A
majority of Americans – 56% -- say the National Security Agency’s (NSA) program
tracking the telephone records of millions of Americans is an acceptable way
for the government to investigate terrorism. (Source: Pew Research Center poll dated June
17, 2013.)
To my mind, the above finding reveals a level of
ignorance, amnesia, and naiveté that a democracy cannot long withstand. The Pentagon has told the Congress that they
anticipate 15 to 20 years of continuous warfare. That alone is more than a
viable democracy can maintain. Now we discover that all Americans may expect to
see their personal behavior monitored by the National Security Agency (NSA).
This immense and growing database will be housed in an
equally immense facility being built in Utah. The data mining activities to be
applied to it can be expected to be very sophisticated. If, as it is said, they
can identify individuals from it as well as the relationships with other
individuals, one can expect every branch of government and every corporation
with its Congressional henchpersons to be mining for its own purposes. It may
be said that access to the database will be strictly controlled, but over the
life time of such a data resource, justifications and pressures may be expected
to prevail.
Consider, as an example, the Federal Bureau of
Intelligence (FBI) under J. Edgar Hoover. Hoover used the resources of the FBI
as he chose without any real Congressional oversight. In fact, some legislators were fearful of him
for what he might reveal about them. He persecuted Martin Luther King Jr.,
bugging his home, his office and the various hotels he stayed in. The latter
activity turned up the fact that MLK was having affairs with women not his
wife. The FBI employee even suggested that King might prefer to commit suicide
rather than have these liaisons revealed. This 56% majority should ask
themselves what might happen if another Hoover got hold of this database.
Again, Senator Joseph McCarthy wielded the power of his
office to hound people and destroy careers and livelihoods by innuendo and
fabrication. McCarthy had no qualms
about modifying a photo to show that two people were together at a certain time
and place when they were not. Could another such powerful senator, riding the
wave of popular hysteria or a congressional committee such as HUAC, do the same
with PRISM? All it would take would be to show that a person or group placed
phone calls to others who had placed call to yet others some of whom were known
terrorists. Guilt by association would
do the rest.
We know other countries have fallen prey to the
domination of secrecy. East Germany under Soviet control had its Stasi, many
members of which were ordinary citizens reporting on the behavior of other
ordinary citizens. Angela Merkel expressed to President Obama Germany’s concern
about PRISM, especially the Boundless
Information program within it that focused heavily on German citizens, by
comparing PRISM to the infamous Stasi. As a result of their experience with the
Stasi, Germany has one of the strictest privacy laws in the world. That we have
secretly and massively violated it does not sit well with one of the United
States’ most important allies. The level of fear in such a society is very
high, which may have been the primary function of the Stasi.
This database is being developed and controlled under
contract by a major corporation—Booz Allen Hamilton. This means that access to
information from the database is in the hands of the private sector, where
money rules supreme. One should not think for a moment that Booz Allen Hamilton
is above all temptations.
With these few observations of the risk in which our
democracy has been placed by the Obama Administration in mind, let us consider
the context in which this database will exist.
The Pentagon has told the Congress that it expects our
wars to continue for another 15 to 20 years. Reflect on what has happened to
our democracy in the decade of war we have just gone through. At the end of
another 15 to 20 years of war, we will have a garrison state under the military
control of the Homeland Security Department. By then the citizen will have
become a subject living in an environment of suspicion, control, and fear.
Whatever it becomes, it will kill our democracy and democratic freedoms. It is
up to citizens of today to stop this horrendous project before it accomplishes
exactly what Osama bin Laden and Al-Qaeda have in mind. There is an implicit
conflict in any democracy between freedom and security. To preserve a
democratic state its citizens must, by the very conditions this bifurcation
creates, take some degree of risk to preserve their democracy. This is a lesson
the American citizenry have yet to grasp and has led them to be easily
manipulated by fear, as G.W. Bush knew when he created colored levels of
imminent Al-Qaeda terrorist attack. Our citizenry needs to grow up, calm down,
and carefully develop a democracy-protecting strategy for our country.
Obviously our military and our current administration cannot do it.
Admittedly, this is a big order for an American populace
that seems to have forgotten the risks and efforts of the nation’s founders to
create our democracy and the civic courage of those who undertook its preservation
in precarious times. As the fights for a just economy and civil rights called
upon the citizenry of those times, so the current destruction of our
Constitutional liberties call upon us to marshal a vigorous opposition capable
of stopping the erosion of our democracy. They did it in their time, we must in
our time.
All futures lie in time and circumstance. Let us look at
both and do our part in creating a viable and promising future for this nation
and this world.
Bob Newhard
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