IS GEORGE W. OBAMA LISTENING IN?
Thursday, September 2nd, 2010A FEDERAL JUDGE’S LANDMARK RULING UPHOLDS BIG BROTHER’S SURVEILLANCE OF OUR TELEPHONES AND COMPUTERS.
by Nat Hentoff for HUSTLER Magazine – June 2010
In a startling decision on January 21, 2010, Chief Judge Vaughn R. Walker of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California ruled that we Americans have no privacy rights in our telephone and e-mail communications whenever the federal government decides to spy on us for national-security reasons.
The judge dismissed a crucial case, Jewel v. NSA, that had been filed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation—the leading defender of Americans’ digital rights—on behalf of five AT&T customers. The plaintiffs claimed that the telecommunications mammoth had given the private information on their telephones and emails to the National Security Agency, the government’s nonstop collector and data banker of Americans’ electronic messages.
The EFF has appealed Chief Judge Walker’s disembowelment of these AT&T customers’ Fourth Amendment rights to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, and eventually the U.S. Supreme Court will rule. The EFF is not giving up because the aim of this legal action, it explains, is to end “the NSA’s dragnet surveillance of millions of ordinary Americans—and hold accountable the government officials who illegally authorize it.”
At the very top of that accountability list are former President George W. Bush and his mirror like successor in these assaults on our rule of law, Barack Obama, whom I’ve come to describe as President George W. Obama.
During previous hearings on Jewel v. NSA before Chief Judge Walker, he seemed quite sympathetic to the EFF’s argument, but now he has given the Obama Administration a greatly empowering historic authority to learn intimate details of our private lives and everything else. See if you can understand Chief Judge Walker’s slippery reasoning. Although the government obviously cannot deny the NSA’s omnivorous spying on us, the five aggrieved AT&T customers, says the jurist, have no basis to claim “a particularized injury” despite whatever private information about them AT&T has given Big Brother NSA.
According to Chief Judge Walker, these plaintiffs have only a “generalized grievance” against the government, and that’s not the basis for a lawsuit because, he continues, nearly everybody in this country has a telephone and a computer connected to the Internet. Huh? Stunned, the EFF’s senior staff attorney, Kevin Bankston, sums up what this upside-down decision is going to mean for all of us if it is eventually upheld by the High Court: “The alarming upshot of the decision is that, so long as the government spies on all Americans, the courts have no power to review or halt such mass surveillance even when it is flatly illegal and unconstitutional.” This is only one of the reasons my next book’s title will be Is This America?
Chief Judge Vaughn R. Walker had already been lavishly shredding our privacy rights. On June 3, 2009, he threw out a series of lawsuits by customers of not only AT&T but also other telecommunications companies charged by irate customers with tuning the NSA into their personal phone calls and e-mails.
At that time, Chief Judge Walker cited a law justifying this mass dismissal of such lawsuits. In 2008 the Democrat-controlled Congress passed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Amendments Act, which declares no “civil action” lawsuit can be filed in any state or federal court against any entity [like AT&T] “for providing assistance to the intelligence community.” Such lawsuits must be automatically dismissed if the U.S. Attorney General verifies that this surveillance was authorized by the government. You got to trust your rulers.
Characteristically, then-Senator Barack Obama of Illinois ardently pledged on the floor that he would filibuster such a glaringly unconstitutional law. But when ultimately tested, Obama voted for it.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation is also appealing that thunderclap of a court ruling. Says EFF Legal Director Cindy Cohn of the continuing2008 FISA Act: “The retroactive immunity [for the telecommunication companies] takes away Americans’ claims arising out of the First and Fourth Amendments; violates the federal government’s separation of powers as established by the Constitution; and robs innocent telecom customers of their rights without due process of law.”
What recourse do citizens have when their government’s executive branch, along with a complicit Congress, behaves as King George III did against the American colonies? Benjamin Franklin warned of this grim possibility when he told a newly independent America right after the Constitution was signed: “We have a republic—if you can keep it.”
How can we keep it? In a January 8, 1789,letter to Richard Price, Thomas Jefferson wrote:“It is to me a new and consolatory proof that whenever the people are well informed, they can be trusted with their own government [and] whenever things get so far wrong as to attract their notice, they may be relied on to set them to rights.”
Would you say Americans are sufficiently well informed now that the Obama Administration is continuing the privacy-euthanizing legacy of the Bush-Cheney Administration? Will we act to restore our individual rights in this purportedly self-governing republic?
I didn’t see any headlines or demonstrations in the streets when Chief Judge Walker encouraged the National Security Agency to keep tracking what we say on the phone and on the Internet. Did you know about it?
Nat Hentoff is a historian of the Constitution, a jazz critic and a columnist for the Village Voice and Free Inquiry. His incisive books include The First Freedom: The Tumultuous History of Free Speech in America ; Living the Bill of Rights; and the forthcoming Is This America?
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