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Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this forumWhat Do Patriarchy and Surveillance Have in Common? Ask Women.
What Do Patriarchy and Surveillance Have in Common? Ask Women.
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If you find this behavior infuriating and demoralizing, you should also be outraged about the most flagrant starers of all; intelligence agencies such as the National Security Agency (NSA) and its frequent collaborator, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Agencies such as these possess vast powers to gather highly personal information without consent or a judges sign-offincluding under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, a massive warrantless authority that the agencies are currently trying to convince Congress to renew, and the even more shadowy and expansive Executive Order 12333.
Laws such as these entitle officials to open your personal life to the unblinking eye of the state, collecting extremely sensitive information including, for example, communications about your religious and political beliefs, sexuality, family relationships, and health history. The key word here is entitled, since you have no control over this, and judges largely dont either. Moreover, the agencies believe they have no obligation to tell you that youve been a victim of intelligence surveillance (except in a handful of criminal cases meeting criteria that have never been fully disclosed). One problem with constant or invasive monitoring, as many women would likely attest, is that the prospect of being watched makes a person change her behavior. She may avoid saying things she wants to say, go where she wants to go, and take part in certain activities, and this is disempowering. Implicitly, unwelcome and overbearing attention is also a kind of threata threat that it will escalate into something worse. Its not a coincidence that monitoring of communications, including through phone or internet surveillance, is a tool of control wielded by perpetrators of domestic violence.
Of course, domestic violence and similar abuses are much more overt and palpable than government surveillance. However, there are similarities in the ways our knowledge that the government might be watching that discourage us from visiting potentially controversial websites, messaging friends or relatives who have experienced problems with law enforcement or who hold unpopular views, or liking certain social media posts. It makes us think twice before discussing important informationsuch as problems with addictionwith our doctors or religious advisers via e-mail, and it may very well prompt us to not participate in a protest. Moreover, as a forthcoming Human Rights Watch report will point out, evidence gathered through secret surveillance may subject people to unfair imprisonment, worsening an already inequitable criminal justice system.
As people in the United States take part in a widespread reckoning with the patriarchal power imbalances that facilitate gender-related abuse, it is time to also think about the imbalances between the well-funded, secretive, male-dominated intelligence agencies versus the rest of us. Everyone should be paying attention to the looming renewal of massive, intrusive spying under Section 702 and the gigantic data collection the NSA has been conducting under Executive Order 12333. When were confronted with the NSAs and the FBIs arguments that Congress should allow them to engage in sweeping, and largely unaccountable activities under these or any other laws, our answerand our message to our representativesshould be the same: The agencies are not entitled! Get a warrant!
http://womensenews.org/2017/12/what-do-patriarchy-and-surveillance-have-in-common-ask-women/
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