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[IP] re govt collection of call-rcds, why hasn't anyone mentioned ...





Begin forwarded message:

From: Jim Warren <jwarren@xxxxxxxx>
Date: May 12, 2006 4:31:31 PM EDT
To: Dave Farber <dave@xxxxxxxxxx>, Declan McCullagh <declan@xxxxxxxx>
Subject: re govt collection of call-rcds, why hasn't anyone mentioned ...

In the discussion and posturing about the collection of most (all?) Americans' call-records, why has there been so little mention of any of the following:

* Such call records could [will?!] be used against investigative reporters and news media, and their whistle-blower sources who uncovered these kinds of governmental actions. (Since they disclosed NSA activities and CIA torture operations, it seems certain that ferreting out such leaks is a high priority in the administration's "anti-terrorism" initiative.)

* Vice-President Dick Cheney totally refused to give any identifying information about the people who attended his secret "energy summit", shortly after he took office. Has the NSA collected and cross- correlated all the phone calls of oil-company executives around that time? Will they remain available -- but only inside the [leaky] NSA of course -- if some opposing administration is ever able to take power?

* California's former [Republican] Governator, Pete Wilson, absolutely refused to release his own phone records, when requested as "public records" by one of the state's major newspapers. (Similar to Cheney, Wilson successfully claimed that even phone records alone, would violate his "consultative privilege".)

* Given the example of the IRS being used to attack political opponents, Watergate, Nixon, LBJ, J. Edgar Hoover, and so many other examples, is there any question that call records of opposition political operatives are INVALUABLE -- for anyone in a position to access them who might dare to do so?

--jim; Jim Warren; jwarren@xxxxxxxx, public-policy advocate & technology writer

[self-inflating puffery: InfoWorld founder; Dr.Dobb's Journal first editor; Soc.of Prof.Journalists-Nor.Cal.James Madison Freedom-of-Information Award;
Electronic Frontier Foundation Pioneer Award (1992, its first year);
Playboy Foundation Hugh Hefner First-Amendment Award (1994);
founded the Computers, Freedom & Privacy Conferences; blah blah blah]


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