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Now We Are Supposed to Cheer Government Surveillance?
Brownstone Institute ^ | April 24, 2024 | Jeffrey A. Tucker

Posted on 04/24/2024 1:54:46 PM PDT by Heartlander

Now We Are Supposed to Cheer Government Surveillance?

They are wearing us down with shocking headlines and opinions. They come daily these days, with increasingly implausible claims that leave your jaw on the floor. The rest of the text is perfunctory. The headline is the takeaway, and the part designed to demoralize, deconstruct, and disorient. 

A few weeks ago, the New York Times told us that “As It Turns Out, the Deep State Is Pretty Awesome.” These are the same people who claim that Trump is trying to get rid of democracy. The Deep State is the opposite of democracy, unelected and unaccountable in every way, impervious to elections and the will of the people. Now we have the NYT celebrating this. 

And the latest bears notice too: “Government Surveillance Keeps Us Safe.” The authors are classic Deep Staters associated with Hillary Clinton and George W. Bush. They assure us that having an Orwellian state is good for us. You can trust them, promise. The rest of the content of the article doesn’t matter much. The message is in the headline. 

Amazing isn’t it? You have to check your memory and your sanity. These are the people who have rightly warned about government infringements on privacy and free speech for many decades dating way back.

And now we have aggressive and open advocacy of exactly that, mainly because the Biden administration is in charge and has only months to put the final touches on the revolution in law and liberty that has come to America. They want to make it all permanent and are working furiously to make it so. 

Along with routine warrantless surveillance, not only of possible bad guys but everyone, comes of course censorship. A few years ago, this seemed to be intermittent, like the biased and arbitrary actions of rogue executives. We objected and denounced but generally assumed that it was aberrant and going away over time. 

Back then, we had no idea of the scale and the ambition of the censors. The more information that is coming out, the more the full goal is coming into view. The power elite want the Internet to operate like the controlled media of the 1970s. Any opinion that runs contrary to regime priorities will be blocked. Websites that distribute alternative outlooks will be lucky to survive at all. 

To understand what’s going on, see the White House document called Declaration on the Future of the Internet. Freedom is barely a footnote, and free speech is not part of it. Instead it is to be a “rules-based digital economy” governed “through the multistakeholder approach, whereby governments and relevant authorities partner with academics, civil society, the private sector, technical community and others.” 

This whole document is an Orwellian replacement of the Declaration of Internet Freedom from 2012, which was signed by Amnesty International, the ACLU, and major corporations and banks. The first principle of this Declaration was free speech: don’t censor the Internet. That was 12 years ago and the principle is long forgotten. Even the original website has been dead since 2018. It is now replaced with one word: “Forbidden.”

Yes, that’s chilling but it is also perfectly descriptive. In all mainline Internet venues, from search to shopping to social, freedom is no longer the practice. Censorship has been normalized. And it is taking place with the direct involvement of the federal government and third-party organizations and research centers paid for by tax dollars. This is very clearly a violation of the First Amendment but the new orthodoxy in elite circles is that the First Amendment simply does not apply to the Internet. 

This issue is making its way through litigation. There was a time when the decision would not be in question. No more. Several or more Supreme Court Justices do not seem to understand even the meaning of free speech. 

The Prime Minister of Australia made the new view clear in his statement in defense of fining Elon Musk. He said that social media has a “social responsibility.” In today’s parlance, this means they must obey the government, which is the only proper interpreter of the public interest. In this view, you simply cannot allow people to post and say things that are contrary to regime priorities. 

If the regime cannot manage public culture, and manipulate the public mind, what’s it there for? If it cannot control the Internet, its managers believe, it will lose control of the whole of society. 

The crackdown is intensifying by the day. Representative Thomas Massie shot a video after the Ukraine vote for a total foreign aid package of an astonishing $95 billion. Vast numbers of Democrats on the House floor waved Ukrainian flags, which you might suppose smacks of treason. The Sergeant-at-Arms wrote Massey directly to tell him to take down the video or get a $500 fine. 

Instead of fining democrats for waving flags, the House Sergeant at Arms just called and said I will be fined $500 if I don’t delete this video post.

Mike Johnson really wants to memory hole this betrayal of America. https://t.co/5DPWoo4cLw— Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) April 23, 2024

True, the rules say you cannot film in a way that “impairs decorum,” but he simply took out his phone. The decorum was disturbed by masses of lawmakers waving a foreign flag. So Massie refused. After all, the entire disgraceful scene was on C-SPAN but the presumption is that no one watches that but everyone reads X, which is probably true. 

Clearly, GOP speaker Mike Johnson doesn’t want his perfidy this well-advertised. After all, it was he who shepherded the authorization of spying on the American people using Section 702 of FISA, which 99 percent of GOP voters opposed. Just who do these people think they are there to represent? 

It’s actually astonishing to do a conjectural history in which Elon did not buy Twitter. The regime monopoly on social media today would be 99.5 percent. Then the handful of alternative venues could be shut down one by one, just as with Parler a few years ago. Under this scenario, closing the social end of the Internet would not be that difficult. The domains are another matter but those could be banned gradually over time. 

But with X rising in a meteoric way since Elon’s takeover, that is now far more difficult. He has made it his mission to remind the world of core principles. This is why he told the boycotting advertisers to jump in a lake and why he refused to comply with every dictate by the despotic head of the Brazilian Supreme Court. Daily he is showing what it means to stand up for principle in extremely hard times. 

Glenn Beck puts it well: “What Elon Musk is doing in both Brazil and Australia is this: He is simply standing where the Free world used to stand. They have moved, not him. They are the radicals not him. HAVE THE COURAGE to remain standing, unmovable in the truth that can never change and you will be targeted and eventually change the world.”

Censorship is not an end unto itself. The purpose is control of the people. That is also the purpose of surveillance. It is not, rather obviously, to protect the public. It is to protect the state and its industrial partners against the people. Of course, just as in every dystopian film, they always pretend otherwise. 

Somehow – call me naive – I just didn’t expect the New York Times to be all-in on the immediate establishment of the surveillance state and universal censorship by the “awesome” Deep State. But think of this. If the NYT can be fully captured by this ideology, and probably captured by the money that goes with it, so can any other institution. You have probably noticed a similar editorial line being pushed by Wired, Mother Jones, Rolling Stone, Salon, Slate, and other venues, including the entire suite of publications owned by Conde Nast including Vogue and GQ magazine. 

“Don’t bother me with your crazed conspiracy theory, Tucker.”

I get the point. What is your explanation?


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Government
KEYWORDS: civilrights; privacy; spying; surveillance

1 posted on 04/24/2024 1:54:46 PM PDT by Heartlander
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To: Heartlander

My life went from an active role in real life to an extra in The Far Side and now to a fugitive in Brazil.


2 posted on 04/24/2024 1:58:17 PM PDT by xoxox
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To: Heartlander

Lindsey Graham says you will grow to love it.


3 posted on 04/24/2024 1:58:28 PM PDT by OakOak (Misinformation Campaign on your TV)
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To: Heartlander

I think they spy on whoever they like whenever it pleases them


4 posted on 04/24/2024 1:59:23 PM PDT by NWFree (Sigma male 🤪)
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To: Heartlander

government surveillance is a tool of dictators, and should be anathema to free men.


5 posted on 04/24/2024 2:07:28 PM PDT by Terry L Smith
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To: Heartlander

The enemy telling us how great they are!


6 posted on 04/24/2024 2:13:01 PM PDT by MichiganCheese (The darker the culture, the brighter your light can shine.)
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To: Heartlander

It may be too late to get the American people to wake up. The conditioning is relentless and many are horribly deceived.

My friend is dating a woman in China. He travels there a couple of times a year. She told him that the Chinese government has to track their people because “if they don’t the people won’t always do what is right.”

I’m sure a large segment Of our electorate already agree with that. They’re just too stupid to realize they will eventually not be “doing the right” things according to our rulers.


7 posted on 04/24/2024 2:55:43 PM PDT by subterfuge (I'm a pure-blood!)
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To: Heartlander

Who doesn’t love Leader Johnson, big time?


8 posted on 04/24/2024 3:26:49 PM PDT by Paladin2
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To: NWFree

🤬🤬🤬 where are all my civil libertarian friends. We used to have a bond over these issues.


9 posted on 04/24/2024 3:52:03 PM PDT by griswold3 (Truth, Beauty and Goodness. )
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To: Heartlander

The left’s total reversal on surveillance and censorship has been stunning to see. Like the writer of this piece, I’ve been a surprised by it. I knew it was in their ideological DNA but I didn’t expect it to be so fast and so total and so shameless.


10 posted on 04/24/2024 4:14:27 PM PDT by Yardstick
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To: subterfuge

US voluntary mask compliance was 75-85%, they were expecting 25-35%-

the nation of rugged individualists has been replaced by conformist sheep.


11 posted on 04/24/2024 4:41:11 PM PDT by Freest Republican (This space for rent)
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To: NWFree

You are so right. Reauthorization of Fisa merely means they have authority to prosecute if they so choose. They were going to continue unabated surveillance whether it was legal or not.


12 posted on 04/24/2024 5:07:17 PM PDT by Rowdyone (Vigilence)
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To: Yardstick

“Those are *our* spies now!”


13 posted on 04/24/2024 5:08:18 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Heartlander
We were forced to enter our personal data into an unconstitutional warrantless spying database. Exemptions are a who's who of political donors who donated to the politicians of both parties to get their exemption.

Exemption No. Exemption Short Title
1 Securities reporting issuer
2 Governmental authority
3 Bank
4 Credit union
5 Depository institution holding company
6 Money services business
7 Broker or dealer in securities
8 Securities exchange or clearing agency
9 Other Exchange Act registered entity
10 Investment company or investment adviser
11 Venture capital fund adviser
12 Insurance company
13 State-licensed insurance producer
14 Commodity Exchange Act registered entity
15 Accounting firm
16 Public utility
17 Financial market utility
18 Pooled investment vehicle
19 Tax-exempt entity
20 Entity assisting a tax-exempt entity
21 Large operating company
22 Subsidiary of certain exempt entities
23 Inactive entity

The lawyer sent a form letter saying this applied to everyone on the board. I was beyond pissed. I read the regulations myself and decided it only applied to me. Not a hero by a long shot, just really pissed. Even identical large corporations, about 25 times larger than ours by income are exempt. The exact same corporation, exempted because they donated to buy an exemption. I entered my info and nobody else's

Those big donors can't money launder because they are what, too large? But we can launder money even though it would literally be a few hundred dollars and that would get caught by our mandatory audits. So now my info is in a warrantless search database. F every single one of those bastards, both parties.

14 posted on 04/24/2024 9:14:44 PM PDT by palmer (Democracy Dies Six Ways from Sunday)
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To: palmer
It's mostly rats defending it now: https://www.whitehouse.senate.gov/news/release/whitehouse-wyden-warren-reed-waters-file-amicus-brief-defending-constitutionality-of-corporate-transparency-act/ The link gives a few well-spun notions about how it passed and basically saying I am a f-ing money laundering shell company.

It eventually was stuck into a must-pass defense bill, but ere's an 2019 vote on it: https://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/116-2019/h577 showing Cheney YEA and Crenshaw prior to his conversion actually voting NAY, Stefanik the fraud voted YEA, etc. Doesn't look like the Senate ever voted on it, just let it slide through in the defense bill.

15 posted on 04/24/2024 9:49:11 PM PDT by palmer (Democracy Dies Six Ways from Sunday)
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