Ghosts in the Machine
Encounters with the NSA
By Charles Sullivan
12/01/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- Quite some time ago, I am not sure
exactly when, the thought police (National Security
Agency) clandestinely moved into my computer. It did so
without my permission and in violation of the law, not
to mention the Constitution. The prying eyes of
government are watching my every move, noting my every
keystroke and monitoring my every electronic
transmission and telephone conversation. They became
visible to me one day when I did a trace route from the
Windows command line of my home computer. Since then we
have been peering at each other with eyes that do not
blink.
I am astonished that so many manifestations of a police
state have managed to crowd into the narrow confines of
my hard drive. Disease thrives in dark places. According
to the NSA, I could pose a threat to national security
because I have been exposing the government’s
criminality. So, in order to save myself hardship
further down the road, I hereby confess to having a
previous encounter with the law. Sometime in the 1970s,
I think it was, I got a ticket for an expired parking
meter, which was my single recorded offense over nearly
fifty-three years of existence. It must be this nearly
forgotten incident that makes me a hardened criminal,
extremely dangerous; a menace to national security—a
terrorist threat.
Will my new status require me to man a sand bag bunker
in the front yard?
At least I am in good company with other suspected
terrorist organizations including librarians, that most
militant breed of non-conformists, Mennonites and
Quakers. Waging peace, waging justice, is apparently a
threat to national security in a criminal regime bent on
war and occupation. My office, like much of the Middle
East, is now an occupied territory. The news is like the
discovery of a malignant tumor. I could disappear as
completely as a wisp of smoke.
Over the years I have participated in anti-war
demonstrations and have committed acts of civil
disobedience; but I have never been charged with a crime
and have yet to be arrested for any offense. I rarely
even swat a bothersome fly. But I am being watched,
preemptively, in case I get a dangerous thought. These
appear to be the only kind of thoughts I have.
For all I know, the FBI, the CIA and the military may
even be hiding in the bushes outside my door. My small
office may be bugged with electronic listening devices
or miniature cameras, and my every movement monitored by
unmarked vans parked down the road, just out of sight.
The NSA has more than a hundred satellites in
synchronous earth orbit, at least one of them spying on
U.S. citizens like me. I almost feel like apologizing to
the tax payers for costing them so much money, but I do
not believe it is my fault.
While it troubles me that the NSA is lurking in my
computer, it does not deter me from exercising my
constitutional rights of free speech and, more
specifically, speaking truth to power. I am not paranoid
or afraid. I have not armed myself. I go on doing what
has to be done. I stand behind my words and have every
intention of continuing for as long as I draw breath.
Truth still matters and someone has to protect it.
I marvel that I, a man in my fifties of relatively small
physical stature, command so much respect from the most
powerful government ever assembled. To think that an
innocuous figure like me with a long history of
non-violence can have so many governmental forces
marshaled against me at tax payer expense is both
astonishing and appalling. I don’t know whether to be
indignant or flattered.
One naturally wonders why the government is watching me.
The government knows that I am not a terrorist and do
not pose a threat to national security. They fear me
because I have power and I exercise it frequently. Each
of you has similar power and I urge you to exercise it
freely. Truth is the enemy of corrupt power and that is
what the government fears. Shady government has made a
mockery of national security and rendered the concept
moot. The truth is that we have long been an occupied
nation.
And you, dear reader, may be complicit in my crimes by
reading these most dangerous of words and responding to
them with equally dangerous words of your own
manufacture. There are almost certainly ghosts in your
machines too and you cannot shake them out. But do not
allow them to deter you from doing what must be done.
Now is not the time to fall silent. It is a time, like
all times, to stand up and be counted; a time to keep
truth and hope alive in the hearts of humankind. More
than ever, it is a time to live the word, to be the
word.
Once again, as so many times throughout history, we bear
witness to who America’s so called law enforcement
agencies and the military are really working for: the
same ones it has always served—the ruling Plutocracy. As
always, high level law enforcement is on the side of the
oppressors, not the oppressed; the purveyors of
injustice, not the just. It has traditionally been on
the wrong side of morality, always against the people.
The Plutocracy cannot withstand the probing light of
truth; it requires the cover of darkness to do its
gruesome work. Its continued existence is dependent upon
deception and lies. If the people knew and understood
what is being done to them and their families, they
would not support this criminal cabal, and it would soon
collapse into the dust bins of history. No one would
serve in the military. That is why it must operate
behind closed doors, safely beyond the pale of public
scrutiny. That is why it feels compelled to spy upon its
own citizens and treat them like criminals.
The Plutocracy has every reason to be paranoid and
afraid. In the right hands truth can be a dangerous
thing.
Charles Sullivan is a photographer, free-lance writer
and social activist residing in West Virginia. He
welcomes your comments at
csullivan@phreego.com.
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