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Wiretapping's True Danger
History Says We Should Worry Less About Privacy and More About Political Spying.
As the battle over reforms to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act rages in Congress, civil libertarians warn that legislation sought by the White House could enable spying on "ordinary Americans." Others, like Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), counter that only those with an "irrational fear of government" believe that "our country's intelligence analysts are more concerned with random innocent Americans than foreign terrorists overseas."
But focusing on the privacy of the average Joe in this way obscures the deeper threat that warrantless wiretaps pose to a democratic society. Without meaningful oversight, presidents and intelligence agencies can -- and repeatedly have -- abused their surveillance authority to spy on political enemies and dissenters.
The original FISA law was passed in 1978 after a thorough congressional investigation headed by Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho) revealed that for decades, intelligence analysts -- and the presidents they served -- had spied on the letters and phone conversations of union chiefs, civil rights leaders, journalists, antiwar activists, lobbyists, members of Congress, Supreme Court justices -- even Eleanor Roosevelt and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. The Church Committee reports painstakingly documented how the information obtained was often "collected and disseminated in order to serve the purely political interests of an intelligence agency or the administration, and to influence social policy and political action."
Political abuse of electronic surveillance goes back at least as far as the Teapot Dome scandal that roiled the Warren G. Harding administration in the early 1920s. When Atty. Gen. Harry Daugherty stood accused of shielding corrupt Cabinet officials, his friend FBI Director William Burns went after Sen. Burton Wheeler, the fiery Montana progressive who helped spearhead the investigation of the scandal. FBI agents tapped Wheeler's phone, read his mail and broke into his office. Wheeler was indicted on trumped-up charges by a Montana grand jury, and though he was ultimately cleared, the FBI became more adept in later years at exploiting private information to blackmail or ruin troublesome public figures. (As New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer can attest, a single wiretap is all it takes to torpedo a political career.)
In 1945, Harry Truman had the FBI wiretap Thomas Corcoran, a member of Franklin D. Roosevelt's "brain trust" whom Truman despised and whose influence he resented. Following the death of Chief Justice Harlan Stone the next year, the taps picked up Corcoran's conversations about succession with Justice William O. Douglas. Six weeks later, having reviewed the FBI's transcripts, Truman passed over Douglas and the other sitting justices to select Secretary of the Treasury (and poker buddy) Fred Vinson for the court's top spot.
"Foreign intelligence" was often used as a pretext for gathering political intelligence. John F. Kennedy's attorney general, brother Bobby, authorized wiretaps on lobbyists, Agriculture Department officials and even a congressman's secretary in hopes of discovering whether the Dominican Republic was paying bribes to influence U.S. sugar policy. The nine-week investigation didn't turn up evidence of money changing hands, but it did turn up plenty of useful information about the wrangling over the sugar quota in Congress -- information that an FBI memo concluded "contributed heavily to the administration's success" in passing its own preferred legislation.
In the FISA debate, Bush administration officials oppose any explicit rules against "reverse targeting" Americans in conversations with noncitizens, though they say they'd never do it.
But Lyndon Johnson found the tactic useful when he wanted to know what promises then-candidate Richard Nixon might be making to our allies in South Vietnam through confidant Anna Chenault. FBI officials worried that directly tapping Chenault would put the bureau "in a most untenable and embarrassing position," so they recorded her conversations with her Vietnamese contacts.
Johnson famously heard recordings of King's conversations and personal liaisons with various women. Less well known is that he received wiretap reports on King's strategy conferences with other civil rights leaders, hoping to use the information to block their efforts to seat several Mississippi delegates at the 1964 Democratic National Convention. Johnson even complained that it was taking him "hours each night" to read the reports.
Few presidents were quite as brazen as Nixon, whom the Church Committee found had "authorized a program of wiretaps which produced for the White House purely political or personal information unrelated to national security." They didn't need to be, perhaps. Through programs such as the National Security Agency's Operation Shamrock (1947 to 1975), which swept up international telegrams en masse, the government already had a vast store of data, and presidents could easily run "name checks" on opponents using these existing databases.
It's probably true that ordinary citizens uninvolved in political activism have little reason to fear being spied on, just as most Americans seldom need to invoke their 1st Amendment right to freedom of speech. But we understand that the 1st Amendment serves a dual role: It protects the private right to speak your mind, but it serves an even more important structural function, ensuring open debate about matters of public importance. You might not care about that first function if you don't plan to say anything controversial. But anyone who lives in a democracy, who is subject to its laws and affected by its policies, ought to care about the second.
Harvard University legal scholar William Stuntz has argued that the framers of the Constitution viewed the 4th Amendment as a mechanism for protecting political dissent. In England, agents of the crown had ransacked the homes of pamphleteers critical of the king -- something the founders resolved that the American system would not countenance.
In that light, the security-versus-privacy framing of the contemporary FISA debate seems oddly incomplete. Your personal phone calls and e-mails may be of limited interest to the spymasters of Langley and Ft. Meade. But if you think an executive branch unchecked by courts won't turn its "national security" surveillance powers to political ends -- well, it would be a first.
Julian Sanchez is a Washington writer who studies privacy and surveillance.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times



20 Comments so far
Show AllCriminals often are careful on phones, reasonably taking precautions because of their crimes. The innocent are much more likely to sound guilty. Careful selection of conversations, redactions and 'secret', 'classified' thrown about and you are guilty by assumption.
During the Nixon days one big project was to monitor Quakers who don't really commit a lot of crimes as a rule, but do oppose wars. Worse yet, they are fairly reasonable people who are often pacifists. No crime was found but peaceful protests were infiltrated with police agitators who tried to initiate violence.
Bu$h the inferior's FBI showed up at a Quaker prayer meeting for peace prior to the Iraq illegal occupation. The people sit together silently praying to themselves for an hour. No one speaks. The FBI should have worn flashing FBI lights they would have blended in better. The Quakers called their lawyers to see if they could again sue the government to protect their rights. They had been there before.
You see, only innocent people have to fear if their rights are violated. The guilty only need to fear the exposure of the evidence of their crimes. Besides, it is easy to bribe corrupt politicians, prosecutors, and police who routinely violate innocent people's rights. Their conscience has been numbed so letting the guilty go for cash seems reasonable.
"...the security-versus-privacy framing of the contemporary FISA debate seems oddly incomplete"
By design. Are the "Protect America Act" and the current FISA bill necessary? "To protect us from terrorism" is not good enough as there are already security procedures in place.
Screwing around with the Fourth Amendment requires an explanation to the *American people*. "Let us do our jobs and look the other way" is not good enough for Bush, and it's not good enough for McCain or Obama. Neither is "one bill was flawed and now we have another, better one."
If the Fourth Amendment is not prominent in the explanations, we'll have to assume bureaucrats are expanding their fields of control at the expense of constitutional rights. In fact, that's always a good assumption, the ridiculous Orrin Hatch notwithstanding.
This is changing the constitution by increment.
We should demand a constitutional convention and ratification by 3/4 of the states before we wipe out the 4th.
This is much more egregious than Prohibition.
We need to call them Stalinists, for that is what they are.
It is ridiculous to think that those in the US government, out of some in-born ethical predisposition and superiority, would somehow be different and less liable to abuse their function, power and access than those in any other government.
By its very nature the US government is separate from and greater than the people who have been elected and appointed to administer, legislate and judge under that government. The elected are merely the representatives of the population they serve and therefore cannot be allowed to assume powers greater than, or beyond, the tenets of the systems of laws they have been hired to protect and enact. To allow them greater powers than are outlined by the constitution they are mandated to protect, destroys the fabric of the constitution and invalidates its central structures. Without adherence to the system of laws, without exception, by those who have been selected to protect that system of laws… a system written, essentially, under the direction and approval of the people the government serves and protects… a democratic constitution cannot exist beyond being governmental public relations propaganda; a hoax and a manipulation.
The people who glibly deny the potential and reality, in the present, future and historically, of real abuses of power by our government in order to squelch opposition and establish an advantage by any means necessary are perhaps the first people to scrutinize in any effort to maintain the constitution's guarantees of privacy, free speech and equal access to power and information. Those people might be the first who would either be blind to, or find excuses for, the assumption of nefarious extra-constitutional leeway in how they pursue those whom they imagine threaten their power.
There are plenty of above-board, transparent, constitutionally legal, methods available to scrutinize the population for potential threats without resorting to methods borrowed wholesale from systems of government that have been defined as ones we have declared independence from, systems we have hoped to defeat or for which we hope to be a role model.
One might cleverly manipulate the unforeseen and maneuver interpretations of the constitution in order to make extra-constitutional powers appear to be efficacious and timely, but that, again, guts The Founders' intent and makes the constitution an advertisement as opposed to a living, tension-filled, organic document that describes the freedoms of the citizenry and expands the legal structures and the organic function of a nation of empowered citizens: how the nation works and evolves on a day to day basis for all citizens, no exception.
It is hard to believe that anyone would justify any such boundless means of mind, expression and behavior control that belong historically to the realm of tyranny and define what can only be called an anti-democracy.
you all should know what you have to say when a company calls you, what is it?
Except... it's now been eight years of massive domestic illegal spying and info mining and database building without oversight. Isn't it a bit naive to believe that anyone who's even remotely anyone isn't cataloged and detailed at this point?
Unlike the good ole days of Tricky Dick, this time "they" did it right and they did it permanent. It can't be stopped because it's already done.
We lost our identification with the ideals of the Bill of Rights in 1968. Of course the Bill of Rights had not become a part of most of our lives, but we revered it, in the way a religious person reveres his religion even though he doesn't fully practice it. Now it seems that the country, not just the congress and the Supreme Court, have allowed the Bill of Rights, along with other parts of the Constitution, to be violated with contempt for what was once an untouchable promise of human transcendence, of wisdom and peace for us and the world; we, the people, in spite of Lincoln's optimism about us, have become willing victims of the enemies of our country who now occupy the White House. Can we arouse ourselves from this political paralysis? And if we do, what are the options?
"Turce" Is this the answer?: Do you have a job for me?
All joking aside now, and I mean that.
Warrantless wiretapping is criminal.
So is invading another country without an actual invasion of your own country.
So is holding people for years in captivity without giving them a trial.
So is torturing people.
So is asking people to pay a part of their incomes to support a system while doing all of the above. I refer to Thoreau. http://eserver.org/thoreau/civil.html
As a well-known man said; who came from the same state as me, I regret that I have but one life to give for my country.
Unfortunately, I didn't know this would mean living and then staying in voluntary exile in Sweden after I saw what was happening in the country I was born in.
What to do, when a 300 million person strong and free country has allowed itself to be put into bondage by people who meet in a White House? What is that? Should we not arrest the obvious gang of criminals who gather there? I would love to see a fair and unbiased trial, I would presume they were innocent; although the blatant crimes have been committed publicly and should present us with an easy trial.
Shouldn't criminals like this be arrested by the citizens, immediately?
Is that not what We the People means?
On another note, if all polls show that a president has a 30 percent approval rating; then doesn't he step down and call for new elections, should there not be an outcry?
Candidly, I have had quite a few personal issues and problems in recent years, I think many are caused by the stress of having watched the strongest nation on the earth turn fascist. I have trouble coping with life as I watch in disgust the awful slavery that is being hung around the neck of the human soul in a country that calls itself the "Land of the Free!"
Oh yes, and Sweden of all places, it used to be a great country; just went fascist as well.
The FRA law they just passed last month allows them to read everyone's emails, listen to everyone's phonecalls and read all SMS's (I do hope and believe that the Swedes, being quite the intelligent bunch that they are, will put this disastrous law into the ground quite soon). Not sure if it is just communications leaving the country, but alas, I don't care, I will use my freedom of speech to shout from the mountains until they put me into the dungeons. Where will I go now? I cannot keep running to wells of freedom when the rivers of liberty have run dry.
Guess who pressured the Swedes into enacting such an obviously soul- defeating law?
Free will was invented by God, taking this away is a slap in his face and a death sentence for the soul.
Could someone please take the power back?
Could we take the power back?
I hope to God it can be done.
I would rather die than live in a world which is not free, (I am talking about the freedom to communicate my ideas with other people without being watched by a "Big Brother").
For all the people out there reading this, who might misunderstand me, this does not mean that I will take any life, including my own, but I do not mind if I have to offer it to water the roots of that beautiful tree called liberty, and I tell you, as I see the situation of governance today, it needs water, or it will wilt and die.
Please also excuse my irrational or maybe better said, erratic writing, it is a result of looking at an irrational and erratic system of governance that has not upheld its end of the bargain, but has sold us on a very wooden and splintery nickel.
My final thought. The fact that I can sit here and write like this, and publish it to the world, anonymously, completely and utterly negates most of what I have said about loss of liberty. This is the trump card and yes, I do appreciate it. Therefore, I must say in closing that the problem thus lies within my first complaints, these breaks from freedom in our otherwise free system of government must be dealt with, swiftly with justice and honour, because if we continue along this current path, in the very near future, people like me aren't going to be allowed to write like this anymore.
Therefore, I urge intelligent people everywhere, to continue to write as they wish, as they do here, as they do more often than not better than I, to scream their stories and thoughts from the mountains until their last breath they do take; for as a wise man once said, the pen is mightier than the sword, and when this right is taken away from us; and I have the feeling it could happen very soon, then it will be time to put down the pen and die for a very good cause.
And so the facists win.
Face it, American Democracy is dead. Oh, we might see a brief "DC Spring," for a few years; but the fact is democracy has been dying in our country for many years, and the Supremes drove home the final nail in the coffin when they appointed bush the Feeble pres.
Inexorably, our rights have been chipped away at; the constitution has been repeatedly violated until it is all but a dead letter. And while Bush ravaged what was left, the dems in congress fiddled and said the only cure was 'off the table.'
That's just the way it is. And make no mistake, with the global reachof the US, every country will do as Sweden has done, and repudiate freedom as well.
Don't want to live in a facist state? Then grab your gun and head for the hills and live off the grid entirely.
For years we heard the Repubs rail against "Big Government". One way of being "big" was deficit spending, and the other was excessive intrusion into our personal business.
What if we started calling $500 B spent in Iraq/Afghanistan and spying on millions of Americans what it is: BIG GOVERNMENT?
I submit that Orrin Hatch's blithe trust of Big Government is what is unreasonable. People always act badly (eventually) when there is power without accountability.
I didn't see your reply until 12:23 am EST 7 July 2008, I noticed something else, you'd understand I wasn't clear enough. Now this voxclamantis person is threatening me, on Israel/Iran/US article at bottom, of course I'm not frightened but cannot clarify anything here. I will create an html link, it'll lead to my full explaination.
Thank you, you are indeed kind.
Being in SWEDEN and a Patriot all the while it has been a FOX I suppose if I knew wizardry I'd know much, then again who knew?
PatriotisVeritas:
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I've thought about leaving the US, and probably could if I wished. But for the last 8 or so years I've pretty much known that the system as constructed is everywhere, and there is nowhere anyone can live free anymore. (Although interestingly I learned today that the Lakotah nation declared its independence on December 17,2007. http://www.republicoflakotah.com/)
Notwithstanding the noble efforts of the Lakotah, it should be clear to almost anyone not completely asleep that the world is not run by "the rule of law," it is run by guns. The ideas of capitalism in particular are so devoid of intellectual superiority that only a blind fool would belief the crazy myths they still spout in the corporate media these days. Constant growth in the body is called cancer, and the same term should apply to economic theories that advocate constant growth. Yet this is repeatedly lauded as the highest value in the land.
At the end of the day, it is not warrantless wiretapping that is the fundamental problem, it is the massive ponzi scheme set up by the bankers and financiers of the world that has destroyed everything it has touched. Countries do not make wars, banks make wars. And they almost always fund both sides, to double their take and drag it out as long as possible. They loan the money to the countries to buy the guns and the bullets - at interest. Then, the citizens of the countries are indebted by their leaders to repay the bankers. We're currently at around 9.5 Trillion, or $31k per person in the US.
http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/
And to borrow all this money, what did they put up for collateral? WE are the collateral. They didn't put up gold or silver to borrow this money, they put US, we the people, up as collateral. Our futures and our children's futures are being sold as a commodity to the bankers.
The only way I can see to counter this in any way is to only buy what I really need to live. Basic food, basic clothes, minimal heat, and basic transportation. No cable television, no restaurants, no travel, no Walmart shopping for Chinese plastic crap, none of it. Next I think comes taxes... I'm looking into that.
Like you, I am speaking out while I can. They will have to put a bullet through my head to stop me, and if that happens, well, I won't have a worry in the world.
How many times have you heard that old saw: "If you aren't doing anything wrong, you have nothing to hide?" I remember hearing it from time to time from my parents, the last generation that more or less trusted the Government. Read Milton Mayer's THEY THOUGHT THEY WERE FREE: THE GERMANS, 1933-1945. We have yet to confront or accept the fact that this Government is without precedent in our history and that its goal is the destruction of the Constitution.
Any loss of a freedom for whatever good "reason" of the moment is never a good thing.
Consider the Japanese Americans internment during WW2. It "seemed" rerasonable at the time, under the circumstances, but of course it wasn't.
How many times does it have to be said: "Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely." (Lord Acton). As others have commented, there is nothing special about being born in the US that prevents one from becoming a fascist. Unrestrained power corrupts virtually everyone.
First rule of dealing with power:
When it insists on having the right to scr*ew you built into its governance, you may safely ignore everything else.
You WILL be scr*wed. As quickly as possible and for as long a period as possible.
Powerful entities don't ask for legal cover "just in case." It's ALWAYS in the plan.
Patriotis Veritas
Fine words from some one who ran away. Where's that one life you'd be willing to give for your country? Dissent from across the sea? You want us to do something, but you want to hide.
Now you'd like to flee again. Yes, that would be of as much help as the first run.
Yes, I have thought about emigrating, myself. The difference is, I would do what I could until it is too late to make a difference; and there wouldn't be any, 'Go do something!' missives from me after I ran and abdicated further responsibility to do something.
Hey, if I can tap Rove's phone, I'm all for it.