Keep in mind that next year after the midterm elections, it will be that Congress determining what the law is.
If Obama’s lockstep Democrats are still in control next year, Glenn Greenwald continues, “Internet services could legally exist only insofar as there would be no such thing as truly private communications; all must contain a ‘back door’ to enable government officials to eavesdrop.”
Would this still be America?
There’s more to Obama’s euthanizing of the Fourth Amendment in Charlie Savage’s reporting: “Essentially, officials want Congress to require all services (ALL services) that enable communications — including encrypted e‑mail transmitters like Blackberry, social-networking sites like Facebook, and software that allows direct ‘peer-to-peer’ messaging like Skype — to be technically capable of complying if served with a wiretap. The mandate would include (the government) being able to intercept and unscramble encrypted messages.”
As Sen. Frank Church said long ago when he was the first to discover the omnipresent spying on us of the National Security Agency (NSA), eventually, “no American would have any privacy left, such is the capability to monitor everything. … There would be no place to hide.”
Not at all surprisingly, President Obama has extended the reach — and just about total lack of accountability — of the NSA.
But if the Republicans take control of Congress after the midterm elections — and then under a new Republican president in 2012 — is there any certainty that we may begin to be under the protection of the Fourth Amendment again?
Insofar as the tea partiers will continue to be an influence on the Republicans — having already been instrumental this year in re-electing some — I have not, as I’ve reported, seen much concern among them about our vanishing privacy (though I admire the tea partiers declared devotion to the Constitution).
As of this writing, I have no idea who will be the Republican presidential candidate in 2012, but I’m not aware that any of the potential leading Republican candidates are impassioned about the Fourth Amendment.
Even if she’s not a candidate, the perennial newsmaker Sarah Palin will be an influence on the 2012 elections. She probably doesn’t remember, but I was the first national columnist to recommend to John McCain that she be on his ticket, having read of her independence of party orthodoxy in Michael Barone’s invaluable Almanac of American Politics, as governor of Alaska. Anyway, I strongly recommend to firebrand Palin what Justice Louis Brandeis wrote in his dissent in the first Supreme Court wiretapping case, Olmstead vs. United States (1928):