The War on Telephone Privacy
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
DIGG THIS
A perfect
example of the integrated threat that U.S. foreign policy and federal
domestic regulations pose to the freedom, privacy, and well-being
of the American people is the current telecommunications controversy.
Soon after
the 9/11 attacks, the feds approached various U.S. telephone companies
and asked them to illegally share private information about their
customers. The argument, of course, was national security
and the war on terror, the magic words that have come
to justify all sorts of federal wrongdoing since 9/11 (e.g., torture,
the invasion of Iraq, cancellation of habeas corpus, indefinite
incarceration, and denial of due process).
In a lawsuit
filed in U.S. District Court, the plaintiffs are alleging that some
of the telephone companies agreed to cooperate with the feds, illegally
and secretly sharing their customers private information with
them. If the allegations are true, the obvious question arises,
Why would these companies choose to become secret informers for
the feds rather than fight to protect the rights and interests of
their customers?
One possibility,
of course, is that they fell for all the national security,
war on terror nonsense, just as many other Americans did,
failing to recognize that such nonsense has always been the time-honored
way that governments seduce people into giving up their rights and
freedoms for the pretense of security.
But there
is another possibility, as former Qwest CEO Joe Nacchio can attest.
Unlike the other telephone-company CEOs, Nacchio refused to play
ball with the feds, deciding, correctly, that the federal request
was illegal and deciding, correctly, that he had a duty to protect
the privacy of his customers.
What was Nacchios
reward for such heroic action? The feds indicted him and convicted
him of a federal crime, for which he has been sentenced to serve
six years in a federal penitentiary. What was the heinous crime
that Nacchio was convicted of? Insider trading, that heinous economic
crime in which there are no victims.
In other words,
the message delivered by the feds to the telephone companies after
9/11, when the federals were feeling the full force of their power,
was, You need to play ball with us, or else. Some of
the other companies, in an act of extreme cowardice, apparently
folded, kneeled, kissed the rings of federal officials, and did
what the feds wanted them to.
Not Nacchio
and Qwest, for which they deserve the praise and accolades of every
freedom-loving American.
At Nacchios
trial, the federal judge refused to permit him to introduce evidence
that his prosecution was retaliation for his refusal to go along
with the federal request to violate the law and the rights of his
customers. (See Documents: Qwest was targeted,
by Sara Burnett and Jeff Smith, in the Rocky Mountain News,
October 11, 2007.) The judge said the evidence wasnt
relevant. All that was relevant, the judge said, was whether Nacchio
had sold some of his Qwest stock as a result of insider information
he had acquired as a Qwest executive.
There are
two important points to note about what is going on here.
First, as
we have long pointed out here at FFF, the real value of the regulated
society is not any protection it provides to people. All that protection
talk is just a sham. The real purpose of the regulated society is
to keep the business and banking community in line meaning
in conformity with federal policy. The real purpose of the rules
and regulations is to serve as a Damocles sword, ready to fall on
any business or bank that refuses to go along with the feds.
The rationale
behind the federal regulated society was best summed up by what
a bureaucrat from the State Science Institute said to Hank Rearden
in Atlas
Shrugged:
Did you really think that we want those laws to be observed?
said Dr. Ferris. We want them broken. Youd
better get it straight that its not a bunch of boy scouts
youre up against then youll know that this is
not the age for beautiful gestures. Were after power and we
mean it. You fellows were pikers, but we know the real trick, and
youd better get wise to it. Theres no way to rule innocent
men. The only power any government has is the power to crack down
on criminals. Well, when there arent enough criminals, one
makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that
it becomes impossible for men to live without breaking laws. Who
wants a nation of law-abiding citizens? Whats there in that
for anyone? But just pass the kind of laws that can neither be observed
nor enforced nor objectively interpreted and you create a
nation of law-breakers and then you cash in on guilt. Now
thats the system, Mr. Rearden, thats the game, and once
you understand it, youll be much easier to deal with.
Of course, the
feds would argue that the law is the law and that Nacchio broke it
and therefore has to pay the price. That, of course, is not the point.
The point is that in the regulated society, everyone breaks the law,
one way or another, which then provides the feds with the option of
prosecuting anyone they want whenever they want.
Consider,
for example, the IRS code. Despite never-ending railing among political
candidates about how complex the code is, the feds love the complexity.
Why? Because they know that no one can ever file a perfect income-tax
return and especially not wealthy and influential businessmen. If
the feds looked hard enough, they could prosecute anyone they wanted
at any time for income-tax violations.
Its
the same with insider-trading laws, Sarbanes-Oxley, hiring illegal
aliens, or a multitude of other economic crimes. If they hadnt
gotten Nacchio on insider trading, they would have undoubtedly gone
after him for other things. The point is, he refused to go along
with illegality and wrongdoing, and they went after him for it.
To add insult
to injury, President Bush and some of his federal cohorts in Congress
are seeking to give civil immunity to the telephone companies that
allegedly chose to become federal informers. They are trying to
get Congress to pass a law that would prohibit the customers of
the telephone companies from suing for the companies allegedly
wrongful (and cowardly) misconduct.
In other words,
become a federal informer and well protect you. Refuse to
do so, and well send you to jail.
What is the
difference between neighborhood captains in Castros Cuba,
who report peoples activities to their government, and U.S.
telephone companies who report peoples activities to their
government? Don't they all rationalize their conduct under the same
warped sense of patriotism?
And why are
the telephone companies seeking immunity from civil liability in
lawsuits brought by their customers? At trial, wouldnt they
have ample opportunity to show that the only records they turned
over to the feds were those of terrorists? Why should they be let
off the hook if they have illegally and secretly betrayed their
customers in order to ingratiate themselves with the feds?
Another critically
important point to note in all this is how U.S. foreign policy is
at the root of it all. Follow the logic: With the fall of the Berlin
Wall in 1989, the feds lose their official enemy communism.
Throughout the 1990s, they poke hornets nests in the Middle
East, knowing that they are provoking anger and rage among people
in that part of the world. That anger and rage ultimately erupts
into terrorist blowback. The blowback is used to bludgeon American
telephone companies into allegedly selling out the rights and privacy
of their customers. Those who refuse are prosecuted for violating
domestic rules and regulations.
Thus, while
the short-term answer to all this involves a refusal to grant civil
immunity to the telephone companies that allegedly became federal
informers as well as dismissal of all charges against Joe Nacchio,
there is only one long-term solution to this noxious weed
pull it out by its root by bringing an end to the U.S. governments
overseas empire and its interventionist foreign policy.
November
1, 2007
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2007 Future of Freedom Foundation
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Hornberger Archives
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