Safire...Whistle Blowing or Paranoid Re: Homeland Security Legislation?

Inspired by this thread, I made it a point to read Bill Safire’s opinion piece in the Gray Lady. (As quoted here by the SF Indy).

If true, this is worse than Big Brother, in fact it’s chilling.

Is William Safire’s reading of the language in The Homeland Security Bill a contrived stretch and exersize in paranoia…or has the forth estate once again dropped the ball in reporting the details of the HSB?

In Safire’s opinion, there’s a provision in the bill that sets-up a centalized, database in the DOD…that would possibly be administered by William Poindexter of Iran-Contra fame.

What would be stored in the Pentagon database?[ol][li]Credit card purchases[]Your magazine subscriptions[]Your prescriptions[]Web sites visited[]Your e-mail[]Your academic grades[]Your banking transactions[]Booked Vacations, and []Every event you attend[/ol][/li]
When asked about Mr. Safire’s concerns yesterday in a press briefing, White House spokesman Scott McClellan said

In a follow up asking if W supports total information awareness through data mining the answer was evasive at best…

That just doesn’t cut it. This is something no American should stand for…no matter how fearful they are about security.

Who put this language in the bill, the House or the Senate or liasons at the White House?

The House Bill says the Secretary shall

as well as the Under for Information Analysis (creepy title) shall

But no where in the bill is the data Mr. Safire enumerated listed.

My guess is his interpretation is alarmist.

I don’t think 1 judge on the Supreme Court, be they right or left wing, would allow such an infringemnent on personal freedoms & liberties for 2 minutes before striking it down…but maybe I’m just an optimist.

worry less about the potential for your “civil liberties” to be violated & instead worry more about ppl commiting crimes of oppurtunity.

My biggest reason to doubt Safire’s opinion is this sentence:

First of all, Safire started his sentence with a conjunction. That leads me to suspect an imposter. :smiley:
But more importantly, this works out to a database set up at a cost of $.66 per person in the database. I’ve never developed a database, but I suspect that it would cost a lot more than 66 cents to collect and collate all the data floating out there about me and my habits and purchases.

Sua

Total Information Awareness (TIA) System
:frowning: :mad: