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Title: The NSA’s Technotyranny: One Nation Under Surveillance
Source: Lew Rockwell
URL Source: https://www.lewrockwell.com/2015/05 ... ead/what-the-nsa-really-wants/
Published: May 26, 2015
Author: John Whitehead
Post Date: 2015-05-26 05:47:53 by Deckard
Keywords: None
Views: 498
Comments: 4

“The ultimate goal of the NSA is total population control.”—William Binney, NSA whistleblower

We now have a fourth branch of government.

As I document in my new book Battlefield America: The War on the American People, this fourth branch came into being without any electoral mandate or constitutional referendum, and yet it possesses superpowers, above and beyond those of any other government agency save the military. It is all-knowing, all-seeing and all-powerful. It operates beyond the reach of the president, Congress and the courts, and it marches in lockstep with the corporate elite who really call the shots in Washington, DC.

You might know this branch of government as Surveillance, but I prefer “technotyranny,” a term coined by investigative journalist James Bamford to refer to an age of technological tyranny made possible by government secrets, government lies, government spies and their corporate ties.

Beware of what you say, what you read, what you write, where you go, and with whom you communicate, because it will all be recorded, stored and used against you eventually, at a time and place of the government’s choosing. Privacy, as we have known it, is dead.

The police state is about to pass off the baton to the surveillance state.

Having already transformed local police into extensions of the military, the Department of Homeland Security, the Justice Department and the FBI are preparing to turn the nation’s soldier cops into techno-warriors, complete with iris scanners, body scanners, thermal imaging Doppler radar devices, facial recognition programs, license plate readers, cell phone Stingray devices and so much more.

This is about to be the new face of policing in America.

The National Security Agency (NSA) has been a perfect red herring, distracting us from the government’s broader, technology-driven campaign to render us helpless in the face of its prying eyes. In fact, long before the NSA became the agency we loved to hate, the Justice Department, the FBI, and the Drug Enforcement Administration were carrying out their own secret mass surveillance on an unsuspecting populace.

Just about every branch of the government—from the Postal Service to the Treasury Department and every agency in between—now has its own surveillance sector, authorized to spy on the American people. Then there are the fusion and counterterrorism centers that gather all of the data from the smaller government spies—the police, public health officials, transportation, etc.—and make it accessible for all those in power. And of course that doesn’t even begin to touch on the complicity of the corporate sector, which buys and sells us from cradle to grave, until we have no more data left to mine.

The raging debate over the fate of the NSA’s blatantly unconstitutional, illegal and ongoing domestic surveillance programs is just so much noise, what Shakespeare referred to as “sound and fury, signifying nothing.”

It means nothing: the legislation, the revelations, the task forces, and the filibusters.

The government is not giving up, nor is it giving in. It has stopped listening to us. It has long since ceased to take orders from “we the people.”

If you haven’t figured it out yet, none of it—the military drills, the surveillance, the militarized police, the strip searches, the random pat downs, the stop-and-frisks, even the police-worn body cameras—is about fighting terrorism. It’s about controlling the populace.

Despite the fact that its data snooping has been shown to be ineffective at detecting, let alone stopping, any actual terror attacks, the NSA continues to operate largely in secret, carrying out warrantless mass surveillance on hundreds of millions of Americans’ phone calls, emails, text messages and the like, beyond the scrutiny of most of Congress and the taxpayers who are forced to fund its multi-billion dollar secret black ops budget.

Legislation such as the USA Patriot Act serves only to legitimize the actions of a secret agency run by a shadow government. Even the proposed and ultimately defeated USA Freedom Act, which purported to restrict the reach of the NSA’s phone surveillance program—at least on paper—by requiring the agency to secure a warrant before surveillance could be carried out on American citizens and prohibiting the agency from storing any data collected on Americans, amounted to little more than a paper tiger: threatening in appearance, but lacking any real bite.

The question of how to deal with the NSA—an agency that operates outside of the system of checks and balances established by the Constitution—is a divisive issue that polarizes even those who have opposed the NSA’s warrantless surveillance from the get-go, forcing all of us—cynics, idealists, politicians and realists alike—to grapple with a deeply unsatisfactory and dubious political “solution” to a problem that operates beyond the reach of voters and politicians: how do you trust a government that lies, cheats, steals, sidesteps the law, and then absolves itself of wrongdoing to actually obey the law?

Since its official start in 1952, when President Harry S. Truman issued a secret executive order establishing the NSA as the hub of the government’s foreign intelligence activities, the agency—nicknamed “No Such Agency”—has operated covertly, unaccountable to Congress all the while using taxpayer dollars to fund its secret operations. It was only when the agency ballooned to 90,000 employees in 1969, making it the largest intelligence agency in the world with a significant footprint outside Washington, DC, that it became more difficult to deny its existence.

In the aftermath of Watergate in 1975, the Senate held meetings under the Church Committee in order to determine exactly what sorts of illicit activities the American intelligence apparatus was engaged in under the direction of President Nixon, and how future violations of the law could be stopped. It was the first time the NSA was exposed to public scrutiny since its creation.

The investigation revealed a sophisticated operation whose surveillance programs paid little heed to such things as the Constitution. For instance, under Project SHAMROCK, the NSA spied on telegrams to and from the U.S., as well as the correspondence of American citizens. Moreover, as the Saturday Evening Post reports, “Under Project MINARET, the NSA monitored the communications of civil rights leaders and opponents of the Vietnam War, including targets such as Martin Luther King, Jr., Mohammed Ali, Jane Fonda, and two active U.S. Senators. The NSA had launched this program in 1967 to monitor suspected terrorists and drug traffickers, but successive presidents used it to track all manner of political dissidents.”

Senator Frank Church (D-Ida.), who served as the chairman of the Select Committee on Intelligence that investigated the NSA, understood only too well the dangers inherent in allowing the government to overstep its authority in the name of national security. Church recognized that such surveillance powers “at any time could be turned around on the American people, and no American would have any privacy left, such is the capability to monitor everything: telephone conversations, telegrams, it doesn’t matter. There would be no place to hide.”

Noting that the NSA could enable a dictator “to impose total tyranny” upon an utterly defenseless American public, Church declared that he did not “want to see this country ever go across the bridge” of constitutional protection, congressional oversight and popular demand for privacy. He avowed that “we,” implicating both Congress and its constituency in this duty, “must see to it that this agency and all agencies that possess this technology operate within the law and under proper supervision, so that we never cross over that abyss. That is the abyss from which there is no return.”

The result was the passage of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), and the creation of the FISA Court, which was supposed to oversee and correct how intelligence information is collected and collated. The law requires that the NSA get clearance from the FISA Court, a secret surveillance court, before it can carry out surveillance on American citizens. Fast forward to the present day, and the so-called solution to the problem of government entities engaging in unjustified and illegal surveillance—the FISA Court—has unwittingly become the enabler of such activities, rubberstamping almost every warrant request submitted to it.

The 9/11 attacks served as a watershed moment in our nation’s history, ushering in an era in which immoral and/or illegal government activities such as surveillance, torture, strip searches, SWAT team raids are sanctioned as part of the quest to keep us “safe.”

In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, George W. Bush secretly authorized the NSA to conduct warrantless surveillance on Americans’ phone calls and emails. That wireless wiretap program was reportedly ended in 2007 after the New York Times reported on it, to mass indignation.

Nothing changed under Barack Obama. In fact, the violations worsened, with the NSA authorized to secretly collect internet and telephone data on millions of Americans, as well as on foreign governments.

It was only after whistleblower Edward Snowden’s revelations in 2013 that the American people fully understood the extent to which they had been betrayed once again.

What this brief history of the NSA makes clear is that you cannot reform the NSA.

As long as the government is allowed to make a mockery of the law—be it the Constitution, the FISA Act or any other law intended to limit its reach and curtail its activities—and is permitted to operate behind closed doors, relaying on secret courts, secret budgets and secret interpretations of the laws of the land, there will be no reform.

Presidents, politicians, and court rulings have come and gone over the course of the NSA’s 60-year history, but none of them have done much to put an end to the NSA’s “technotyranny.”

The beast has outgrown its chains. It will not be restrained.

The growing tension seen and felt throughout the country is a tension between those who wield power on behalf of the government—the president, Congress, the courts, the military, the militarized police, the technocrats, the faceless unelected bureaucrats who blindly obey and carry out government directives, no matter how immoral or unjust, and the corporations—and those among the populace who are finally waking up to the mounting injustices, seething corruption and endless tyrannies that are transforming our country into a technocrized police state.

At every turn, we have been handicapped in our quest for transparency, accountability and a representative democracy by an establishment culture of secrecy: secret agencies, secret experiments, secret military bases, secret surveillance, secret budgets, and secret court rulings, all of which exist beyond our reach, operate outside our knowledge, and do not answer to “we the people.”

What we have failed to truly comprehend is that the NSA is merely one small part of a shadowy permanent government comprised of unelected bureaucrats who march in lockstep with profit-driven corporations that actually runs Washington, DC, and works to keep us under surveillance and, thus, under control. For example, Google openly works with the NSA, Amazon has built a massive $600 million intelligence database for CIA, and the telecommunications industry is making a fat profit by spying on us for the government.

In other words, Corporate America is making a hefty profit by aiding and abetting the government in its domestic surveillance efforts. Conveniently, as the Intercept recently revealed, many of the NSA’s loudest defenders have financial ties to NSA contractors.

Thus, if this secret regime not only exists but thrives, it is because we have allowed it through our ignorance, apathy and naïve trust in politicians who take their orders from Corporate America rather than the Constitution.

If this shadow government persists, it is because we have yet to get outraged enough to push back against its power grabs and put an end to its high-handed tactics.

And if this unelected bureaucracy succeeds in trampling underfoot our last vestiges of privacy and freedom, it will be because we let ourselves be fooled into believing that politics matters, that voting makes a difference, that politicians actually represent the citizenry, that the courts care about justice, and that everything that is being done is in our best interests.

Indeed, as political scientist Michael J. Glennon warns, you can vote all you want, but the people you elect aren’t actually the ones calling the shots. “The American people are deluded … that the institutions that provide the public face actually set American national security policy,” stated Glennon. “They believe that when they vote for a president or member of Congress or succeed in bringing a case before the courts, that policy is going to change. But … policy by and large in the national security realm is made by the concealed institutions.”

In other words, it doesn’t matter who occupies the White House: the secret government with its secret agencies, secret budgets and secret programs won’t change. It will simply continue to operate in secret until some whistleblower comes along to momentarily pull back the curtain and we dutifully—and fleetingly—play the part of the outraged public, demanding accountability and rattling our cages, all the while bringing about little real reform.

Thus, the lesson of the NSA and its vast network of domestic spy partners is simply this: once you allow the government to start breaking the law, no matter how seemingly justifiable the reason, you relinquish the contract between you and the government which establishes that the government works for and obeys you, the citizen—the employer—the master.

Once the government starts operating outside the law, answerable to no one but itself, there’s no way to rein it back in, short of revolution. And by revolution, I mean doing away with the entire structure, because the corruption and lawlessness have become that pervasive.

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#1. To: (#0) (Edited)

Beware of what you say, what you read, what you write, where you go, and with whom you communicate, because it will all be recorded, stored and used against you eventually, at a time and place of the government’s choosing. Privacy, as we have known it, is dead.

And precisely BECAUSE privacy is dead, and cannot be revived as long as Republicans and Democrats control the American government, a complete change in personal outlook is necessary - and we already see it developing in society.

The secret for average citizens to defeat the power of the surveillance state is SHAMELESSNESS.

See, there are two types of people being surveilled: the people who are plotting violent crimes. THOSE people will have the state come crashing in on them with violent force, if caught. And then there's the other type of person: everybody else.

Us "everybody else's" always lived in a world where we could easily HIDE our sins. We always had them - always - all the way back to Adam and Eve - but we could easily HIDE them, and by keeping them invisible, we could maintain our own discretionary power to be hypocritical and go after other people for the same or related sins, if it suited us.

That's why we fear the surveillance state so much, and why we fear the end of cash. Because then the government will be able to see our communications, and see that we flirt, even though married, or have occasional affairs, or look at all sorts of wild porn, or buy illicit services, or sneak cigarettes or alcohol or junk food but pretend we don't. The government can see who is shirking, and who is doing what. And then it can bring down reputation- destroying blackmail on people.

That was always the claim in the old days of security clearances: the government needs to know all of people's sexual sins, because those are the ways that foreign intelligence operatives can blackmail people.

One of the reasons that homosexuality in particular was such a fraught topic for the military was that it was socially unacceptable, and therefore whoever was involved in gay sex was a potential security risk: he could be blackmailed by the Russians. Same with adulterous affairs.

In the age of the surveillance state, though, it becomes impossible to maintain private secrecy anymore without substantially curtailing one's life.

What to do?

The gays have actually led the way in this. They have come forcefully, joyously "out of the closet", and now all of the power of "exposing" them has gone out of the system. "They're here, they're queer, and they're in your face"...and THAT means that they can't be blackmailed, or embarrassed, or anything, by calling them out as gay. In fact, they will hit back very aggressively at you if you do. It's no longer a crime, and they're not going to let anybody discriminate against them.

And we MUST recall that everybody who does discriminate against the gays DOES have very deep and embarrassing personal sins - ALL of humanity does. The Bible says so, and it's true.

One sees men desperate to burrow in and hide. We all feel it. None of us wants to be exposed in all of our flaws and weaknesses and sins.

But the SHAMELESS have the advantage of not CARING as much if they are "outed". They have sins like everybody else, but they have disempowered others' ability to lord it over them by ceasing to CARE if anybody knows.

It would be swell if we could drive the surveillance state back out of existence and reinforce the 4th Amendment, so that government left us alone and we were not so intruded upon in every facet of our lives.

Truth is, that is never going to happen. We will not preserve our privacy as long as the Republicans and Democrats are in power. And there's no indication at all that they will be uprooted. So, the state and purveyors of communications services will know more and more, and they will be able to bring pressure upon people through their personal activities IF those people CARE that other people know what they are doing.

But if people become shameless, as the gays in particular have, they become immune to blackmail. In fact, when visible, they form constituencies that can swiftly move the legal system to no longer permit prosecution of their particular morals crime. Marijuana users are doing that right now, and they will prevail.

Truth: far too many people have used marijuana and know it didn't hurt them for the harsh laws to stand. They won't go out there and protest for marijuana, but they don't support the laws, and when the time comes for them to vote in secret, they do, and the laws fall.

Truth: a large percentage of the population has had a homosexual experience but is not gay or lesbian. That is why the willingness to stomp out the gays is not there in the electorate, and never will be. By contrast, when it comes to adultery, women are involved in that, and they have gained tremendous power in the last hundred years, and are quite vindictive. Heterosexual affairs, though much more common than homosexuality, will still bear consequences for a long time, because of this.

The societal solution to THAT is that men are no longer marrying as much. Why buy the cow when you can get the milk for free?

Now, people can grouse and scream about the immorality (and to be clear, homosexual acts, marijuana use and extramarital affairs, and looking at porn, ARE immoral), but they cannot keep their lives secret anymore without engaging in such fierce separation from societal norms of communication that they appear obsessive. Truth is, anybody as obsessed as Mrs. Clinton was with secrecy, such that she had her own server, has something to hide.

Truth is, we ALL have something to hide. And the truth also is that the quicker we adapt our minds to simply stop hiding, to become more shameless, the quicker that the authority over us that we fear fades. You can't blackmail people who are sinners, know it, and don't are if anybody else knows it.

The surveillance state is here to stay, as long as the Democrats and Republicans rule the roost. Your secrecy is gone. You will either retreat into a Luddite shell to protect yourself, or your sins will be knowable to whomever in the surveillance state wants to know them.

Rather than be a Luddite, take a page from the gays and the potheads and become SHAMELESS. We already know we are sinners. Right now, we're accustomed to hiding that and caring desperately if others find out whatever our sin is. The stronger, empowering approach is to take the Scripture literally: Yes, I am a sinner. And so are you. And you. We all know it - that's why we hide it. But the world in which simple hypocrisy could protect us is vanishing. We're all going to be exposed. So, we can either be enslaved by the people who know our secrets, or we can cease to care if we are watched.

Think about that Tsarnaev in a small cell under 24 hour surveillance, for the rest of his life. Think about what 24-hour surveillance means, precisely. And then think of the prisoner's strategy: try to maintain modesty, and fail, and be beaten down by it. Or be shameless, flip off the camera, and do as he pleases, not caring who sees.

We're all in that boat more and more. We haven't committed any crimes, but we HAVE committed sins, and the surveillance state exposes many of them, and will expose more.

Divorce-seekers get Easy-Pass records to prove affairs now. You can't hide now without being a Luddite, and as we move to a cashless society, the option to be a Luddite will be removed. You will be exposed.

IF people maintain their current mindset, which relies heavily on the facade of hypocrisy, they will be manipulable. But by adopting an attitude of SHAMELESSNESS, the power of "gotcha" in the surveillance state is neutered. Currently people sin and hide it, and that desire to hide it is exploited by others to gain power over them.

The ability to hide is being removed.

One can become docile and beaten down.

Or one can acknwledge that sins are answerable to God, not to other men, and cease to hide them.

Kids who were pounded by ridicule when they were young often are damaged for life. But some of them simply ceased to care about the opinions of others.

To take a page out of Eminem, who probably was one of those kids: You all hate me, and I don't give a fuck.

This is a very aggressive, proactive response to the surveillance state that is becoming ubiquitous.

Of course, the legal process of tolerating gays and legalizing marijuana are inevitable. Once people's sins are exposed, they will move in numbers to prevent other people from punishing them for them.

The top of society seeks to control the rest by taking away their secrecy. The answer to that is to remove the means of control, by becoming shameless: you see? So what? I don't give a fuck. Yeah, I'm a sinner, and so are you. But YOU'RE a control freak and a hypocrite, because you're a sinner too - I leave you alone, but you don't leave me alone.

In a world made shameless by universal surveillance, the people who attempt to use people's secrets to blackmail them are the real criminals, and the ones who need to be punished, hounded and broken.

We are answerable to God alone for our sins. If a MAN tries to use our sins to gain power over us, we should expose all of his secrets - HE is obviously controllable that way. HE has something to hide. So let's find it and kill him with shame.

To be free of HIM we have to free ourselves of shame vis a vis other men. If we hold onto our desire to use the power of hypocrisy on others, all we are doing is delivering ourselves bound hand and foot (and dick) to the power of people much more powerful than we are.

That's the truth: Shamelessness is the only strategy that will set people free.

Nothing will save those who hide violence. But hiding vices? They won't be hideable anymore.

We could go back to making them hideable, so that we can preserve our secrecy. But as long as people vote in Republicans and Democrats that will never happen, so if you want to stay free in a world without secrets, arm yourself with shamelessness. It's the only effective weapon you have.

It has freed the gays, and the pot-heads. Now use it to free yourself.

Vicomte13  posted on  2015-05-26   10:48:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Vicomte13 (#1)

Great standing argument.

But wouldn't the shamelessness of ones sins end up making a higher tolerance and acceptance for sins?

I feel like the Elite know what they are doing.

ebonytwix  posted on  2015-05-26   12:51:29 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Deckard (#0)

Seriously? I'd rather live in a little island like Martinique or something.

ebonytwix  posted on  2015-05-26   12:52:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: ebonytwix (#2)

But wouldn't the shamelessness of ones sins end up making a higher tolerance and acceptance for sins?

Obviously.

Which is why people need to remember that nothing is EVER hidden from God, and that God at the final judgment will specifically throw into the flames:

Killers. Liars. Peddlers of drugs to produce altered state. Adulterers. The sexually immoral. Cowards.

Unless they repent to God for those sins AND forgive others their sins against them.

That's how it works.

The world will be sinful. In intolerant societies, it is sinful and violently hypocritical. In tolerant societies, morals are loose and immorality is more visibly prevalent. It's there in both, more open in some.

So, there's more fornication in Sweden, because the society is broad and tolerant. And there's more homosexual sodomy in the Muslim world, because access to women is extremely limited, and because the society is aggressively intolerant, there is more killing of fornicators and adulterers.

There's probably the same quantum of sin either way, but the sins of oppressive society are far more brutally violent to individuals.

North and South Korea probably have the same overall quantum of sin, and men will all answer to God for that. But in North Korea, men answer to men for everything, and the society APPEARS to be cleaner because of the oppression.

Killing, judicially, is not an improvement over fornication and sodomy.

Vicomte13  posted on  2015-05-26   14:34:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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