Biden Terrifyingly Grows Ranks Of Government Spies

Guest Post by Kevin Gosztola

The White House enthusiastically backed surveillance reauthorization that despite a fresh record of routine abuses expands security agencies’ spying power.

On April 20, Edward Snowden declared, “America lost something important today, and hardly anyone heard. The headlines of state-aligned media screech and crow about the nefarious designs of your fellow citizens and the necessity of foreign wars without end, but find few words for a crime against the Constitution.”

The NSA whistleblower was referring to the United States Senate reauthorizing and expanding surveillance under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

President Joe Biden circulated a memo that cast the Fourth Amendment right to privacy as a “threat to national security.” Biden National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and Attorney General Merrick Garland called members of Congress to ensure that they voted to give spy agencies renewed power.

Specifically, “Patriot Act 2.0,” as Representative Zoe Lofgren called it, broadened the definition of service providers and exponentially increased the power that the government has to force numerous business and industries to aid warrantless surveillance.

Senator Ron Wyden strongly opposed the legislation and even introduced an amendment that would have prevented this assault on civil liberties. But the Senate rejected his effort to protect privacy.

“The Senate waited until the 11th hour to ram through renewal of warrantless surveillance in the dead of night,” Wyden stated. He also added, “It is clear from the votes on very popular amendments that senators were unwilling to send this bill back to the House, no matter how common-sense the amendment before them.”

Although the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) renewed Section 702 until April 2025, allowing lawmakers plenty of time to appropriately draft and amend legislation, panic was stirred by Biden and the national security state.

Wyden, who has a track record of challenging surveillance, did not mince words. He described the provision that he fought, which was dubbed the “Make Everyone A Spy” provision, as “one of the most dramatic and terrifying expansions of government surveillance authority in history.”

“It allows the government to force any American who installs, maintains, or repairs anything that transmits or stores communications to spy on the government’s behalf. That means anyone with access to a server, a wire, a cable box, a wifi router, or a phone. It would be secret: the Americans receiving the government directives would be bound to silence, and there would be no court oversight.”

Forcing More Service Providers To Spy On Customers

The Biden administration applauded the passage of legislation that expanded warrantless surveillance. “The President will swiftly sign the bill into law, ensuring that our security professionals can continue to rely on Section 702 to detect grave national security threats and use that understanding to protect the United States,” Sullivan stated.

Section 702 used to primarily apply to telecommunications or technology companies. Now, as detailed by Demand Progress, Section 702 may be used to force business landlords, cleaning contractors, delivery personnel, utility providers, etc, to help U.S. security agencies spy without probable cause.

Entities and individuals required to help with surveillance cannot speak about it. Their First Amendment speech rights are curtailed as they violate their customers’ Fourth Amendment privacy rights.

Also, according to Demand Progress, House Intelligence Committee Chair Mike Turner and House Intelligence Committee Ranking Member Jim Himes drafted the expanded surveillance reauthorization without defining terms like “any other service provider,” “access to equipment,” or “custodian.”

Only as a result of opposition did security hawks insert an exemption for coffee shops, hotels, and libraries.

Writing about the impact on journalism for The Nation, longtime national security journalist James Bamford wrote, “A requirement could easily be added to Section 702 that compels the need for a warrant as soon as an NSA employee or FBI agent recognizes that the communication involves a journalist conducting an interview, or an attorney engaged in a conversation with a client or source.”

“In the end,” Bamford argued, “insight gained from the American journalist’s interaction with a foreign source may be far more valuable and provide considerably more insight than inhibiting sources to interact with journalists.”

The FBI consistently abused the surveillance power it was granted under Section 702 before the authority was reauthorized. It is a certainty that the FBI will abuse this ill-defined authority handed to them by Biden and Congress.

No Justification For Opposing A Warrant

House Speaker Mike Johnson was at one point an opponent of warrantless surveillance under FISA. He claimed that he shifted his position because as Speaker he is privy to “confidential briefings” that have showed him how critical Section 702 is to “national security.”

“I personally used 702 authorities at NSA,” Snowden responded. “There is absolutely nothing in any briefing of any level, then or now, that would justify opposition to recognizing the government’s obligation to seek a warrant for searches of Americans’ communications, which are constitutionally-protected.”

“And frankly, let’s be serious: the NSA and FBI have plainly demonstrated that they’re more than comfortable violating the law when they feel it binds too tightly. 278,000 times just for one auth: 702. Millions and millions of times under others for [President Barack] Obama. And on a literally innumerable scale under [President George W.] Bush—we couldn’t even count it.”

“So let’s not pretend that, in the apocryphal ‘ticking time-bomb’ scenario of the Hollywood imagination, that a series of agencies which have since their inception been characterized by a criminally casual respect for the Constitution would feel in the slightest way encumbered by something as parochial as the law,” Snowden added. “After all, the legislation rarely ascribes penalties for federal infractions.”

The House Judiciary Committee passed legislation—the Protect Liberty and End Warrantless Surveillance Act—at the end of 2023 that would have required a warrant for any U.S. person search. However, through the House Intelligence Committee, U.S. officials thwarted attempts to constrain the national security state.

During a private meeting on reauthorization, WIRED reported that Turner “presented an image of Americans protesting the war in Gaza while implying possible ties between the protesters and Hamas, an allegation that was used to illustrate why surveillance reforms [would be] detrimental to national security.”

It is highly likely that antiwar or pro-Palestinian protests, particularly on college or university campuses, will be targeted. Biden will probably have no problem with using this expanded spying power against students.

A day after Biden signed the reauthorization bill, White House Deputy Press Secretary Andrew Bates accused student demonstrators opposed to Israel’s assault on Gaza of “echoing the rhetoric of terrorist organizations.”

Hawkishly Backing The National Security State

Back in 2008, Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama campaigned against retroactive immunity for telecommunications companies that helped Bush engage in warrantless wiretapping. He even promised to filibuster the FISA Amendments Act. But Obama voted for the bill when there were 46 different lawsuits pending against the companies and angered many progressives and civil liberties advocates.

Biden, who was Obama’s vice president, did not even pretend to support reform, greater accountability, or limits to government surveillance. Fifteen years after Obama flip-flopped, Sullivan, his national security advisor, made it clear that the administration believed that “failure to reauthorize Section 702” would be “one of the worst intelligence failures of our time.”

He additionally urged Congress to reauthorize Section 702 “without new and operationally damaging restrictions on reviewing intelligence” and “with measures that build on proven reforms.” That was subtle language, which sent a message to representatives and senators that Biden opposed adding a warrant requirement to protect Americans’ privacy rights.

Hawkish lawmakers, intelligence officials, and the Biden White House conspired to pass an updated surveillance law that not only avoided meaningful reforms but also expanded the law in a way that U.S. intelligence agencies could only dream about a year or two ago.

For many months, news reports detailed stories of spying abuses and enraged lawmakers. That gave some hope to those in favor of privacy that Congress might rein in government surveillance. Yet the national security state stayed the course. They once again hid the truth from elected officials, accelerated the process, and fear-mongered and spread propaganda to escape accountability.

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30 Comments
k31
k31
  bidenTouchesKids
April 24, 2024 11:08 pm

A couple of forked tongued devils.

Jdog
Jdog
April 24, 2024 8:00 pm

Behind every bad thing that is happening in the US, is the terrorist state of Israel. It is Israel that is responsible for the destruction of the USA. It is Israel that owns the US Government.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Jdog
April 24, 2024 9:02 pm

CIA and its attendant agencies like the National Endowment for Democracy and USAID would want that spying capability and would still be stirring up trouble everywhere even if there were no Israel.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Iska Waran
April 24, 2024 9:52 pm

THANK YOU !!!!!

Truth is always a blessing.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Jdog
April 24, 2024 9:51 pm

Behind every crying child is a child raping Israel hater.

Fuck you, you one trick pony faggot.

Ed
Ed
  The Central Scrutinizer
April 25, 2024 6:58 am

Behind every Jdog, there is a One Trick Pony Scrotumizer trying to cornhole him.

zappalives
zappalives
  Jdog
April 24, 2024 10:02 pm

yep………….ITS ALL VERY CLEAR.

k31
k31
  Jdog
April 24, 2024 11:09 pm

A bit hyperbolic, but definitely the banking cartel uses their state of Israel to attack us because we are not Jews and they fear us.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Jdog
April 25, 2024 1:09 pm

Simple people NEED simple answers…and you’re DEFINITELY simple.

zappalives
zappalives
April 24, 2024 8:35 pm

Assume all democrat family and friends are recording everything you say.
Have a plan to kill each of them.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  zappalives
April 24, 2024 9:54 pm

Since when did murder need a plan? Sounds like the same logic that leads to condom usage. They serve no useful purpose. Why consider it further? You were obviously never planning on staying with the bitch in the first place. What does it matter?

Ed
Ed
  The Central Scrutinizer
April 25, 2024 7:03 am

Damn, Scrote. You sound like Joe Biden over there. Wandering off topic like that makes you sound like you need another shot of Methadrine.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Ed
April 25, 2024 11:55 am

It’s called ‘metaphor” moron.

Take a remedial English Literature class.

luke2236
luke2236
April 24, 2024 8:42 pm

America is officially gone.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  luke2236
April 24, 2024 9:56 pm

Was that the LAST nail?

Asking for an American friend.

Ed
Ed
  The Central Scrutinizer
April 25, 2024 7:03 am

STFU, Scrote. You don’t have any American friends.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Ed
April 25, 2024 11:56 am

You certainly aren’t among them.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
April 24, 2024 9:03 pm

I can’t lay this at Biden’s feet. The entire intelligence community and both parties are behind this.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Iska Waran
April 24, 2024 9:57 pm

Bro. Biden can’t even FIND his own feet. That’s gonna make laying anything there problematic at best.

zappalives
zappalives
April 24, 2024 9:59 pm

Expect some young nigger-loving faggot-worshiping white democrat kids to come knocking on your door like the covid corp during the FAKE VIRUS CRISIS,
It aint gonna happen.
They ran the program.
Most get shot and UNCIVIL FUCKING WAR IS UNLEASHED !

k31
k31
  zappalives
April 24, 2024 11:36 pm

Civil war is literally impossible, because there are too many factions. This was not an accident. Civil wars suck, anyways. If any war is worth a shot, it would be revolutions. Civil war is just demoniacs scrapping it out. The USA has never had a civil war, but a war of secession, which is closest to revolution.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  k31
April 25, 2024 7:44 am

merriam-webster –a war between opposing groups of citizens of the same country
Seem close enough for me.

k31
k31
April 24, 2024 11:07 pm

I find myself not being afraid. What is there to fear, I know where I am going.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  k31
April 25, 2024 11:57 am

I wouldn’t be so sure if I were you. EVERYBODY thinks that. Most of them are dead wrong.

Ray Gun
Ray Gun
April 25, 2024 6:21 am

Not just Biden, Congress and the Federal bureaucracy too. They know they are corrupt, they know we know they are corrupt, and they are scared to death of us collectively, so they can’t let that happen. So spying and taking out people one by one before resistance can become widespread is their weapon.

Tlate
Tlate
April 25, 2024 8:57 am

The alphabet letter agencies have been able to monitor pretty much all electronic information from people for quite some time and have done so without warrants. Yet we have FBI director warning us of upcoming terror attacks. What happened to all the billions we have spent since 2001 to find and track terrorists? We are being played as usual.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
April 25, 2024 1:08 pm

And here I was thinking that there’s no WAY that bloated cadre of finks could possibly grow any larger.

A pox on their penises and a plague on their pudendas!

Anonymouse
Anonymouse
April 25, 2024 4:08 pm

Expanded surveillance powers…expanded IRS…what could go wrong.

VOWG
VOWG
April 26, 2024 8:49 am

Just more traitors to be removed.