from
NYTimes Website a 32-year veteran of the National Security Agency who helped design a top-secret program he says
is broadly collecting Americans’ personal data.
It took me a few days to work up the nerve to phone William Binney.
As someone already a “target" of the United States government, I found it difficult not to worry about the chain of unintended consequences I might unleash by calling Mr. Binney, a 32-year veteran of the NSA (National Security Agency) turned whistle-blower.
He picked up. I nervously explained I was a documentary filmmaker and wanted to speak to him.
To my surprise he replied:
Two weeks later, driving past the headquarters of the NSA in Maryland, outside Washington, Mr. Binney described details about Stellar Wind, the N.S.A.’s top-secret domestic spying program begun after 9/11, which was so controversial that it nearly caused top Justice Department officials to resign in protest, in 2004.
In this Op-Doc, Mr. Binney explains how the program he created for foreign intelligence gathering was turned inward on this country.
He resigned over this in 2001 and began speaking out publicly in the last year. He is among a group of NSA whistle-blowers, including Thomas A. Drake, who have each risked everything - their freedom, livelihoods and personal relationships - to warn Americans about the dangers of NSA domestic spying.
To those who understand state surveillance as an abstraction, I will try to describe a little about how it has affected me. The United States apparently placed me on a "watch-list” in 2006 after I completed a film about the Iraq war.
I have been detained at the border more than 40 times.
Once, in 2011, when I was stopped at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York and asserted my First Amendment right not to answer questions about my work, the border agent replied,
As a filmmaker and journalist entrusted to protect the people who share information with me, it is becoming increasingly difficult for me to work in the United States.
Although I take every effort to secure my material, I know the NSA has technical abilities that are nearly impossible to defend against if you are targeted.
The 2008 amendments to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which oversees the NSA activities, are up for renewal in December.
Two members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Senators Ron Wyden of Oregon and Mark Udall of Colorado, both Democrats, are trying to revise the amendments to insure greater privacy protections.
They have been warning about "secret interpretations" of laws and backdoor “loopholes” that allow the government to collect our private communications. Thirteen senators have signed a letter expressing concern about a “loophole” in the law that permits the collection of United States data.
The A.C.L.U. and other groups have also challenged the constitutionality of the law, and the Supreme Court will hear arguments in that case on Oct. 29.
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