Hi I read this in the latest 
   CRYPTO-GRAM
I was wondering what my friends down south think about it.  It raises some interesting questions.  As this is starting to occur in Canada as well I am looking for opinions.  Also I would like opinions of other ways that other countries handle these issues.  
               February 15, 2004
               by Bruce Schneier
                Founder and CTO
       Counterpane Internet Security, Inc.
            
schneier@counterpane.com
 Toward Universal Surveillance
 
Last month the Supreme Court let stand the Justice Department's right 
to secretly arrest non-citizen residents.  Combined with the 
government's power to designate foreign prisoners of war as "enemy 
combatants" in order to ignore international treaties regulating their 
incarceration, and their power to indefinitely detain U.S. citizens 
without charge or access to an attorney, the United States is looking 
more and more like a police state.
Since 9/11, the Justice Department has asked for, and largely received, 
additional powers that allow it to perform an unprecedented amount of 
surveillance of American citizens and visitors.  The USA PATRIOT Act, 
passed in haste after 9/11, started the ball rolling.  In December, a 
provision slipped into an appropriations bill allowing the FBI to 
obtain personal financial information from banks, insurance companies, 
travel agencies, real estate agents, stockbrokers, the U.S. Postal 
Service, jewelry stores, casinos, and car dealerships without a warrant 
-- because they're all construed as financial institutions.  Starting 
this year, the U.S. government is photographing and fingerprinting 
foreign visitors into this country from all but 27 other countries.
The litany continues.  CAPPS-II, the government's vast computerized 
system for probing the backgrounds of all passengers boarding flights, 
will be fielded this year.  Total Information Awareness, a program that 
would link diverse databases and allow the FBI to collate information 
on all Americans, was halted at the federal level after a huge public 
outcry, but is continuing at a state level with federal funding.  Over 
New Year's, the FBI collected the names of 260,000 people staying at 
Las Vegas hotels.  More and more, at every level of society, the "Big 
Brother is Watching You" style of total surveillance is slowly becoming 
a reality.
Security is a trade off.  It makes no sense to ask whether a particular 
security system is effective or not -- otherwise you'd all be wearing 
bulletproof vests and staying immured in your home.  The proper 
question to ask is whether the trade-off is worth it.  Is the level of 
security gained worth the costs, whether in money, in liberties, in 
privacy, or in convenience?
This is a personal decision, and one greatly influenced by the 
situation.  For most of us, bulletproof vests are not worth the cost 
and inconvenience.  For some of us, home burglar alarm systems 
are.  And most of us lock our doors at night.
Terrorism is no different.  We need to weigh each security 
countermeasure.  Is the additional security against the risks worth the 
costs?  Are there smarter things we can be spending our money on?  How 
does the risk of terrorism compare with the risks in other aspects of 
our lives: automobile accidents, domestic violence, industrial 
pollution, and so on?  Are there costs that are just too expensive for 
us to bear?
Unfortunately, it's rare to hear this level of informed debate.  Few 
people remind us how minor the terrorist threat really is.  Rarely do 
we discuss how little identification has to do with security, and how 
broad surveillance of everyone doesn't really prevent terrorism.   And 
where's the debate about what's more important: the freedoms and 
liberties that have made America great or some temporary security?
Instead, the DOJ (fueled by a strong police mentality inside the 
Administration) is directing our nation's political changes in response 
to 9/11.  And it's making trade-offs from its own subjective 
perspective: trade-offs that benefit it even if they are to the 
detriment of others.
 From the point of view of the DOJ, judicial oversight is unnecessary 
and unwarranted; doing away with it is a better trade off.  They think 
collecting information on everyone is a good idea, because they are 
less concerned with the loss of privacy and liberty.  Expensive 
surveillance and data mining systems are a good trade-off for them 
because more budget means even more power.  And from their perspective, 
secrecy is better than openness; if the police are absolutely 
trustworthy, then there's nothing to be gained from a public process.
If you put the police in charge of security, the trade-offs they make 
result in measures that resemble a police state.
This is wrong.  The trade-offs are larger than the FBI or the 
DOJ.  Just as a company would never put a single department in charge 
of its own budget, someone above the narrow perspective of the DOJ 
needs to be balancing the country's needs and making decisions about 
these security trade-offs.
The laws limiting police power were put in place to protect us from 
police abuse.  Privacy protects us from threats by government, 
corporations, and individuals.  And the greatest strength of our nation 
comes from our freedoms, our openness, our liberties, and our system of 
justice.  Ben Franklin once said: "Those who would give up essential 
liberty for temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor 
safety."  Since 9/11 Americans have squandered an enormous amount of 
liberty, and we didn't even get any temporary safety in return.