Increasing Surveillance Isn't the Answer
Increasing Surveillance Isn't the Answer
Last week's assault on the Capitol by Trump supporters hoping to stop the certification of Electoral College vote was, to many, truly shocking. Images filtered out of the melee: of a man dressed in animal skins at the head of an empty Senate chamber, of “thin blue line” flag-wavers clobbering police, of people scaling a wall to invade the seat of American government, and elected lawmakers taking shelter. As the chaos subsided, mixed among the calls for the President's removal were those looking to make sure this never happens again. However, in the effort to prevent a repeat performance, there are lines that shouldn't be crossed. For one, increasing surveillance is not the answer to this problem.We've seen this movie before. We know the plot.The United States has been increasing surveillance since the 9/11 terrorist attacks birthed the PATRIOT Act. These powers, granted on an “emergency” basis to the Bush administration, ballooned the government's ability to spy on American citizens in the name of preventing terror. Although there's never been another comparable terror attack on American soil, we're apparently still having an emergency two decades later. The same Republicans who protested those powers in the hands of President Obama regularly team up with the Democrats who consider President Trump a danger to the country in order to re-up the various portions of the Act as they face possible sundown every couple years. And is any of it necessary, if the government clearly knew the attack was coming months before the first plane was hijacked?Even before 9/11 came COINTELPRO (a portmanteau of “Counter Intelligence Program”), J. Edgar Hoover's 1950s-and-onward vehicle for rooting out activism, largely in the African-American community. Hoover's policies included engaging in psychological warfare, increasing surveillance of prominent protesters, infiltrating groups like the Black Panthers and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and assassination of leaders such as Fred Hampton.
Sign from the 2021 storming of the United States Capitol. Photo by Tyler Merbler, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. CC BY 2.0
Sources:
The Capitol Attack Doesn’t Justify Expanding Surveillance
Giving Government Vast Snooping Authority Is One Thing Democrats and Republicans Both Like
The Same Democrats Who Denounce Donald Trump as a Lawless, Treasonous Authoritarian Just Voted to Give Him Vast Warrantless Spying Powers
What the CIA knew before 9/11: New details
FBI COINTELPRO: The U.S. Government’s War Against Dissent
The IRS Is Being Investigated for Using Location Data Without a Warrant
Amazon's Echo Spot is a sneaky way to get a camera into your bedroom
Why printers add secret tracking dots
Facial recognition… coming to a supermarket near you
Border Patrol Has Used Facial Recognition to Scan More Than 16 Million Fliers — and Caught Just 7 Imposters
Did you protest recently? Your face might be in a database
DNA Databases Are Boon to Police But Menace to Privacy, Critics Say
The Capitol rioters put themselves all over social media. Now they’re getting arrested.
The fantasy-industrial complex gave us the Capitol Hill insurrection
Storming of the Capitol was Openly Planned but Ignored by Law Enforcement
Details emerge of high-level state involvement in Wednesday’s coup attempt
Seth Abramson's Twitter Thread
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.