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March 8, 2000: Surveillance and Technology Issues - John Nolan

March 8, 2000: Surveillance and Technology Issues - John Nolan

Published 1 year, 6 months ago
Description
Art Bell speaks with John Nolan, a former military intelligence officer turned business intelligence consultant, about Project Echelon and the true state of personal privacy in the modern world. The program opens with Art reading mixed early reviews of the Mission to Mars film and reporting severe weather anomalies across the country, including 100-mile-per-hour winds near Boulder and a winter tornado striking Milwaukee.

Nolan confirms that electronic surveillance capabilities extend far beyond what most citizens imagine. He acknowledges that the freedom and privacy Americans believe they enjoy is largely an illusion, explaining how the UKUSA alliance of five nations shares intercepted communications to circumvent domestic spying restrictions. He then drops a startling revelation: Russian intelligence operatives at the Lourdes listening station in Cuba, now numbering 2,300 personnel, are collecting economic and personal information on American companies and citizens, and that information is available for purchase.

The discussion turns philosophical as Art and Nolan debate whether citizens would willingly trade privacy for security if given the choice. Nolan argues most would, but Art points out that nobody was ever asked. Nolan offers practical countermeasures, including the importance of crosscut shredders and careful communication habits.
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