US Congress Committee Talking About Privacy
rm007 writes "The US House of Representatives Judicial Committee's Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law
is holding hearings on the Privacy Officer for the Department of Homeland Security
and approved
the Defense of Privacy Act.
The DHS Privacy Officer hearings are to examine how well the incumbent,
Nuala O'Connor Kelly, is doing and whether the statute creating the
position sufficiently addresses concerns about the handling of personally
identifiable information. This should be worth watching. Wired News has an
article that covers both of these as does GovExec.com, a newsletter for senior Federal employees."
Government is on the right track with laws like HIPPA, as we see the government already acting against Doctors who publicly released Dr. Atkins medical records. However, privacy laws need to go further ...
The US needs UK like data privacy laws where no company or organization can ship private information outside the homeland's jurisdiction. This will not only help keep jobs in the country but protect the US from a digital "Pearl Harbor"
It is only when government overstepps its boundry does the right of privacy dissapear, and often it is like the frog telling of the ecological disaster to come. Remember Hoover and his FBI? They were the ones who tapped the phones of political groups. And remember Nixon?
Defend your liberty or lose it.
Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."
Perhaps it is time for an amendment, but given the way things seem to be headed at the moment, do you think any amendment would be made in the right direction?
---
Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty girl is simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves. -- AE
I wonder if this "Minister of Privacy" position will be more like the EPA head who has gutted long-standing environmental laws. Now personally I've always thought that the Republican candidates had more respect for individual privacy laws and that Democrats were more likely to attempt to legislate morality (and you know as well as I that this is impossible). Plus, it seems there have always been fewer wackos running on the Republican tickets than on the Democratics ones.
Not in this administration.
Part of freedom is the ability to do what one pleases as long as it does not hurt or affect others. But now I'm seeing laws that allow the government (under the pretense of law enforcement) to surveil whoever they want without a judge giving the OK. This administration has soiled the sacrifices of those brave soldiers on earlier battlefields; it has twisted the tragic deaths of those on 9/11; it has waged war by deceiving the American public.
These are our new overlords.
Just remember this rule, power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
People act for their self benifit, and when they can to help their friends. Look at Bush and the oil industry or Cheney and Halliburton. Cheney will make millions from them when he leaves the white house. The temptation is too great. That is why we need rules in place to protect those in power from abusing the power we give them.
Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."
What scares me the most is people are blind to see what letting the government collect information on people with out any control will bring to us. I think the government impact in our lives was to strong before the Patriot Act was ever dreamed up. The small rights they take away just will lead to the total control they might have over us in the end. More people need to start watching what our Governmental Officials are doing with our tax money. I think this new bill should have been put in place back in the early stages of telephone, satellites, and other communicational devices that the government can in some way use to listen in on our private lives.
"The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited to it by the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
In the 1996 Presidential campaign, Bob Dole flew a couple of trial balloons about "dusting off the Tenth Amendment," which was Republican code for "get rid of social programs we don't like." I laughed and wondered if ol' Bob would be willing to have a real discussion of dusting off the Tenth Amendment and doing away with all the power the US Government has taken on without that power having been delegated to the government by the Constitution. Of course not!
The Tenth Amendment, like the Second, was designed to protect the people from the very government whose powers are specified by the Constitution. The Second Amendment was not about armies or self-defense against foreign invaders, as its modern-day opponents allege; it was designed to prevent the usurpation of power by the Federal Government that has in fact occurred over the 217+ years since the Constitution was written. I am sad to report that the meaning of the Second and Tenth Amendments is largely forgotten (favorite funny slogan for the ACLU: "Defending the rights guaranteed by the Amendments of the Bill of Rights-- all nine of them") and basically ended up amounting to nothing more than mere speedbumps, only slowing down (definitely NOT preventing) the theft of power from citizens of the USA by the government of the USA.
It's a little sad that I have to say this, but even though I've criticized both the Republicans and the ACLU (and thus, basically the entire political "spectrum" of the USA), this is not intended as any kind of troll. The meaning of the two Amendments in question is clear if you read the Constitution itself and other writings from the same time by the "framers" of the Constitution. The framers, having had to fight a war against a government they felt did not represent them, were very worried about their new government becoming like the one against which they had fought. Washington voluntarily stepping down after two terms as President due to concerns that he could become like a new "king" shows that this concern continued until at least 1797, more than 15 years after the end of the American Revolutionary War and more than a decade after the Constitution was written.
--Mark
"It is nice to know that the computer understands the problem. But I would like to understand it too." --Eugene Wigner
Privacy of the people = security risk
Privacy of politicians = security measure
The US Army: promoting democracy through unquestioned obedience