Posted on 07/18/2002 11:21:23 AM PDT by chunjay
Is operation TIPS part of a plan to defend our homelandor destroy it?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "There ought to be limits to freedom." George W. Bush, May 21, 1999 "I tell you, freedom and human rights in America are doomed. The U.S. government will lead the American people inand the West in generalinto an unbearable hell and a choking life." Osama bin Laden, Oct. 21, 2001
When George W. Bush made his astonishing remark about limiting freedom, he was referring to his desire to shut down a parody website that had been giving him grief. But with every new proposal put forth by the Bush administration since Sept. 11 to "protect" America from the specter of another terrorist attack, this 43rd president of the United States seems to be doing everything within his powers to fulfill Osama bin Ladens dire prediction. And the latest assault on our privacy and freedoms, the formation of civilian spy teams, may accomplish that very thing.
Part of a new volunteer Citizen Corps program proposed by President Bush and administered by the U.S. Department of Justice, Operation TIPS (Terrorism Information and Prevention System) attempts to involve Americans in safeguarding homeland security. According to the government website for the program, TIPS, to be launched in August 2002, will provide "millions of American truckers, letter carriers, train conductors, ship captains, utility employees," who "in the daily course of their work, are in a unique position to serve as extra eyes and ears for law enforcement" with "a formal way to report suspicious terrorist activity."
What this means for the average citizen is that whatever you read, eat or doin the privacy of your home or out in publicwill now be suspect in the eyes of your cable repairman, postal carrier, meter man or others who, by way of the services they provide, will have access to your home. So youd better hide that Tom Clancy novel, disassemble that transistor radio and be nice to the guy installing your TVbecause the eyes of Big Brother will soon be watching your every move.
With the installation of this citizen surveillance program, the Fourth Amendment, which has already taken quite a beating in the past several months from the Supreme Court and a variety of anti-terrorism initiatives, will take another hit. After all, what good are warrants and bans against illegal searches and seizures by law enforcement agencies if the government can just have your cleaning lady or telephone repairman snoop around for incriminating information?
And what will happen if these people actually find something possibly incriminating? According to the skeletal information provided on the Citizen Corps site, a toll-free number will connect informants directly to a hotline, which will route calls to the proper law enforcement agency when appropriate. Those unfortunate enough to raise suspicion might find themselves stuck forevermore in a computer database for individuals engaging in possible terrorist activity.
Once upon a time, America was a place where a person was innocent until proven guilty. But under the Bush plan for our country, every American citizen is a suspect until certifiable proof can be foundthrough any means, fair or foulthat they are, in fact, involved in terrorist activity. And perhaps that is appropriate in a land common sense has gone the way of the Dodo bird.
By directing Americans to conduct illegal searchessearches the police would not have the authority to conduct without a warranton their fellow Americans, the U.S. government is essentially turning the average citizen into an extension of the thought police. And suddenly, George Orwells futuristic vision of Nineteen Eighty-Four doesnt seem so farfetched, particularly if you substitute Orwells "family" for Bushs letter carrier, utility worker or cable guy:
The family could not actually be abolished and, indeed, people were encouraged to be fond of their children in almost the old-fashioned way. The children, on the other hand, were systematically turned against their parents and taught to spy on them and report their deviation. The family had become in effect an extension of the Thought Police. It was a device by means of which everyone could be surrounded night and day by informers who knew him immediately. It seems as if weve come full circle, reverting back to the Cold War tactics and paranoia of the 1950s, when civil liberties was secondary to security.
"So whats the big deal?" one reporter asked me. "Wouldnt such a programeven if it is a violation of our rightsbe worth it if we could prevent even one terrorist attack?" It is, as Benjamin Franklin said more than 200 years ago: "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
If our law enforcement agencies could be trusted to do their jobs effectively and efficiently, there would be no need for a program that, once implemented, can only be a bureaucratic and legal nightmare.
Although we need to be concerned about terrorist threats from outside our borders, we must also be mindful that our own government could be posing a similar threat. With every draconian piece of legislation crafted by Bushs henchmen to limit the rights of the American people, President Bush comes ever closer to carrying out bin Ladens agenda to destroy Americanot so much its landmarks and government but our concepts of freedom and justice.
And in the end, the laughs on us, because bin Laden doesnt have to lift a finger to ensure that Americas freedoms are doomed. President Bush is managing it perfectly from the Oval Office, and the American people are falling for it hook, line and sinker.
T. I. P. S.
= Towards
Implementing a
Police
State
Wrong. The Dems don't want volunteers (like you and me) to do it. They want to greatly expand government by hiring countless new law enforcers, civil servants, and bureaucrats to man this program.
Our founding fathers forged an incredible set of chains to bind this evil inclination.
They have held pretty well up to now, but I fear that is all coming to an end.
The inmates are running the asylum and ir doesn't look good.
Looks like he wants an easier job.
Given the fact that this activity reporting is so widespread, I am always amazed at those that see threats in a rinky-dink program like TIPS.
The threat is in the organization.
Very true. Now, under the Patriot Act, merely the suspician of wrong-doing is enough for someone to be jailed indefinately - no trial, no nothing.
The key to understanding the American system is to imagine that you have the power to make nearly any law you want. But your worst enemy will be the one to enforce it. ~~ Rick Cook
Do you find TIPS, as described by the Wash Times article, to be more threatening than the TIPS described at the official web page?
FWIW, it would appear that the TIPS program is dead before it started. All the individual organized componants will continue. Unorganized individuals will still have the anonymous toll free numbers to call.
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