NSA
Whistleblower Details How The NSA Has Spied On All US Citizens Since
9/11
24
August, 2012
National
Security Agency whistleblower William Binney explains how the
secretive agency run its pervasive domestic spying apparatus in a new
piece by Laura Poitras in The New
York TImes.
Binney—one
of the best mathematicians and code breakers in NSA history—worked
for the Defense Department's foreign signals intelligence agency for
32 years before resigning in late 2001 because he "could
not stay after the
NSA began purposefully violating the Constitution."
In
a short video called "The
Program,"
Binney explains how the agency took part of one of the programs he
built and started using it to spy on
virtually every U.S. citizen without
warrants under the code-name Stellar Wind.
Binney
details how the top-secret
surveillance program,
the scope of which has never been made public, can track electronic
activities—phone calls, emails, banking and travel records, social
media—and map them to collect "all the attributes that any
individual has" in every type of activity and build a profile
based on that data.
"So
that now I can pull your entire life together from all those domains
and map it out and show
your entire life over time,"
Binney says
.
The 8-minute
video,
adapted from an ongoing project by Poitras that is to be released in
2013, has footage of the construction of the NSA's $2
billion data storage facility in Bluffdale, Utah,
which Binney says "has the capacity to store 100 years worth of
the world's electronic communications."
The
purpose of the program, according to Binney, is "to be able to
monitor what people are doing" and who they are doing it with.
"The
danger here is that we fall into a totalitarian state,"
Binney says. "This is something the KGB, the Stasi or the
Gestapo would have loved to have had."
Poitras,
who has been detained
and questioned more than 40 times at
U.S. airports, has been working on a trilogy
of films about
post-9/11 America.
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