(what's this?)
Home
Discussion Forum
Blog
Galleries
Pamphlets
Headline Archive
Video Archive
Audio Archive
Document Archive
Charts
Timelines
POAC counter- spin
Buzzwords
Daily Email Newsletter
Postal newsletter
Links
POAC Store
Recommended Books
Donate
Contact
POAC Myspace 
You can have POAC headlines emailed to you every day free of charge. Subscribe here
 
T.J. Templeton for Iowa State Representative
 

Paper or plastic? NO! Earth-friendly reinforced canvas grocery totes now available in the POAC store
 
If you are presently serving in the military or in the Delayed Enlistment Program and beginning to rethink your participation, here are resources to help you.
 
Your ad here: $50/week or $150/month Click for details
 

 Contributing Columnists

Tj Templeton
Jack Dalton
Anwaar Hussain
Doris Colmes
Crisis Papers
Vincent L Guarisco
W. David Jenkins III
Dr. Steven Jonas
Lucinda Marshall
Jason Miller
Andrew Wahl
Rowan Wolf
Reader Submissions
 

POAC merchandise:

T-shirts, fleece, tank-tops, prints, magnets and more...

 

Must-see Selections

 
14 points of fascism
 
Sept. 11: They Let it happen 
 
A brief history of the PNAC: a refresher 
 
Bush Cronyism
 
Catapulting the propaganda: The Rendon group
The office of special plans
The Whitehouse Iraq Group
 
 

POAC ENDORSED: The 15% Solution: A Political History of American Fascism, 2001 to 2022 
 

F r o m   t h e Archives

National Security and Homeland Security Presidential Directive makes Bush dictator in event of a terrorist attack or disaster
 
Former Reagan official says "something's in the works" to trigger a police state (Held over)
 
False flag reminders from the POAC forum
 
Pentagon tells Bush: climate change will destroy us: Secret report warns of rioting and nuclear war, Britain will be 'Siberian' in less than 20 years, threat to the world is greater than terrorism
 
Must see: What happens at Facebook.com does not stay at Facebook.com
 
Dateline 2002: "This is a memo that describes how we're going to take out seven countries in five years, starting with Iraq..."
 
 
 

 

It's OK to Spy, Just Call It Eavesdropping

Rowan Wolf

 

I was listening to folks calling in to Washington Journal this morning, and I must admit that I was stunned. I listened for about a half hour as person after person called in to support Bush. I must say that the characterization of this presidency left me with grave concerns. The general tenor was that the democrats were digging up one "little thing" after another to "smear" Bush with. The minimization of the egregious actions of the administration floored me. At the top of the list was a 28 year old man from Florida who said that nobody cared about the government "eavesdropping" on Americans. It was the tone in this man's voice that triggered a large concern about characterizing Bush's authorizing broad scale, indiscriminate, spying on people as "eavesdropping."

My guess is that most people who speak American English have certain associations with the word "eavesdropping." At the light end of the spectrum is inadvertently overhearing someone else's conversation. At the other end is deliberately sneaking around to overhear someone's conversation. What comes to mind is a child hiding outside her or his parent's bedroom while they talk about what presents to get the kid for her/his birthday. Of course, "eavesdropping" may take on a somewhat more ominous meaning when someone "listens in" with hostile intent. Regardless, I think that most people take that word to me something pretty innocuous.

I did a google news search on "bush eavesdrop." What came back surprised me. Sources across the spectrum from "liberal" to "conservative" were using "eavesdropping" to characterized Bush's actions.

When Bush authorized the NSA to engage in spying on people without a warrant he went far beyond "eavesdropping." His program (which still continues today as far as I can tell) was non-specific wiretapping and data mining of massive amounts of electronic communication. It did not just target "suspected terrorists." The operation was the deployment of NSA technology at a number (unspecified) of U.S. communications switching stations. As I understand it, everything that went through those hubs was captured. The spying was done without any form of oversight by Congress or the courts. It was done without any warrant whatsoever. The data was processed against other databases and passed on to other government intelligence and legal agencies. Now the questions arise as to whether whatever "suspected terrorists" were apprehended must be released.

Why? It is the "fruit of a poison tree" issue, and whether all evidence used was accessible to defense attorneys. As the program was secret, it is clear that not only was any evidence from the NSA spying excluded, the existence of the program was excluded as well. . Risen and Lichtblau explore in their article Defense Lawyers in Terror Cases Plan Challenges Over Spy Efforts.

But let's go back to the issue at hand. How many people in the United States do not see their privacy as an issue? How many do not care about Constitutional protections of their freedom? I have a feeling, that many have no idea why the Constitution, and law, stands between the abuses of government and their lives. I don't know whether they trust government that much, or whether they do not see the consequences of the loss of privacy (from wiretapping, to surveillance, to covert searches of their property), or that they see themselves as immune from any of these violations. Perhaps it is some combination of those, or something else entirely. Regardless, it does not bode well for the United States.

Perhaps people really don't see the personal and national risks of the course Bush has taken. Perhaps they don't see how information about them, in their normal daily lives, might be taken out of context to land them in hot water. Maybe they don't see how their child checking the out Kevin Phillips American Dynasty might bring additional scrutiny to their daily lives. Or maybe they don't realize how calling Great Aunt Mimi in France might find them under surveillance. Or even a broader stretch that a friend of a friend showed up at a peace rally and how that swept them into the net. Or the awful truth - that most of the abridgements of our Constitutional protections have been in the "war on drugs," not the "war on terror."

Perhaps they cannot extrapolate how people's concern about how actions and interests in their daily lives may place them under scrutiny, and therefore they circumscribe their lives to fit what they think is a "safe" profile. They watch what internet sites they visit. They do not engage in any kind of dialogue that might be considered "unpatriotic." They do not give their opinion, and they avoid anyone they think might remotely place them under the microscope. Perhaps they do not understand how fundamental the right to privacy is, and how important the protection from its abuse is to a "free" country. Afterall, bad things (like being disappeared) happen other places. Innocent people are not imprisoned here, only in those "unfree" places in the world.

So what's the big deal with massive surveillance activities by the NSA, or the DIA, CIA, FBI, or local police force? Afterall, it's only "eavesdropping," and it only targets the "bad guys."



Rowan Wolf is a columnist for Project for the Old American Century,  
and the editor of Radical Noesis and Uncommon Thought Journal . 
Her email is rowan@uncommonthought.com
 

This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. The material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information please review Title 17, Sec. 107 of the U.S. Code. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

privacy policy

© 2002- 2008  OLDAmericanCentury.org and OLDAmericanCentury.com