The National Security Agency's massive general
surveillance of the phone and Internet communications of
multiple millions of Americans eerily recalls the image of the Red Eye of
Sauron sweeping like a menacing monitor-beacon over the Free Peoples of the
West from a dark tower in Mordor.
Sensational metaphors aside – I just could not resist that one -- a remarkable aspect of this affair is the atypical division of opinion it has generated, confounding the usual divide between liberals/Democrats on one side versus conservatives/Republicans on the other. In this case, the division appears to be drawn between two somewhat diversified general groupings that cross the standard lines. Staunchly supporting this unprecedented mass surveillance by Mega-Tech Government is an unholy coalition of Obama Administration members and political supporters; Bush Administration alumni and loyalists who supported the earlier (and less sweeping) Patriot Act surveillance prototypes; advocates and defenders of Big Government; and the grizzled military/national security/intelligence Establishment of both parties. Opposing the program are genuine libertarians of both the left and the right, and from both parties; hardcore, across-the-board opponents of the Obama Administration; and constitutional conservatives who oppose Big Government expansionism, without necessarily embracing the libertarian ideology.
The All-Seeing Eye of Big Government Surveillance
SR is more of a cultural conservative than a libertarian. Nonetheless, coming on top of five years of the Obama Administration's anti-constitutional, oppressive, and perfidious misgovernance, the exposure of the grotesque scope of the NSA surveillance programs has pushed me over to the libertarian camp on this issue. Without going into all the details of this complex affair, two particular issues seem especially persuasive in rejecting the Establishment's defense of this ugly, over-rated, and over-reaching citizen-surveillance program.
First,
virtually every defense and justification for this ominous
monitoring program depends upon a false premise: i.e., that it is a necessary and effective means of
preventing catastrophic acts of terrorism and other major damages to national
security. The Chairmen of the House and
Senate Intelligence Committees – persons who are themselves complicit in the
establishment and continued approval of the surveillance – insist, for example, that the
programs are crucial, and that they have been "instrumental" and
helpful in stopping several possible terrorist incidents.
But some suggest a better idea altogether. Rather than spending billions of tax dollars monitoring our own citizenry's communications, the Government might actually do something palpably effective to prevent terrorism, like barring radical Islamicists from entering the United States altogether. Yet the same national security hardheads who so enthusiastically monitor innocent Americans' communications are paralyzed by Obama's policy of coddling Islam from taking such directly preventive measures.
In any event,
even if there were hard evidence that the surveillance program had actually
helped to thwart a few potential terrorist incidents, it still would not justify the
establishment of wholesale, dystopic police state surveillance of the general populace. And at a cost of so many
billions as to stagger the mind. Enough
of this notion that merely invoking the talisman of fighting terrorism
justifies the surrender of our civil liberties and granting national security
bureaucrats a blank check on our national treasury. Instead, a rigorous cost-effectiveness test
needs to be applied to these programs. The tangible and demonstrable benefits of the program must be carefully weighed against its enormous impositions on privacy, liberty, and democracy, as well as its present and future costs in government expenditures.
Secondly,
we are repeatedly assured that the Government is merely gathering a mysterious
category of information called "metadata" and that there are various
checks to prevent the abuse of particularized prying into an innocent citizen's
actual communications and transactions. Of
course, these checks are not foolproof; on the contrary. We are nonetheless supposed to place our trust in the unimpeachable integrity and
restraint of the officials and judges who control, operate, or supervise use of
this massive surveillance matrix.
But
the demonstrated corrupt and abusive behavior of the Obama Administration and
its minions in scandal after scandal confirms that such trust would be
foolishly misplaced. The IRS's abuse of
its power against conservative organizations in a shocking program of insidious
political discrimination; the duplicity and deception by the national security
agencies in the cover-up of the Benghazi disaster; the Justice Department's
malfeasance and misrepresentations in such cases as the Operation Fast and
Furious gun-running fiasco and the New Black Panthers voter intimidation outrage in
Philadelphia; all these, and many other comparable episodes, demonstrate all
too well that governments in general, and this administration in particular, should
not be trusted with such massive discretionary power to monitor the
communications of the citizenry.
We have simply been lulled for too long by the dubious pretext of national security necessity into a blind and passive trust that can no longer be sensibly justified.
We have simply been lulled for too long by the dubious pretext of national security necessity into a blind and passive trust that can no longer be sensibly justified.
For
those who nonetheless remain inclined to trust the Government with this massive
power, closer consideration of the particular men and women in whom this trust is placed is in
order. Take, for example, the Director
of National Intelligence, James Clapper, who was asked the following in a
recent senate committee hearing on government surveillance issues: “Does the NSA collect any type of data at all
on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans?” Looking like a latter-day Ernst Stavro Blofeld,
but without the theatrical charm, Clapper, after an excruciating and
shifty-eyed consideration, responded, "No, sir." But when the questioning senator pressed him,
he apparently realized he might be getting himself into testimonial trouble,
and so offered the following bizarre qualification: “Not wittingly. There are cases where they
could inadvertently, perhaps, collect, but not wittingly.” Given what we now know about the astronomical
volume of data gather by NSA on at least "millions" of Americans, the
brazen mendacity of Clapper's testimony on this grave matter is astonishing and
disturbing. There is nothing "inadvertent"
or "unwitting" about NSA's undisputed mass collection of "any
type of data" on millions of Americans.
And yet this character – and others like him, such as the devious
Attorney General Eric Holder -- is a man who serves at the very highest levels
of the government bureaucracy which we are expected to trust with the
surveillance of the communications of virtually the entire citizenry. With protectors like this, who needs threats?
The
threats to liberty and privacy raised by this open-ended mass sureveillance
program are many and varied, but one is particularly salient in today's polarized
political environment. The Obama Administration
and its liberal allies have exploited recent multiple murders by unhinged psychopaths
to advocate legislative and regulatory programs to restrict the Second
Amendment rights of law-abiding American gun owners. It does not take a paranoid imagination to
foresee that the sophisticated, all-seeing electronic surveillance systems of
the NSA and other agencies – especially when coupled with gun registration
requirements that have been ardently proposed by gun control advocates –
could be used to help identify, investigate, and
prosecute Americans who exercise their Second Amendment rights in a manner
deemed too assertive by an over-reaching Federal Government. SR has previously posted about the disturbing
historical precedent of Toyotomi Hideyoshi's notorious Sword Hunt, see "Lessons of the Sword
Hunt," Splashingrocks.blogspot.com, which reduced the Japanese people to
abject subservience for centuries. Let's
hope we never reach the point in this country where the all-seeing surveillance
powers of the Government threaten the American right to keep and bear arms with
the prospect of a similar weapons hunt.