consortiumnews | In addition to Assange’s assertion that government secrecy has far
less to do with national security than political security (a claim he has made before which seems to be proving correct time and time again), there’s the jarring question posed by Republican
Congressman Thomas Massie: “who made the decision to withhold evidence
of FISA abuse until after Congress voted to renew FISA program?”
Whoa, Nelly. Hang on. What is he talking about?
It would be understandable if you were unaware of the debate over the reauthorization of FISA surveillance which resulted in unconditional bipartisan approval last
month – the mainstream media barely touched it. In point of fact,
though, the very surveillance practices alleged to have been abused in
this hotly controversial memo are the same which was waved through by
both the House and the Senate, and by the very same people promoting the memo in many cases.
The McCabe testimony was in December. FISA was renewed in January.
Why is all this just coming out now? If the Republicans truly believed
that McCabe said what the memo claims he said, why wasn’t the public
informed before their elected representatives renewed the intelligence
community’s dangerously intrusive surveillance approval? Was this
information simply forgotten about until after those Orwellian powers
had been secured?
Of course not. Don’t be an idiot.
This makes the kicking, screaming, wailing and gnashing of teeth by
the political establishment make a lot more sense, doesn’t it? Now
suddenly we’re looking at a he-said, she-said partisan battle over an
issue which can only be resolved with greater and greater transparency
of more and more government documents, and we can all see where that’s
headed. In their rush to win a partisan battle and shield their
president from the ongoing Russiagate conspiracy theory, the Republicans
may have exposed too much of the establishment foundation upon which
both parties are built.
The term “deep state” does not mean “Democrats and Never-Trumpers” as
Republican pundits would have you believe, nor does the term refer to
any kind of weird, unverifiable conspiracy theory. The deep state is
in fact not a conspiracy theory at all, but simply a concept used in
political analysis for discussing the undeniable fact that unelected
power structures exist in America, and that they tend to form alliances
and work together in some sense.
There is no denying the fact that plutocrats, intelligence agencies,
defense agencies and the mass media are both powerful and unelected, and
there is no denying the fact that there are many convoluted and often
conflicting alliances between them. All that can be debated is the
manner and extent to which this is happening.
The deep state is America’s permanent government,
the U.S. power structures that Americans don’t elect. These power
structures plainly have a vested interest in keeping America’s Orwellian
surveillance structures in place, as evidenced by the intelligence
community’s menacingly urgent demand for
FISA renewal back in December. If there’s any thread to be pulled that
really could make waves in the way Official Washington (hat tip to the
late Robert Parry) operates, it is in the plot holes between the
bipartisan scramble toward unconditional surveillance renewal and the
highly partisan battle over exposing the abuse of those very powers.
If we’re going to see a gap in the bars of our cages, that’s a great
place to keep our eyes trained, so keep watching. Watch what happens in a
partisan war where both parties have a simultaneous interest in
revealing as little of the game as possible and exposing the other
party. Things could get very interesting.
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