NO PLACE TO HIDE?

by Berit Kjos (http://www.crossroad.to)

Surveillance is becoming a normal part of life in the "free" nations of the world, and America is leading the way! Surveillance cameras like those I saw along streets in Australia some years ago are now posted in schools, hospitals, and workplaces in this country. But such visible signs of a watchful Big Brother pale in comparison to a greater threat. Beyond the sight of ordinary Americans lurk vast interconnected systems of private, state, federal and international databanks. Their fast-growing files of personal information about ordinary citizens are now shared, sold, distorted, and often used to monitor, manage, and manipulate lives in ways we can hardly conceive.

Long before The New York Times (July 20, 1998) announced President Clinton’s plans for "a giant medical database" with the "unique health identifier" needed to monitor people "from cradle to grave," these invasive databanks were eroding our freedom. In The Sale of Privacy, a 1992 book exposing this growing threat, Jeffrey Rothfeder tells the story of Ernest Trent who was severely injured on his job and received Workman’s Compensation.

This personal information was sent to a large databank accessible to potential employers -- but not to Trent. Needing a less physically demanding job, he began his search and faced nearly 200 rejections. His qualifications were excellent. Why, then, would no one hire him? Finally a friend with a small business checked his file in the databank and saw the problem. Though Trent had done nothing wrong, he had been "blacklisted".

Long-established private databanks may betray our trust and spread false or incriminating data. But even more alarming is the fast-growing union of federal databanks tracking American citizens. (See "A National Information System" at our website) In flagrant violation of the Privacy Act of 1974, the IRS, FBI, CIA and other federal agencies have been gathering and sharing electronic files on countless millions of Americans. Many who, like myself, question the growing power of our federal government are apparently included in this massive surveillance system.

"The numbers [of databanks] are staggering," wrote Rothfeder. He explained why:

"The 178 largest federal agencies and departments maintain nearly two thousand databanks, virtually all of them computerized and outsize, containing tens of millions of files each. Peppering these records are mind-boggling permutations of Social Security numbers, names and addresses, and financial, health, education, demographic, and occupational information—obtained from individuals themselves and from external sources such as state government files, the Census Bureau, the credit industry, and insurance companies…. Meanwhile, outsiders who have no legal right to know about these databanks or their contents are inexplicably given free access to them…."

Rothfeder pointed to the FBI’s National Crime Information Center (NCIC) as an example of the malignant expansion of these databanks. Keep in mind, this was written in 1992:

"At its inception in 1967, NCIC had about three hundred thousand records, mostly about people involved in robberies, auto theft, and stealing license plates. NCIC has grown nearly twentyfold since then. It currently maintains records on twenty million Americans in more than a dozen categories….

"The FBI wants to implement the most massive NCIC expansion to date. New proposals would turn the computerized criminal records index into a monstrously huge national databank with tentacles that reach into virtually every information storehouse in the government and the private sector….

"Not only does it provide access to records of criminals, it also supplies files on people with radical political leanings…. And because the database is such a wide-open, virtually unregulated forum of criminals and suspects, it has led to serious invasion of privacy based on mistaken identity and an unwillingness by many authorities to remove a name from NCIC once it’s there."

The missing link in these huge data collecting systems has been a fail-safe "identifier", a uniform computer code that would clearly identify every person and help standardize information in a massive new government-and-private tracking system. So, in 1996, our Republican Congress passed a law that called for such an identifier. Like most steps toward greater government control, this "personal identifier" was promoted under the noble banner of a public need: a coordinated health care system in which a job change would not cause the loss of insurance.

It was now up to the Clinton administration to "assign codes, as law requires, to create a giant medical database." According to The New York Times article titled "A Unique Personal Identifier", "every person would be given an electronic medical identification code." It would enable the vast system of intrusive government databanks not only to monitor us "from cradle to grave," but also assess compliance with today’s evolving global standards for politically correct values and behavior – a process essential to the sustainable development of human as well as natural resources. This "identifier" could use Social Security numbers or a new "composite number" based on personal history, or it could be a "’biomedical marker,’ like a thumb print or an electronic scan of the retina."

MENTAL HEALTH. Keep in mind, "health" includes mental health. And the political and education leaders who intend to mold human resources for the 21st century community are more interested in your mental health than in your physical health. (See "Clinton’s War on Hate Bans Christian Values" and "Local Agenda 21" at <http://www.crossroad.to>)

This massive identification and tracking system would be implemented by Secretary Donna Shalala and her Department of Health and Human Services. Its health guidelines -- including mental health standards -- match those established by the World Health Organization (WHO) half a century ago.

Psychiatrist Brock Chisholm, former chief of the WHO, summarized these international guidelines back in 1946. Notice his hostility toward biblical absolutes and values:

"The responsibility for charting the necessary changes in human behavior rests clearly on the sciences working in that field. Psychologists, psychiatrists, sociologists, economists, and politicians must face this responsibility….

"Prejudice, isolationism, the ability emotionally and uncritically to believe unreasonable things.… They are all well known and recognized neurotic symptoms…. When we see neurotic patients showing these same reactions in their private affairs we may also throw up our hand and say "human nature".... or we may go to work to try to help the person in trouble to grow up over again more successfully than his parents were able to do….

"Man's freedom to observe and to think freely... has been destroyed or crippled by local certainties, by gods of local moralities, of local loyalty, of personal salvation... frequently masquerading as love.…

"The re-interpretation and eventual eradication of the concept of right and wrong which has been the basis of child training... these are the belated objectives of practically all effective psychotherapy. If the race is to be freed from its crippling burden of good and evil, it must be psychiatrists who take the original responsibility. ...

"Can such a program of re-education or of a new kind of education be charted?"

Chisholm’s "re-education" program was key to changing attitudes of political prisoners in Communist nations for more than four decades. In America today, it’s the heart of the deceptive process used to prepare human resources for the "sustainable communities" outlined by the President’s Council on Sustainable Development. Everyone must embrace the beliefs and values needed for global unity and compliance with the national-international management described in its report, Sustainable America.

The attitudinal and behavioral changes Dr. Chisholm recommends have become the primary goals of UNESCO’s program for "lifelong learning", which is being implemented in our American schools through Goals 2000 and our national and state school-to-work laws. To finish the transformation according to the blueprint for Total Quality Management, every human resource must be assessed and monitored for compliance. Those who don’t measure up must be remediated, i.e. re-educated. The rate of change must be measured. A reliable personal identifier is essential to an efficient, standardized, and inclusive TQM monitoring system.

The national guidelines for mental health go far beyond the traditional meaning of mental illness. Through the American Cancer Society, our Department of Health and Human Services provides national health standards that call for the same politically correct attitudes and group thinking students must learn before they can earn their work certificates and win entrance to college and good jobs.

A NATIONAL ID. Compliance with the new standards will be rewarded, and the proposed National ID cards will show who conforms. The two alarming proposals – a "unique identifier" and a National ID – seem made for each other.

U.S. Congressman Ron Paul saw the danger. On September 18, 1998, he sent an urgent warning to his colleagues, asking that "language forbidding the expenditure of funds to implement either Section 656 of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 and Section 1173 (b) of the Social Security Act…. be included in any omnibus budget considered by Congress this year." Then he summarized the threat to American freedom:

"Unless Congress acts to stop this scheme, no American will be able to get a job; open a bank account; apply for Social Security or Medicare; exercise their Second Amendment rights; or even take an airplane flight unless they produce their federally-approved state drivers' license….

"These provisions represent a major power-grab by the federal government and a major threat to liberty. As the law stands now, the federal government will have the ability to inappropriately monitor the movements and transactions of every citizen. History shows that when government gains the power to monitor the actions of the people, it eventually uses that power to impose totalitarian controls on them.

"The Clinton administration has even come out in favor of allowing law enforcement officials access to health care information, in complete disregard of the fifth amendment….

"Some claim that the problems can be fixed by passing "privacy protection" legislation. However, legislative attempts to protect the privacy of information collected by, or at the command, of government officials are likely to be ineffective at protecting citizens from the prying eyes of government officials.

"….the only effective way to protect privacy is to forbid the government from forcing citizens to accept a national identifier."

PERSECUTION. Surveillance is nothing new. But the last century has revolutionized the old ways of identifying and monitoring citizens, especially those who might resist a politically correct ideology. Remember the first three decades of the Soviet Union. Its pioneering strategies for molding the minds of its people, monitoring compliance, and punishing non-compliance modeled government control to other totalitarian regimes around the world. Soon China, North Korea, and other Communist nations followed suit.

So did Nazi Germany. According to a display in the Holocaust Museum in Washington DC, "the Gestapo gathered much of its information from private citizens… even children were taught to report on their parents. The Gestapo’s main sources, however, were Nazi party officials and SA men [the Sturm Abteilungen or storm troopers that preceded the SS] who constantly monitored the activities of all citizens."

What surprises me is the reluctance of Americans to believe that it could happen here. When it does, there will be no place to hide – other than in Jesus Christ. But that’s no small promise. Our Lord – the mighty King of heaven and earth – has promised to be our Shepherd, our Provider, our Peace, and our Hiding Place. David knew it well, therefore he could sing with joyful confidence:

"The LORD is my light and my salvation;
Whom shall I fear?
The LORD is the strength of my life;
Of whom shall I be afraid?
…Though an army may encamp against me,
My heart shall not fear;
Though war should rise against me,
In this I will be confident….
For in the time of trouble
He shall hide me in His pavilion;
In the secret place of His tabernacle
He shall hide me….
Therefore… I will sing praises to the LORD."
(Psalm 27:1-6)

 

For practical information about the strategies used to instill the new global attitudes, values, and group thinking, visit our web site <http://www.crossroad.to>.

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