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Jennifer Stoddart, the Privacy Commissioner of Canada, has
given her own Valentine to Canadian citizens: a
48-page report warning them that the RCMP (Canada's national
police force) is keeping thousands of files on regular citizens
in secret databases which cannot be seen by the accused. The
news is perhaps unsurprising, given that the
McDonald Commission reported in 1981 that the RCMP had been
involved in all manner of illegal activity in their attempts to
spy on Canadian citizens, including breaking into citizens'
homes without warrants and even conducting electronic
surveillance of a member of Parliament.
One of the many disturbing facets of Stoddart's report are
the examples she cites of information for these secret files
coming from citizen informants. In one case a man was put into
the secret database because a resident of his daughter's school
neighborhood saw him entering a rooming house and—believing
drugs were involved—called the police. The police investigation
concluded that the man had only stepped out of his car to have a
cigarette, but the file was still in the national security
databank seven years later.
Another incident cited in the Stoddart report involved a
neighbour who saw two men carrying "something that resembled a
large drum, wrapped in canvas" into their house. Police were
called to investigate but found nothing resembling the reported
item, yet the data was still sitting in a top secret databank
five years later. As Stoddart points out in the
CBC story on the report, this is potentially disastrous for
the individuals named in the files, because it "could
potentially affect someone trying to obtain an employment
security clearance, or impede an individual's ability to cross
the border."
This report follows on the heels of
news from London that a man was arrested, fingerprinted and
had his DNA stored in the
British DNA database because a passer-by mistook his mp3
player for a gun.
What these seemingly disparate reports point to is a growing
movement to turn the citizens of so-called free, democratic
nations into a self-regulating secret police, saving the
government the hassle of keeping tabs on everyone by delegating
the duty to an unwitting public duped by a
phoney war on terror. That this is a part of a concerted
effort on the part of the authorities to inculcate paranoia in
the public is suggested by this ridiculous police training video
from Michigan, teaching people how to be good informants: report
on everyone, everywhere for doing anything.
What this video and these recent news items highlight is a
harmonized effort to turn the myth of the war on terror around
and aim its machinery at the general public. The controlled
corporate media has played along by dutifully regurgitating
government propaganda that
Al-Qaeda
has recruited thousands of homegrown terrorists. Now that we
know anyone, anywhere, at any time is potentially a terrorist,
it is our civic duty to report everything we see to the police.
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The historical parallels to the Stasi should be obvious. The
Stasi were the dreaded secret police of East Germany, who
had
one out of every seven citizens of the country working for
them as secret informants. What is perhaps most surprising is
that
the US Department of Homeland Security hired the ex-Stasi chief
and engineer of the Stasi police state as a consultant in 2004,
shortly before they brought in a program known as
Highway Watch, which has spent millions of dollars teaching
tens of thousands of long distance truckers how to spot
terrorists on the road. The hiring of the ex-chief of the Stasi
to consult for Homeland Security also coincided with a
2004 White House push to recruit over 15,000 citizen informants
to help counterterrorism investigations...and all this effort
despite the fact that
terrorist-related cases account for less than 0.01 percent of
all Homeland Security investigations. Markus Wolf (now
deceased) and his Stasi shadow loom large over the Homeland
Security Department he helped shape.
Look for the number of false accusations from anonymous
citizen informants to increase under the watchful eye of these
government paranoia programs. |