Common Dreams – by Lauren McCauley & Jon Queally
Responding to the revelations detailing the US government’s massive surveillance programs in recent days, President Obama on Friday said the two programs—one which allows the collection of virtually all phone records produced in the United States and the other which allows the National Security Agency to search through the private digital data of the world’s most popular internet systems—are merely a “modest encroachment” on personal privacies.
However, calling the program “Orwellian” and a “grave threat to democratic freedoms,” critics of the program and other champions of civil liberties have decried the government’s surveillance tactics saying—as one of the journalists who broke the story, Glenn Greenwald, did— “It’s well past time that we have a debate about whether that’s the kind of country and world in which we want to live.”
“There is a massive apparatus within the United States government that with complete secrecy has been building this enormous structure that has only one goal,” Greenwald said, appearing on CNN’s Piers Morgan Thursday night following the story’s release. “And that is to destroy privacy and anonymity not just in the United States but around the world.”
“Unchecked government surveillance presents a grave threat to democratic freedoms,” addedJameel Jaffer, the ACLU’s Deputy Legal Director. “The stories published over the last two days make clear that the NSA – part of the military – now has direct access to every corner of Americans’ digital lives.”
Arguing that criticisms of the program are “overblown,” the President, along with other defenders of the surveillance program point to the fact that the NSA is reportedly not eavesdropping on the content of communications but rather “sifting through the metadata,” which includes the identities of the sender and recipient, and the time, date, duration and location of a communication.
“I think it’s important for everybody to understand—and I think the American people understand—that there are some tradeoffs involved [in the balance between the need to keep the American people safe and our concerns about privacy],” said President Obama during a press appearance Friday. “And the modest encroachments on the privacy that are involved in getting phone numbers or duration without a name attached and not looking at content, that on net, it was worth us doing. Some other folks may have a different assessment on that.”
However, as Jay Stanley and Ben Wizner of the ACLU argue, “any suggestion that Americans have nothing to worry about from this dragnet collection of communications metadata is wrong.” They explain:
Even without intercepting the content of communications, the government can use metadata to learn our most intimate secrets – anything from whether we have a drinking problem to whether we’re gay or straight. The suggestion that metadata is “no big deal” – a view that, regrettably, is still reflected in the law – is entirely out of step with the reality of modern communications.
“The public doesn’t understand,” said mathematician and former Sun Microsystems engineer Susan Landau, speaking with The New Yorker’s Jane Mayer about the collection of metadata. “It’s much more intrusive than content.”
Adding that if the government can track “who you call, and who they call” then “you know exactly what is happening—you don’t need the content.”
For example, Mayer notes, in the case of journalists, metadata,
can be so revelatory about whom reporters talk to in order to get sensitive stories that it can make more traditional tools in leak investigations, like search warrants and subpoenas, look quaint. “You can see the sources,” [Landau] said. When the F.B.I. obtains such records from news agencies, the Attorney General is required to sign off on each invasion of privacy. When the N.S.A. sweeps up millions of records a minute, it’s unclear if any such brakes are applied.
“It’s well past time that we have a debate about whether that’s the kind of country and world in which we want to live,” added Greenwald. “We haven’t had that debate because it’s all done in secrecy and the Obama administration has been very aggressive about bullying and threatening anybody who thinks about exposing it or writing about it or even doing journalism about it. It’s well past time that that come to an end.”
He continued:
No one’s ever heard of it before and yet it has extraordinary consequences for what our governtment does, for how the world is impacted. If you look at the pages of reports that the PRISM program talks about and that the NSA program boasts about, they pride themselves on discovering all sorts of political conversations in places like Turkey and Israel. They use Facebook and Google and Skype to invade conversations about a whole variety of things, in South America in Asia. And, many times, the people involved in these conversations and where they originate are people within the United States. It’s all done without warrants and without accountability and the entire world is impacted.
Watch Greenwald’s full discussion of the programs on CNN:
Well, if it’s just a “modest encroachment”, I’m sure Mr. Obomba wouldn’t mind opening all his school records, his fake birth certificate records, his fake Social Security number records, and anything and everything else that he has spent millions on to keep in secret, now would he???
Even a “modest encroachment” is a violation of Constitutional protections and a breach of their Oath of Office.
If you rob a bank of a “modest” amount of money, say, $50 instead of $10,000, does that somehow make it less illegal?
You also have to remember that if they wanted to keep this hidden they could have. Don’t make the mistake of thinking the Zionist propaganda machine is “exposing corruption” or anything like that. That’s not what they do.
This was reported to the people to get you used to the fact that government watching your every move, and listening to your every conversation is going to be part of the new reality.
Too many people still think they’re watching the news when they tune into the news, and that’s a big mistake. They’re reporting this to get you accustomed to living under brutal dictatorship, and most Americans won’t figure it out, until they’re already in Gitmo for expressing their opinions.
Agree with you Jolly Roger-we only get what the MSM is told to report on from their script. I knew years ago that this “spying”, or intelligence gathering, was going on. So why all the big fuss about it now?? Watch what my right hand is doing, so you don’t see what the left is doing??!! When they are diverting our attention in one direction, I’m always looking in the other direction for another false flag or something like that to happen. These fools have been playing by the same game plan for those of us who aren’t asleep to see what they’re up to. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.
Hey Jolly Roger, I’m with you on most things but I have to disagree on the contention that they “allowed” this revealing of NSA internet spying and phone hijacking scandal. I may be wrong but they would need more people than are currently alive today just to sift through the phone conversations and records to garner anything. I don’t deny the existence of computer programs that flag the “key” words for further investigation but it still takes a person to review the data. These people are far from perfection and their mistakes are visible on a daily basis. I think they do this to render the proper colored flag on your “file” to ascertain the fate they have decided. When they start the “round up”, they punch in your file number and your sent to whatever fate the color on your file designates. All the data to be stored in that shiny new building in Utah. Or maybe I’m just a “conspiracy theorist.”
” Some other folks may have a different assessment on that.”
Maybe.
They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
— Benjamin Franklin
…I’ve already had the FBI come out and talk to me about the things I’d written to my government employer….an extremely corrupt government employer / agency I should add…it seems that being a “Federally Protected Whistle-Blower” and mentioning that the corruption is so deep that we need trials, convictions and executions… that didn’t seem to go over to well with the corrupt folks I worked for…if you want t find one of the most corrupt military agencies around…go look up AAFES the Army and Air Force Exhange Service…they are the 12 billion dollar a year retailer for the US Military….they run food concessions and k-mart like PX & BX Stores on posts and bases……corrupt, corrupt, corrupt, corrupt from head to toe…leadership to janitor…corrupt, corrupt,corrupt…
Regards,
RJ O’Guillory
Author-
Webster Groves-The Life of an Insane Family