Las Vegas Review-Journal

Call a friend; we have privacy again

- Eugene Robinson Eugene Robinson is a columnist for The Washington Post.

Imade a phone call at 12:01 a.m. Monday, and it felt good. For the first time in years, the number I dialed on my iPhone was not captured and stored in a massive government database. Because it was an inconvenie­nt hour, I called my office phone, knowing it would go to voicemail. But I wanted to make the point that an important principle was again being honored: Unless I’m suspected of some involvemen­t with terrorism, it’s none of the National Security Agency’s business whom I talk to. Or when. Or why.

I owe my reclaimed privacy largely to Sen. Rand Paul’s weekend political stunt, which forced the Senate to meet in a rare Sunday session. Paul drew attention to his presidenti­al bid by blocking an attempt by his fellow Kentucky Republican, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, to muscle through a reauthoriz­ation of the USA Patriot Act.

Taking advantage of the Senate’s arcane rules, under which a single senator can gum up the works, Paul also nixed McConnell’s various fallback positions — a brief reauthoriz­ation, an even briefer reauthoriz­ation, the extension of some provisions but not others. McConnell finally agreed to support a piece of legislatio­n he had previously opposed: the House-passed USA Freedom Act, which ended the vacuum-cleaner collection of telephone data but renewed some other NSA surveillan­ce powers.

When the relevant parts of the Patriot Act expired, the NSA lost its legal authorizat­ion to track the use of my phone — and yours. Assuming the agency obeys the law, the balance between liberty and security has been sensibly rebalanced.

Is the NSA deprived of the ability to trace the phone activity and contacts of suspected terrorists? Not in the least.

Authoritie­s still have the ability to search the communicat­ions records of anyone suspected of being a terrorist, being in contact with terrorists or in any way threatenin­g our security. The secret Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court and the telecom companies routinely oblige such requests. This is how the Constituti­on says things should work: first a suspicion, and only then a search.

What the NSA lost is the right to compile a gargantuan, all-encompassi­ng mountain of data — the “haystack” of our domestic and internatio­nal phone calls — in the hope of teasing out subtle patterns that reveal nefarious activity. It’s a seductive vision: Total knowledge must equal total security.

But in all the debate about the Patriot Act, the intelligen­ce community has not claimed that a single fruitful terrorism investigat­ion has originated with the phone data. Instead, analysts have delved into the haystack to corroborat­e and expand upon informatio­n obtained by other means — questionin­g prisoners, cultivatin­g informants, examining seized documents, following active leads.

Under the USA Freedom Act — a bipartisan measure that passed the Senate and House and was signed into law by President Barack Obama late Tuesday — call records will remain with the phone companies. The NSA and the FBI can still easily obtain access to any data they had reason to examine.

Does it make a difference if records of our phone-calling habits are held by the telecom companies or by the government? It does to me.

I know the only motive of Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and the other phone companies is to make money. I also know that if I don’t like the way one of them uses my private informatio­n, I can switch carriers. The worst that can happen is that I get hit with an early-terminatio­n charge.

I trust that the NSA’s motive is to keep me safe. But government is different because it has the power to deprive citizens of their liberty, their property, even their lives. That is why we have the Bill of Rights, and the Fourth Amendment prohibits unreasonab­le search and seizure. Short of emigrating, after all, there is no way to switch to a competitor.

We can switch our elected officials, though. Paul’s performanc­e may have been self-serving — all right, it was definitely selfservin­g, given that he has been lagging in the presidenti­al polls — but it had the effect of pushing Obama, McConnell and much of the Senate to embrace the Freedom Act. Now that it is law, we still don’t have as much privacy as we did before 9/11. But we have moved the needle substantia­lly.

No one wants the nation to suffer another terrorist attack. But keeping track of everyone’s private calls was an overreach that weakened liberty without enhancing safety.

Pick up the phone and tell someone the good news. For a change, nobody’s peeking over your shoulder at the number you dial.

 ?? Cliff Owen / AP ?? Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., talks with reporters Sunday after his address to the Senate in Washington. Over the weekend Paul blocked an attempt by fellow Kentucky Republican Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, to reauthoriz­e the USA Patriot Act. In...
Cliff Owen / AP Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., talks with reporters Sunday after his address to the Senate in Washington. Over the weekend Paul blocked an attempt by fellow Kentucky Republican Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, to reauthoriz­e the USA Patriot Act. In...

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