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Don't let a president turn off the Internet

Examiner Editorial
September 1, 2009

A man surfs the Internet in Klang, outside Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Friday, Aug. 7, 2009. Malaysia may set up an Internet filter to censor pornography, a Cabinet minister said Friday, raising concerns ...
(AP Photo/Lai Seng Sin) (AP)

Sen. Jay Rockefeller's revised Cybersecurity Act of 2009 is worse than the original version he unveiled in April. That one drew well-deserved derision from civil liberties advocates left and right, as well as from Silicon Valley executives fearful that their company assets would be confiscated by government fiat. The West Virginia Democrat's new version is full of vague legislative language that is the public-policy equivalent of throwing the barn door open to horse thieves. As the Electronic Frontier Foundation's Lee Thien told CNET: "The language has changed but it doesn't contain any real additional limits. It simply switches the more direct and obvious language they had originally to the more ambiguous." Thien adds that the bill contains no administrative or appeals process to limit what he describes as the "amorphous" powers granted to the president.

Just how amorphous is seen in the bill's grant of presidential authority to "declare a cyber-security emergency" and then shut-down privately owned computer networks (i.e. the Internet) without defining what computer networks are critical to national security or what defines an emergency of sufficient seriousness.

That means the job of defining those critical elements is left to the first president who wants to be the digital age's Harry Truman. Under the pretext of a national security emergency during the Korean War, Truman seized the nation's steel mills in 1952, while planning to force U.S. Steel and nine other steelmakers to accept union wage and pension demands that the companies claimed would put them out of business. But the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. versus Sawyer that the chief executive lacked the authority to seize private property on the grounds of national security.

With no clear definitions of these factors, nothing would stand in the way of an ambitious chief executive - likely egged on by an Emanel-esque advisor sensing opportunity in a crisis - willing to act and then say, in effect: "So sue me." Considering the thousands of cyber-attacks already being mounted against U.S. defense networks from China, Russia and elsewhere, the day for such action might be closer than anybody realizes.

Note also that the Rockefeller bill does not say whether these cyber-security threats must come only from overseas sources or might also encompass domestic threats. Given the Department of Homeland Security's report branding pro-lifers, military veterans, and advocates of stronger immigration laws as potentially violent "right-wing extremists," what's to prevent a presidential seizure of the Internet to stop their digital communication? This is a bad bill that ought to be withdrawn.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

examiner

Sep 1, 2009

The internet is how the American people find out what the truth is everyday. The only reason Obama would really have for shutting down the internet is to silence lawful dissent, or to squelch civil disobedience of obviously bad laws.

 

wilson

Sep 1, 2009

we have to stop this gov run mafia type
be at washington dc march 9 12
we must stop this insane mess

 

Paul the cab driver

Sep 1, 2009

There are a number of reasons that I do not really fear this bill. Its chances of passing are very slim. But even if it does pass, if it were put into effect, the techies would quickly find a way around it.

 

depaz

Sep 1, 2009

We have a government that wants to grant constitutional protection to our enemies who are not citizens, but wants to be able to monitor citizens to be sure there are no "subversives" lurking in middle America. Here's an issue that actually merits the ACLU's attention. . . .

 

Sep 1, 2009

Jay Rockefeller promoting anything with 'security' in its name is a very unfunny joke.

This is the august Senator whose hamfisted leaks of intelligence data continued unchecked during the Bush administration. Just because the president is now a Democrat doesn't mean the idiot great-grandson has stopped his shenanigans.

 

TreehuggersjustLuvhimjustthe same

Sep 1, 2009

Talk about HYPOCRISY.I remember talk of Nixon pressing ATT about technology that could turn television monitors into cameras .you get the idea...

 

Beauty

Sep 1, 2009

Again FACTS Thank you for info worth reading. PS. Ask the paper to put back the poll you had on the home page. It was fun. PLEASE! tks

 

dan

Sep 1, 2009

mr president, you must have read the book chavez gave you,now you want o cut our freedom of speach , dear sir you are breaking the constitution, have you read this document , i doubt it!!! this secret plan you have for our country is coming out for america to see.leave our freedom of speech alone sir!we are and never will be a socialist country, by the way what comes after socialist, we all know that word, ask any russian, mr president please dont let your people mess with our freedom and libertys

 

Captain Moroni

Sep 1, 2009

My prediction. This bill will be slipped through by a midnight series of session closed to the MSM for national security reasons. There will little debate UNLESS the internet "angy mob" get busy NOW in educating our congresscritters

 

carol50

Sep 1, 2009

Obama is making this country more and more communist every day. We are losing all our rights. We complain and they don't listen. They do what they want and we're sitting ducks.

 

Mad Monica

Sep 1, 2009

Thank you for pointing out this bill's lack of clarity on just what this administration's definition of "terrorist" is. I wish the sheeple who follow Obama so willingly would wake up and take stock of just how much they want to allow this inexperienced president to control in their lives. One day we're going to look back on 2009 as the year America truly lost its way.

 

HEY MIDDLE AMERICA

Sep 1, 2009

keep in mind how this country was founded...and clean your guns...you might need them soon

 

PaulCC

Sep 1, 2009

This is nothing but a white elephant being used to inflame the wackos on the far right. Anyone with any objective view can see that it would political suicide to even support such a law let alone have it passed and executed.

You have to do better than this if you claim to be the 'reasonable' voice from the right. Otherwise, you are feeding into the claim by the wackos on the left that we are the real enemies and the ones to be feared.

 

Commonsense

Sep 1, 2009

2010 can't come soon enough!

 

Tumbrel Jockey

Sep 1, 2009

I guess that just leaves the carrier pigeons .oops!

 

StargazerInSavannah

Sep 2, 2009

What do you expect of the Alinsky disciple Thief in Chief from Chicago. Just another step in the destruction of the constitution..
Three potential sources of truthful information still exist, Fox News, AM Radio and the Internet. All are currently under attack by the Thief in Chief.
Silence talk radio, shut down Fox News and control content on the Internet and the Chavez like revolution is complete. Doesn't anyone remember the Thief in Chief telling 'Joe the Plummer' that he was going to 'redistribute the wealth'?
The compliant Government Controlled Media provides free air time and print for propaganda from "HIM".

 

FuzzyBunnyFeet

Sep 6, 2009

I've found news reports going back to April 1, 2009 about this draft legislation which is sponsored by SENATORS Jay Rockefeller and Olympia Snowe (R-Maine).

However, I have found no evidence that the Obama administration has actually supported this legislation.

You all sound like foaming at the mouth wackos when you try to lay everything at Obamas desk and give it the worst possible spin.

 


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