“Fight Against Stupidity And Bureaucracy”
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If you are a bureaucrat in the US government you spell bollocks ‘F-R-E-E-D-O-M’.
Then you stick that name on a new act and you sit down, confident that most of the politicians elected to represent the people are too dumb to realize what they are voting for. They were, the US Senate passed the USA Freedom Act by 67 votes for to 32 against.
Then you hope that most of the people are also too dumb to realize they’ve been conned again. And, sadly, most of them are. They listen to con men like Obama who lies to them, saying things like, “Glad the Senate finally passed the USA Freedom Act. It protects civil liberties and our national security. I’ll sign it as soon as I get it.”
In business there are rules for blatantly misleading consumers with false statements. If you run a pet shop, for example, you can’t sell a kitten as a puppy. There should be similar rules for governments. But unfortunately there aren’t. In politics you can sell the people as many pups as you like. That’s how Obama and the rest have got away with another scam.
Not that they would ever lie, of course. Take the Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, who in a briefing under oath swore that the NSA wasn’t collecting data on millions of innocent American citizens. He said this pre-Snowden’s well publicized whistleblowing.
Even after the Snowden revelations about the horrific extent of the government’s snooping, Clapper insisted he told the truth. It was a bit like Bill or Hilary Clinton’s ‘truth’, because apparently in Clapper’s head if you store data but don’t look at it, it’s not the same thing as collecting it.
That leaves me wondering if I robbed Clapper’s house but didn’t look at anything I took, would I have really stolen anything? I’m not going to try it to find out because I think I know what the result for me would be.
Getting back to this new legislation, on the face of it “Freedom” sounds great.
The bureaucrats knew that it would. They deliberately choose the word to deceive the American people. The ‘USA FREEDOM’ bit in the USA Freedom Act is supposed to mean “Uniting and Strengthening America by Fulfilling Rights and Ensuring Effective Discipline Over Monitoring”.
‘Supposed to’, being the key words.
Let me be quite blunt.
If you believe the USA Freedom Act is ‘Strengthening and Uniting America’ then you are a fool.
If you think it is ‘Fulfilling Rights’ then you are a bigger fool.
And if you think it will ensure ‘Effective Discipline Over Monitoring’, then you are out of your frigging mind.
The only mitigating factor in your defense is that you have been brainwashed by the unthinking media who have swallowed hook, line and sinker all the government’s ‘spin’ on this new piece of legislation, and repeated it ad nauseam. Misleading headlines such as the Washington Post’s “NSA phone program doomed as Senate passes USA Freedom Act”, or USA Today’s equally ridiculous, “NSA data collection ended” are examples of lazy and bad journalism and a complete failure to properly assess the impact of this new Act.
They all want you to think what the government wants you to think, and that is that the USA Freedom Act is a victory for civil liberty.
It is not. In fact it is quite the opposite.
For example, the USA Freedom Act only slightly modified one small part of a single NSA data collection program. Now, instead of the NSA directly capturing and holding the metadata for every American citizen’s cellphone conversation – i.e., your phone number, the numbers you call, the length of your phone calls, etc – the telecommunication companies must hold on to it for the NSA, and give it access to it through the federal court system any time it wants it. Basically the USA Freedom Act just saves the NSA from having to store the information itself.
Meantime the NSA can still monitor and collect anything it wants from the Internet. It will continue to snoop on your medical records, emails, business deals, where you are and practically anything else, which is far more valuable than cellphone calls.
And as General Michael Hayden, former director of the NSA and the CIA, has said, it doesn’t take much metadata to specifically identify and track anyone. “We kill people based on metadata,” he said.
See, this Freedom Act makes you so safe again.
So that is my take on the USA Freedom Act. Another piece of government deceit. And another attack on the Constitutional rights of Americans. For a country that for so many years has taken pride in its freedom, it’s allowing it to be taken away with very little comprehension or fight.
The true fact is that the United States of America, which has more controls on government data collection than any other country in the world – including the USA Freedom Act just passed – spends more on intelligence collection and analysis than the rest of the world combined.
But at least now you know how to spell ‘bollocks’.
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I am reminded of doublespeak from “1984” and the “Affordable” Healthcare Act that is not always affordable to everyone. Well stated post, fasab. Sad but true!!! You should write for a newspaper – or do you? (I didn’t know about bollocks but now I can spell it!)
Thanks for your comments. The ‘doublespeak’ in 1984 is spot on. Btw, I wouldn’t mind writing for a newspaper now and again but I don’t think there are many that would take me on. At least I am pretty sure they won’t fire me from this blog 🙂
There might be some sane online sources out there that might welcome your attitude. In the meantime I will enjoy reading your posts
Hope you are right, and thanks again.