http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=14831
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Homeland Security Changes America
By Andrew Lam, Pacific News Service December 20, 2002
I first came to America at the age of 11, at the end of the
Vietnam war. Mr. Gonzalez, my neighbor in San Francisco's
working-class Mission district, taught me about freedom of
speech. "In America, you don't have to look over your
shoulder when you speak," he said proudly. "And you can damn
well say whatever you want."
Those, alas, were the good old years.
Were he alive today, Mr. Gonzalez, who spoke his mind, might
say something very different: "Be careful what you say,
kids. In America, the damn walls have ears and the sky has
eyes." And given the era of government surveillance post
9-11, who could disagree?
Three of many examples of how your tongue can get you in
trouble with Uncle Sam:
Charlotte Wu, a sophomore at the University of California,
Berkeley, mentioned the word "bomb" and "secret" several
times on the phone in her dorm. A video-game wizard, she was
telling her friend how to get to another game level. Two
hours later, police came to interrogate her and her
roommates.
Wu still doesn't know how it happened. Did someone overhear
her conversation and tell the police, or was her phone
wiretapped? Wu says now she is careful about what she says
on the phone and how she behaves.
Barry Reingold, a retired telephone company worker, had an
argument with a few people at his fitness club in San
Francisco last year. Reingold said President Bush was a
bigger fool "than bin Laden." A few days later, FBI agents
came to his apartment and interrogated him for having
discussed Bush and bin Laden in public. He was never
charged, but he remains angry and spooked.
Three Arab American medical students were arrested on
their way to Miami last September. A woman at a Shoney's
restaurant claimed she overheard them laughing about 9-11
and mentioning the word "bomb." The three were held
handcuffed for 17 hours and then released. They claim they
never mentioned the word bomb.
In the wake of the destruction of the Twin Towers in New
York, the dust and debris seem to have blanketed the entire
country. The USA Patriot Act gave the government expanded
powers to invade citizens' privacy and imprison them without
due process. The newly installed Homeland Security
Department has encouraged and condoned domestic spying.
Anyone and everyone can be monitored.
Most citizens may not be aware of this ominous shift, but
those who live within the sweeping reach of government
dragnets can tell them that life is not the same in America.
People in Muslim communities don't mention certain words on
the phone, out of fear it might trigger investigation. Arab
Americans are inventing roundabout ways to refer to their
own children or relatives with certain common names like
Osama or Saddam.
In my own community, far from the turmoil and passion of the
Middle East and South Asia, I nevertheless also hear a
prudent whisper. It's the kind that sends chills down my
spine. A cousin, once a boat person who escaped communist
Vietnam, was looking at my library card the other day, when
he said, "They know."
"Know what?" I asked.
"With the new technology, the government can tell what books
you are checking out of the library, what you buy," he said.
"Be careful. They know. Don't check out books with titles
like radiation, anthrax, or chemical weapons or Jihad."
This is the same man who said, during the high-tech boom,
that the information revolution was changing the world for
the better and giving equal footing to all. Today, laid off
from a software engineering job, he sees that the technology
he admired so much has become part of an empire's war
machine.
Abroad, drones and satellites seek out enemies, and at home,
the unblinking electronic eye of homeland security spies on
immigrants and soon, perhaps, everyone else. My cousin's
paranoia reminded me of the kind of fear we lived with under
the police state of Vietnam during the Cold War. One checks
one's tongue and fears what the neighbors might report to
the authorities. One wrong word can bring calamity down on
yourself and your family.
A friend reckons the whole country is becoming a kind of
"mega-airport," where you watch your language, your
neighbor's briefcase and your neighbor and your neighbor
does the same. Meanwhile, security cameras watch everyone.
If this is true, then it is only tolerable as long as we
know it will not last, that we are passengers to some
hopeful and brighter destination. But if we are not if
this is what life is going to be like from now on, or if it
is going to get worse it should offend any American.
Andrew Lam is the Associate Editor at Pacific News Service
and a recent Knight Fellow at Stanford University.