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There's nothing new about the government's domestic spying; and nothing new about the excuse used for it either.

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Domestic Spying Is Old News

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, Pacific News Service. Posted December 21, 2005.


There's nothing new about the government's domestic spying; and nothing new about the excuse used for it either.
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The big puzzle is why anyone is shocked that President Bush eavesdropped on Americans. The National Security Agency for decades has routinely monitored the phone calls and telegrams of thousands of Americans. The rationale has always been the same, and Bush said it again in defending his spying, that it was done to protect Americans from foreign threat or attack.

The named targets in the past have been Muslim extremists, Communists, peace activists, black radicals, civil rights leaders, and drug peddlers. Even before President Harry Truman established the NSA in a Cold War era directive in 1952, government cryptologists jumped in the domestic spy hunt with Operation Shamrock. That was a super-secret operation that forced private telegraph companies to turn over the telegraphic correspondence of Americans to the government.

The NSA kicked its spy campaign into high gear in the 1960s. The FBI demanded that the NSA monitor antiwar activists, civil rights leaders, and drug peddlers. The Senate Select Committee that investigated government domestic spying in 1976 pried open a tiny public window into the scope of NSA spying. But the agency slammed the window shut fast when it refused to cough up documents to the committee that would tell more about its surveillance of Americans. The NSA claimed that disclosure would compromise national security.

The few feeble Congressional attempts over the years to probe NSA domestic spying have gone nowhere. Even though rumors swirled that NSA eyes were riveted on more than a few Americans, Congressional investigators showed no stomach to fight the NSA's entrenched code of silence.

There was a huge warning sign in 2002 that government agencies would jump deeper into the domestic spy business. President Bush scrapped the old 1970s guidelines that banned FBI spying on domestic organizations. The directive gave the FBI carte blanche authority to surveil, and plant agents in churches, mosques, and political groups, and ransack the Internet to hunt for potential subversives, without the need or requirement to show probable cause of criminal wrongdoing.

The revised Bush administration spy guidelines, along with the anti-terrorist provisions of the Patriot Act, also gave local agents even wider discretion to determine what groups or individuals they can investigate and what tactics they can use to investigate them. The FBI wasted little time in flexing its new found intelligence muscle. It mounted a secret campaign to monitor and harass Iraq war protestors in Washington D.C. and San Francisco in October 2003.

Another sign that government domestic spying was back in full swing came during Condeleezza Rice's finger point at the FBI in her testimony before the 9/11 Commission in 2004. Rice blamed the FBI for allegedly failing to follow up on its investigation of Al-Qaeda operatives in the United States U.S. prior to the September 11 terror attacks. That increased the clamor for an independent domestic spy agency. FBI Director Robert Mueller made an impassioned plea against a separate agency, and the reason was simple. Domestic spying was an established fact and the FBI and the NSA had long been engaged in it.

The September 11 terror attacks, and the heat Bush administration took for its towering intelligence lapses, gave Bush the excuse to plunge even deeper into domestic spying. But Bush also recognized that if word got out about NSA domestic spying, it would ignite a firestorm of protest. Fortunately it did.

Despite Bush's weak and self-serving national security excuse that it thwarted potential terrorist attacks, none of which is verifiable, the Supreme Court, the NSA's own mandate and past executive orders explicitly bar domestic spying without court authorization. The exception is if there is a grave and imminent terror threat. That's the shaky legal dodge that Bush used to justify domestic spying. Bush and his defenders discount the monumental threat and damage that spying on Americans poses to civil liberties. But it can't and shouldn't be shrugged off.

During the debate over the creation of a domestic spy agency in 2002, even proponents recognized the potential threat of such an agency to civil liberties. As a safeguard they recommended that the agency not have expanded wiretap and surveillance powers or law enforcement authority, and that the Senate and House intelligence committees have strict oversight over its activities.

These supposed fail-safe measures were hardly ironclad safeguards against abuses, but they understood that domestic spying is a civil liberties nightmare minefield that has blown up and wreaked havoc on American's lives in the past. The FBI is the prime example. During the 1950s and 1960s, FBI director J. Edgar Hoover kicked FBI domestic spying into high gear. FBI agents compiled secret dossiers, illegally wiretapped, used undercover plants, and agent provocateurs, sent poison pen letters, and staged black bag jobs against black activists and anti-war groups.

Bush's claim that domestic spying poses no risk to civil liberties is laughable. Congress should demand that Bush and the NSA come clean on domestic spying, and then promptly end it.

Digg!

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is the author of 'The Crisis in Black and Black' (Middle Passage Press).

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The excuset that everyone does it, so I can too did work when I was a kid
Posted by: ShaSpirit on Dec 21, 2005 12:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is nice to read the NSA history and there is a law that made to keep presidents from spying on Americans and it needs to be enforced with impeachment. Just because someone else did it I can too, is not a good enough reason. But with the new Supreme Court judges ruling Bush will probably get the law that kept Nixon from using this excuse law over turned.

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JUDGE, JURY, AND EXECUTIONER
Posted by: Bushhater on Dec 21, 2005 4:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We have an administration whose position is "the law is whatever we say it is", or "I am the law". This administration endorses and practices torture, spies on its own citizens without warrants, do "sneak and peak" without questions, maintained "free speech zones" in violation of the 1st amendment. Anyone, including American citizens on American soil can be arrested and held indefinitely without any judicial review or charges or access to an attorney in this administration's view merely on the President's word. These above mentioned occurrences are, by any definition are the characteristics of a tyrannical fascist police state. Wonder how much longer it will be before the government's Gestapo goon squads will be breaking down doors to people's homes in the middle of the night to handout summary executions to Bush critics deemed treasonous?

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Dangerous precedent
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Dec 21, 2005 5:34 AM   
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If the present president isn't held accountable for illegal activity, it will set a precedent. Every president from now on will be free to violate any article of the constitution using the excuse that Bush violated this one. In principle it doesn't matter which law is broken.

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» RE: Dangerous precedent Posted by: Chris420
WHATS GOOD FOR THE GOOSE
Posted by: Jeffersonista on Dec 21, 2005 7:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Guess its time for 24/7 taping of GW and Cheny, to be recallable by any us citizen. No nat security loopholes.

Musolini was right its should be called CORPORATISM and it owns us lock stock and barrel, at least untill CHINA call in our IOU's.

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This has been all over the place lately.
Posted by: bettsoff on Dec 21, 2005 7:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The "oh this is old news" defeatist attitude is pretty damn annoying, I must say. Borders on santimonious "oh settle down little citizens, if you were really progressive you'd have known about this years ago" pontificating. Sooner or later, what's been known about and ignored will stop being ignored and something will be done about it. That is, as long as the elite progressives among us will get off their asses and do something besides chide the unwashed masses for not knowing everything they know for as long as they've known it.

Do I care about the long history of domestic spying? Marginally
Do I care Clinton did it too? No.
Do I care that this may be the vehicle to get rid of Bush and possibly bring some reform? Fuck YES. This is what we should be talking about.

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Scott
Posted by: Grouchoman on Dec 21, 2005 11:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is no doubt in my mind that the reason the Bushies are protesting so loudly about how they have done no wrong is that the list of who was wiretapped contains some names that would startle even the most disinterested citizen.

As Nixon had his enemies list, so does President Scroob...so on that list of wiretaps are probably some left leaning figures and other names of note that don't rhyme with Zarqawi or Bin Laden.

They know that the gig is up if the names get out. It would be fine justice if this ass was impeached over his follower's zeal to get a Howard Dean or Al Franken wiretapped. Ha!

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Kind of defeats the purpose
Posted by: YogiBear on Dec 21, 2005 11:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It would be a lot easier to find the people trying to destroy our democratic republic if we weren't a deomcratic republic. Why commanders-in-chief, congressmen and cops constantly feel the need to suspend our rights in order to save them is beyond me.

If we could trust our goverment to do the right thing, we wouldn't need a Bill of Rights, we wouldn't need civil liberties. These liberties exist precisely because we cannot trust our government, not now, and not ever.

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SickOBush
Posted by: SicfkOfBush on Dec 21, 2005 2:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alll these arguments by Bushies have no true validity. They had solid information regarding the 9/11 hijackers long before they boarded the planes. And, they missed it then and bungled the job. With all the additional information coming from additional wiretaps, etc. it isn't very likely that they will catch anything in the works hereafter, except some peace group protesting in a very lawful, peaceful manner

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» RE: SickOBush Posted by: billfaster
Hate directed Downward
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Dec 21, 2005 2:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Domestic spying is about what it's always been about.
CONTROL. The System is afraid of People that can THINK ON THEIR OWN. You know who I mean,Hippies,Indians, Blacks,
Latinos,Womens Activists,Environmental Activists,out-of-the-box thinkers like you and me.
This is HATE. Hate makes you do stupid things like steal a country,enslave people,start wars,and killoff the very systems of the Planet that keeps us alive. OH YEAH the spying thing too. Those poor pathetic wretches. If they really took care of the People they would'nt need spies. If their Foriegn Ploicy was'nt a bag of shit they would'nt have had a 9/11. That's what we get for standing by a FAILED SYSTEM.
The time for change is NOW, the People that will effect it ARE US. We MUST have the POLICE and MILITARY on OUR SIDE. We are'nt against them,we're against the corrupt,Liberty-less, Freedom-less policies that created the mess we have.
It's not about votes anymore. They've proved it's a sham.When states get away with saying 105% voting turnouts
happen,that's the proof we need to make our 'votes' by standing together,in Peace, the hundreds of millions of us that are fed up and we'll be walking down the street. Not in some 'protest area'. As FREE PEOPLE, LIVING LIBERTY.

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Paranoid Pollyanna
Posted by: Linda on Dec 30, 2005 9:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No doubt that not only is our gov't spying on us, and spying on Al Qaeda, but that Al Qaeda I'm sure is spying on us & on our gov't, from within our own country. Which is really, really a bummer. The feds should be only spying on them, but we know that ain't happenin! Not this bunch. Probably Bush has Karl Rove poring over their "Enemies List" of political & other Americans who threaten their power.

By the way: Would somebody please ask some college age people they know, this question: Why the hell are some in this generation of college kids paying big bucks to sit in HOOKAH BARS, to smoke TOBACCO in their water pipes?

The Hookah Smokin' Caterpillar & Alice would love to know!

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The NSA's Spying is Much Worse Then you Think
Posted by: SleepLessONE on Mar 31, 2006 6:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The NSA's Signals Intelligence Program is one of the most
secret and invasive in existence. The NSA uses this program to spy on American citizens within their own homes by way of satellites. People targeted for this illegal surveillance are being spied on 24 hours a day 7 days a week for years on end, being watched in the privacy of their own bedrooms and bathrooms, without their knowledge of it.

They are also being subjected to an electronic form of mind reading technology which the NSA refers to and REMOTE NEURAL MONITORING. This system which incorporates EBL Electronic Brain Link can not only monitor a target's thoughts but also influence them. This can be done by way of brain to brain or computer to brain link, in which a target can have their thoughts manipulated without their knowledge of it.

The best testimony in regard to this is by a man named John
St. Clair Akwei.

Akwei is a former National Security Agency employee who became a whistle blower against the NSA when he found out that they were using advanced computer/ satellite technology to spy on Americans within their own homes. The NSA's Remote Neural Monitoring Program has been existence for decades as a covert part of its Signals Intelligence Operation.

I am also a victim of this technology and have had the FBI NSA and Department Of Homeland Security destroy my life
as a result of it. My relationship with my family and friends
has been destroyed and I have been made a virtual pariah in my community without having ever been arrested or charged with a crime.

I have also had my thoughts both scanned and manipulated over the years and been psychologically tortured by the NSA cryptologists operating this technology.

The Federal Intelligence community in this country is trying to discredit those targets who come forward with our accounts as being mentally unstable. But the truth of the matter is that we are quite sane and more knowledgable about this technology then the Intelligence community wants us to be.

Why would we make up such outlandish accounts when it would be far easier to describe something that was easier to
comprehend. Why would we waste our valuable time posting
attacks on the NSA FBI CIA and DHS attracting their ire if
they were not attacking us?

The simple answer is that we would not.

Below is a hyperlink to Akwei's lawsuit. It should be circulated to every American citizen so that they can learn first hand of this diabolical technology and how the federal intelligence community is using it illegally and in violation of the US Constitution and Bill Of Rights. Akwei's lawsuit is now making the rounds on the Internet and a grassroots movement to expose the NSA has begun in much the same way the Impeachment Petition for George Bush has begun. WWW.VOTETOIMPEACH.ORG
Please do your part to alert the American people the treasonous
acts that the NSA FBI and CIA are involved in.

Thank you.

James F. Marino
Brookville, NY 11545
American target of the NSA's Signals Intelligence Remote Neural Monitoring Program

John St. Clair Akwei VS The National Security Agency

http://www.angelfire.com/or/mctrl/akwei.html

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