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                Date: 1998-08-11
                 
                 
                Kassandra/Eins: Das Ende der Privatsphäre
                
                 
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      in den USA sei auf ein Zusammenspiel von rapider 
technologischer Entwicklung, einer apathischen Legislative & 
dem unbändigen Verlangen der Nachrichtendienste nach totaler 
Kontrolle zurückzuführen meint Patrick S. Poole, Deputy 
Director des Center for Technology Policy an der Free 
Congress Foundation. 
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"The end of privacy in America is the result of a mixture of 
rapid technological developments, an apathetic Congress and 
federal agencies drunken mad with lust for unbridled power. 
But the end of privacy is merely the beginning of a horrific 
period in which the illicit use of perfectly legitimate 
technology by our government against all citizens will 
demonstrate the truth of Lord Actons prophetic warning that 
while power corrupts  absolute power corrupts absolutely." 
 
 
Recently while appearing on a Detroit radio talk show 
discussing the Department of Transportation regulations to 
tag and track everyone in the country through the use of a 
National ID card (a measure already passed into law by 
Congress), a caller to the show stated that we should have 
nothing to fear from our government knowing every intimate 
detail of our lives if we indeed have nothing to hide. 
 
Struck first by the callers absolute ignorance of the rise 
and practice of fascism and communism in the 20th Century, I 
noted how common it has become for the average American to 
give our government the benefit of the doubt  to our own 
peril, I believe  regarding the erosion of our most basic 
liberties and freedoms. Our country was founded upon the 
presupposition that government is a dangerous servant and a 
fearful master. With that in mind, they created a government 
with limited and separated powers. Now, however, our 
government on daily basis makes an absolute, and generally 
unchallenged, claim to access every area of a citizens 
life. This is no truer than in the area of privacy. 
... 
Apart from that debate, there is a subtle war going on 
against the American public fostered by our governments 
insatiable hunger for absolute power. While most of the 
country slumbers, our government is gaining access to vast 
amounts of personal information and beginning to monitor and 
track our movements and activities. 
 
For instance, I have recently written about 
(http://capo.org/opeds/pp0615.htm) the National Security 
Agencys massive ECHELON system that serves as a worldwide 
electronic vacuum cleaner to search every phone, fax, email 
and telex message for designated keywords that are flagged, 
recorded and analyzed. 
 
But the development of ECHELON has not prevented Congress 
from inflicting a death of a thousand strokes on personal 
privacy. Last month, the Department of Health and Human 
Services issued regulations, authorized by Congress, that 
would create a massive federal database of every citizens 
medical records for snooping by bureaucratic officials. The 
FBI recently requested an expansion of its surveillance 
powers under the 1994 CALEA legislation that would allow 
them to track citizens through the signals sent by their 
mobile phones without any probable cause. Last October, the 
federal New Hires Directory database went into operation to 
track deadbeat parents by requiring every employer to 
report the income and additional personal data of every new 
employee. 
 
Many of the legislative requests for surveillance expansion 
on the American people by the federal government are just 
attempts to obtain authorization for illegal and 
unconstitutional activity that these agencies are already 
engaged in. And without exception, Congress  Republicans 
and Democrats alike  is more than willing to provide them 
sufficient cover. 
 
And this is just the beginning. Unlike the caller I 
encountered that day, I am gravely concerned about the 
proliferation of surveillance powers by our government. I 
have traveled extensively in former communist countries 
where such powers were routinely used by those totalitarian 
states to squash political opposition, and in several cases, 
to commit genocide. 
 
To those who say that we have nothing to fear from such 
assumptions of power if we have nothing to hide, I would 
retort that if there is nothing for us to fear, why do 
federal agencies and proponents of such measures feel 
compelled to pass every authorizing piece of legislation in 
the dark hours of the night, buried deep inside 
thousand-page appropriation bills? Or in the case of 
ECHELON, continuing to cloak the system in absolute secrecy? 
If there really is no problem with reading and listening to 
every phone, fax and email sent by an American citizen, why 
are they so afraid to reveal their practice to the American 
people? Precisely because the standard by which these 
self-appointed snoops regard others privacy is quite 
different than the peoples expectation of privacy. 
 
The end of privacy in America is the result of a mixture of 
rapid technological developments, an apathetic Congress and 
federal agencies drunken mad with lust for unbridled power. 
But the end of privacy is merely the beginning of a horrific 
period in which the illicit use of perfectly legitimate 
technology by our government against all citizens will 
demonstrate the truth of Lord Actons prophetic warning that 
while power corrupts  absolute power corrupts absolutely. 
 
More 
http://www.freecongress.org/  
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relayed by Michael Grinner http://www.gis.at
                   
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TIP 
Download free PGP 5.5.3i (Win95/NT & Mac) 
http://keyserver.ad.or.at/pgp/download/
                   
 
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edited by  
published on: 1998-08-11 
comments to office@quintessenz.at
                   
                  
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