
“The potential of the surveillance state goes way beyond anything in George Orwell's 1984, (said Guardian Editor) Alan Rusbridger . ‘Orwell could never have imagined this concept of scooping up everything all the time’. The NSA stories were ‘clearly’ not about totalitarianism, but an infrastructure had been created that could be dangerous if it fell into the wrong hands. ‘In history, all the precedents are unhappy. The ability of these big agencies to keep entire populations under a system of monitoring and surveillance, is astonishing.’”
“George Orwell’s classic dystopian novel 1984 described a fictitious totalitarian society control(ing its) population through invasive surveillance. Today, as the Snowden documents make clear, it is the NSA that keeps track of phone calls, monitors communications, and analyzes people’s thoughts through data mining of Google searches and other online activity. Of course the US is not a totalitarian society. Still, the US intelligence agencies also seem to have adopted Orwell’s idea of doublethink—`to be conscious of complete truthfulness,’ he wrote, `while telling carefully constructed lies.’”
— “They Know Much More Than You Think”, James Bamford, N.Y. Review of Books, August 15, 2013
Below our fifth and final segment on what must be done to end the U.S. Executive Branch’s present creation of a Surveillance State and infrastructure for a future Police State. Because surveillance is largely invisible, many economically comfortable journalists remain complacent, and so many other issues – Syria, a government shutdown, gun control, climate change, economic inequality, food stamp cuts, Iran, etc. etc. – call for our attention, the enormity and unprecedented nature of the Executive Branch’s assault on democracy itself has not yet sunk in for many. It is those closest to the story, like Alan Rusbridger and NSA expert James Bamford, who understand the full implications of the Orwellian threat to everything in which we believe.
Continue reading “John Steiner: From Sanity Central on NSA and the Surveillance State”






Note: A copy of Prachatai’s recent disclosure 
