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The Emerging Surveillance State
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
Last month,
the House amended the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
(FISA) to expand the governments ability to monitor our private
communications. This measure, if it becomes law, will result in
more warrantless government surveillance of innocent American citizens.
Though some
opponents claimed that the only controversial part of this legislation
was its grant of immunity to telecommunications companies, there
is much more to be wary of in the bill. In the House version, Title
II, Section 801, extends immunity from prosecution of civil legal
action to people and companies including any provider of an electronic
communication service, any provider of a remote computing service,
any other communication service provider who has access to
wire or electronic communications, any parent, subsidiary,
affiliate, successor, or assignee of such company, any officer,
employee, or agent of any such company, and any landlord,
custodian, or other person who may be authorized or required to
furnish assistance. The Senate version goes even further by
granting retroactive immunity to such entities that may have broken
the law in the past.
The new FISA
bill allows the federal government to compel many more types of
companies and individuals to grant the government access to our
communications without a warrant. The provisions in the legislation
designed to protect Americans from warrantless surveillance are
full of loopholes and ambiguities. There is no blanket prohibition
against listening in on all American citizens without a warrant.
We
have been told that this power to listen in on communications is
legal and only targets terrorists. But if what these companies are
being compelled to do is legal, why is it necessary to grant them
immunity? If what they did in the past was legal and proper, why
is it necessary to grant them retroactive immunity?
In communist
East Germany, one in every 100 citizens was an informer for the
dreaded secret police, the Stasi. They either volunteered or were
compelled by their government to spy on their customers, their neighbors,
their families, and their friends. When we think of the evil of
totalitarianism, such networks of state spies are usually what comes
to mind. Yet, with modern technology, what once took tens of thousands
of informants can now be achieved by a few companies being coerced
by the government to allow it to listen in to our communications.
This surveillance is un-American.
We should remember
that former New York governor Eliot Spitzer was brought down by
a provision of the PATRIOT Act that required enhanced bank monitoring
of certain types of financial transactions. Yet we were told that
the PATRIOT Act was needed to catch terrorists, not philanderers.
The extraordinary power the government has granted itself to look
into our private lives can be used for many purposes unrelated to
fighting terrorism. We can even see how expanded federal government
surveillance power might be used to do away with political rivals.
The Fourth
Amendment to our Constitution requires the government to have a
warrant when it wishes to look into the private affairs of individuals.
If we are to remain a free society we must defend our rights against
any governmental attempt to undermine or bypass the Constitution.
See
the Ron Paul File
April
8, 2008
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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