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This article originally provided by
Yahoo
December 30, 2005
The Return of Total Information Awareness
Bush Asserts Dictatorial "Inherent"
Powers
NEW YORK--Civil libertarians relaxed when, in September
2003, Republicans bowed to public outcry and cancelled Total
Information Awareness. TIA was a covert "data mining"
operation run out of the Pentagon by creepy Iran-Contra
figure John Poindexter. Bush Administration marketing mavens
had tried to dress up the sinister "dataveillance" spook
squad--first by changing TIA to Terrorism Information
Awareness, then to the Information Awareness Office--to no
avail. "But," wondered the Electronic Frontier Foundation
watchdog group a month after Congress cut its funding, "is
TIA truly dead?"
At the time I bet "no." Once a regime has revealed a
predilection for spying on its own people, the histories of
East Germany and Richard Nixon teach us, they never quit
voluntarily. The cyclical clicks that appeared on my phone
line after 9/11 corroborated my belief that federal spy
agencies were using the War on Terrorism as a pretext for
harassing their real enemies: liberals and others who
criticized their policies. As did the phony Verizon employee
tearing out of my building's basement, leaving the phone
switching box open, when I demanded to see his
identification. He drove away in an unmarked van.
So I was barely surprised to hear the big news that Bush
had ordered the National Security Agency, FBI and CIA to tap
the phones and emails of such dangerously subversive radical
Islamist anti-American terrorist groups as Greenpeace,
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, the American
Indian Movement and the Catholic Workers, without bothering
to apply for a warrant. "The Catholic Workers advocated
peace with a Christian and semi-communistic ideology," an
agent wrote in an FBI dossier, a man sadly unaware of the
passings of J. Edgar Hoover and the Soviet Union.
Old joke: A suspect running away from a cop ducks down a
long dark alley. When the policeman's partner catches up he
finds the first cop walking around in circles under a bright
streetlamp. "What are you doing?" the second officer asks.
"The guy ran into that alley!" "I know," his colleague
replies, "but looking for him out here is a lot easier."
No wonder they haven't found Osama bin Laden. Tapping the
ACLU's phones is easier than traipsing through Pakistani
Kashmir.
The return of brazen Nixon-style domestic eavesdropping
--it undoubtedly occurred under presidents from Ford to
Clinton, though on a smaller, more discreet scale--indicates
that the White House is flipping ahead to the next page in
its Hitler playbook, the part about exploiting a state of
perpetual war to stifle internal dissent on a vast scale.
"As part of the program approved by President Bush for
domestic surveillance without warrants," the New York Times
reports, "the NSA has gained the cooperation of American
telecommunications companies to obtain backdoor access to
streams of domestic and international communications." Maybe
I should worry about the real Verizon guy too.
But then, last week, Bush also claimed the right to spy
within the United States. Despite Congressional denials Bush
said that the resolution that authorized him to use force to
go after the perpetrators behind 9/11--which he used to
invade Afghanistan--also gave him the right to listen in on
Greenpeace and infiltrate a PETA seminar on veganism (yes,
really). Attorney General and torture aficionado Alberto R.
Gonzales cited the president's "inherent power as commander
in chief."
Actually, as Peter Irons documents in his outstanding War
Powers: How the Imperial Presidency Hijacked the
Constitution, the Founding Fathers never intended for the
"commander in chief" to have any powers beyond ordering
troops to repel an invasion force. As everyone understood in
1787, the title was strictly ceremonial. A president can't
declare war, much less violate our privacy, based on his
commander-in-chief "authority."
Officials of a democratic republic derive their power and
authority from law. As servants of the people, they can't do
anything unless it's specifically authorized by law or
judicial interpretations thereof. Only in authoritarian and
totalitarian regimes may a legal theory be created that
imbues the leader, as the personal embodiment of the state,
with "inherent" powers. For example, the Nazi "führer
principle," in which the head of state was answerable to no
one and the legislative and judicial branches of governments
were reduced to rubber stamps, required Hitler to assign
himself inherent powers.
Bush and Gonzales' interpretation of their roles is
alien, un-American. Do they understand our system of
government? Or are they trying to change it to something
more "efficient"--something closer to authoritarian state
led by a strongman, or even outright fascism?
When I first read about Bush's domestic eavesdropping
operation--which he promises to continue--I did what any
left-of-center Bush-bashing cartoonist and columnist would
do: I filed Freedom of Information Act requests to force the
FBI, CIA and NSA to cough up whatever they've got on me.
After all, if the feds are going after Ancient Forest
Rescue, it isn't a big stretch to surmise that they might be
interested in a guy who says that George W. Bush is
illegitimate, dumb as a rock and the head of a cabal of
sociopathic mass murderers who've done more to destroy the
United States than Osama. I'll let you know what, if
anything, turns up.
Interesting tidbit: When I visited the NSA's official
website, my browser warned me that I was "about to enter a
site that is not secure." Ain't that the truth.
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