• news
  • SUNDAY DECEMBER 9 2007 9:00 AM

We Had A Good Run, Didn’t We? So Long, America



Finally, the government is privitizing domestic spying. I feel so safe now. When I think of America, I usually envision large companies sifting through all of my information, my home and hopefully, my unmentionables. Thankfully, this dream is coming true. Up until this point, information from domestic spy satellites was only used by scientific agencies. After 9/11, the NSA was given powers that allowed it to monitor domestic communications without getting those pesky warrants. And now the Bush administration is blowing it out!


Under a proposal being reviewed by Congress, a National Applications Office will be established to coordinate how the Department of Homeland Security and domestic law enforcement and rescue agencies use imagery and communications intelligence picked up by U.S. spy satellites. If the plan goes forward, the NAO will create the legal mechanism for an unprecedented degree of domestic intelligence gathering that would make the United States one of the world's most closely monitored nations.


Sweet. Monitor the shit out of us. We used to have this stupid law that confined intelligence collection to foreign countries and battlefields. Not anymore. And let's make sure private companies are a huge part of it, because they never do anything wrong and have continually shown throughout history that they can be trusted.


The intelligence-sharing system to be managed by the NAO will rely heavily on private contractors, including Boeing, BAE Systems, L-3 Communications and Science Applications International Corporation.


Mmmmm, safety. Nothing makes me feel safer than knowing BAE Systems has my back. Also my front. And my unmentionables.

Last month all the private domestic spy companies went to the intelligence conference in San Antonio and lobbied intelligence officials, in a giant, disgusting, display of everything that is wrong with our country. But, hey, those companies are the ones who told the government that we needed to expand our domestic spying, so bravo.

A study group was put together by a couple of government agencies and they thought it would be a great idea to use former intelligence officers. Many of them just happened to be employed by private intelligence companies, like Booz Allen. Guess what crazy conclusion they came up with?


Not surprisingly, its contractor-advisers called for a major expansion in the domestic use of the spy satellites that they sell to the government. Since the end of the Cold War and particularly since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, they said, the "threats to the nation have changed, and there is a growing interest in making available the special capabilities of the intelligence community to all parts of the government, to include homeland security and law enforcement entities and on a higher priority basis."


Word. We think you should give us money to do stuff. Lots of stuff. Oh, did I mention we’re going to need lots of money? To do that stuff we said should be done? Thanks for asking. Hey, you know that thing I said we should be doing with that satellite? Turns out I can totally do that. And it will only cost millions of dollars. How weird is it that I am the guy who is able to do what I said needed to be done? For money?

The domestic spying contracts are worth billions of dollars and this is a brand new business. The new plan was revealed in August and caught some people off guard. Bennie G. Thompson, a Democratic member of Congress from Mississippi and the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee was surprised when he read about it in the Wall Street Journal.


There was no briefing, no hearing, and no phone call from anyone on your staff to any member of this committee of why, how or when satellite imagery would be shared with police and sheriffs' officers nationwide.


Well, that is probably because most Americans don’t want to be spied on. Duh. Actually, maybe I’m just being an alarmist and blowing this all out of proportion.


"It will terrify you if you really understand the capabilities of satellites," warned Jane Harman, a Democratic member of Congress from California. "Even if this program is well-designed and executed, someone somewhere else could hijack it.”


Oh.

So far the NAO has been delayed. It was supposed to kick off on October 1st, but annoying Congress members and civil rights hippies have been making noise. Of course, later we will learn that the Bush administration did not delay the program. And then when we try to investigate, we won’t be able to because all the information is “classified.” This entire program will always be classified, which is awesome, because it is watching us.


America is going forward, and as we do so, we must remain keenly aware of the threats to our country.

Those in authority should take appropriate precautions to protect our citizens. But we will not allow this enemy to win the war by changing our way of life or restricting our freedoms.

- George W. Bush, September 12, 2001.

 

Previous

PAGE: 

1 ... 

12 | 13 | 14

Next

Comments
_kungfoo_

_kungfoo_

Los Angeles, CA
April 2005

DEC 22, 2007 05:44 PM

oyaji said:

tat2dsinner said:

oyaji said:

tat2dsinner said:
Orwell was right. He just missed the mark by about 23 years. I hope everybody loves Big Brother!



Have you actually read 1984?

That was Orwell? I thought he did the drum solo for Inagadadavida. Yes I have read 1984, in high school and again in college just for myself. The only real difference I see is instead of the state spying on it's people, it's farming it out to the corporations to spy for the state. Lets the government keep it's hands cleaner that way, and probably less of a paper trail as well.



Utterly absurd. The way we live is nothing like the post-apocalyptic nightmare world of 1984. I'm not saying that there haven't been Orwellian moments under the auspices of this administration. There have been (e.g.s "No Child Left Behind" and the "PATRIOT Act") many such moments.

Still, the comparison to the world of 1984 writ large is absurd.



That seems to be the problem with some of us on the left. Some serious perspective is in order.


Well... hell... that's just a human trait I guess.

tat2dsinner

tat2dsinner

Piper City, IL
December 2007

DEC 22, 2007 06:02 PM

Do you mean comparing now to 1984, or thinking that the comparison is absurd?

tat2dsinner

tat2dsinner

Piper City, IL
December 2007

DEC 22, 2007 06:27 PM

Keep telling yourself that.

rev24

rev24

San Francisco, CA
July 2004

DEC 22, 2007 06:29 PM

most people don't know illegal domestic spying began before 9/11 therefore making these crimes committed by private companies punishable by law depsite the "us and against them" mentality...

tat2dsinner

tat2dsinner

Piper City, IL
December 2007

DEC 22, 2007 06:59 PM

Oh no, no I haven't read it. And I also couldn't see how CNN and Fox news and the like could ever be guilty of producing propaganda, or how Osama bin Laden could be used in the same way as Emmanuel Goldstein. The Department of Homeland Security. the CIA, the NSA, no way could they ever be compared to the MInistry of Truth. And political correctness can't be thought of as one step closer to newspeak, oh no that would be ++ungood. And they don't come into your house at night to take you away to be "re-educated". Oh wait, I forgot about Gitmo!

tat2dsinner

tat2dsinner

Piper City, IL
December 2007

DEC 22, 2007 07:07 PM

Oh yeah, Ipods and x boxes, yeah, that's not the same idea as Victory Gin, or whatever he called it in the book. Keep us all cooing like babies at a mobile while they wipe their ass with the bill of rights. You ever tried to get shit stains out of 200 year old parchment?

ClovenBunny

ClovenBunny

I'm lost
October 2007

DEC 28, 2007 08:56 PM

Moonrabbit said:

michael9000000 said:
Aren't we being a bit over-dramatic here?



Not to sound paranoid here or anything. But that is the kind of attitude that lets things like this be put into place unchallenged.
They count on it being too inconvenient for us to stand up for ourselves.



I STRONGLY AGREE.
It is just one more thing, maybe a small part, but most certainly not the end AND that kind of attitude is what they are counting on to rob us of every little freedom we have left. Think about it. Please.

Cye

Cye

SUICIDEGIRL

Oklahoma, USA

JAN 01, 2008 11:31 PM

wow...thats really scary...dontcha just love bush?? *sarcastic*

Cye

Cye

SUICIDEGIRL

Oklahoma, USA

JAN 01, 2008 11:33 PM

varukasalt said:

MrStitches said:

coyotemike said:
That does it! I'm going to start walking around naked and hopefully the glare off my fat naked ass will burn out their satelites!!! Or, alternativly, make those checking out the images quit their jobs.



Or they will just put the video up on a fetish website and use the proceeds to fund their shenanigans.



Evil shenanigans??



haha thats fucking great!

Cye

Cye

SUICIDEGIRL

Oklahoma, USA

JAN 01, 2008 11:34 PM

Mockingbird said:

All_Sewn_Up said:

SnowScoundrel said:
We need a new plague.



A zombie apocalypse would do nicely.



I endorse this statement.



I 2nd. but we'll need guns...Colinism?? wink

Cye

Cye

SUICIDEGIRL

Oklahoma, USA

JAN 01, 2008 11:36 PM

damn spying perverts...i don't want my nekkid pictures up for their viewing pleasure!!

*pause*


waiiiiiiitttttt


*sigh*


well shit

Coyotemike

Coyotemike

USA
May 2006

JAN 01, 2008 11:49 PM

tat2dsinner said:
Orwell was right. He just missed the mark by about 23 years. I hope everybody loves Big Brother!



Oh hell no! That show fucking sucks!!!

At least the US version. European and Aussie versions show titties tongue

Previous

PAGE: 

1 ... 

12 | 13 | 14

Next