The Business as Usual Brigade

I missed the CATO surveillance event today (they’ll have video up soon, Julian Sanchez promises), but here’s the speech Ron Wyden gave.

I’m amused by this line:

We wanted to put this marker down early because we know in the months ahead we will be up against a “business-as-usual brigade” – made up of influential members of the government’s intelligence leadership, their allies in thinktanks and academia, retired government officials, and sympathetic legislators.

Wyden, a politician, can’t name these people.

But I would suggest they are all immediately identifiable as an archetype:

Influential members of the government’s intelligence leadership: Keith Alexander and James Clapper

Their allies in thinktanks and academia: Ben Wittes

Retired government officials: Michael Hayden

Sympathetic legislators: Dianne Feinstein

Indeed, further in his speech, he repeats claims these people have made, without identifying the speaker.

Some of the “business as usual” arguments have something of an Alice in Wonderland flavor.

We have heard that surveillance of Americans’ phone records, aka metadata, is not actually surveillance at all – it’s simply the collection of bits of information. [DiFi]

We’ve been told that falsehoods aren’t falsehoods – they are simply imprecise statements. [Clapper]

We’ve been told that rules that have been repeatedly broken are a valuable check on government overreach. [Wittes]

And we’ve been told that codifying secret surveillance laws and making them public surveillance laws is the same as actually reforming these overreaching surveillance programs. [Hayden]

And Wyden is absolutely correct. DiFi has submitted changes to Section 215 and 702 that … don’t change a single solitary thing, except that they (1) write down what the FISA Court has already mandated and (2) expand surveillance by authorizing the wiretapping of roamers for a period in the US.

So maybe Wyden isn’t correct? Maybe this is not the “Business as Usual Brigade,” but the “Use a crisis to authorizing phone wiretapping in the US brigade”?

Whatever it is, these are recognizable people. And the press should be focusing on the many ways in which their legislation actually increases surveillance.

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7 replies
  1. Snoopdido says:

    I’m sure it was just an oversight (ha, ha, ha!), but you forgot that other fawning Security State duo over at HPSCI: House Intel panel working on bill to save NSA spying – http://thehill.com/blogs/hillicon-valley/technology/327361-overnight-tech-house-intel-panel-working-on-bill-to-save-nsa-spying

    “House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers (R-Mich.) hinted on Tuesday that his National Security Agency reform legislation would preserve the bulk of the agency’s surveillance powers.

    He said he and ranking member Dutch Ruppersberger (D-Md.) have held a series of meeting with their Senate counterparts, Sens. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.), to discuss the legislation.

    “We went over some of these confidence-builders to rebuild trust in these programs and at the end of the day still allow us to do it [conduct surveillance],” Rogers said during a panel discussion hosted by Politico.”

  2. greengiant says:

    Wyden, member of gang of 6, 3rd senator from NY, ( although trying to spend more time in his alleged state), … spieling to CATO…
    Said he was still thinking about just about any major issue.
    Would be surprised if he is not one of the closest to the puppet masters.
    When they wake this sleeper up it should be for a real doozy of a paradigm shift.

  3. Phil Perspective says:

    But I would suggest they are all immediately identifiable as an archetype:

    Influential members of the government’s intelligence leadership: Keith Alexander and James Clapper

    Their allies in thinktanks and academia: Ben Wittes

    Add flunkies like Joshua Foust and John Schindler

    Retired government officials: Michael Hayden

    Sympathetic legislators: Dianne Feinstein

  4. peasantparty says:

    Don’t forget Chertoff, along with many Corporate Lobbyist that will be there with prize sized campaign dollars and influence.

  5. harpie says:

    @Snoopdido:

    TWEETS from CATO:

    concerned citizen ‏@18USC241 13h
    RT @normative: Sensenbrenner calls Rogers bill a “fig leaf to let the intelligence comm keep doing what it wants” #CatoNSA

    Siobhan Gorman ‏@Gorman_Siobhan 16h
    Sensenbrenner on expected spy bill fight: “we’re going to have to beat ‘em on the floor and I think we’re going to do it.” #CatoNSA

    Julian Sanchez ‏@normative 17h
    USA PATRIOT Act author Sensenbrenner announces USA FREEDOM act to end bulk collection, add transparency at #CatoNSA

  6. harpie says:

    [My link filled comment is under moderation, so I’ll just post it without links in the mean time-should have remembered:]

    TWEETS from CATO:

    concerned citizen ‏@18USC241 13h RT @normative: Sensenbrenner calls Rogers bill a “fig leaf to let the intelligence comm keep doing what it wants” #CatoNSA

    Siobhan Gorman ‏@Gorman_Siobhan 16h Sensenbrenner on expected spy bill fight: “we’re going to have to beat ‘em on the floor and I think we’re going to do it.” #CatoNSA

    Julian Sanchez ‏@normative 17h USA PATRIOT Act author Sensenbrenner announces USA FREEDOM act to end bulk collection, add transparency at #CatoNSA

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