Crimes Committed by the N.S.A.

Saturday, April 25, 2015

How long should the prison sentence be for people that break the laws contained within our U.S. Constitution?

The American public has the right to have the U.S. Constitution rights, bills, and amendments to be unchanged and not modified and re-modified for the sake of creating a soviet style police state, and neither does any private U.S. citizen or U.S. non-citizen have the right to use technology to spy on one another to fulfill any of their psychological needs that dissolve their fear and paranoia, since these criminally guilty persons, organizations, agencies, corporations, or groups of persons have 24 hour a day access to audio, visual, location, cyber, personal, family, spousal, property, financial, medical, employment and many other forms of data that either make up a meta-data profile, (for government employees only) or the raw data gathered by a private citizen from his or her technology either purchased or developed by himself or herself. Now there is the question of just what length of a prison sent and what dollar amount should be given for the fine for the punishment of anyone and everyone that uses technology to break the laws, bills, and amendments that were once not changed in the U.S. Constitution, such as having the right to not have civil liberties broken and privacy removed from U.S. citizens as a direct result of the U.S. government, U.S. corporations, and individual U.S. citizens using technology to spy on one another. If the U.S. government at one point in the future feels that the only solution that solves the issues and problems that U.S. citizens have with privacy rights being continually broken --is for the complete infrastructure, and the many corporations providing technologies for the internet to be given a federal court order to cease and quit, then issues of privacy might be solved, but most people around the world would be completely outraged. The internet resulted from the need of the U.S. government and the U.S. military to send information about the U.S.S.R.’s military in relation to the U.S. military over long distances via an encrypted network of 5 computers at UCLA, UC Berkeley, UC Irvine, UC Davis, and UIUC. Most of the engineering research and development took place at UCLA and was completed in 1969. The name of this very large engineering project was called the “Athernet”. Such an event as the 13 day Cuba Missile Crisis of 1962 was now easily prevented when the Athernet was launched in 1969. The Athernet was also used during all of the Vietnam War. U.S. military generals sent and received information and encrypted messages written in the Navajo Native American language to plan and update military information for U.S. troops on the ground in Vietnam.

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