The U.S. Government's raging
paranoia regarding terrorism has now led to a high-octane obsession with
perpetual and complete surveillance of its citizens in every manner conceivable.
"The thought police
would get him just the same. He had committed—would have committed, even if he
had never set pen to paper—the essential crime that contained all others in
itself. Thought crime, they called it. Thought crime was not a
thing that could be concealed forever. You might dodge successfully for a
while, even for years, but sooner or later they were bound to get
you." —George Orwell, 1984 (Book 1, Chapter 1)
Each day, we move closer to
Orwell's dystopic vision. The latest addition to U.S. domestic surveillance is the National
Security Agency's (NSA) new data mining facility behemoth in San Antonio , Texas .
More worrisome, a Microsoft data centre is located just a few blocks away, so
the NSA will be able to tap into the massive stores of data without a warrant
being necessary, only a simple fibre optic cable.
“And if you look at all the
other databases that IBM and their subcontractors have access to
government-wide, the question is if you integrate those databases what you’re
talking about is a complete control system‘cos you’ve got the mortgages, you’ve
got the IRS payments, on and on and on and on and on. So, if you watch the
movie ‘Enemy of the State’ or you watch the movie ‘Listening,’
you’re talking about an intelligence capacity that can basically manage and
manipulate the economy at a very detailed level, whether it’s manipulation of
the stock in the financial markets or manipulation of households.”
With so many lumbering and
uncoordinated security agencies engaged in electronic surveillance, how can all
this information be shared and correlated? What risk does the U.S. run should
it fall prey to a tyrannical despot with a fully functioning and devastatingly
intrusive surveillance system already in place? These questions and more
must give U.S.
citizens pause to reflect on the swiftness with which our privacy evaporates
before our eyes.
The concept of the CIA
project Total Information Awareness has now migrated over to the NSA, which is
determined to turn that vision into reality. The NSA wants to know every
detail about our lives: what we eat, where we travel, what books we read,
what movies we watch, every iota of our lives. But with very little
progressive legislation emanating from the regressive two-party system to
harness this rapid data grab for electronic omnipotence, is it too late for U.S. voters to
pull their lives out from underneath the microscope of the state?
SAN
ANTONIO CURRENT — “Eisenhower warned of the
military-industrial complex, but now it’s mostly the security, industrial
complex; it’s these people that build all the hardware and software for
Homeland Security and Intelligence and all that,” says Bamford. “As far as I
can see, nobody has a handle on how many contractors are out there, what
they’re doing, how much money’s going to them, how much is useful, how much is
wasted money.”
Cate says the NRC committee
is not necessarily opposed to data-mining in principal, but is concerned about
how it’s carried out. “The question is can you do it and make it work so that
you don’t intrude unnecessarily into privacy and so that you reach reliable
conclusions.”
Bamford writes in the Shadow
Factory of how the NSA’s Georgia listening post has
eavesdropped on Americans during the Iraq War, including journalists, without a
warrant or any indication of terrorism. He also reports on NSA eavesdropping on
undecided members of the United Nations Security Council in the run-up to the
vote on the Iraq War resolution, with the Bush regime seeking information with
which to twist the arms of voting countries. The spying was only revealed due
to British Parliament whistleblower Claire Short, who admitted she’d read
secret transcripts of UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s confidential
conversations.
“The UN people have been
aware of [NSA eavesdropping] for a long time, but there’s not much they can do
about it,” says Bamford.
A common response to
concerns about data surveillance is that those who keep their noses clean have
nothing to worry about. But the reach of the NSA’s surveillance net combined
with lack of oversight and the political paranoia escalated by the 9/11 attacks
means that almost anyone could wind up on the terrorist watch list.
“The principal end product
of all that data and all that processing is a list of names — the watch list —
of people, both American and foreign, thought to pose a danger to the country,”
writes Bamford. “Once containing just twenty names, today it is made up of an
astonishing half a million — and it grows rapidly every day. Most on the list
are neither terrorists nor a danger to the country, and many are there simply
by mistake.”
Read more about the NSA's
long arm of surveillance
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