Monday, January 16, 2017

Trump’s pick to head the CIA wants to collect your personal metadata—all of it


That headline isn’t an exaggeration. Mike Pompeo, the Kansas congressman and Donald Trump’s pick to head the CIA, who testified on Capitol Hill earlier today, wants the government to collect all metadata from everyone, regardless of whether they’re suspected of a crime or not.


Pompeo’s expansive view of the surveillance state was made clear in an op-ed he wrote for the Wall Street Journal earlier this year, titled “Time for a Rigorous National Debate About Surveillance.” That headline alone is a red flag: “national debate,” and its more common cousin “national dialogue,” are among the most bullshit terms in our political discourse, employed almost exclusively by those who desire the opposite. In the case of surveillance, we already had an extensive debate, between Edward Snowden’s revelations in 2013 and the passage of the USA Freedom Act in 2015. What Pompeo really means is that he wants to suppress the will of Congress and enshroud all discussion about signals intelligence back within the hyper-secretive NSA.


Among the questionable claims in Pompeo’s Journal piece is that “[c]ollection of phone metadata under the Patriot Act was banned by Congress.” In fact, the Freedom Act merely rehoused metadata collection from within the government to within the telecom companies—all the NSA has to do for access is obtain a warrant from the notoriously licentious FISA court.


But even that’s too cumbersome for Pompeo, who continues, “Congress should pass a law re-establishing collection of all metadata, and combining it with publicly available financial and lifestyle information into a comprehensive, searchable database.” In other words, they should have information about all your calls, all your communications, supplemented with whatever other color they’ve been able to gather about you. And they should be able to access it through a simple search prompt.


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