« on: December 13, 2013, 12:39:23 PM »
A conspiracy so vast -- it's not just the NSA, now the FBI, your local police are also spying on US citizens
By Judge Andrew P. Napolitano Published December 12, 2013 FoxNews.com
Readers of this page are well aware of the revelations during the past six months of spying by the National Security Agency (NSA). Edward Snowden, a former employee of an NSA vendor, risked his life and liberty to inform us of a governmental conspiracy to violate our right to privacy, a right guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment.
The conspiracy he revealed is vast. It involves former President George W. Bush, President Obama and their aides, a dozen or so members of Congress, federal judges, executives and technicians at American computer servers and telecoms, and the thousands of NSA employees and vendors who have manipulated their fellow conspirators. The conspirators all agreed that it would be a crime for any of them to reveal the conspiracy. Snowden violated that agreement in order to uphold his higher oath to defend the Constitution.
The object of the conspiracy is to emasculate all Americans and many foreigners of their right to privacy in order to predict our behavior and make it easier to find among us those who are planning harm.
Frustrated that the NSA seems to get whatever it wants, some local police have used their own technology to spy.
A conspiracy is an agreement among two or more persons to commit a crime. The crimes consist of capturing the emails, texts and phone calls of every American, tracing the movements of millions of Americans and foreigners via the GPS system in their cellphones, and seizing the bank records and utility bills of most Americans in direct contravention of the Constitution, and pretending to do so lawfully.
The pretense is that somehow Congress lessened the standard for spying that is set forth in the Constitution. It is, of course, inconceivable that Congress can change the Constitution (only the states can), but the conspirators would have us believe that it has done so.
The Constitution, which was written in the aftermath of the unhappy colonial experience with British soldiers who executed general warrants upon the colonists, forbids that practice today.
That practice consists of judges authorizing government agents to search for whatever they want, wherever they wish to look. By requiring a warrant from a judge based on probable cause of criminal behavior on the part of the very person the government is investigating, however, and by requiring judges to describe particularly in the warrants they issue the places to be searched or the persons or things to be seized, the Constitution specifically outlaws general warrants.
{{snip}}
If we permit the government to destroy that right, we will live under tyrannies similar to the ones we thought we defeated.
I heard on the TV this morning that the US is thinking of giving Snowden asylum. ASYLUM? To a US citizen? WTF? Did anyone else hear anything like this?
http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2013/12/12/conspiracy-so-vast/
« Last Edit: December 13, 2013, 12:45:18 PM by oldcoastie6468 »
Logged
U.S. Coast Guard veteran, 1964-1968
Will Rogers never met Barack Obama. He would not like Obama.
I hate liberals. Liberalism is a disease that causes severe brain damage after it tries to suck knowledge and history out of yours.