by Bill Holmes
It
seems like every time I tune in the TV or read an article lately it's about
some new infringement on our liberties. Although this trend didn't start with
9/11/2001, it has certainly accelerated since then.
The biggest change came with the passage of the Patriot Act which was written, passed and signed into law by October 26,
2001. That includes coming up with the convoluted acronym USA PATRIOT. You
didn't know it was an acronym? It stands for Uniting (and) Strengthening America (by) Providing
Appropriate Tools Required (to) Intercept (and) Obstruct
Terrorism. Catchy isn't it? It just rolls off the tongue. I bet Congress
spent more time on the acronym or backronym than on the actual legislation. When is the last
time Congress accomplished anything in only six weeks? The Patriot Act was
extended in 2011 with very few changes.
I won't go into the details of the
act but in general it changed the rules of the game. Whereas individual rights
and freedoms were once the principal concerns, we now could infringe on those
rights in the name of national security. It changed the way government agencies
were organized and how they share information. It changed the rules about
gathering that information and the restrictions on that gathering. The rules of
subpoena were changed and relaxed. The lines between domestic and foreign
surveillance were blurred.
As is to be expected, the
government agencies involved took the ball and ran. They fully exploited their
new freedoms even at the expense of our individual freedoms. It is the nature
of man and his institutions to seek power and control. Once a little bit is
achieved there is a burning desire for more power and control. The problem is
the Patriot Act made it easier for these agencies to increase their power. We
need laws and rules that make it more difficult for government to infringe on
our rights and freedoms.
So, now we have the revelation that the National Security
Agency (NSA) is monitoring phone records, emails and social media sites. They
regularly receive information from the major Internet providers, phone
companies and social sites. The president and others have assured us that the
government is not listening to our phone conversations or reading our emails.
If you believe that then you probably think everything on the Internet is true.
Now I don't think that the NSA is
listening to my phone calls or scrutinizing my Google searches but I do think
they could if they wanted to. I also don't think they would need, or even ask
for, any judicial OK to do it. Maybe if I write about government surveillance,
Google Al-Qaeda or “friend” a suspicious person on Facebook I might show up on
their radar.
The concern is that once government
has the keys to the information, the odds are that they will use those keys.
Even if they don't, someone else will use the keys. That has been proven by the
Edward Snowdon affair. Do we even know what information he took or who he has
given it to? There is no way that millions of people can have “top secret”
clearance and the information remain “top secret”.
I remember right after the 9/11
tragedy that our leaders implored us to return to normal life as soon as
possible. Go shopping, go to the movies, go to the park, go out to eat. If we didn't do these things then the
terrorists had won. Too bad our government didn't take their own advice. They
went into a bunker and passed sweeping legislation in a very few weeks.
Besides the Patriot Act, the
president and Congress got us into a protracted war in Afghanistan and soon
thereafter in Iraq. We opened a prison
in Guantanamo, foreign soil, for terrorist prisoners so we wouldn't have to
abide by all those pesky US laws. US citizens who were Muslims were discriminated
against and profiled often involving physical violence.
The current administration and
Congress have followed along the same path. The fact that Obama has continued
so much of what was put in place by Bush (43) makes me wonder about the
phenomenon that seems to happen with every new administration or new congress.
That phenomenon is that things barely change from one to another. Every
presidential candidate talks about change but few actually do it. I wonder why
this is. Is it because things are just more complicated than expected, the
optimistic view. Or is it that so much government stuff is kept secret that the
new president says “Oh shit, now I understand”, the pessimistic view. This Bush
to Obama hand off is not the first time I've been confused. How many
administrations kept the Vietnam War going?
The one time when change happens is
when a crisis, real or perceived, occurs. Then we go overboard. Our alleged
leaders pass sweeping legislation that doesn't accomplish what it was supposed
to. Either the legislation is flawed to begin with or it gives too much leeway
to the implementation and enforcing agencies of the executive branch. If you
allow an executive department to make the rules they will build an empire. They
will spend every cent Congress allocates and then ask for more. They will push
every restriction to the limit and then probably blow through it. That's our
nature. Grab as much power and budget as you can. Bureaucrats don't care about
our rights. For that matter, members of Congress don't really care about our
rights either. They care about reelection and the perks of office.
Although not related to terrorism,
the recent IRS problems are another example of big government agencies running
amuck. It's also an example of the government scrutinizing our political and/or
religious beliefs.
How many billions of dollars have
we spent on the Afghanistan and Iraq wars and on the NSA and related agencies?
How many individual rights have been trampled on? How many dollars will we
continue to spend? It's estimated that the NSA has 40,000 employees and a $10
billion annual budget. Of course the real numbers are “top secret” so I guess
only the four million people with top secret clearance know for sure. Remember,
the NSA is only one of many agencies spying on us so the budget numbers are way
bigger than $10 billion per year. Don't get me started on the Transportation
Security Administration (TSA) with their ever changing rules and general
incompetence.
Wouldn't it be nice to have a few
of those billions of dollars available to fix our decaying infrastructure,
lower our staggering national debt, rebuild West, Texas and the New Jersey
coastline or even lower taxes?
There is a TV program on CBS called
Person of
Interest about the guy who programmed the machine that
analyzes all the data the government collects. He programmed a back door to the
computer that he uses to save peoples' lives. I originally thought it was a
fictional drama but I'm beginning to think it is actually a documentary. Is
there a back door entrance to the NSA computers? If so, who has the key, the
good guys or the bad guys?
Our government urged us to get back
to our normal lives after 9/11. They then decided that normal was to go to war
with two countries, reduce our rights and build huge government agencies. All
this comes down to my original question. Who's winning? Is it us who have
drained our treasury and reduced our freedom or is it the terrorists? I don't
have the answer but this doesn't feel like winning to me. At best I'd call it a
draw. Maybe that's a good as we can expect. We need national security but we
also need to maintain our basic principles. Let's remember what we're
protecting.
What do you think?
wjh
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