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Alexander Cockburn

Big Brother's been around along time
November 27, 2002

So let's join Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition, Logistics and Technology Edward C. "Pete" Aldridge at a recent Pentagon press briefing, where he's addressing concerns about the Pentagon's bold new plan to have Admiral John Poindexter personally review exactly what you bought in Safeway last week and all the dirty movies you ordered up in Motel 6 last time you were on the road.

Poindexter, you'll recall, is the bespectacled seadog who, as one of Reagan's National Security chieftains, instrumented another bold effort in synergy, later known as Iran/Contra, which involved shuffling money and guns along the axis of evil from Iran to the Nicaraguan contras in defiance of U.S. laws at the time. Poindexter got nailed for lying to Congress but was later pardoned.

Back to Aldridge: "We established a project within DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency, that would develop an experimental prototype -- underline experimental prototype, which we call the Total Information Awareness System (TIA). The purpose of TIA would be to determine the feasibility of searching vast quantities of data to determine links and patterns indicative of terrorist activities."

Aldridge reeled off the TIA research menu: rapid language translation using computer voice-recognition techniques; discovery of connections between transactions (such as passports, visas, work permits, driver's license, credit card, airline tickets, rental cars, gun purchases, chemical purchases and events -- such as arrest or suspicious activities and so forth).

What about privacy? Aldridge is soothing: "We're designing this system to ensure complete anonymity of uninvolved citizens, thus focusing the efforts of law enforcement officials on terrorist investigations."

This is too much for one reporter, who cries out, "How is this not domestic spying? I don't understand this. You have these vast databases that you're looking for patterns in. Ordinary Americans, who aren't of Middle East origin, are just typical, ordinary Americans, their transactions are going to be perused."

"It is a technology that we're developing," Aldridge offers by way of response, meaning that DARPA is merely assembling the software package. "We'll have to operate under the same legal conditions as we do today that protects individuals' privacy when this is operated by the law enforcement agency."

The press dutifully howled about Big Brother and Orwell, which is fine, but it misses the sad truth that DARPA is limping along in the wake of reality. For most practical purposes, Total Information Awareness got here years ago. Police reports, criminal record, mortgage records, credit history, medical history, former employment, DMV data ... either lawfully or with artifice any competent private investigator can get the skinny on you. Wiretaps? My local lineman tells me that years ago, the cops stopped even asking the phone company for an OK to monitor calls. Try buying a gun, and see how many questions you have to answer.

I took a Gloucester canary to the Arcata Animal Hospital the other day to have a cyst gouged out of its wing and was handed a form demanding not only such intimate details as whether I fed my birds green vegetables but also my Social Security number. Back in 1936, they said these numbers would be secret, and (so the late, great Murray Kempton used to recall) Republican presidential candidate Alf Landon, campaigning against Social Security, used to proclaim, "Mark my words, that number will follow you from cradle to grave." He was right about that one.

Not so long ago, our friend, and CounterPuncher, Susan Davis, a professor of communications at the University of Illinois in Urbana, described how at work one day, she'd gone to Amazon on her computer and ordered up a used copy of Estelle Friedman and John D'Emilio's breakthrough book "Intimate Matters: a History of Sexuality in America."

You can guess what the Amazon server did next. It brought to Susan's attention a long and most unchaste list of books about sex. But since she was writing a profile for CounterPunch of Gershon Legman, a folklorist who was also a sex researcher, she skimmed these lists to see if there's anything she could use. Up popped "A Mind of Its Own: A Cultural History of the Penis," with enthusiastic academic as well as popular reviews.

Susan added "A Mind of Its Own" to her shopping cart, browsed some more, placed her order, picked up her papers and went home. Her husband met at the door with an upset look at his face. "You've just had an urgent call from Capital One Visa. They want you call back RIGHT away!"

In Susan's ensuing conversation with Capital One Visa, a young woman inquired whether she had just placed several orders with "a bookstore, for items totaling about $45." Susan allowed that she had. What was the problem? "I've done much bigger volume in a single day than that." "Just a routine check," said the woman. "Is it the content of what I bought?" Susan wondered aloud. "Or is it that a few months ago I reported my Visa card lost and had to get a new one?" Neither, she was reassured, "just a routine check."

We live in the world of the routine check. Vary your shopping travel patterns, and the credit card company is programmed to start asking questions. A national ID card? We already carry one, known as a driver's license. Somewhere I still have an Vermont driver's license from the l970s. A bit of white pasteboard. No photo. I once offered it to an officer of the California Highway Patrol, who gazed at it bemusedly before throwing it on the ground. The cops have a battery of pretexts they use, so that they can stop any driver anywhere and run a check. Ask any black person, of any income bracket, how many times they get checked driving across, say, Los Angeles. Big Brother? Big Brother figured out laws in the 1980s, enthusiastically passed by a Democrat-controlled Congress, which laid the legal groundwork for imprisoning and disenfranchising black people in vast numbers. When it comes to social control, DARPA has nothing to offer in its quest for total transparency except total confusion, which remains our last best hope.

Alexander Cockburn is coeditor with Jeffrey St. Clair of the muckraking newsletter CounterPunch. To find out more about Alexander Cockburn and read features by other columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2002 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


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