
“American attitudes towards wiretapping significantly shifted during the 1940s, as the war and changes in the class distribution of telephones helped shift judicial acceptance of wiretaps. President Roosevelt issued a secret executive order authorizing widespread Justice Department wire-taps of ‘subversives’ and suspected spies. Hoover used these vague new powers to investigate not just Nazis but anyone he thought subversive. The social history of wiretaps is a history of mission creep, where FBI agents initially hunting for wartime Nazi spies soon monitored progressive activists fighting racial segregation.”
http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/08/09/a-social-history-of-wiretaps-2/
Related posts:
Declare Your Independence
Chris Hedges: The Day That TV News Died
California, Here They Go
Bill Bonner: Why the Fed’s ‘Taper’ Won’t Work
Go Directly to Jail: The Criminalization of Almost Everything [2010]
Dual Canadian-American citizens: We are not tax cheats
How to Fight the Modern State
Got grandparents? Four places where you can become a citizen.
The Holocaust, the West, and the Lost Caribbean Shelter
Michael Scheuer: Obama & Brennan - A new American-killing “Murder Inc”?
Bill Bonner: How to Survive the Coming Zombie Apocalypse, Part 1
Not Your Father's Stock Market Anymore
Larken Rose: The Complete and Undeniable Truth
How Police Became a Standing Army
The Shoes Keep on Dropping… What Next?