U.S. Tracks Canadians For Terror Traits

Posted on Sunday, December 03 at 14:44 by 4Canada
U.S. privacy advocates and some legislators promised to fight to kill the program yesterday, but the Department of Homeland Security was unapologetic, saying the ATS is really just a continuation of a program overseen by another agency for more than a decade. Every traveller from every nation, arriving by land, air or sea, is screened under the program. There was no official reaction from Ottawa to the U.S. program yesterday. A consultation period inviting comments on the plan ends Monday at which time Washington will determine whether it needs to modify it before publishing the final rules, said homeland security spokesperson Jarod Agen. Details of the program were placed on the electronic Federal Register here in early November, but the department did nothing to publicize it, Agen said, because it was not seeking new information, merely bringing existing programs under the homeland security umbrella. The information remains in the government's possession for up to 40 years, he said, because it can sometimes take 10 years or more for terrorist plots to develop. "If you booked your flight by cellphone and that cellphone shows up at a terrorist's safe house, you will be under greater scrutiny," he said. Privacy advocates say the Bush administration was trying to hide the program. "The Automated Targeting System mines a vast amount of data to create a `risk assessment' on hundreds of millions of people per year, a label that will follow them for the rest of their lives, as the data will be retained for 40 years,'' said the Electronic Privacy Information Centre. "Yet the system is deeply flawed, and the funds spent turning ATS into a citizen profiling program would be better spent in perfecting its cargo screening process, so that port security can be stronger than a `house of cards,'" the privacy centre says. http://tinyurl.com/ygulos [Proofreader's note: this article was edited for spelling and typos on December 4, 2006]

Note: http://tinyurl.com/ygulos

Contributed By



Article Rating

 (0 votes) 

Options




Comments

  1. Mon Dec 04, 2006 4:10 am
    BC use to employ photo-radar. Many speeders felt this was unfair and hence, so did the politicians. The radar is no longer permitted in the province. There are those who believe that the best way to render that radar useless is by "not speeding".
    The choice is there. Canadians going into "any" country is subject to that country's rules. Only if those rules follow them back into this country, are they obligated to complain. Only Hypocrites complain about the Americans attempting to apply their rules to other countries, but feel our rules should be applicable in the US.

    ---
    Expect little from life and get more from it.

  2. by RPW
    Mon Dec 04, 2006 5:07 pm
    <blockquote> Canadians going into "any" country is subject to that country's rules. </blockquote> Except for that bit about sharing with other governments. That would include our government collecting information on us, without our knowing it..........<p>---<br>"No kingdom could be ruled without lies - - for lies are the things we use to build our reputations."........<br />
    King Arthur <br />

  3. Tue Dec 05, 2006 4:42 am
    Only if those rules follow them back into this country, are they obligated to complain.,,

    There is no reason Canadians have to accept rules from the neighbourhood bully. We are told we have to, by our own government and given the same excuses. The world still rotated before 911 and the Americans have a history of sabotage in their country prior to it. It seems the world must suffer because Americans are. Perhaps Canadians must get that American attribute and tell them AND our government to stick it!

    ---
    Expect little from life and get more from it.



view comments in forum


You need to be a member and be logged into the site, to comment on stories.



Latest Editorials

more articles »

Your Voice

To post to the site, just sign up for a free membership/user account and then hit submit. Posts in English or French are welcome. You can email any other suggestions or comments on site content to the site editor. (Please note that Vive le Canada does not necessarily endorse the opinions or comments posted on the site.)

canadian bloggers | canadian news