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July 11, 2008

Here's How to Side-Step the Warrantless Wiretapping:

By Kathryn Smith

Since the telecom immunity bill was passed in Congress, against all Constitutional law, we the people now have to take matters into our own hands. Wherever there is a big problem, there is a simple solution: Sign up with phone and Internet companies which will not wiretap without court warrant. Fortunately, new telecom immunity does not render Congress immune from lawsuits + applies to civil cases, not criminal ones.

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Hello friends

Given the telecom immunity bill which was passed in Congress, against all Constitutional law, we the people now have to take matters into our own hands.

Wherever there is a big problem, there is a simple solution:

Sign up with phone and Internet companies which will not wiretap without court warrant.

First, let me qualify that I have zero affiliations or personal connections with any companies I am mentioning below. Neither am I intending to go on a commercial crusade. I am simply posting the solution to the problem, with the hope that others may benefit.

Credo, formerly known as Working Assets Long Distance, will not wiretap without court warrant. In addition to providing mobile, cell phone, and long distance phone services, they are an activist entity in their own right. One percent of their profits ($42 million to date) are contributed to progressive causes such as planting rainforests, the Center for Constitutional Rights and ACLU, gay and lesbian rights groups, and much more. They print their phone bills on recycled paper with soy-based ink. To boot, they have done many impeachment projects, such as the San Francisco "Impeach on the Beach" in which participants laid down on the sand to spell the word "impeach", and a helicopter flew overhead to photograph the entire scene. Credo , trust me, is good for their word when they say they won't wiretap, and in fact are fighting the warrantless wiretapping program as one of their activist projects. One percent of their credit card proceeds are also contributed to environmental and progressive causes.

Qwest will not wiretap without warrant, offering phone and Internet service alike. But they only service certain parts of the country. A percentage of their proceeds are contributed toward educational causes.

The ACLU, Center for Constitutional Rights ,and Electronic Frontier Foundation are part of the solution. Join them and you will be helping the cause along. The ACLU and EFF are litigating the new telecom immunity bill. See www.aclu.org, www.eff.org, www.centerforconstitutionalrights.com or www.ccrjustice.com . Make a contribution to these entities, small or large, and you will be helping to hold Congress in check while fighting the warrantless wiretapping.

Here's how to get around being tracked by RFID chips: Tuck your government documents (passports, driver's licenses, etc) which contain RFID chips into a mylar bag. The same one you would use to de-activate your Fastrack card. The radio wave chips bounce off the mylar, rendering it unscannable. If stopped by the police, the ACLU attorney Nicole Ozer, who convinced (for a while, anyway) the Dept of Homeland Security not to use RFID chips in our driver's licenses, says that a legal argument is to state that you are concerned about protecting yourself from identity theft. Because with scanners available on-line for under $200, it is easy for an identity thief to scan you and obtain your personal information from your chip-containing credit cards, driver's license, etc...they would know your name, home address, social security number, get some idea of your financial prowess.....so you can tell the policeman that you are not hiding from the law, but instead from identity thieves and home burglars. End of discussion!

In case you are curious about whether or not the FBI is spying on you, here is a link (one among numerous links) to the ACLU's facts about who is being targeted by the FBI as "Terrorists". Most of them activists. Check this out:

http://www.aclu.org/safefree/spying/17548prs20050518.html

"Since when did feeding the homeless become a terrorist activity?" asked ACLU Associate Legal Director Ann Beeson. "When the FBI and local law enforcement target groups like Food Not Bombs under the guise of fighting terrorism, many Americans who oppose government policies will be discouraged from speaking out and exercising their rights."

More here about peaceful activist and environmental groups like Greenpeace being spied on:

www.aclu.org/safefree/general/20073prs20050718.html

Here about individual citizens being wrongfully targeted by the FBI, several of them for the heinous crime of birdwatching, another for the crime of being Middle Eastern:

http://www.rightsmatter.org/multimedia/

As for the warrantless wiretapping and retroactive immunity, the above facts should have us very concerned. Doubtlessly, the FBI will be able to serve more National Security Letters than they already have, if warrantless wiretapping of citizens is coddled and shielded in this way by Congress's vote for telecom immunity. NSL's are gag order-containing subpoenas issued at the FBI agent's unilateral whim, without any warrant or judicial involvement, thanks to the Patriot Act. The gag order carries a six-year jail sentence (reduced from seven years in the first version of the Patriot Act) to anybody who utters a peep. In other words...if your doctor is ordered to fork your records over to the Feds, he/she would be jailed if s/he told you that s/he did so. Ditto as regards any telecom provider and your records. You can read the true story of someone who was served with a gag order/National Security Letter here, in the Washington Post:

www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/22/AR2007032201882_pf.html

But here is a little bit of hope with which to end this article. We all may be thinking in black and white, where warrantless wiretapping and telecom immunity are concerned. Fortunately, according to John Dean, former counsel to Richard Nixon and Watergate whistleblower, the new telecom immunity is granted only in civil cases, not in criminal ones. It also does not render Congress or the Prez immune from lawsuits. See more in the article below:

http://writ.news.findlaw.com/dean/20080702.html

Time to sue Congress, big-time. Undermining the power of the judiciary, as a fundamental arm of government with the function of putting a "Check" on government power, ain't no joke. We've got to oust 85% of them if we want our country back. Let's get to it! Perhaps if we show them the stuff of which we are made, they will no longer even try to literally get away with murder, let alone actually get away with it. The state of affairs is as much enabled by our collective silence as it is by the crooks themselves. Let's go! Upward and onward! Lawsuits, ahoy! (While we still can...do it, FAST!)

Please circulate this widely and post all over the Internet. Dial in to radio talk shows, send out chain emails, and get this information out to the public! Letters to college and underground newspaper editors...the big problem can be remedied in simple ways, and people need to know! Thank you for being part of the hope and the solution by spreading word. Bless you.



Authors Bio:
This quote summarizes the nature of my concerns and the content of personal experiences which stir my activism:

"Necessity is the plea for every infringement on human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves". --Paul Revere, House of Commons

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