It’s become a cottage industry —- scaring the
bejesus out of the citizenry in an effort to push U.S. House
members into following the example of their Senate counterparts
and pass legislation giving the administration legal authority
to secretly surveil phone calls and e-mails of U.S. citizens
in this country without court approval.
Surveillance advocates from President Bush on down are disingenuously
mischaracterizing the law —- and the already vast power
of the government to gather intelligence information electronically
—- in order to gain the votes needed to send such legislation
to the president for signature.
To set the record straight, here are some key points concerning
the surveillance powers of government —- current and
desired:
Q. Despite the fact that the House has not yet caved to the
president and the Senate and permanently expanded the power
of the government to surreptitiously surveil Americans’
international calls and e-mails, is our government still able
to conduct necessary foreign intelligence surveillance?
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A. Yes. The sky has not fallen and will not fall. The government
has had and continues to have robust power and lawful authority
to monitor calls and e-mails of known or suspected terrorists.
Q. As an American citizen within the United States, aren’t
my calls and e-mails protected against the government listening
in, unless the government suspects me of unlawful activity,
including working with or communicating with terrorists?
A. Such calls should be, and are, protected against warrantless
surveillance by the 30-year-old Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act. However, under the “Protect America Act,”
in effect from August 2007 until the middle of February of
this year, the government was given vastly expanded power
to listen in to any of your calls or e-mails, so long as a
government official “reasonably believed” one
party was outside the United States. In other words, any call
you made with or e-mail you sent to, someone in another country
—- a friend, a relative, a business associate or anyone
else —- could be monitored by the government without
any suspicion you were doing something wrong or that you were
conspiring with a member of al-Qaida.
Full
article here.