Sunday, June 30, 2013

A little more in regard to my last post.

     Last post I talked about the deliberate betrayal of our nation's security and those that defend it.   I would like to put exactly what those that defend our nation are sworn to do.  This is the oath that all active duty and reserve U. S. military personnel willingly swear in order to serve and defend our nation:

     I, (NAME), do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; and that I will obey the orders of the President of the United States and the orders of the officers appointed over me, according to regulations and the Uniform Code of Military Justice. So help me God.

     Anyone reading this blog should know that once you make this vow, you are never released from it.  Please think about that a bit.  (The vow differs slightly for military officers and the National Guard--if you are interested, the specifics are here.)  Once a citizen has served in the military, they can never be a civilian again; they are forever after a veteran, and, as such, still obligated to keep the vow they made.

     In the interests of fairness and pointing out stupidity everywhere I can find it, I would like to show another betrayal.  This editorial in the Washington Times does it quite succinctly.  I recommend everyone read it to see exactly what the White House did to Seal Team 6 by making the covert action team that took down Osama bin Laden international celebrities (and thus easily acquirable targets).  It doesn't matter if it was done with good intentions, some kind of overabundance of enthusiasm, stupidity, or malice aforethought.  Just like Edward Snowden and Bradley Manning, the current administration has betrayed We, The People (and royally screwed Team 6--I feel for those guys and their families, bigtime). 

     I personally think that their intrusions into my privacy by recording all of my (and everyone else's on the planet) communications, whether they be by phone/email/text/instant message/whatever, to be a little overkill, but if it catches terrorists or prevents even one more attack on our soil, I guess some good will have come of it.  I can see that it will remain a permanent part of our intelligence gathering assets, whether We, The People, like it or not--it is too cool in that "new toy" way that guarantees it will never be discarded.  And, because it is managed by mere mortals, it will be abused.  Your privacy shrinks day by day.  Everywhere you go you end up in front of some kind of camera.  This often helps solve crimes, which is good, but wouldn't you all rather live in a society that didn't need all this self-surveillance in the first place?  You would think it would be enough to make even the most avid voyeur lose their taste for it.  They (and by this I mean our and every other government on this planet) never will, though.   We spy on everyone else while every other nation does the same.  Why this ridiculous 'round robin' game is necessary is obvious--once the players get in the game they are all afraid to quit.

     And yes, I will state the obvious.  Just like you, I can't help but wonder: where will it escalate to from here?

Monday, June 10, 2013

This one's about the latest leak in our intelligence sieve. Sort of.

     Okay, the NSA is all over the news because they have been listening to people's phone calls.  Actually, they have been doing alot more than that, ever since the agency was founded (in 1952, if memory serves).  The NSA is tasked with providing security for the United States by listening to every piece of communications there is on the planet.  They are not chartered to operate domestically, which is what a good part of the media panic is all about...but the handshake deal they have with all of the major communications providers has been going on for a long time.  Most of them cuddled up to the NSA as soon as they were asked--decades ago--without any kind of court order.  Please note that the NSA does not have a fleet of silent black helicopters or a highly trained cadre of assassins at their beck and call.  They are eavesdroppers taken to the highest degree.  Typically they just have a bank of supercomputers monitoring all the chatter, looking for certain buzzwords like jihad or bomb.  Some of these get brought to human eyes for further examination.  Most get discarded.  A rare few save lives.

     Now, I don't like the idea of any of my phone calls or texts or emails being read by anyone but the person or persons I intended them for any more than the next person.  The harsh truth of the matter is that, unless your browsing with Tor and using Hushmail with the settings tooled all the way up, your communications are not private.  Your phone company keeps this data, as does your email provider.  They data mine every scrap of information they can get and sell it for a huge profit.

     (* I'm pinning this asterisk here because privacy is something I would like to devote an entire post to later.)

     To my readers, please not that I have not written this post in order to condemn or condone the NSA, any other intelligence gathering agency or tool, the White House, the current or any past administration, or the government in general.  I would just like to point out a few things.

     First, if you are reading this, it is very unlikely that anyone in a position like Edward Snowden (the source of the recent leak of what I heretofore thought was common knowledge regarding the NSA) is going to be listening to any of your phone calls or reading your texts unless you are some kind of terrorist.  Second, the United Staes is not the only government that does this--every government on the planet does, or tries to--ours is just one of the best at it.  Third, Mr. Snowden has taken refuge in China.  I would dearly love to know what he is telling the Chinese in exchange for that amnesty, and what his bank balances are--though to be perfectly honest most of the traitors in the espionage history of our nation committed their crimes through some kind of misplaced idealism, rather than for money--though they usually took money as well.  What Mr. Snowden did was no different that what PFC Bradley Manning did.  They both broke oaths that they took to defend you and me and our friends and families--and our Constitution--from our enemies, and then helped those same enemies with their actions.

     Reasons, moralization, or civic outrage notwithstanding, these men are criminals.

     To be more specific: traitors.