In case you were wondering, someone is watching you

The FBI now employs 36,000 people and focuses ever more on dissenters. The CIA, supposedly prohibited from spying domestically, now stations agents in local police departments. Homeland Security may legally confiscate your computer and smart phone at the airport, copy their contents and eventually give them back. Civilian agencies have drones to follow you.And that’s just the beginning.The FBI can secretly demand your financial records from your accountant, your medical records from your doctor and your travel routes from your cell phone company. Further, Congress has now ruled that if you’re arrested on some terrorism charge you shall be whisked off to Guantanamo to be tried by the military. Or just left there.Most Americans, fortunately, aren’t likely prospects for these or similar new Kafkaesque treatments. The chief targets just now are Muslims and liberal activists. Anti-war protesters are treated as America’s next greatest threat to national security. They’re spied upon, infiltrated and occasionally detained without charge. It’s as though our political-economic structure would collapse if there were no more wars.Under a little-known law that itself now faces a legal challenge, the government can also brand activists as “terrorists” if they try to document inhumane and unsanitary conditions at factory farms or laboratories that conduct tests on animals.The media loves this sort of adventure, but at the same time it keeps pretty mum about government spying overall. That espionage quietly undermines the lives and futures of whistleblowers and other Americans who openly oppose various harmful government/corporate practices.It would be a comfort to believe that all this domestic surveillance had receded under President Barack Obama. No such luck.Homeland Security still wants us to snitch on our neighbors and the FBI still conducts illegal wiretaps. Last year, Obama also signed a four-year extension of the dreaded USA Patriot Act. Spying on dissident citizens simply seems to be what governments do, and ours has certainly gotten the hang of it.Columnist William A. Collins is a former state representative and a former mayor of Norwalk.

Latest News

Love is in the atmosphere

Author Anne Lamott

Sam Lamott

On Tuesday, April 9, The Bardavon 1869 Opera House in Poughkeepsie was the setting for a talk between Elizabeth Lesser and Anne Lamott, with the focus on Lamott’s newest book, “Somehow: Thoughts on Love.”

A best-selling novelist, Lamott shared her thoughts about the book, about life’s learning experiences, as well as laughs with the audience. Lesser, an author and co-founder of the Omega Institute in Rhinebeck, interviewed Lamott in a conversation-like setting that allowed watchers to feel as if they were chatting with her over a coffee table.

Keep ReadingShow less
Reading between the lines in historic samplers

Alexandra Peter's collection of historic samplers includes items from the family of "The House of the Seven Gables" author Nathaniel Hawthorne.

Cynthia Hochswender

The home in Sharon that Alexandra Peters and her husband, Fred, have owned for the past 20 years feels like a mini museum. As you walk through the downstairs rooms, you’ll see dozens of examples from her needlework sampler collection. Some are simple and crude, others are sophisticated and complex. Some are framed, some lie loose on the dining table.

Many of them have museum cards, explaining where those samplers came from and why they are important.

Keep ReadingShow less