Have not had a chance to look at this
http://list.dickmorris.com/t/490614/613051/4294/4/but this seems interesting
THE PATRIOT POST
Voice of Essential Liberty
Friday Digest -- June 14, 2013
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Is Snowden a Patriot or a Traitor?
"Ambition must be made to counteract ambition. The interest of the man must be
connected with the constitutional rights of the place. It may be a reflection
on human nature that such devices should be necessary to control the abuses of
government. What is government itself but the greatest of all reflections on
human nature?" --James Madison
Intense debate continues to rage over the legality, constitutionality and
morality of the National Security Agency's data collection, as well as the
status of Edward Snowden, the contract employee who leaked the documents to a
British newspaper last week. Is he a Patriot or a traitor, or somewhere in the
middle?
(Regarding the program itself, read Mark Alexander's essay, It's the
Profiling, Stupid! One noteworthy addition to the essay is that the
administration's surveillance seems to have excluded mosques, which are often
jihadi programming centers. Target conservatives with the IRS, but don't mess
with Muslims.)
Snowden is a 29-year-old former contract employee of Booz Allen Hamilton,
which in turn provided technical service to the NSA. He also spent time
previously working for the CIA. Though he worked as a computer technician in
several positions with some level of security clearance, he never completed
high school, dropped out of community college and overstated his pay grade at
Booz Allen Hamilton by about 40 percent, calling into question his veracity.
He was also a Ron Paul donor who was reportedly disappointed to discover that
Barack Obama didn't fix everything upon taking office.
He opined to the UK's Guardian newspaper, "I can't in good conscience allow
the U.S. government to destroy privacy, Internet freedom and basic liberties
for people around the world with this massive surveillance machine they're
secretly building." No question he put his money where his mouth is, giving up
a comfortable life with a (we suppose) secure job to stand for his
convictions. Then again, he argues, "I have done nothing wrong." That must be
why he fled to Hong Kong -- a rather ironic choice for a lover of "privacy,
Internet freedom and basic liberties" given that the city is a Special
Administrative Region of Communist China.
If conscience was such a problem, Snowden could have taken any number of other
jobs. He also had much better options than the Leftmedia to make his concerns
known. If not the chain of command in place within the NSA, he likely would
have received a fair hearing by approaching a senator opposing the NSA's
programs.
Perhaps something can be learned from Snowden's choice of Glenn Greenwald as
the journalist to whom he would leak: Greenwald is a well-known hard-left
attack dog and supporter of U.S. Army Pfc. Bradley Manning, currently facing
court martial for having aided our enemies by leaking to WikiLeaks the largest
trove of classified documents in U.S. history.
Snowden claims that he was motivated by a self-defined mission of
"transparency," and that "I don't want the story to be about me." Yet he
effectively made himself the issue anyway, rather than the potentially
unconstitutional actions of the Obama administration. His leak also served as
a diversion from the other scandals at the IRS, the Justice Department and the
State Department. In fact, Obama benefits from so many things happening at
once because focus is scattered -- almost, one might say, as if through a
PRISM (the name of the NSA's email-tracking program).
There are 4.8 million federal employees and contractors that hold security
clearance. Some 1.2 million hold top-secret clearances -- and a third of those
are private contractors. This amounts to unprecedented access to highly
classified information, likely as a result of the pressure to have enough
analysts to direct intel to the right folks. There is currently a push in
Congress to move classified contractors to government positions where they
might be better monitored -- you know, like IRS agents in Cincinnati.
No one seems to know (or at least no one is saying) how an employee in
Snowden's position could gain access to the classified court orders he
released to the media. Did he have help higher up? Either way, never mind
algorithms to comb through the phone records of every American -- the NSA
clearly has difficulty determining which of its own employees can or can't be
trusted, even with a team dedicated to that task. And that's a big problem
with the apparatus itself.
This Week's 'Braying Jackass' Award
"I don't have to listen to your phone calls to know what you're doing. If I
know every single phone call you've made, I'm able to determine every single
person you talk to; I can get a pattern about your life that is very, very
intrusive. The real question here is what do they do with this information
that they collect that does not have anything to do with al-Qa'ida? ... But
this idea that ... we're going to trust the president and vice president of
the United States that we're doing the right thing -- don't count me in on
that." --then-Senator Joe Biden in 2006
Don't count us in on trusting this president or vice president, either.