The Fuse Has Been Lit: Seven Critical Points on Uncle Sam's Spying Program
By Patrick Caddell
Breitbart.com
The sordid revelations from the Obama
administration are coming at a pace that can only be
described as, well, fast and furious. So let’s lay
down some markers here, as a sort of road map for
the months and years ahead:
First, if the PRISM program and all the rest of the
government’s surveillance programs were so good and
necessary, then why didn’t the feds catch the
Tsarnaev brothers, who earlier this year blew up the
Boston Marathon? Or Major Hassan, the 2009 Fort Hood
mass-murderer? Or the “underwear bomber,” also from
2009, who nearly succeeded in blowing up the
passenger jet flying into Detroit?
Second, if and when everything is revealed about
PRISM and all the rest, it’s likely that we will
learn of important and inculpating connections
between the National Security Agency (NSA), on the
one hand, and many civilian agencies, on the other.
I am not just referring to Eric Holder’s Justice
Department; I am also referring to the gleefully
gushing leakers and win-at-any-cost politicos in the
White House. And oh yes, let’s not forget the Obama
administration’s partisan allies at the IRS, as well
as the Obamacare overseers at the Department of
Health and Human Services.
Moreover, since we know that the IRS was
eagerly willing to share secret tax information with
favored private groups, we shouldn’t be
surprised, in the end, to learn that NSA/PRISM
material ended up in the hands of Obama friends and
allies outside of the government.
Third, we now know that Silicon Valley, and the
telecommunications industry, are the key to the
Obama strategy for total information awareness. In
fact, the internet companies, and the phone
companies, were the spearpoint for PRISM. No, wait,
that’s not the right image. Let’s try this: These
communications companies put peepholes into all of
our private lives, through which Uncle Sam could
sneak a peek. Every e-mail, every phone call, every
text-message--the government knows about them all.
It’s now evident that all these wonderful digital
services--many of them, such as Google’s Gmail,
given away for free--were, in fact, a kind of Trojan
Horse. That is, on the outside, it all seemed like a
good deal--but then the real truth comes tumbling
out, and it’s too late. Some might recall the rueful
lesson of the Trojan War: “Beware of Greeks bearing
gifts.” The rueful lesson of our own time: “Beware
of geeks bearing gifts.”
Yes, Big Brother walks among us now, peeking and
snooping into everything. And we, innocently and
unwittingly, invited Big Brother into our midst.
Fourth, it’s not an accident that these Silicon
Valley companies are supporters of Barack Obama. The
greatest among these Obama supporters is Eric
Schmidt, executive chairman of the largest of these
companies, Google. Google gained a lot of
traction--the company is now worth nearly $300
billion, and Schmidt owns a good chunk of that--on
the slogan, “Don’t be evil.” But now we know better.
Indeed, we are reminded of another old piece of
wisdom: Be extra careful around the man who protests
his virtue too much. And beware the company, too.
Google and all the rest of the Silicon Valleyites
say they didn’t know about what was happening, and
if you don’t believe that, well, they will then tell
you that they didn’t provide “direct access.” Oh,
okay, not “direct access”--just full access. And
what did the companies get in return for this
cooperation with the government? A pat on the head?
Or something more? Did any of these companies make
any serious attempt to put any sort of limits on
what was being snooped, and how it was being
utilized?
Let’s remember: All these companies had a lot of
leverage, because any one of them had the power to
make the PRISM operation, at least some of it,
public. But they all chose not to; they all chose to
be part of the effort. How come? Patriotism? Or
something else?
Fifth, Eric Schmidt, in particular, seems on his way
to becoming a major Democratic powerbroker, bringing
Silicon Valley smarts--and who knows what else--into
the realm of partisan campaigning. Schmidt is so
into this president that he snapped up the 2012
Obama campaign’s data analytics team--hired the
whole Chicago group--and has now launched them in
a new company. The company, Civis Analytics,
will work on various for-profit and non-profit
projects, including helping the Obama administration
dragoon young people into Obamacare. And oh yes,
Civis will also work on political campaigns--but
only for Democrats.
So we might ask: Is Schmidt really doing the right
thing for the employees and shareholders of Google?
To say nothing of all those Google users? Is it
really in keeping with Schmidt’s fiduciary duty to
his company to get so extended into the policy and
politics of the Obama administration? Are Schmidt’s
actions truly helping the long-term growth and
well-being of Google? Not only are its American
customers justifiably freaked out, but how ‘bout
customers worldwide? If you were a citizen of
another country, would you really want to keep using
Google if you know that American intelligence
types--and maybe American political operatives--were
perusing your private life?
Sixth, young Edward Snowden, the 29-year-old who
leaked the PRISM information, is sort of a Zelig
figure--if you remember your
Woody Allen movies--for our own time. That is,
the naive figure who ends up in the middle of great
events, without fully understanding what is
happening all around him. As a teenager in 2003, at
the height of the patriotic feeling of the War on
Terror in 2003, Snowden joined the US Army. He was
discharged after breaking both of his legs in a
training accident, and then, as he made his way up
the ladder in the national security apparatus, he
seems to have veered between sort of liking Obama
and actually supporting libertarian candidates.
In other words, Snowden seems to have been pro-war
when just about everyone was pro-war, and he became
part of the national security sector when it was a
boom industry. More recently, he believed that Obama
would bring about positive hope and change, even as
he himself became more and more skeptical of
government. Then, of course, came his profound
disillusion, and the PRISM leak.
More biographical information on Snowden will come
pouring out, but it surely seems, as of now, that
Snowden was riding on the same political
rollercoaster as many millions of American. First,
trust in George W. Bush, then trust in the system,
then trust in Obama--and now, trust in nobody and
nothing in Washington.
Seventh, as far as the American people are
concerned, this domestic spying is a big deal. Yet
revealingly, to the political class--that is, our
leaders in Washington DC--it’s not such a big deal.
And there we see the central cleft in our politics
today: the widening gap between the government and
the governed.
According to pollster
Scott Rasmussen, the American people oppose the
US government’s secret collection of phone records
by a whopping 59:26 margin.
People know, in their bones, that unaccountable
government is bad government; as Patrick Henry said
more than two centuries ago, “The liberties of a
people never were, nor ever will be, secure, when
the transactions of their rulers may be concealed
from them.” So when Obama said, on Friday, “I
welcome this debate and I think it's healthy for our
democracy,” we might ask right back: Mr. President,
if you welcome this debate so much, why didn’t you
begin the debate yourself? Why did you wait until
PRISM was leaked?
The reason, of course, is that Obama did not see
anything objectionable about PRISM. Moreover,
neither did anyone around him--in either party. On
Sunday, the talkshow airwaves were thick with DC
Establishment tools rallying around PRISM--that is,
rallying around their own entrenched and centralized
power.
Only a few outsiders, such as Sen. Rand Paul
(R-KY)--who has retained his outsiderness, even
inside the club of the US Senate--are reading public
sentiment correctly. Paul plans a class-action suit
against the communications companies, inviting all
Americans to join him. That’s the sort of
citizen-engagement effort that the insurgent and
outsider-ish Obama campaign of 2008 would have
loved, even if the arrogant and insider-ish Obama
administration of 2013 hates it.
In fact, those Americans whom Rasmussen categorizes
as the “political class”--that is, those connected
to DC and governance--support PRISM by a 71 percent
to 18 percent ratio. Meanwhile, the rest of the
country opposes PRISM by a more than three-to-one
ratio, 69 percent to 21 percent. Now let’s think
about the enormous chasm here: The political class
supports the program by a 53-point margin, while
everyone else opposes it by a 48-point margin. If
you add up those two margins, 53 and 48, you get
101. That’s a vivid indicator of the gap between the
government and the governed.
So here we see it: The elites think one thing, and
the people think another thing. Nothing new there,
of course, except that rarely, if ever, has the
dichotomy between overdog and underdog been this
stark.
Something is going to have to give. We are on the
cusp of some huge shift in power relations between
the core and periphery, between the DC Beltway and
flyover country. Right now, Washington has the upper
hand, but an aggrieved population can always win--if
it is willing to stand up and fight.
In the minds of ordinary Americans, the fuse of
outrage has been lit. Now this is the question: Can
honest but responsible leaders, truly reflecting
populist anger, find a way to force change in DC?
Moreover, can this needed reform happen without
tearing apart the country?
Let’s hope so.
But we must know this for sure: One way or another,
a revolution is coming.