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Those who sacrifice liberty for security . . .

17 Mar 2008 09:36 am

Julian Sanchez has a great op-ed in the LA Times on wiretapping.

As the battle over reforms to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act rages in Congress, civil libertarians warn that legislation sought by the White House could enable spying on "ordinary Americans." Others, like Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), counter that only those with an "irrational fear of government" believe that "our country's intelligence analysts are more concerned with random innocent Americans than foreign terrorists overseas."

But focusing on the privacy of the average Joe in this way obscures the deeper threat that warrantless wiretaps poses to a democratic society. Without meaningful oversight, presidents and intelligence agencies can -- and repeatedly have -- abused their surveillance authority to spy on political enemies and dissenters.

The original FISA law was passed in 1978 after a thorough congressional investigation headed by Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho) revealed that for decades, intelligence analysts -- and the presidents they served -- had spied on the letters and phone conversations of union chiefs, civil rights leaders, journalists, antiwar activists, lobbyists, members of Congress, Supreme Court justices -- even Eleanor Roosevelt and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. The Church Committee reports painstakingly documented how the information obtained was often "collected and disseminated in order to serve the purely political interests of an intelligence agency or the administration, and to influence social policy and political action."

Political abuse of electronic surveillance goes back at least as far as the Teapot Dome scandal that roiled the Warren G. Harding administration in the early 1920s. When Atty. Gen. Harry Daugherty stood accused of shielding corrupt Cabinet officials, his friend FBI Director William Burns went after Sen. Burton Wheeler, the fiery Montana progressive who helped spearhead the investigation of the scandal. FBI agents tapped Wheeler's phone, read his mail and broke into his office. Wheeler was indicted on trumped-up charges by a Montana grand jury, and though he was ultimately cleared, the FBI became more adept in later years at exploiting private information to blackmail or ruin troublesome public figures. (As New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer can attest, a single wiretap is all it takes to torpedo a political career.)

. . .

It's probably true that ordinary citizens uninvolved in political activism have little reason to fear being spied on, just as most Americans seldom need to invoke their 1st Amendment right to freedom of speech. But we understand that the 1st Amendment serves a dual role: It protects the private right to speak your mind, but it serves an even more important structural function, ensuring open debate about matters of public importance. You might not care about that first function if you don't plan to say anything controversial. But anyone who lives in a democracy, who is subject to its laws and affected by its policies, ought to care about the second.

To be sure, I'm the sort of ornery person who gets mad that the government is forbidding me to take drugs I have absolutely no interest in, so this probably resonates with me more than most. Nonetheless, it bears remembering that you can be materially harmed by infringements on liberty even when it isn't your liberty.

Side thought: how much of the much-vaunted political consensus of the 1930-1965 period might have had its roots in the fact that the government was spying on dissidents?

Comments (15)

I take back my comment from last week. This is now the msartest thing you've posted in a long, long while. The only problem is what took you so long? Also, have you finally come to realize just how evil the Bushies are? Will you be happy when Bush is remembered like Hoover?

"Nonetheless, it bears remembering that you can be materially harmed by infringements on liberty even when it isn't your liberty."

Liberty is the more valuable currency, of those we may worry about, Today.

It is an asinine, wildly misleading op-ed.

The current FISA debate has nothing to do with spying on ordinary citizens, except to the extent that "ordinary citizens" are making phone calls across borders to terrorists.

Thomas Corcoran wasn't calling Pakistani terrorists about William O. Douglas. The idea that "'Foreign intelligence' was often used as a pretext for gathering political intelligence" may be true, but cross-border wiretapping isn't very useful for gathering political intelligence. Martin Luther King Jr. wasn't calling Afghanistan to do civil rights strategy.

The op-ed is typical liberterian hysteria intended to mislead us from the actual issues at hand. Which is why I would never take a magazine like Reason seriously.

As I recall, the last misuse of the FBI was orchestrated by the Clintons.

The current FISA debate has nothing to do with spying on ordinary citizens, except to the extent that "ordinary citizens" are making phone calls across borders to terrorists.

Bullshit. The entire point is that these warrantless wiretaps give people in power the tools to spy on ordinary citizens. I am absolutely baffled by the people who are so trusting of our government and the people who work in it that they think the government is capable of policing itself and refraining from "doing the wrong thing." The history of power teaches us that whenever those in government have the ability to misuse their power, they will. You say that they won't be spying on ordinary citizens, but what if they do? What's to stop them? The point is that there is no oversight in the system you support-- there is nothing to stop the rogue agent or agency who decides he'd like to spy on you or me or anyone else.

The entire point is that these warrantless wiretaps give people in power the tools to spy on ordinary citizens.

Don't they already have these tools?


You say that they won't be spying on ordinary citizens, but what if they do? What's to stop them?

What's to stop them now? I am not defending FISA - these are "face value" questions...

That's true, TakeFlight, but I don't think we should make the perfect the enemy of the good. The response to imperfect oversight is not "no oversight, then." At that point you might question why we try to establish any checks on government at all-- after all, they've got the guns. If they really want to, they can do whatever they want. That doesn't mean we don't try to limit their power wherever we can.

The entire point is that these warrantless wiretaps give people in power the tools to spy on ordinary citizens.

What does this mean? We already have "the tools" to spy on anybody. The question is what legal hoops we have to go through to use those tools in various situations.

Didn't I read that the Feds were tappping purely domestic calls that had the misfortune to routed thru switches offshore / in Canada / off satellites?

That would qualify as a HUGE abuse of the system, on the order of tapping MLK's phone.

"Don't they already have these tools?"

If the telecom companies play ball they do, but making it clear they won't be granted immunity retroactively is the best way to ensure they won't.

"The current FISA debate has nothing to do with spying on ordinary citizens, except to the extent that "ordinary citizens" are making phone calls across borders to terrorists."

That's wrong it allows the wiretapping of all calls, but they promise it will only be on terrorists. Forgive me if I'm skeptical of any promises the government makes.

Freddie, I heartily agree with checks on the gov't, but I'm not following how legalizing wiretaps on calls made outside the country to (suspected?) terrorists changes the "oversight" situation? It seems that the status quo isn't affected: gov't still has the tools if they choose to misuse them; and presumably the fact that the communication is with terrorists at least satisfies probable cause?

"and presumably the fact that the communication is with terrorists at least satisfies probable cause?"

It's this part that's troubling. The government has the ability to label anybody they want as a terrorist. This means that for all intents an purposes they can listen in on all phone calls that go outside the country.

BTW, it is legal to wiretap calls it just requires probable cause and a warrant. What the government wants to do here is to bypass the oversight we currently have in place.

Side thought: how much of the much-vaunted political consensus of the 1930-1965 period might have had its roots in the fact that the government was spying on dissidents?

William Lemke ran for President in 1936 and won 2% of the vote. Henry Wallace ran for President in 1948 and won 2% of the vote. The American Labor Party (founded by the garment unions) was quite consequential in New York politics in the years running from 1936 to 1956. It could poll 20% of the vote statewide, or around 2% of the vote nationally. The social basis for radical politics in this country had a certain ceiling, J. Edgar Hoover or no.

IIRC, the Exec wants warrantless tapping for calls with one endpoint in a foreign country. This is nothing new, and AFAIK is not illegal even with FISA in place. Intercepting calls that have both endpoints in the US is a no no without a warrant. Does anyone have evidence that the latter is happening?

One argument for not getting FISA warrants runs along these lines... we are using automated tools to screen squillions of calls, and this activity can't easily adapt to the FISA court requirement, since it would need squillions of warrants, not to mention what probable cause means in such a context. I'm not sure that we should rule such tools out of bounds for foreign communications, but I'm willing to listen to good reasons.

I'm also unclear as to how denying telecoms immunity for cooperating with the government will encourage full cooperation with, say, government oversight. We'd all be better off if Congress wasn't so easily prodded into grandstanding and offering circus trials to show They Really Care, and actually took oversight seriously. YMMV.

Rex: Yeah, that was so long ago that back then, *Republicans* sometimes feared abuses of the powers of the executive branch. I wonder when that day will come again.

John: Previously, the executive branch violated the written law with the help of some telecom companies, albeit with the claim of the executive branch that they somehow had the legal right to do so. When that violation came out, nobody went to jail, and there were really no consequences for any government officials involved. If the telecoms are also not penalized at all, then why would we expect that the other written laws will be followed in the future? Why won't the executive branch feel free to just ignore the laws protecting domestic communications in the future, knowing that nobody will go to jail or lose any money?