The House's NSA Bill Could Allow More Spying Than Ever. You Call This Reform? [View all]
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/03/25-8
When Rep Mike Rogers claims a bill does something particular like, say, protect your privacy it's a fairly safe assumption that the opposite will end up true.
The House's NSA Bill Could Allow More Spying Than Ever. You Call This Reform?
by Trevor Timm
Published on Tuesday, March 25, 2014 by The Guardian
The White House and the House Intelligence Committee leaked dueling proposals last night that are supposedly aimed at ending the mass collection of all Americans phone records. But the devil is in the details, and when it comes to the National Security Agencys unique ability to twist and distort the English language, the devil tends to wrap his horns around every word.
The House proposal, to be unveiled this morning by Reps Mike Rogers and Dutch Ruppersberger, is the more worrying of the two. Rogers has been the NSAs most ardent defender in Congress and has a long history of distorting the truth and practicing in outright fabrication, whether in touting his committees alleged oversight or by way of his attempts to impugn the motives of the once again vindicated whistleblower who started this whole reform debate, former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.
As a general rule, whenever Mike Rogers (not to be confused with incoming NSA director Michael Rogers) claims a bill does something particular like, say, protect your privacy it's actually a fairly safe assumption that the opposite will end up true. His new bill seems to have the goal of trading government bulk collection for even more NSA power to search Americans data while it sits in the hands of the phone companies.
While the full draft of the bill isnt yet public, the Guardian has seen a copy, and its description does not inspire confidence. Under the Rogers and Ruppersberger proposal, slyly named the End Bulk Collection Act, the telephone companies would hold on to phone data. But the government could search data from those companies based on "reasonable articulable suspicion" that someone is an agent of a foreign power, associated with an agent of a foreign power, or "in contact with, or known to, a suspected agent of a foreign power". The NSAs current phone records program is restricted to a reasonable articulable suspicion of terrorism.