Amidst the inevitable 9-11 retrospectives, I feel like only the Los Angeles Times is putting the past ten years in the proper perspective. Because the longest-lasting legacy of the 9-11 attacks is clearly the terror industry it spawned. Over the weekend the LAT looked at the hundreds of billions of dollars being spent on absurd “security” projects, filling the pockets of contractors, and for little benefit:
“The number of people worldwide who are killed by Muslim-type terrorists, Al Qaeda wannabes, is maybe a few hundred outside of war zones. It’s basically the same number of people who die drowning in the bathtub each year,” said John Mueller, an Ohio State University professor who has written extensively about the balance between threat and expenditures in fighting terrorism.
Today’s entry from the LAT is even better, and something I feel we pay too little attention to. In the decade since 9-11, this has become a surveillance state, and the government collects enormous amounts of data on every man, woman and child in America, in all likelihood too much to process. We all know about this, but it’s important to see all that surveillance together in one package:
…the secret domestic intelligence gathering [...] is one of the most significant legacies of Sept. 11. U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies now collect, store and analyze vast quantities of digital data produced by law-abiding Americans. The data mining receives limited congressional oversight, rare judicial review and almost no public scrutiny.
Thanks to new laws and technologies, authorities track and eavesdrop on Americans as they never could before, hauling in billions of bank records, travel receipts and other information. In several cases, they have wiretapped conversations between lawyers and defendants, challenging the legal principle that attorney-client communication is inviolate.
Advocates say the expanded surveillance has helped eliminate vulnerabilities identified after the Sept. 11 attacks. Some critics, unconvinced, say the snooping undermines privacy and civil liberties and leads inevitably to abuse. They argue that the new systems have weakened security by burying investigators in irrelevant information.
“We are caught in the middle of a perfect storm in which every thought we communicate, every step we take, every transaction we enter into is captured in digital data and is subject to government collection,” said Fred H. Cate, a professor at the Indiana University Maurer School of Law who has written extensively on privacy and security.
We had one moment where this was subject to any debate at all, during the fight over the FISA amnesty legislation. But that was really about a small portion of the total data collection. Most of the surveillance remains a secret. Ron Wyden and Mark Udall tried to tease out a little more this summer, when they tried to get the intelligence community to admit to how they were misinterpreting the Patriot Act to allow for more data collection. But that never went anywhere. From NSA surveillance to national security letters to the AT&T room on Folsom Street in San Francisco, what bits and pieces we do know about point to a giant network Hoovering up every piece of information you let out into the world digitally.
I appreciate the LA Times highlighting this legacy. Nobody really questions why we’ve deprived American civil liberties to this degree, to protect the homeland from a threat that mirrors the threat posed by full bathtubs. Read the whole story for yourself. This has been an inexorable slide downward for ten years, and it shows no sign whatsoever of letting up.




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“This has been an inexorable slide downward for ten years, and it shows no sigh whatsoever of letting up.”
Why stop there, DDay, not only is “it” not “letting up”, isn’t it unrealistic to imagine that “it” is doing anything but increasing, especially since the beginning of the Obama administration …?
DW
Thanks so much for highlighting this, David. It is really an excellent series.
“We had one moment where this was subject to any debate at all, during the fight over the FISA amnesty legislation.”
BO Plenty loves getting the goods on political opponents as did Bushco and daddy bu
sh of CIA. With blackmail how can we have a viable candidate. Big Brother is watching you on the internet, wifi, telephones and from space. There should be a past tense for privacy as it is history.
Those, I’m one, who use ezpass to zip through the toll booths add to the data base.
This issue in data collection and its massaging into information is this:
The algorithms that massage the data can discard too much, leading to missed leads, or can include too much, leading to false positives.
1. Missed leads
2. False Positives
Well we have some experience with massive false positives in large all-encompassing systems.
The Credit Bureaus.
Hypothesis: The credit bureaus match debts with debtors as a service sold to collection bureaus.
Credit reports require, Name, An Address, and Social Security number.
Here are four examples:
1. Ran the credit for a person wanting to rent a house. A person with the same family name and address, different social security number, deceased was delivered on his credit report.
2. My credit as hot with a charge from Lowes (Money One Bank). I has credit monitoring so I believe it was identity theft.
On examination of the credit card bills, month 1 had my name, one good and one bad street address on the same bill. The good address, I discovered, was the borrower.
Month two had my name and an address I sold in 2002. I received the credit hit in Month two.
Month three, after I contacted Money One Bank was correctly addressed for me. The debt was in AZ, and I live in CA, and had not been to AZ for over 18 years.
My wife, a member of a minority with few family names, was suddenly hit with a charge from Capitol One. Similar name, similar street address different office unit number.
My wife suddenly became liable for $3,300,000 in real estate loans. I know she shops, but this was ridiculous. Eventually the credit bureau admitted in was their mistake. The person to who the loans belonged had a similar name and and an identical number on their street address of a home we lived in in 2000/2001.
I’m now sure that 75% to 90% of “identity theft” is credit bureau false positives, and
1. They have the gall to sell us a service to protect against their business practices.
2. I’m positive that these debit hit more than one debotors credit. How many collection agencies collect the same debt multiple times? (I’m sure the debt collection business, being such an honest business would not collect any debt more than once, right?)
Conclusion
Will the government do any better at false positives? No.
And they will use the false positives to accuse us, and penalize us without being able to confront our acccusers or demand due process.
A picture is worth a thousand words:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/survivalbros/5241337674/
Think about how credit bureaus (“rating agencies”), collection agencies, credit counselling groups and credit card issuers can create a pool of debtors that can be reiteratively mined. Vulture funds don’t just deal in corporate obligers and sovereign debtor states but they have reduced the granularity of the scam to the mass markets (see “Defaulted Credit Card Scams And Judicial Wimpiness,” Nov. 5, 2010). The surveillance state plays these games too with who gets to be on the du jour list of “criminals” s.t. the real criminals are on top behind the systems and the rest of us are on the bottom out in the cold. Our job is to end The Matrix.
“Thoughts on War at the American Cemetery” (Aug. 4, 2011)
There was a quote I read from someone in the intelligence business who said, “If you are trying to find a needle in a haystack, do not start by making the haystack bigger.”
Re: “From NSA surveillance to national security letters to the AT&T room on Folsom Street in San Francisco, what bits and pieces we do know about point to a giant network Hoovering up every piece of information you let out into the world digitally.”
I agree there seems to be no sign whatsoever of this letting up. Part of the corporate master grand scheme is to control and intimidate us little sheep into becoming even more sheepishly spineless.
Those who don’t stand up right now and put a stop to this are equally complicit and culpible, and those who continue to propulgate it had better look in the mirror to be sure they are immune from getting bit in the ass. It can go both ways.