NEW YORK – The attorney who won a high-profile federal court fight Monday with the National Security Agency over its invasive telephone call spy program says he was put under surveillance – and more – by the agency when he filed the case.
Larry Klayman, a WND commentary contributor and founder of Judicial Watch and, more recently, FreedomWatch, told WND that once his allegations that the federal government was violating the Constitution with its “watch-every-call” strategy hit the courts, he noticed problems with his email.
“People began receiving from me emails that I had never sent,” Klayman told WND, suggesting harassment over his work. “The government just wanted me to know they were watching me.”
Disrupting the Borg is expensive and time consuming!
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Big Brother is watching you.
This is a common problem for users of webmail accounts (yahoo, hotmail, aol, etc., and less frequently gmail). It probably has nothing to do with the NSA. He probably just had his webmail account hijacked, via one of the usual phishing scams.
Here’s the problem though. They’ve lied before about what they do, they’re doing very questionable things, and they self police their activity. How is it possible to ever find out if someone there did start screwing with this guy’s email? That’s the real issue. They have the means to do some very intrusive things and they are the ones who self regulate the use of that power.
I would say such intended (and blatantly childish–but also illegal) intimidation is a trademark of the Insane Left “community organizers” now (they probably thought of the harassment as a “grass roots show of support for the duly elected authority”…Mafia Dons, and other dictators, think the same way).
…or Dave Burton (above) could be right. I have gotten 2 or 3 e-mails, apparently from my sister, which my sister never sent. I even got 1 or 2 e-mails from myself (and I am not on yahoo, hotmail, etc.). But that explanation in the case reported here ignores the fact that it started when the man’s case, against the NSA, hit the courts.
Off topic: Appeal to Authority
As we all know, the science is settled. Shut up and listen to your superiors.
And one of the biggest peddlers of that authority line is Obama’s NPR. So it was a bit unsettling to hear a story this morning on NRP that bewailed American Education’s pitiful approach to science education. The main theme? “American students need to learn to question, test, explore.”
NPR’s PC arbiters of right and wrong preached that educators must “counter the idea that science is a set of known facts that students should sit back quietly and receive from on high.”
Are they completely oblivious to the irony?
http://www.npr.org/2013/12/17/251675532/to-make-science-real-kids-want-more-fun-and-fewer-facts
“We always tell them, ‘Don’t just believe me, try it for yourself, test it for yourself. It’s OK to be wrong. It’s OK to say what you’re thinking,’ ” she says.
For teacher Sam Haynor, the science workshop is about using imaginative experimentation to spark learning, and to counter the idea that science is a set of known facts that students should sit back quietly and receive from on high.
“The idea of this place is really to say that it’s constructive — that you have to build, you have to try,” Haynor says. “You have to experiment and fail and learn again. And that science really is just a quest to learn the truth.”
They are completely oblivious.
It is time for all of us to take action against big brother.
Did you think 1984 was a warning and missed the part about it being an instruction manual?