examples of change and that the members of the group that I belong to, specifically, have changed their attitdes and have positive experiences"
Is it just me, or does this kinda sound like brainwashing? And I kid you not, these instructions were actually under the subheading "free thinking"!