From The World Can’t Wait;
By Debra Sweet
Barack Obama pulled out the “we’re not Big Brother” line again
Friday in the ongoing to effort to bamboozle people alarmed about the vast
National Security Agency surveillance of whole populations exposed by Edward
Snowden. The important thing to him is not that the surveillance is
curtailed, but that you feel comfortable with
it.
Tech Crunch outlined
Obama’s program to make you comfortable:
1) a new independent NSA review board that will publish
recommendations on protecting civil liberties 2) a new website detailing the
surveillance activities 3) changes to the Patriot Act authorizing the spying,
and 4) a new public advocate to argue cases in the secret court that grants the
NSA spying requests.
Reviews, public advocates, and a website (!) all with the
intention of making you accept the illegal busting down of virtual walls
breaking any remaining protection promised by the Fourth Amendment. Obamastraight up lied when
saying that
all these steps are designed to ensure that the American people
can trust that our efforts are in line with our interests and our values. And
to others around the world, I want to make clear once again that America is not
interested in spying on ordinary people.
Obama was especially pissed off that Snowden’s revelations
continue to be published via Glenn Greenwald in The Guardian, and
in other media. These include irrefutable evidence – from the horse’s
mouth — of ongoing NSA programs which collect all metadata from very large
sections of people, includingStellar Wind, Boundless Informant, and X-KEYSCORE.
Plainly put by The Guardian:
Nothing Obama announced Friday is likely to materially alter the
NSA’s ongoing mass collection of phone data and surveillance of internet
communications in the short term.
The Wall Street Journal, which mostly supports Obama’s
spying, spoke
plainly to Obama’s chief goal; to
gain public trust in the NSA programs and engage in a national
debate about surveillance. But he also has said he was comfortable with the
current programs. So he could say he spurred a debate and tried to address
privacy concerns even if no changes result.
The New York Times editorialized,
mildly, against the spying, apparently not satisfied with Obama’s sales effort:
The
programs themselves are the problem, not whether they are modestly transparent.
As long as the N.S.A. believes it has the right to collect records of every phone
call — and the administration released a white paper Friday that
explained, unconvincingly, why it is perfectly legal — then none of the promises
to stay within the law will mean a thing.
Obama’s
rhetoric rang like the May 23, 2013 address when he said he “wants” to close
Guantanamo and would remove an obstacle to prisoners’ release — which he
created — by putting a moratorium on releasing prisoners to Yemen.
Exactly ZERO prisoners have been
released since his comments.
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