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FBD
05-07-2015, 05:30 PM
While Edward Snowden may be legally charged for treason in the US (even as he gets his own statue in Berlin), his contributions to US civil rights just got a huge validation by none other than the Federal appeals court which ruled moments ago that the National Security Agency’s controversial collection of millions of Americans’ phone records isn't authorized by the Patriot Act, as the Bush and Obama administrations have long maintained.

It would appear America's transformation into a "Big Brother" police state is not endorsed by every branch of the government after all.

As the WSJ reports, the ruling by the three-judge panel in New York "comes at a delicate point in the national debate over government surveillance, as Section 215 of the Patriot Act is due to expire next month and lawmakers are haggling about whether to renew it, modify it, or let it die."





The court’s ruling came in a lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union arguing the data collection should be stopped because it violates Americans’ privacy rights. A lower court judge ruled the program was constitutional, and the civil liberties group appealed, leading to Thursday’s decision.



“The text of (Section 215) cannot bear the weight the government asks us to assign to it, and...does not authorize the telephone metadata program,’’ the court wrote.



Ironically, the court declined to address the issue of whether the program violates Americans’ rights, because, they found, it was never properly authorized by existing law.

Of course, had it been authorized, the logical implication is that it would have been a violation, however score two for the government which not only did not legally implement mass spying on its citizens, but proceed to do so for years while violating the constitution.

But before anyone gets concerned that all their data will no longer be "backed up" by the NSA, fear not: the judges didn't order the collection to stop, noting that the legislative debate and the looming expiration of Section 215 will force action on the issue one way or another.






The judges also note that if Congress decides to approve some version of the phone data collection program in coming days, then the privacy issue could be revisited in court.



The panel sent the case back to the lower court judge for further review based on the appeals court findings.


So to summarize: the NSA massive telephonic data collection is not legal, but it is still allowed to continue indefinitely.

FBD
05-07-2015, 05:34 PM
Top NSA Official Who Created the Global Surveillance System: Fire the U.S. Intelligence Agencies … Hire Anonymous, Instead


William Binney is the high-level NSA executive who created the agency’s mass surveillance program for digital information. A 32-year NSA veteran widely regarded as a “legend” within the agency, Binney was the senior technical director within the agency and supervised thousands of NSA employees.

Binney sent Washington’s Blog an article from Monday showing that a member of the cyber collective Anonymous tipped off Texas police to the imminent shootings by Muslim extremists. (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3068250/Texas-police-warned-ISIS-attack-TWO-DAYS-days-deadly-shootout-Anonymous-activist.html)



This is the objective of intelligence agencies that I worked in – predict intentions and capabilities in advance. I agree with my VIPS [i.e. Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity] associates, hire Anonymous and fire the bums we got including the intelligence committees and the FISC [U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court].



After all, when was the last time our “intelligence community” predicted anything like this in advance????


Binney and other top NSA whistleblowers have previously explained that the intelligence agencies should have stopped 9/11, the Boston Marathon bombing, the Paris shootings and other terrorist attacks. But corruption prevented them from stopping the attacks.

Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity – a group composed of former high-level military and intelligence officials – recently called for independent intelligence analysis to keep our country safe.

PorkChopSandwiches
05-07-2015, 05:58 PM
So to summarize: the NSA massive telephonic data collection is not legal, but it is still allowed to continue indefinitely.

:qft:

perrhaps
05-07-2015, 07:27 PM
Don't get yer panties ruffled, FBD. You're still with us, right?

Lambchop
05-07-2015, 09:26 PM
I deleted my Facebook account after the NSA Prism notes were leaked... but in hindsight it doesn't really matter, once the data is uploaded to FB servers the NSA will receive a copy. Scumbag agency

FBD
05-08-2015, 11:08 AM
Don't get yer panties ruffled, FBD. You're still with us, right?

well, I'm not against yas :thumbsup: