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- BIG BROTHER SPIES ON WHOM?
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- For nearly a half century a primary influence upon all our lives
- has been the fact that Russia exist as an implacable, unswervable
- danger to our way of life. Thus we justify confiscatory taxes,
- mushrooming government spending, various "police actions" in which a
- good many "policemen" died, and, for a long time, a peacetime draft.
- And, although they are much less in the public eye, spy satellites.
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- I believe most Americans would be surprised to learn of the
- enormity of this satellite network, not only in terms of the hardware
- in space, but also the hardware on earth required to service it, and
- the large number of people involved in the systems. of course, all of
- this expenditure of valuable resources is justified by that old
- bugaboo, Communism. But now that Communism is being discarded - at
- least in its most obvious and inefficient form - won't this satellite
- network be allowed to fade away? I d on't think so. In fact, as the
- idea of one-world government becomes ever closer to reality, the
- existing satellite systems will fit into the picture so perfectly that
- one might almost believe that surveillance of our Russian "enemies"
- was merely a ruse to get the stuff into space in the first place. I am
- assuming that, gathered under one super-government by means of
- one-world currency, there might be among us at least a few individuals
- who feel sufficiently oppressed to attempt to refrain their freedom. A
- sort of underground, in other words. But Big Brother is watching, and
- far more efficiently than George Orwell ever dreamed.
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- For almost twenty years now,a satellite names Rhyolite has been
- able to monitor telephone calls from space. In fact, it can monitor
- 11,000 such calls simultaneously. Additionally, it can listen in on
- walkie-talkie communications, and intercept telemetr y signals. Newer
- satellites of the same type, over twenty-two thousand miles in space,
- can intercept microwave transmissions and radio traffic.
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- Of course, there are the old plain-Jane photographic type spy
- satellites, too. Armed with image-enhancement devices, these can give
- incredible data. For instance, the KH-11 satellite, equipped with
- something akin to a telescope with flexible mirrors to adapt to the
- distortions of the atmosphere, can read the license plates of the
- cars in your driveway! If you happed to leave a copy of this Bulletin
- in your back yard, the reconnaissance expert who studies the images
- from this satellite may be able to re ad the society's name from the
- top of this page.
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- The Lacrosse satellite doesn't use light waves to record images -
- that would limit its use to clear skies and daylight. Rather, it beams
- microwaves down to earth, and measures their reflected energy on a
- grid of thousands of detectors on panels twelve by forty-eight feet!
- From two hundred and seventy-five miles above the earth, this
- technology can yield images of objects as small as three feet across,
- day or night, cloud cover or not. Incidentally, this satellite costs
- about half a billion - in the sam e league as the B2 bomber. There are
- critics aplenty of this "Stealth" aircraft, but I've heard no
- criticism of the stealth satellite. Of course, the aircraft is only
- useful in bombing enemy targets, whereas the satellite can assist in
- bringing troublemak ers under control without all that messy nuclear
- debris and loss of property.
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- So we are free men and women, right? Yes, sure we are. Of course,
- the government can keep track of our spending via the paper trail we
- leave with checks and credit cards. When the magnetic stripes are put
- into our currency, it will even be able to tell the amount of money
- we're carrying as we pass through detectors, without our even being
- aware of it. If we attend a seminar on, let us say, "personal
- freedom," our license plates may be detected from hundreds of miles
- away, via satellite. Our phone calls can be overheard without the
- clumsy and detectable addition of a "bug" to our line; and should we
- become so paranoid as to communicate by walkie-talkie, even that will
- be heard by Big Brother. Don't even think about ham radio!
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- It is especially galling that all of this is justified by the need
- for "security". Security for whom? Does the rabbit feel secure,
- knowing he is watched by the fox? ndred
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- From: The Bulletin of the Monetary Realist Society, July 1990, #120
- P.O. Box 31044, St. Louis, Mo. 63131 ox? ndred
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