I’m listening to all your phone calls. And I know how many times you’ve logged on to “Girls Wrapped in Rubber” dot com. I mean, why not me? In what way am I less qualified to listen to all your phone calls and monitor your Internet activities than, say, Bush or Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales?True, I never managed the Texas Rangers baseball team nor have I been a White House counsel. Okay, you’re right; those other guys should have access to every detail of your private life. It would be more than a dichotomy if America was asserting itself as a warrior for “freedom” while simultaneously the same guys that launched that freedom program overseas were attempting to repeal privacy, one of the defining characteristics of a free and democratic society. Is that happening?Wisconsin Senator Russ Feingold got a cool reception last week to his move to censure President Bush over domestic spying, even from other Democrats. On the other hand, a federal judge sent a strong message to Gonzales regarding Internet data in a decision denying a Justice Department demand for access to Internet search queries from Google. Nicole Wong, a lawyer for Google, said the ruling means “Neither the government nor anyone else has carte blanche when demanding data from Internet companies.”Unless of course, like identity thieves, they just take it. Maybe on a presumption that, as our President has said regarding phone surveillance, “Previous presidents have used the same Constitutional authority I have.” While all that has been hashed out in various interpretations of the “authority” the President actually has, I’m frankly more interested in what you think. Like you, I was sickened last week when a report on the bust of a global child porn ring included accounts of abuse of children as young as 18 months, often by their own parents. That bust yielded charges against 29 individuals after undercover officers infiltrated an Internet chat room. When you hear a story like this, do you care exactly how that “infiltration” takes place? Would concerns about entrapment and surveillance even enter your head?According to a poll by Harris Interactive conducted in February, 69 percent of respondents think their president is justified in authorizing wiretaps on U.S. citizens suspected of terrorism without court authorization. That’s great, as long we take everybody’s word for it that is what they’re up to. When the FBI spied on Martin Luther King Jr., I guess there were “security” concerns there as well, right?The Google ruling is a pretty big deal if you believe, as I do, that the Internet is basically a telephone with pictures and as such should afford you the same privacy as a telephone. But if your neighbor is downloading kiddie porn, are you good with giving up your own rights to bust him? Not to mention where that stops. Maybe I’d like a photo of Mary Carey, the porn “star” that dined with Bush last week. Will Internet surveillance classify my activities as surfing for porn? Will the President ask Carey about this at the next Republican fundraiser she attends? And may I please have a transcript of that private conversation?
You might be interested in …

Santa Monica Airport Park Project Receives $10M State Grant as Planning Moves Forward
The funding arrives as debate continues over the long-term future of the airport property. Plans to transform Santa Monica Airport into a large public park received a significant financial boost this week after state officials […]
Sierra Club Joins Coalition to Convert Santa Monica Airport Into Great Park
Environmental group backs Measure LC-compliant plan for 192-acre public park following the airport’s scheduled 2028 closure The Sierra Club has joined the Santa Monica Great Park Coalition to push for the conversion of Santa Monica […]

Seven-story affordable housing project reaches framing phase in Santa Monica
The 78-unit joint development from Venice Community Housing and Community Corp. near the E Line remains on track for a 2027 opening. Construction crews have begun framing the upper levels of a seven-story affordable housing […]

Malibu sets final deadlines for Woolsey Fire fee waiver program applications
The city’s financial relief program is winding down, here are the cutoffs you need to know. Malibu property owners must submit all required planning applications by Tuesday, June 30, to qualify for the city’s Woolsey […]

Summer Garden Tour to Highlight Native Plants, Coastal Ecology at Santa Monica’s Shotgun House
Event organizers noted that white sage smudging is a sacred Indigenous practice used for prayer and spiritual cleansing. Community members are invited to celebrate the start of summer with a guided tour of the Shotgun […]

Workshop Aims to Preserve Oakwood’s Black Heritage Through Community Mapping Project
Residents are invited to identify historic places, share stories and help shape preservation strategies for one of Los Angeles’ last remaining Black coastal communities. Community members will gather in Venice later this month to help […]
Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest news and events in Santa Monica and the surrounding areas!
DIGITAL
RECENT POSTS
Santa Monica State of City Event to Feature Performances and Updates on the Realignment Plan
Mayor Torosis will deliver the address, outlining accomplishments from the past year and discussing priorities for 2027. Santa Monica will...
Read morePOPULAR
SM.a.r.t Column: The Dual Process, Part Three: The Line the Sea Is Moving Toward
The Part One article showed Santa Monica’s permitting delay as self-inflicted; Part Two, that the bill has shed its exemptions,...
Read moreNewsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest news and events in Santa Monica and the surrounding areas!
DIGITAL
RECENT POSTS
Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest news and events in Santa Monica and the surrounding areas!










