Progress Pond

Down the Memory Holes

What always makes me laugh, in a bitter and angry way, is how supporters of the Bush administration defend every intrusion of privacy, from the PATRIOT Act to warrantless NSA spying on Americans, with the canard that it’s ok because they’ve got “nothing to hide”.

Yet the Bush administration has been hiding things and it all started way before 9/11, so that tired old cliche about the attacks “changing everything” does not apply.
In Chapter 4 of George Orwell’s epic 1984, the main character, Winston, worked in the Ministry of Truth in a department which altered the past by destroying unpleasant records:

In the walls of the cubicle there were three orifices. To the right of the speakwrite, a small pneumatic tube for written messages, to the left, a larger one for newspapers; and in the side wall, within easy reach of Winston’s arm, a large oblong slit protected by a wire grating. This last was for the disposal of waste paper. Similar slits existed in thousands or tens of thousands throughout the building, not only in every room but at short intervals in every corridor. For some reason they were nicknamed memory holes.

There have been many documents fed into the “memory holes” since Bush came into office:

For even more information removed and/or protected, see here.

In 2004, Representative Henry Waxman issued a 90-page report on secrecy in the Bush administration, which you can find here.  Definitely worth reading.

Meanwhile it is legal for the government to do the following, without a warrant:

Access your library records without telling you, maintain your credit card information in multiple databases, add your name to a “No Fly” list without telling you why or giving you a manner in which to have your name removed, wiretap your phone, do a “pen register” on your phone (record all the numbers you dial or numbers which dialed you), conduct a physical search of your home without informing you, open and read your mail, spy on you if you’re conducting a protest, add your name to one of dozens of “terrorist” databases, infiltrate your peaceful anti-war group with undercover agents, flag you for extra screening hassles on commercial airline flights, get all of your commercial records (including bank records) simply by writing a National Security Letter, read, track and intercept all of your internet use, add your DNA to a federal database if you’ve ever been arrested (even if you were later found not guilty) and maintain “total information awareness” databases on you, despite the fact that they were outlawed by Congress (they simply changed the name to TOPSAIL).

Have a Doubleplusgood Day!

Crossposted from the ungood crimethink website Flogging the Simian

Peace

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