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by Jayne Lyn Stahl
There was an email in my inbox, this morning, from Senator Dianne Feinstein thanking me for writing to her about administration efforts at legislation that would give what both the Senator and the President call "liability relief" for those telecoms, after 9/11, that cooperated with the National Security Agency's request, and participated in clandestine surveillance of their customers' telephone conversations, without a warrant, in violation of FISA, as well as privacy laws. The way this government has attempted to rewrite not merely the Constitution, history, but the English language is a continuous source of amazement to me. Liability relief, indeed!
Why didn't anyone think of liability relief for Richard Nixon when he authorized the break-in of Democratic headquarters at Watergate? From now on, when they take the oath of office, we ought to require that all future presidents have liability insurance in place so that they don't waste taxpayer money, tie up both houses of Congress with interminable investigations, and may be held harmless from charges of war crimes, destruction of White House emails in violation of the Presidential Records Act, as well as any other misdeeds, and misconduct.
Indeed, why not require future presidents to carry immunity
from prosecution insurance the way Governor Schwarzenneger is working
to require all Californians to carry health insurance. Moreover, why
restrict immunity from criminal prosecution to those who carry out the
surveillance, and not those who give the commands to surveil?
In
her letter, Senator Feinstein also asserts that it was the Executive
branch who demanded that electronic communication service providers
turn over records, and that requests for N.S.A. assistance were
generated by the President himself. She insists that these demands for
information are legal. What's more, the Senator says that she herself
voted for the FISA bill, in October, which included the provision to
grant immunity to companies that cooperate with governmental requests
for information.
Yesterday, the Senate Intelligence Committee,
upon which Ms. Feinstein serves, not surprisingly, voted to approve the
controversial FISA overhaul measure with the retroactive immunity
clause in there, by an impressive margin of 76-10. (Reuters) We'd all
like to know the names of all those on the committee, besides
Feinstein, who voted in favor of this legislation. esp. those who are
up for reelection.
The good news is that, thanks to the efforts
of Senator Reid, a final vote by the full Senate has been delayed until
after the congressional recess. Unlike the Intelligence Committee, both
the House and the Senate Judiciary Committee looked less favorably on
legislation that would grant so-called liability relief to those who
violate ordinary citizens' privacy rights. In fact, the House bill
doesn't mention immunity at all.
But, what many in Congress
neglect to consider in their discussion of FISA reform, and immunity to
telecoms who cooperate with NSA, is is that this legislation is
designed not merely to ward off prosecution from past surveillance, but
to open the door to "wider spying" in future, as well as "a wide range
of secret surveillance operations in fighting terrorism and crime."
(WaPo) Yes, America, while the Senate debates whether Big Brother has
the right to eavesdrop on your cell phone conversations, Big Brother
continues to do so, and with the collusion of an alarming number of
your elected representatives. And, from the looks of things, we can
count on yet another preemptive strike against privacy by N.S.A.
Notably,
much of the campaign to monitor our personal communications in the name
of a so-called war on terror has been kept conspicuously private by an
administration which has enhanced the ability to classify information,
as well as deter declassification. Clearly, too, the destruction of
evidentiary videotapes is another means by which the Executive branch
controls the flow of information, especially when there is concern that
there might be leakage to the press.
As first reported in this
morning's Washington Post, the National Security Agency tried
unsuccessfully to gain access to domestic calls through a Denver
telecom, Qwest, access that would have allowed them
"neighborhood-by-neighborhood surveillance of phone traffic without a
court order" Qwest refused to cooperate with the N.S.A. request. And,
if many in Congress get their way, when the temporary FISA reform bill,
scheduled to sunset on February 1st, is finalized, it will contain a
provision that prohibits legal action against communication companies
who intercept your emails, phone conversations if they claim that they
were directed to do so by the N.S.A., or the Executive branch.
Both
the House and Senate must reach agreement on whether or not to include
immunity in the new FISA reform bill before it can pass. We who pay
their salaries, as well as those presidential candidates, of both
parties, who hunger for our votes, must make our position known on
violating privacy laws, and obtaining our personal information without
a warrant. President Bush has already made his position known; he says
that he will veto any measure that doesn't provide for immunity to
telecoms.
As important as privacy is, there is an even larger
question. How can any legislative branch make laws then grant immunity
from breaking laws on the grounds of national security? After all, what
is "national security" if not law enforcement? Clearly, the concept of
"liability relief" means writing an escape clause written into the law.
But, who gets to escape prosecution — the telecommunication companies
who act as hit men, or the Executive branch who gives the command?
Another
representative, from New York, Senator Charles Schumer, suggests that
those who oppose retroactive immunity "really don't want to punish the
phone companies as much as hold the government accountable;" We agree.
He's also right when he says that "it's very hard to do that." (WaPo)
It may be easier to climb Mt. Everest in an ice storm than to hold the
Bush White House accountable for anything.
In her missive,
Senator Feinstein insists that she is "keeping an open mind to whether
some other legislative approach besides immunity would be best." There
is much to be said for keeping an open mind, but there are times when
an "open mind" simply isn't enough. To legislate immunity, past,
present, or future, for those who obediently acquiesce to the will of
those who obey the rule of law selectively is nothing less than
complicity in high crimes and misdemeanors.
A more workable
"legislative approach," and one that would get an enthusiastic
thumbs-up from the framers, might be for the House to begin reviewing
articles of impeachment when they reconvene after the holidays. It's
never too late for love, or impeachment. Failing this, then any FISA
reform that Congress passes which grants "liability relief" to private
companies must also agree to prosecute the Executive branch, or
governmental agency, that issues the orders instead.

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