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Privacy United States Your Rights Online

Pentagon Seeks A Loophole In The Privacy Act 304

CygnusXII writes "As reported over @ wired.com. It seems that Homeland Security isn't the only govermental body wanting to keep a database on the good old U.S. population. 'The bill would allow Pentagon intelligence agents to work undercover and question American citizens and legal residents without having to reveal that they are government agents. That exemption currently applies only to law enforcement officials working on criminal cases and to the CIA, which is prohibited from operating in the United States.' Kinda adds a whole new meaning to 'We want you!', or should it be 'We want all your secrets'?"
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Pentagon Seeks A Loophole In The Privacy Act

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  • by LostCluster ( 625375 ) * on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:32PM (#9473391)
    That exemption currently applies only to law enforcement officials working on criminal cases...

    Which is to say that the DoD is trying to get into the subject area that is presently the property of the FBI along with state and local police forces. It's not that this kind of work can't be done by the US Government, but that the wrong division is asking to do it.

    The DoD runs our armed forces... they are not designed for law enforcement and when they are asked to do so they usually do a poor job of it. This provision in the law should be stricken and replaced with more funding to the FBI and other police forces so that the people who should be gathering info on US soil can continue to do so correctly.
    • Do you mind if I use the text of your post in a letter I am writing to the president [mailto], Halliburton^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hvice president [mailto] and my congress men and women [congress.org]?
    • by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:48PM (#9473475)
      "Pentagon officials say the exemption would not affect civil liberties and is needed so that its agents can obtain information from sources who may be afraid of government agents, such as a green-card-holding professor of nanotechnology who formerly lived under a repressive government."

      And this is supposed to make him feel better how? By HIDING the fact that he's talking to a government agent?

      You're right. The DoD is not designed for law enforcement. And there is no reason for the DoD to have undercover agents checking on US citizens (and legal residents).

      Do you really want Military Intelligence officers spying upon US citizens on US soil?

      From the article:
      "In February, Army intelligence agents improperly sought information about attendees at a University of Texas law school conference about Muslim women. Conference organizers refused to provide a videotape of the event to the officers and publicized the request, leading to an apology by the Army."

      The only way to keep the government honest is to keep it open.
      • When I was in CI, agents went to bars all the time hoping to pick up info. Not really undercover, and they often would have their IDs, but they didn't advertise their presence.

        Funny story - two agents were in a bar in a rough area, playing pool, looking for info. When one of them leaned over the table to make a shot, his badge fell out. They got the heck outa Dodge.

    • by demachina ( 71715 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:58PM (#9473518)
      Its only fair since the DOJ is apparently turning in to a global law enforcement agency, and will apparently be tasked to prosecute DOD and CIA contractors for torture in order to deflect attention from the people in the White House and Pentagon who probably ordered the torture in the first place.

      An interesting case is the CIA contractor who apparently beat an Afghan detainee to death and was charged with assault this week. He is apparently being prosecuted under the Patriot Act, by the DOJ, in a really disturbing interpretation and extension of this already overly broad laws reach. The article being used was supposed to be for foreign terrorists who attack U.S. government facilities overseas but they are apparently reinterpreting it to cover a U.S. citizen, and government employee, attacking a foreigner at a government facility overseas.

      The DOJ apparently had to stretch it this way or CIA and DOD contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan could quite literally get away with murder. The problem:

      - Civilian contractors can be court martialled but only if congress officially declared war which it hasn't in Afghanistan or Iraq
      - There is no way the U.S. will turn its citizens, especially a CIA or DOD employee, over to Afghanistan or Iraq which are the only entities with jurisdiction
      -The U.S. has managed to exempt its citizens from prosecution by the international courts who prosecute war crimes wherever they occur. The U.S. blackmailed the U.N. in to this exemption by threatening to withdraw troops and support from peacekeeping operations in the Balkans in particular. China supported this, and helped pass it, but as of yesterday no longer will because of the obvious war crimes the U.S. is committing.
      - The DOJ doesn't normally have jurisdiction outside the U.S. though it is rapidly taking upon itself the right to prosecute anyone for crimes anywhere, and become the worlds first truly global police force. The Bush administration is trying or has already given the DOJ the right to prosecute U.S. citizens who commit sex crimes anywhere in the world which is another huge extension of the DOJ's power. You can no longer count on escaping the long arm of the Bush administration by moving out of the U.S.

      In an interesting twist it is quite possible the Bush administration was intentionally using civilian contractors to perform interrogations and torture, they've hired a lot of them, because they knew they couldn't be charged thanks to this long series of convenient exclusions.

      It may only be because the Bush administration is under heat to make it look like they didn't approve torture in the first place, that they've been forced to go to these new extremes. So they turn to the Patriot Act to find a way to prosecute these contractors who were probably doing what the Bush administration wanted them to do in the first place when they tortured detainees.

      If this use of the Patriot Act it upheld the DOJ gains broad new international law enforcement powers. If its not upheld CIA and DOD contractors guilty of torture and murder are given a get out of jail free card, at least until the UN cancels the U.S. excemption from international war crimes prosecution.
    • by welloy ( 603138 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:04PM (#9473553)
      You are exactly correct. The military should not and cannot be expected to be a domestic police force.

      This essay [usresolve.org] , which was awarded the top prize for the Strategy Essay Competition at the National Defense University presented by Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Colin Powell in 1992, explains why.

      Briefly, the US military has a very important job, namely protection of the US from external threats, which the military should not be distracted from by acting as the police.

    • The Department of the Treasury runs the Secret Service.

      Which sub-branch of the executive body a particular government organization is under is really only an artifact of what sounded like a good fit at the time it was created.

      I'd guess the problem here is that someone feels that the FBI is too full of bureaucracy and politics to do an effective job.

      Raise your hand if you don't think the biggest problem with our government is the massive inert body of career bureaucrats. But you'd better be prepared

      • The Department of the Treasury runs the Secret Service. Which sub-branch of the executive body a particular government organization is under is really only an artifact of what sounded like a good fit at the time it was created.

        One of the jobs of the Secret Service is to investigate counterfeiting, which is why they are under the Treasury Department.

    • by G-Man ( 79561 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:28PM (#9473665)
      "...that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic..." (emphasis mine)

      That was part of the oath I swore when I joined the military. I don't know where people get the idea that the only activity the military can conduct within our borders is training. What is the point of having a military if not to defend our own soil?

      I agree that the military make lousy police officers -- no one in the military I know is keen on the idea. Where I disagree is the idea that searching for Al Qaeda operatives is strictly a law enforcement activity. By conventions of war they are spies or saboteurs, and we'd be well within our rights to summarily execute them, just as we did with German agents during WWII. (Well, we actually sent them to military tribunals, which is more than is required. Simply put, if you find a spy, you can shoot them.)

      Now, if you were opposed to Eisenhower sending in the 101st Airborne to enforce desegregation, and to Janet Reno using Bradleys to help burn down the Branch Davidians, I'll at least give you credit for consistency. I would be plenty happy to leave it to the FBI if I had faith that they would faithfully follow up on intel given to them by the CIA, but there is a big disconnect there, which the previous administration was more than happy to exacerbate (i.e., the Gorelick memo).

      • by Anonymous Coward
        By conventions of war they are spies or saboteurs, and we'd be well within our rights to summarily execute them, just as we did with German agents during WWII.

        Um, I thought the conventions of war only applied after a declaration of war? To the best of my knowledge the USA is currently not in a state of war with any foreign government, although it is conducting several military operations overseas. That's why the prisoners in Guantanamo aren't covered by the Geneva Convention, remember? It cuts both way
      • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Saturday June 19, 2004 @04:48PM (#9474117) Homepage Journal
        I'm against Janet Reno, period, and especially against sending in bradleys to help with burning down the branch davidians. That was a massacre of U.S. citizens who didn't deserve it, plain and simple. If they REALLY had to close down the compound they should have dropped a bunch of rangers in there under cover of darkness. However, as far as I can tell, there was no good reason for doing it in the first place.

        I agree that it's fine to be shooting spies. Put a fucking bullet right in them. It's even better to be shooting terrorists. However, the military should not be running around harassing civilians. Protecting people trying to bring about desegregation and spying on U.S. citizens are very different things. Besides, there's already an organization designed to spy on U.S. citizens, it's called the FBI, and the solution is to form closer ties with them, not to send military spies out to interrogate the populace.

        • > I agree that it's fine to be shooting spies. Put a fucking bullet right in
          > them. It's even better to be shooting terrorists.

          How does one determine they are spies or terrorists? I am a bit relieved to hear that the more common practice is a military tribunal and not summary execution. How about giving a leg up to all those who might be summarily shot in error and making an arrest and tribunal mandatory (unless the officer is in mortal danger, of course...)

        • So you want to kill Orlando Bosch of Florida just because he's a terrorist who blew up a civilian plane, killing 73 people?

          We need to get rid of our own terrorists before we try to claim we're morally superior to the terrorists.

          http://www.commondreams.org/headlines02/1202-05. ht m
      • " I don't know where people get the idea that the only activity the military can conduct within our borders is training.

        From your country's laws.

        http://writ.news.findlaw.com/commentary/20020731_c arter.html

        • Unfortunately, gp is right. Bill Clinton signed legislation proposed by Bob Dole to effectively kill Posse Comitatus. This was done in the wake of the Oklahoma City bombing of the Murrah Federal Building.

          At the behest of the US Attorney General, the army can be used against those deemed domestic enemies.

      • they can but..... (Score:5, Interesting)

        by zogger ( 617870 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @05:01PM (#9474190) Homepage Journal
        ... the do so at their peril. Just following orders is no excuse to engage in supporting despotism. The possee comitatus act allows for the military to be used in extreme circumstances inside the united states, so it becomes a matter of interpretation on a case by case basis. You are required to follow orders, but not illegal orders. The commander in chief does not have a blank check in these matters, although current thinking and actions by the military tend to indicate they don't understand this very well,(don't *want to understand it* is more my opinion), and your two examples ARE examples of it being abused, yet the orders got followed. Pity. Bad precedents after bad precedents. Following illegal orders puts you outside your oath, because if the person issuing you the order is doing so illegally, you must not follow it, and any citizen being persecuted by this illegal order has the moral and legal remedy of resisting whatever is being forced upon him. that's in the laws as well as all the other stuff.

        Anecdotal but a few years ago my nephew, a career army nco, quit. He refused to re up despite being offered a huge amount of cash to do so. He is not very political,never was as far back as I can remember, but he told me he simply refused to go along with what he knew was coming, martial law,dictatorial military rule, and especially he didn't agree with what they were trying to brainwash him into, which is that the second amendment is only a government granted privelege, not a born with right, and that only regular military, the guard, and selected civilian police have any "right" to keep and bear. He also said it was rare to hear the term "civilian" without it being part of "fingcivilian" to help get that mindset established, part of a demonisation processs, similar to what police are undergoing today. The stories he related to me indicated that that is an on-purpose aspect, an indoctrination they are carrying out for the future. My personal opinion is that it is an accurrate assessment of his,because I haave heard correlating anecdotals based on talking to a number of other individuals I know who were serving. He was instructing at west point at the time, and I tell you, I was shocked. Here's a young man who liked baseball, girls, 4 wheel drives and hunting, and it was his interest in guns and hunting and being exposed to some gunrights information, etc, before he joined that clued him into what was going down. He did NOT want to quit, he had purposely gone in directly out of high school,just like his father way back, my BIL, but he stuck to his principles and did, he wanted nothing to do with todays new "follow any orders no matter what" army.

        I think the trends are ominous, and I am not exaggerating when I will state I feel the USA in 2004 has more parallels with mid 30's germany than most people want to admit to right now.
      • There is a division of work between the defence force and the police force. A State of Emergency changes that division. In most civilized states, the defence force is not allowed to operate inside the country, except during a State of Emergency.
        I know a state of emergency was declared on 9/11, but I don't know whether it has been lifted yet.
      • > would be plenty happy to leave it to the FBI if I had faith that they would
        > faithfully follow up on intel given to them by the CIA, but there is a big
        > disconnect there, which the previous administration was more than happy to
        > exacerbate (i.e., the Gorelick memo).

        Not coming as a fan of the Clinton administration, but isn't the separation between the CIA and FBI intelligence gathering apparatus by design? They have completely different jurisdictions. Granted, information should be transferre
  • AYB (Score:5, Funny)

    by arcanumas ( 646807 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:34PM (#9473399) Homepage
    Uhm..
    -They set us up the database!
    -All your secrets are belong to us
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Kinda adds a whole new meaning to 'We want you!', or should it be 'We want all your secrets'?

    Pentagon: How are you gentlemen!!!
    Pentagon: All your secret are belong to us.
  • I haven't (Score:5, Funny)

    by The Grey Clone ( 770110 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:37PM (#9473417) Homepage
    Secrets? I haven't had any secrets for 3 years now.
  • wow... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by tuxette ( 731067 ) * <(tuxette) (at) (gmail.com)> on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:38PM (#9473421) Homepage Journal
    First the start taking over foreign policy, now law enforcement...?? What's next for the DoD? (Patriotic) education? Will American kiddies have to start going to camp wearing red, white, and blue scarves?
    • Really just a natural extension to
      Poindexter's TIA (Total Information
      Awareness) project (which lives!)
      I could have sworn that the only
      military arm that has ANY LEGAL
      DOMESTIC charter is the Nat. Guard.

      Once DoD gets involved in domestic law
      enforcement investigations, the next
      step is assigning "political officers"
      to each brigade, just like the Nazis
      and Stalinists, as well as "Cuban-style"
      neighborhood watch/informers ...

      Oh, wait, we already have that bit with
      the establishment of the HSA, via phone,
      letter, or
  • by Rick Zeman ( 15628 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:38PM (#9473427)
    Pentagon officials say the exemption would not affect civil liberties and is needed so that its agents can obtain information from sources who may be afraid of government agents, such as a green-card-holding professor of nanotechnology who formerly lived under a repressive government.

    We're getting there....
    • by Rick Zeman ( 15628 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:44PM (#9473454)
      At the risk of looking silly replying to myself, this statement's even sillier than I thought at first: If you think about, who questions people? Cops and reporters. The man on the street doesn't walk up and start pumping you for information.
      Last I knew, it was illegal for US law enforcement to pretend to be reporters. Is that next to fall? If they aren't going to be cops, what's left for them, if this example wasn't a total smoke screen?
      • by whovian ( 107062 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:53PM (#9473496)
        Is that next to fall?

        Seems so. This part of the text sounds as if they can exempt a lot of actions on the part of an agent designated as working undercover. (See other parts of the text for how said agents would be allowed to doctor their income tax returns to hide their status as well):

        ``(g) Exemption From Certain Requirements.--The Director may exempt
        a designated employee from mandatory compliance with any Federal
        regulation, rule, standardized administrative policy, process, or
        procedure that the Director determines--
        ``(1) would be inconsistent with the nonofficial cover of
        that employee; and
        ``(2) could expose that employee to detection as a Federal
        employee.


  • God Bless America (Score:4, Insightful)

    by QEDog ( 610238 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:40PM (#9473438)
    Thank God, I feel safer already.

  • Just say no? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Gothmolly ( 148874 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:41PM (#9473441)
    "...to question American citizens and legal residents without having to reveal that they are government agents"

    So some asshole comes up to you and starts questioning you about Al-Qaeda, but doesn't say he's FBI. Either its blindingly obvious that he is, or you tell him to fuck off.
    I can see it now:
    "As you can see, Mr. Anderson, we've had our eye on your for some time now. Ignore the shades, and the earpieces, and the official-looking, unnaturally clean sedan we're driving, we're NOT government agents. We need your help to find a certain "individual". You want to waste your day talking to us, since of course we cannot compel you to, since we're not government agents, don't you, Mr. Anderson? Since we're not government agents, you're more likely to tell us what you know, since we're just regular guys who happen to have cornered you, dragged you into our car, and want to chit-chat about Al-Qaeda. m-kay?"
    • More realistically (Score:5, Interesting)

      by karzan ( 132637 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:14PM (#9473593)
      How about one day you're hanging out at a bar, and you meet a girl who seems really friendly, you get along, and you start to go out. You happen to be a writer, and one day your typewriter breaks, and guess what? she happens to have a typewriter she can give you! Then you find out a year from now that the typewriter is bugged and records everything you write ...

      This is what happened to Philip Agee, CIA defector, in Paris. A long and elaborate ruse involving gaining his trust and a series of 'accidental' occurrences seemingly unrelated. But that was done outside of the US, where warrants aren't necessary and it's basically just espionage.

      Do you really want this kind of thing to be able to happen domestically? No constitution, no bill of rights, no need for warrants, no need for transparency--just all out domestic espionage operations.
    • Re:Just say no? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Jeremy Erwin ( 2054 )
      So some asshole comes up to you and starts questioning you about Al-Qaeda, but doesn't say he's FBI. Either its blindingly obvious that he is, or you tell him to fuck off.

      The FBI already runs domestic undercover operations. The Department of Defense isn't supposed to. Theoretically, when the FBI arrests someone, the arrestee enjoys certain legal rights. But similar persons in the custody of the military (e.g Jose Padilla) are imprisoned at the pleasure of Mr Bush.

  • by Howzer ( 580315 ) * <grabshot AT hotmail DOT com> on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:41PM (#9473442) Homepage Journal
    Surely I'm not being overly tinfoil-hattish to observe that soldiers getting regular police powers seems like a really bad idea.

    But if that doesn't scare you, what about the prospect of a United States getting what is effectively yet another intelligence agency in the middle of a war between the existing two?

    I dismissed this article [salon.com], about the author of this book [amazon.com] as a little overstretched last week - but the more I look around the more real it seems.

    Ok, so now I'm being hattish...

    • by bogie ( 31020 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:10PM (#9473577) Journal
      Nope your not overly tinfoil-hatish. What they want to do is wrong in every single way. This goes against everything America was founded on and is supposed to stand for. Of course its hardly surprising considering our current Head of State uses the U.S. Constitution as toilet paper.

      Reunite Church and State? Check.
      Hold citizens with trial or bail? Check.
      Nation building without proper cause? Check.
      Tax breaks that only benefit the rich? Check.
      Dismantle the EPA and let Corporations write Enviro Laws? Check.
      Create a Police State where you can spy on cizitens with impunity? Pending/already going on.

      This nation has gone to Hell and the changes they are making and have already made are going to haunt us for the next 50 years. Fuckers.
  • Whatever... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:44PM (#9473451)
    question American citizens and legal residents without having to reveal that they are government agents.

    I'm sorry, but if someone wants to ask me questions, and they A) aren't wearing a police uniform or B) identify themselves as law enforcement/criminal investigators, I'm not saying jack.

    • Re:Whatever... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by The Only Druid ( 587299 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:33PM (#9473708)
      Actually, you'd be surprised how much you'll say.

      I'm surprised its not mentioned yet (that I've seen) on Slashdot, but don't forget that a huge portion of hacking has always been social engineering, which of course includes asking the right questions in the right way.

      I was an anthropology student for a while, and one of the most interesting classes was one called 'Doing Feildwork' which basically taught the techniques, problems and pitfalls of doing an ehtnography (think slightly more academic and analytical documentary). One of our main topics involved when and why you should or shouldn't mention that you're an academic, simply because there are many questions that people will answer if you're polite/friendly that they wont answer if they know you're an academic.

      Someone else here already posted the story of an American spy in Paris who was tricked by a friendly, attractive girl. Think about the last time an attractive member of the opposite sex talked to you [this may be hard for some slashdotters, I'm sure]: don't you typically keep talking with them as long as they want, unless they become too annoying?
  • by dealsites ( 746817 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @02:47PM (#9473465) Homepage
    Well, We have this, traffic light cameras, security cameras everywhere, probably tracking via cell phone and GPS, personal and rental cars with built in GPS, grocery store coupon cards, etc... Where will it end? I guess it probably won't ever stop. Data mining is becoming the hot feature of buisnesses and goverments. Is it still worth the fight for privacy? If you abide by the laws, then there shouldn't be any problems.

    I'm sure there are people out there that detest all the personal surveillance, but if a crime is committed and caught on tape, I think it should be used to prosicute the criminal. I personally don't want to be tracked everywhere I go, but if I was mugged in an alley, I would hope a camera would catch the criminal. It would bring some justice to me and *help* to justify the big brother tactics.

    --
    Please submit any spare Gmail invitations that you might have [dealsites.net]
    • by base3 ( 539820 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:06PM (#9473560)
      The problem is that all this surveillance won't be used to benefit the ordinary citizen. Do you really think that if your car is broken into near a surveillance cam that (unless you're rich and can afford a drawn out legal process) you'll ever get your hands on the evidence?
    • by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:33PM (#9473712)
      "If you abide by the laws, then there shouldn't be any problems."

      That is correct, citizen.
      Only those who oppose the government seek "privacy" and they only want "privacy" so they can plot to overthrow the government.

      The government is your friend.
      The government takes care of you.
      Good citizens trust the government.

      The government would never support a bad law.
      (slavey)
      The government respects all of its citizens.
      (women's sufferage)
      Only terrorists oppose the government.
      Only terrorists seek "privacy".
      Only terrorists oppose the Law.

      "If you abide by the laws, then there shouldn't be any problems."

      The government welcomes the support of good, concerned citizens such as yourself.
    • "If you abide by the laws, then there shouldn't be any problems."

      That's right, because as we all know, the government and the military *always* act perfectly scrupulously when you give them huge amounts of power that they can excercise without any meaningful oversight. *No* genuinely democratic government should need to run the apparatus of a secret police state, complete with secret government agents, the complete absence of judicial oversight, and a total lack of transparency to the public. *Those are

  • Am I the only one that thinks that the current laws that are trying to be passed are as scary as hell and are taking away the rights of U.S. citizens?
    Does the U.S. Department of Defence really need to spy on it's own people? The U.S.A. is really starting to scare the hell out of me with more and more of these silly laws trying to be passed. Thank goodness I'm a Canadain.
  • by Fuzzums ( 250400 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:01PM (#9473539) Homepage
    Namely keeping records of their civilians.
    Stasi (former Eastern Germany) / Gestapo (former 3rd Reich)

    Of course all in the name of security.
    • Hoover's FBI is pretty famous for having had files on many predominant people at one point. Some of the more socialist countries( think scandinavia) also have extensive records on citizens. Records aren't evil in and of themselves. It is what you do with them that makes the difference; and gets you on these silly partial lists that the parent has made if you do bad things.

      There are certainly reasons that this loophole seeking by the pentagon is not a good thing. But 'the gestapo and stasi did it too!' i

  • by dot_borg ( 751877 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:07PM (#9473562)
    ...or the KGB, eh?
  • Military or FBI? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Solidsnot ( 169219 )
    I don't think this is all invasive as people are making this to be. We're not turning the 1st Marine Division into cops here. We're talking about intelligence officers being tasked with gathering information in the US. I think in the fight on terrorism, the more the merrier in gathing intel about possible terrorists. Now, I agree to the fact that this is really the FBI's job and that they shold be doing it, but what I think is funny is that people are complaining that the US military is about to be doin
    • The problem with your "the more the merrier" claim is that you have cooperation problems, turf wars, etc...

      We already have turf wars between the FBI and the CIA. Do we really want to add in a third party? Is that also a case of "the more the merrier"?
    • The problem is that the military doesn't even play by the loosened rules that the appropriate civilian agencies now have. The fact anyone found out about Abu Ghraib was a chance mistake, and eliminating the involvement of other government branches makes it far less likely such un-American conduct will be brought to light and corrected.

      This wild expansion of scope is redundant and dangerous, enough checks and balances have fallen by the wayside already. There is nothing 'Pentagon intelligence operatives' ca
    • You don't see a fucking difference between the military and the FBI????

      You don't see the US *military* torturing and killing people in Iraq?

      How old are you? What fucking middle school did you go to? Who was your civics teacher; because either she sucks you you're a retard.

      More importantly, what fucking section of the Constitution gives the goddamn US Army the right to exist *at all* unless in time of war? You might want to read it slowly, because it sounds like it'll be your first time.

      In case you h
  • These 'Pentagon intelligence agents' aren't going to be checked or balanced by all those troublesome laws and regulations that civilian law enforcement has to abide. With no civilian agency required to do the initial investigating, it will nicely streamline the process of whisking away people to be held indefinately at undisclosed locations. Those pesky records kept by the CIA, NSA, or FBI agents will no longer be a concern, and accountability will be limited to following orders.

    It is already clear that th
  • by Jackie_Chan_Fan ( 730745 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:23PM (#9473623)
    The rich who rule over and dictate our lives fear that you are a terrorist and will possibly cause harm to beverly hills.

    You are now a suspect because you are poor and have no voice (no money)

    Vote the Republicans out of office based on their ACTIONS.

    Does this look like LESS GOVERNMENT?

    I cant beleive the amount of brainwashed republicans out there who go fuck crazy over their $300 tax return. "its your money" Yeah well "It's your country" and look at what these folks are doing to it!!!

    These are not republicans.

    Vote Bush Out!

    And the dems are just as currupt, but i think they're learning a little.

    Frankly in an ideal world we would have a 3rd party president win this election. Someone like Nader. Someone who is completely seperate from the two party system that is bought and paid for buy the enrons, the fords, the mcis, the halleburtons, krafts, aols, etc...

    I'd vote for a fucking steel worker from PA if he was running. Oh yeah we dont really manufacture much of that anymore here in america.

  • state of the US... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sinner0423 ( 687266 ) <sinner0423@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:28PM (#9473666)
    It really is quite sad.

    The government can raid my house, throw me in prison, and ruin my life - all in the name of national security. It's an extremely disturbing thought.

    Big government / brother is not science fiction anymore, it is a reality. It's disturbing, to say the least. RFID imbedded in to everything you buy, is just the next step. This database doesn't suprise me in the least. They've kept records for years, it's what they do.

    I live in illinois, it's a police state. I've already been fined several hundreds of dollars for jaywalking, and owning a NOT USED, CLEAN, TOBACCO pipe. You are guilty until proven innocent, around here.

    I'm 24, an american, and I want to leave. This is a nightmare. A law may come in to fruition, that if I leave and a draft is reinstated, I will be sent back here and possibly thrown in jail, or be forced to serve for a country I don't believe in. We aren't all greedy capitalist pigs, you know. Some of us are actually decent human beings.

    I hate to be such a pessimist, but if you live in the states, your life is going to be more difficult, and if anything - MORE dangerous than it is now. Throw a wrapper out of the window of your car? You could be signaling terrorists that are on the side of the road planting IED's. Think i'm joking? Just wait. It's a pretty far fetched example, but with this administration, would you expect anything else?
  • by Rat's_ass_donor ( 455429 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:29PM (#9473676)
    How can anyone fail to understand the massive threat we are under? We don't have time to consider the consequences - this is a time for ACTION! We are at WAR!

    "But wasn't there only one attack, and wasn't that three years ago?" you say?

    "Are you a freaking communist?!" I say!

    Pansy countries like England, who faced IRA terrorist attacks from the IRA for decades, never managed to secretly detain suspects for years. Wimps. They never even bothered to monitor the books and magazines their citizens were reading!

    As usual, America is showing how to do things right!
    • If sacrificing the liberties of our citizens within our own borders is "doing things right," then I invite you to be the first to be anal-probed by the Government.

      "Overgrown military establishments are under any form of government inauspicious to liberty, and are to be regarded as particularly hostile to Republican liberty." -- President, and former General, George Washington, in his Farewell Address, Sept. 17, 1796.

  • by nurb432 ( 527695 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:55PM (#9473837) Homepage Journal
    Unless you are ordered to by a judge under agreement of protection, you dont have to say boo to anyone...

    So.. i suggest that if ANYONE asks you questions, you politly decline. If they turn out to be feds, then they will have to take you to court to get anything out of you.

    Cant trust anyone.. BB is watching..
  • by Ghoser777 ( 113623 ) <fahrenba@NOsPAm.mac.com> on Saturday June 19, 2004 @03:57PM (#9473847) Homepage

    Man, Victoria's going to be pissed.

    Oh well, I guess her secret has been out of a while now anyway:

    Victoria's Secret Revealed (big pic) [macnn.com]

    Matt Fahrenbacher

  • by tiny69 ( 34486 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @04:01PM (#9473863) Homepage Journal
    I just did a quick search of the bill [gpo.gov] and didn't see anything mentioning the overturning of the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, or any references to it at all.

    The Posse Comitatus Act [dojgov.net] is what currently prevents the military from being used for law enforcement purposes.

  • by t_allardyce ( 48447 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @04:08PM (#9473893) Journal
    Plenty of human-rights abusing reigemes have had secret police for years, it keeps the population in check, because you never know who you're talking to! Start a conversation with that guy sitting in the park? better be careful what you say about your glorious leader or you might find yourself locked up and the key literally thrown away! Don't forget who started bribing locals to grass-up the whereabouts of all the jews - the nazis thats who, and guess which regieme also had an army of secret police ready to get freaky on anyone who said the wrong thing, heres a clue - we invaded them last year and now were using their former prision of injustice to make cheap BDSM porn. Hey maybe the pentagon could go the full way like Israel and send their secret police abroad to kidnap people!


  • it's more like "All your secrets are belong to us" ;)

  • Always Ask for ID (Score:4, Interesting)

    by ElForesto ( 763160 ) <elforestoNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Saturday June 19, 2004 @05:00PM (#9474183) Homepage

    If someone stops me for questioning under the color of law, I immediately ask for ID, even if it's a police officer in uniform in his squad car. I've gotten a lot of hostile responses to that, even though I'm well within my rights. In these days of ID theft, I'm sure as hell not going to hand over my ID to any shmoe that says he's law enforcement.

    A friend of mine has an even more interesting time: he has no ID. He doesn't even have an SSN. When it comes down to federal goons breaking down doors, he'll be the toughest one to find.

  • Is there still an official State of Emergency in the USA?

    If yes, then they don't need this law and if not, then they are not allowed to operate inside the country.

    Is this the next step towards a Honecker state? Sieg Heil!!!
  • Apathy (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Inexile2002 ( 540368 ) * on Saturday June 19, 2004 @05:34PM (#9474384) Homepage Journal
    It seems that for some strange reason I've been using the word "Orwellian" allot in the last three and a half years. I'm not going to venture a guess as to why...

    Seriously though, it's funny how utterly apathetic people are these days. People bandy about the term "freedom" but as long as they have the "freedom" to buy things people don't seem to care about the rest of it. A minority talk about what rights are slipping away, but still cast the valiant few who take to the streets as hippies and whackos. It's sick really.

    What is it going to take for it to be too much? Seriously, stop and think about what exactly the government would have to do for you to be willing to do more than talk. Then think about how effective your protest will be if it gets bad enough for you to protest at all. Will you wait for a total suspension of civil liberties? Mass arrests? Until there are turrets on the street corners and "papers" required to move across state lines? Seriously. I want to say that people need to do something now, but the truth is that people needed to do something a year and a half ago. I'm not talking about revolution or anything... just make the dissenting voices impossible to ignore by adding your own.

    The current administration isn't ready (yet) to start ignoring elections and the army wouldn't follow orders from people who lost elections. So go out and freaking VOTE! And then make it clear to the people you get put in that they're there to fix things. Politicians want job security because it takes more than a couple of terms in office to really secure the personal fortune. Make them fix things or throw the buggers out.
  • Amazing (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Master of Transhuman ( 597628 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @05:57PM (#9474500) Homepage
    Slashdot accepts this report (which is not terribly significant) but ignores submissions which establish that the Total Information Awareness Program - which is far more insidious than a few CID guys running around in civilian clothes - is alive and well and running right now as a Pentagon black budget item. /.'ers...clueless.

    "Stuff that matters" - yeah, right.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 19, 2004 @06:36PM (#9474706)
    Most slashdotter's probably don't recall 5-star general and U.S. President Dwight David Eisenhower's farewell speech [mu.edu]. In it, he cautions as such:
    "In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.

    We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.

    His words are just as insightful today as they were then.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 19, 2004 @06:39PM (#9474726)
    In 1981, then President Reagan signed Executive Order 12333, which reverses a number of the controls that were put in place in 1973.

    Here is a link to the text of the executive order:

    http://www.tscm.com/EO12333.html

    - AC
  • by Invalid Character ( 788952 ) on Saturday June 19, 2004 @07:35PM (#9475054) Journal
    Wouldn't such a bill that allows government agents to not reveal their government employment also help crooks? Now they too could question potential victims and obtain very sensitve data and go under the disguise of a government agent saying "I'm sorry I can't reveal that. Its clanssified". And how would we be able to verify their identity? We can't even complain in some situations. If this bill is passed to law it would really help social engineering, and screw the rest of us. What are the repercussions for Canada? Will we have to comply through our various pacts and treaties?
  • Keep Tabs On Them (Score:3, Interesting)

    by MyNameIsMok ( 462188 ) <sillytenant AT yahoo DOT com> on Saturday June 19, 2004 @11:38PM (#9476377)
    hi,
    Why can't we just start keeping tabs on the as many official in the DoD that we can? Keep our own open databases and what-not? Have it open and published on the internet. If it's legal to obtain certain records, then we should obtain them and post them.
    A similar event occured in California. The CA DMV did not restrict who was allowed access to its driver license database and did not restrict what could be done with the information. Well, some individuals obtained records on the entire state legislature and published it to the net. They changed the laws after that.
    sTc
  • That's something people used to say when I was growing up in the 1960s, when somebody complained about the way our American system worked. In Russia you couldn't do things like travel without a permit, and the Secret Police could whisk you off if you said or did anything the government considered a threat. They could question you and detain you for as long as they wanted. That couldn't happen Over Here, because this is the Land of the Free.

    Our government seems to have developed the same level of paranoia, and is seeking and getting the same level of power to swoop down on anybody at any time. I'm very afraid that people in other countries will one day discourage their kids from whining about their system by asking them that if they would rather live in America.

"What man has done, man can aspire to do." -- Jerry Pournelle, about space flight

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