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excerpted from: Whole Number 87 - August 1997
In Chinese philosophy, two principles, one negative and dark (yin), and one positive and bright (yang), interact to influence the destinies of creatures and things. The computer is certainly not immune to these forces that we Americans sometimes refer to as a double-edged sword. The unique technology of the computer enables it be used not only to improve the quality of life and our standard of living, but as a very effective tool that can be used by government to oppress and terrorize us into submission. On the one hand computers enable this author to write with unparalleled speed, accuracy and convenience. The computer enables me to connect to the internet and read what someone in England or Russia may have written 10 minutes ago, instead of buying a magazine and reading the same article months after it was written. Because of the computer I am able to send electronic mail to someone who may be half-way around the world and it will be delivered to them in a matter of minutes, when it would normally take government postal services a number of days or even weeks to do the same thing. And of course, point-of-sale or point-of-shipment systems allow businesses to be more efficient by immediately knowing what they are selling for inventory or accounting purposes. But on the other hand, the inherent aspect of the computer which allows for this inexpensive acquisition, processing, storage and retrieval of information is why government in the United States has a greater ability to control people than any other government has had in the history of the world. And government isn't the only culprit in using the computer to compile information on us. Private industry doesn't just use the power of the computer to make sure you don't run out of soap and Jell-O at your local market, but also to track your monetary status and your buying and spending patterns to know what advertising mailer to send you next. It is disturbing that few of these invasions of privacy are explicitly consensual. The mere act of living in our society makes one's every movement subject to being recorded and catalogued by someone somewhere for future reference. The computerization of America provides dramatic evidence of perhaps the greatest attitudinal shift that has occurred in any society in history. In just several generations, the concept of personal privacy has gone from being a valued ideal, to one where anyone who desires privacy today is almost immediately considered to be a suspicious person. A television documentary shown a couple of years ago demonstrated how much can be learned about any one of us in a matter of hours. A reporter wrote down the license plate number of a car picked at random driving on the freeway. Within twenty four hours the reporter had found the name of the woman driving the car, as well as the name of her husband and children. He had also found out where she lives, works, what bank she uses and how much money she makes at her job. He also learned what college she'd graduated from and how much is owed on her family's house, as well as much more. All of this information was obtained from readily available public computer databases - not secret government files. Computers are certainly not alone in this duality of use, because literally every creation of the human mind can be used for purposes of enhancing life or destroying it. For example, picks and shovels can be used to dig a basement, but they are very labor intensive. By contrast, explosives are very labor efficient. In less time, a couple of people with dynamite can duplicate the chaos and destruction that it would take hundreds or thousands of people swinging picks and shovels to do. And of course, nuclear weapons are the ultimate expression of this contrast in efficient destruction versus inefficient destruction. By the same token, because the computer can be deployed in a relatively efficient way, it is much more invasive of people's privacy than, for example, the paper file method that was used in Nazi Germany to keep track of personal information about people. Would it have been possible to hide large numbers of people in attics or cellars for years if the Nazis had the computer technology that is available to the U.S. government today? It is highly unlikely considering that computers monitor the water, electricity, and gas used at houses, and it is not uncommon for utility companies to notify law enforcement agencies of abnormal usage. Additionally, the government has virtually unbridled access to all your bank, credit card, and investment accounts as well as such things as your phone records. There are so many computerized red flags that could be set off that it would be extraordinarily difficult to conceal people in the United States the way they were in Nazi-occupied countries during World War II. Tyrants of the past would be green with envy for the way in which computers facilitate the monitoring of almost our every move. In 1981, I told a skeptical friend that the computer was the greatest threat to freedom ever created. The computer destroys privacy, and without privacy, what freedom is there except in one's mind? George Orwell drove this point home with a sledge hammer in his book "1984." Id like to review just a few of the news items I've seen in the past few months for a reality check on how valid my observation of 15 years ago was.
Under the "Act" the government would have the capability of simultaneously monitoring 1% of the total engineered telephone capacity for metropolitan areas in the United States! What this means is that at certain times of low phone usage (such as from midnight to 6 A.M.), the government would have the capability to monitor literally every phone conversation in the United States at the same time! This could be done in the same way that the NSA now monitors calls into and out of the United States. Computer equipment is set to "listen" for key words and when these key words are used in a conversation, recording equipment is activated. And who would be allowed to engage in this snooping To quote from the article: "CALEA" says "government ... means the government of the United States and any agency or instrumentality thereof,... and any State or political subdivision thereof authorized by law to conduct electronic surveillance.... This wiretap system ain't just for elite federal troops. It's for local cops (LAPD comes to mind), rural constables, politicized sheriffs, zealous prosecutors and all local and state agencies with any electronic surveillance authority-as well as the IRS, INS, ATF, FBI, CIA, DIA and ... DEA. Hell, even most park rangers could use it legally!"
Taken as a whole, these few news items are almost mind-numbing and they are only the tip of the iceberg. It is sobering to consider that the government couldn't be doing any of these things without the aid of the computer. My worst fears and more have already been realized. The ability of the computer to process vast amounts of information is every petty bureaucrat's and would-be ruler's dream come true. However, the government's exploitation of computer technology doesn't mean there is reason for unnecessary despair. Although there will always be people who work to enslave the body, mind, and soul of those who seek to carry forth the uniqueness of the human spirit, the "spark of life' - that desire for human freedom and individuality - is difficult to extinguish. SPARTACUS, the book by Howard Fast (upon which the movie was based), illustrates that even in imperial Rome, men who were born into slavery (and whose ancestors had been slaves for several generations) still had the unquenchable desire to be free of the shackles of tyranny. The slave revolts, designated by historians as the Servile Wars, continued for over a hundred years. The governments of the world may use the computer (or even some new invention or technology) to monitor, track, and otherwise attempt to suppress the "fire of human individuality." But they are doomed to fail as long as that fire burns within at least one man and one woman who wittingly or unwittingly pass it along to their offspring.
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