"You shouldn't overestimate the I.Q. of crooks."
...which is also apparently their view of the American public.
WE ARE NOW AT AN HISTORICAL CROSSROAD ON THE ENCRYPTION ISSUE.
IF PUBLIC POLICY MAKERS ACT WISELY, THE SAFETY OF ALL AMERICANS WILL
BE ENHANCED FOR DECADES TO COME.
[1984 Newspeak:] BUT IF NARROW INTERESTS PREVAIL, LAW ENFORCEMENT WILL
BE UNABLE TO PROVIDE THE LEVEL OF PROTECTION THAT PEOPLE IN A
DEMOCRACY
PROPERLY EXPECT AND DESERVE. ANY SOLUTION THAT IGNORES THE PUBLIC
SAFETY
AND NATIONAL SECURITY CONCERNS RISK GRAVE HARM TO BOTH.
And what was a critical public safety and national security
item the FBI insisted on in the first version of CALEA?
They wanted all cellular phones to continually monitor
the location of the owner, EVEN WHEN NOT IN USE.
Every cellular phone would become a location
tracking monitor for the government.
And why would this be a critical public safety and national security item?
Because:
The NSA/FBI are raving rabid frothing-at-the-mouth lying looneys.
I hope you understand that by now.
* "Above the Law", by David Burnham, ISBN 0-684-80699-1, 1996
*
* A few months after his appointment as the new director of the Federal
* Bureau of Investigation, Louis J. Freeh delivered a speech at the
National
* Press Club in Wa****ngton.
*
* More than two hundred Wa****ngton-based re****ters, congressional
staffers
* and interested lobbyists had come, and because the speech was carried
by
* C-Span, National Public Radio and the Global Internet Computer
Network,
* and would be the basis for articles in newspapers all over the United
* States, Freeh was also delivering his message to a much larger
national
* and international audience.
*
* "The people of this country are fed up with crime," Freeh declared.
"The
* media re****t it, the statistics sup****t it, the polls prove it."
*
* To drive home his point and authenticate the national menace, Freeh
said,
*


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