Terminal Compromise by Winn Schwartau (my reading book .txt) 📖
- Author: Winn Schwartau
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ence working from inside the system. I was wrong, and I’ve been
blinded by it until now . . .you know.
“When I was in college the politicians screamed integration while
the poor blacks no more wanted to be bussed to the rich white
neighborhood that the rich whites wanted the poor blacks in their
schools.” Tyrone spoke from his heart, his soul, with a touch of
resentment that Scott had not seen before. But then, they had
never spoken of it before. This was one story that he had suc-
cessfully neglected to share. “Forced integration was govern-
ment’s answer to a problem it has never understood.
“It’s about dignity. Dignity and respect, not government inter-
vention. It’s about a man’s right to privacy and the right to
lead his life the way he sees fit. Civil rights is about how to
keep government from interfering with its citizens. Regardless
of color.” Tyrone was adamant.
“And that’s why you’re gonna quit?” Scott didn’t see the con-
nection.
“No, goddamnit, no,” Tyrone shouted. “Don’t you get it?” Scott
shook his head. “They want to take them away.” He spoke with
finality and assumed Scott knew what he meant. The liquor fogged
his brain to mouth speech connection.
“Who’s gonna take what away?” Scott asked, frustrated by Ty’s
ramblings.
“I know it’s hokey, but the Founding Fathers had a plan, and so
far it’s survived two hundred years of scrutiny and division. I
would like to think it can survive the computer age.” Tyrone
quieted down some. “My father used to tell me, from the time I
was old enough to understand, that law was merely a measure of
how much freedom a man was willing to sacrifice to maintain an
orderly society.”
“My father was a radical liberal among liberals,” Tyrone remem-
bered. “Even today he’ll pick a fight at the family barbecue for
his own entertainment. And he’ll hold his own.”
Scott enjoyed the image of a crotchety octogenarian stirring up
the shit while his children isolated their kids from their grand
father’s intellectual lunacy. What was this about?
Tyrone caught himself and realized that he wasn’t getting his
point across. He took a deep breath and slouched back in the
chair that barely held him.
“From the beginning,” he said. “I told you about ECCO, and what
a disaster it is. No authority, no control, no responsibility.
And the chaos is unbelievable.
“I don’t pretend to understand all of the computer jargon, but I
do recognize when the NSA wants to control everything. There’s a
phenomenal amount of arrogance there. The NSA reps in ECCO
believe that they are the only ones who know anything about
computers and how to protect them. I feel sorry for the guys
from NIST. They’re totally underfunded, so they end up with both
the grunt work and the brunt of the jokes from the NSA.
“NSA won’t cooperate on anything. If NIST says it’s white, NSA
says it’s black. If NIST says there’s room to compromise, NSA
gets more stubborn. And the academic types. At long last I now
know what happened to the hippies: they’re all government con-
sultants through universities. And all they want to do is
study, study, study. But they never come up with answers, just
more questions to study.
“The vendors try to sell their products and don’t contribute a
damn thing,” sighed Tyrone. “A bunch of industry guys from
computer companies and the banks, and they’re as baffled as I
am.”
“So why quit? Can’t you make a difference?”
“Listen. The FBI views computer crimes as inter-state in nature
and therefore under their domain.”
Scott nodded in understanding.
“We are enforcement, only,” Tyrone asserted. “We do not, nor
should we make the laws. Separation of power; Civics 101. To
accomplish anything, I have to be a private citizen.”
“What do you want to accomplish?” asked Scott with great inter-
est.
“I want to stop the NSA.” Tyrone spoke bluntly and Scott sat too
stunned to speak for long seconds.
“From what?” A sudden pit formed in Scott’s stomach.
“I found out why they dumped on you about the CMR,” Tyrone said.
“I haven’t been able to tell you before, but it doesn’t matter
any more.” Tyrone quickly shook off the veiling sadness. “NSA
has a built-in contradiction. On one hand they listen into the
world and spy for America. This is supposed to be very secret,
especially how they do it. It turns out that CMR is one of their
‘secret’ methods for spying on friends and foes alike.
“So, to keep our friends and foes from spying on us, they create
the secret Tempest program. Except, they think it needs to be
kept a military secret, and the public sector be damned. They
actually believe that opening the issue to the public will hamper
their intelligence gathering capabilities because the enemy will
protect against it, too.”
Scott listened in fascination. What he was learning now more than
made up for the loss of one article. He felt bad now that he had
overreacted and taken it out on Tyrone.
“Same goes for the EMP-T bomb,” Tyrone added. “Only they didn’t
know that you were going to publish ahead of time like they did
when I opened up my fat trap.”
Scott’s eyes suddenly lit up. “How much did you tell them?”
“That I knew you and you were writing an article. That’s it.”
“Then how did they know what I had written? It was pretty damned
close. I assumed that you had . . .”
“No way, man,” Tyrone held his hands up.
“Then how did . . .Ty? What if they’re using CMR on my computers?
Could they . . .”
Tyrone’s predicament was to decide whether or not to tell Scott
that he knew the NSA and others spied on Americans and gathered
intelligence through remote control means. “I assume they’re
capable of anything.”
“Shit!” Scott exclaimed. “Privacy goes right out the window.
Damn.” Scott rapidly spun in his chair and vacantly stared off
in space. “Is that legal?”
“What? CMR? I looked into that briefly, and there’s nothing on
the books yet, but I did find out that tapping cellular phone
conversations is legal.”
“Phone tapping, legal?” Scott couldn’t believe his ears.
“Cellular phones, yeah. The FCC treats them like TV sets, radi-
os, satellites. Anyone can listen to any station.”
“That’s incredible,” Scott said, mouth gaping. “I wonder how
they’ll handle RF LAN’s.”
“RF LAN’s,” asked Ty. “What are those?”
“A bunch of computers tied together with radios. They replace
the wires that connect computers now. Can you imagine?” Scott
saw the irony in it. “Broadcasting your private secrets like
that? Hah! Or if you have your own RF network, all you have to
do is dial up another one and all the information ends up right
in your computer! Legal robbery. Is this a great country or
what?”
“Now you know why I’m leaving. The NSA cannot be permitted to
keep the public uninformed about vulnerabilities to their person-
al freedom. And hiding under the umbrella of national security
gets old. A handful of paranoid un-elected, un-budgeted, non-ac-
countable, mid-level bureaucrats are deciding the future of
privacy and freedom in this country. They are the ones who are
saying, ‘no, no problem,’ when they know damn well it is a prob-
lem. What they say privately is in diametric opposition to their
public statements and positions.”
Scott stifled a nervous laugh. Who wound Tyrone up? A conspira-
cy theory. Tyrone was drunk. “Don’t you think that maybe you’re
taking this a little far,” he suggested. For the first time in
years the shoe was on the other foot. Scott was tempering some-
body elses extremes.
“Why the hell do you think there’s so much confusion at ECCO and
CERT and the other computer SWAT teams? NSA interferes at every
step,” Tyrone responded. “And no, I am not taking this too far.
I haven’t taken it far enough. I sit with these guys and they
talk as though I’m not there. I attend meetings where the poli-
cies and goals of ECCO are established. Shit, I trust the dope-
smoking hippies from Berkeley more than anyone from the Fort.”
The bitterness came through clearly, but Scott could see it
wasn’t focussed on any one person or thing.
But Scott began to understand. For over 20 years Tyrone had
insulated himself from the politics of the job and had seen only
what he wanted to see; a national Police Force enforcing the
laws. Tyrone loved the chase of the crime. The bits and pieces,
the endless sifting of evidence, searching for clues and then
building a case from shreds. The forensics of modern criminology
had been so compelling for Tyrone Duncan that he had missed the
impact that the mass proliferation of technology would have on
his first love – The Constitution.
The sudden revelations and realizations of the last several weeks
set his mind into high gear. Tyrone introspectively examined his
beliefs; he tried to review them from the perspective of an
idealistic
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