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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: An American Stasi? The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette reported on July 25 that there are 72 fusion centers around the nation, analyzing and disseminating data and information of all kinds. That is one for every state and others for large urban cities. What is a fusion center? The answer depends on your perspective. If you work for the Department of Homeland Security, it is a federal, state, local, or regional data-coordination unit, designed to improve the sharing of anti-terrorism and anti-crime data in order to make America safer. If you are a privacy or civil-rights advocate, it is part of a powerful new domestic surveillance infrastructure that combines data from both the public and private sectors to track innocent people and so makes Americans less safe from their own government. In that respect, the fusion center is reminiscent of the East German Stasi, which used tens of thousands of state police and hundreds of thousands of informers to monitor an estimated one-third of the population. The history of fusion centers provides insight into which answer is correct. Fusion centers began in 2003 under the administration of George W. Bush as a joint project between the departments of Justice and Homeland Security. The purpose is to coordinate federal and local law enforcement by using the 800,000-plus law enforcement officers across the country whose intimate awareness of their own communities makes them best placed to function as the eyes and ears of an extended national security community. The fusion centers are hubs for the coordination. By April 2008 there were 58. The growth has continued under the Obama administration. Indeed, President Obama has also continued Bushs concealment of domestic intelligence activity by threatening to veto legislation that authorizes broader congressional oversight or review of intelligence agencies by the Government Accountability Office (GAO). As a result of that threat, the GAO provision was removed from the Intelligence Authorization Act. Due to secrecy, it is difficult to describe a typical fusion center. But if the Indiana Intelligence Fusion Center is typical, this is what one looks like: Indianas center has essentially become an arm of Indiana law enforcement. . . . It has 31 full-time staffers and two part-time employees. Some . . . are state employees. Others are assigned to the center from other agencies, such as the FBI, Transportation Security Administration, and Marion County Sheriffs Department. They are joined by workers from the Department of Correction, the Indiana National Guard, the Indiana State Police, the Department of Natural Resources and local campus police. . . . There are also private sector analysts on contract. Previously those analysts were from EG&G Technical Services of California. The most recent contract with EG&G called for payment of $1.1 million. . . . Fusion centers invite reports from public employees such as firemen, ambulance drivers, and sanitation workers as well as from private-sector sources such as hospitals and neighborhood watch groups. They often operate tip hotlines; this means a suspects name could be submitted by a disgruntled employee, a hostile neighbor, or an ex-spouse who seeks child custody. What or who is targeted by this sweeping coordination of data? To get an idea, lets look at the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) program, which the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence said should be a national model. In June 2008 the departments of Justice and Homeland Security recommended expansion of the LAPD program to other cities. In April 2008 the Wall Street Journal reported on a new LAPD policy that compelled officers to report suspicious behaviors to the local fusion center. LAPD Special Order #11, dated March 5, 2008, defined a list of 65 suspicious behaviors, including using binoculars, taking pictures or video footage with no apparent esthetic value, abandoning a vehicle, taking notes, and espousing extremist views. Local police were converted into domestic surveillance agents. Voices of caution were present from the inception of fusion centers. Former U.S. Rep. Bob Barr stated: Using the resources of federal and state law enforcement to encourage the citizenry to submit to the government information on the political, social and even religious views of other people, is in itself outrageous. For the government to then database that information, disseminate it widely, and clearly imply that views with which it may disagree provides an appropriate basis on which to surveil citizens and collect information on them, is beyond the pale. It is also a poor and inefficient use of police resources. Violation of privacy rights, excessive secrecy, lack of congressional oversight, the inevitability of inaccurate and noncorrectable information, the lack of due process for the accused, the encouragement of racial/religious profiling, the creation of a snitch nation, the political abuse of dissidentsthe objections scroll on, followed by specific abuses that bear them out. Heres a brief sample: Specific Abuses Maryland: Fifty-three nonviolent political activists, including antiwar and anti-death penalty activists, were labeled as terrorists and actively surveilled for 14 months. Minnesota: Eight anarchist protesters who planned to protest the Republican National Convention in Minneapolis were preemptively arrested and charged with terrorism. In Minnesota, a crime can become terrorism if it disrupts the conduct of government. Texas: A leaked intelligence bulletin from the North Central Texas Fusion System asked police officers to report on Islamic and antiwar lobbying groups. Missouri: Supporters of third-party presidential candidates, pro-life activists, and conspiracy theorists were targeted as potential militia members. Virginia: A terrorism threat assessment included certain universities as breeding grounds for terrorism, including historically black colleges. A more comprehensive list of fusion abuse is available in the ACLUs Survey of Reported Incidents [PDF]. See also the ACLUs interactive map for whats happening in your state [PDF].
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 9.
#3. To: F.A. Hayek Fan (#0)
The FEDERAL Government is creating the conditions for revolution.
I agree that this will happen eventually but I do not see it happening in my lifetime. The USSR, PRC, Mynamar (Burma), etc., etc. prove that man will take a heap of abuse from their government before they rise up and overthrow their government (if they ever do).
It has already happened.
#10. To: Cynicom (#9)
True, but not in the way that noone222 was talking about.
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