Senate Approves Spy Bill, Possible Link to Pending Covid-19 Actions

in #corona5 years ago

In a vote of 80-16, the US Senate yesterday approved HR 6172, which
reauthorizes several surveillance authorities originally passed into law
via the USA PATRIOT Act as temporary measures. HR 6172 cements the
collection of business records, the “roving wiretap provision,” and the
so-called “lone wolf provision,” which allows the surveillance of those
with no known connection to terrorist organizations. While the FBI has
testified to the Congress that the “lone wolf provision” has never been
used, this is widely thought to be inaccurate and that this provision is
the authority under which US citizens, activists and journalists, are
being widely surveilled.

image.png

Several amendments were proposed to the Senate, only one of which
passed. Senator Mike Lee, R-Utah, had proposed an amendment which would
guarantee the participation of an Amicus Curiae (Friend of the Court) in
cases involving requests for permission from FISA to surveil political
figures, religious organizations and the press. This amendment passed by
a vote of 77-19.

The Wyden-Daines amendment would have restricted the collection of
browser activity and internet search history. This amendment also
failed.


Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) had proposed a widely publicized amendment
which would prohibit the surveillance of American citizens, excluding
Americans from the provisions involving wiretapping and data collection
tools authorized by the FISA court.  This amendment went down in flames,
receiving 11 yea votes and 85 votes against.

In a speech on the Senate floor, Paul had this to say about HR 6172:

To those of us that prize the rights guaranteed in the
Bill of Rights, the Patriot Act is a violation of our most precious
rights. The Patriot Act, in the end, is not patriotic. The Patriot Act
makes an unholy and unconstitutional exchange of liberty for a false
sense of security.

The failure of Paul’s amendment points to an uncomfortable reality:
it is appearing more and more that our government is dedicated to the
surveillance of Americans. With Osama Bin Laden dead and ISIS under
siege, one would wonder what is so compelling about the phone calls,
internet activity and more of a growing number of American citizens who are now watchlisted.

Surveillance and the Coronavirus

It is compelling that Paul’s failed amendment comes at a time when
the Department of Defense has just contracted with ApiJect to provide
delivery systems for vaccines. ApiJect’s website details its capability to provide RFID tracking to every prefilled vaccine it provides, stating:

Whether health officials are running a scheduled
vaccination program or an urgent pandemic response campaign, they can
make better decisions if they know when and where each injection occurs.
With an optional RFID/NFC tag on each BFS prefilled syringe, ApiJect
will make this possible. Before giving an injection, the healthcare
worker will be able to launch a free mobile app and “tap” the prefilled
syringe on their phone, capturing the NFC tag’s unique serial number,
GPS location and date/time. The app then uploads the data to a
government-selected cloud database. Aggregated injection data provides
health administrators an evolving real-time “injection map.”

ApiJect goes on to say:

Remote, real-time tracking of injections in the field can
be achieved by affixing an NFC (Near Field Communication) tag to each
BFS prefilled syringe. The NFC tag will hold a unique encrypted serial
number. Just prior to injection, the health worker would tap the NFC tag
to the back of their smartphone (just like using Apple Pay at a
checkout counter). A free mobile app would capture and automatically
upload the dose’s serial number, as well as append patient anonymous
data including time, date, and GPS location to the government’s
designated cloud database. Data would then be aggregated and analyzed to
provide real-time coverage maps for more efficient vaccination
campaigns.

In other words, everyone who gets the vaccine will have that event recorded and tracked.

It is entirely possible that this level of surveillance might have
run into some problems should Senator Paul’s amendment, prohibiting the
surveillance of US citizens, have passed the Senate. Clearly, a database
concerning who has been vaccinated, when and where constitutes a
surveillance authority.

Due to the passage of the Lee amendment to HR 6172, the Bill now goes
back to the House to be reconsidered before going to President Trump to
be signed into law. Senator Paul has stated he will ask Trump to veto
the legislation. Given that Attorney General William Barr is a proponent
of the Bill, and given that Trump appears to be on the fence concerning
this, it is unknown whether he will veto it or sign it into law.

There is still time to contact the White House and voice your opinion
on the tagging, tracking and surveillance of US citizens. Here is the
contact information for President Trump: https://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/   You can also telephone the White House at this number and leave a comment for him: 202-456-1111

For a list of which traitors, er Senators that is, voted for the spy bill, you can check them out here in the original article on Activist Post.

By Janet Phelan

Janet Phelan is an investigative journalist and author of the groundbreaking exposé, EXILE.
Her articles previously appeared in such mainstream venues as the Los
Angeles Times, Orange Coast Magazine, Long Beach Press Telegram, etc. In
2004, Janet “jumped ship” and now exclusively writes for independent
media. She is also the author of two collections of poetry—The Hitler
Poems and Held Captive. She resides abroad. You are invited to support
her work on Buy Me A Coffee here:
https://www.buymeacoffee.com/JanetPhelan

Subscribe to Activist Post for truth, peace, and freedom news. Become an Activist Post Patron for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Follow us on SoMee, HIVE, Flote, Minds, and Twitter.

Provide, Protect and Profit from what’s coming! Get a free issue of Counter Markets today.

Sort:  

This will not be good.

It never is...

There is almost no need for the 10s of thousands of laws sitting on the books today. Congress should be disbanded... we don't need "lawmakers" making new laws. Society is not improved via Congressional action.

Crazy, of course they did this crap.

I wish someone would have proposed an amendment to put big, brightly colored, plastic tags in our ears with unique idenitifying numbers. It would have driven home the absurdity of tagging people like the cattle we see in fields.

Thanks!