A Pending Blow for States’ Rights

A group of legislators in Maryland has introduced the “Fourth Amendment Protection Act” in the Maryland state legislature, a bill that would deny state support to Federal agencies engaged in warrantless electronic surveillance.  This bill is aimed directly at the National Security Agency and its warrantless monitoring and tracking of US citizens (secret warrants?  C’mon), and it would block the provision of “material support, participation, or assistance in any form” by any state entity or any entity of a political subdivision of the state, or by companies with state contracts.

That “material support, participation,…” ban would include providing water and electricity via public utilities to the NSA at its Ft Meade HQ.  Other parts of the bill would prohibit the use of evidence gathered by the NSA in state courts and prevent state universities from partnering with the NSA on research.

The bill would have state or local officials who violate the ban subject to as much as a year in a county jail and a $5,000 fine.  Such officials also would be fired from their jobs and be barred from public service

Delegate Michael Smigiel (R, Dist 36):

I want Maryland standing with its back to its people holding a shield. Not facing them holding a sword.

Expectation of Privacy

In Klayman v Obama, DC District Federal Judge Richard Leon issued an injunction requiring the government to stop collecting metadata on Americans’ phone calls, ruling the NSA’s program likely unconstitutional.  Leon then stayed his injunction pending appeals.

The Wall Street Journal had some thoughts about Leon’s ruling; as some might expect, I have some thoughts about the WSJ‘s thoughts.

While obtaining the content of phone calls requires a warrant, the High Court ruled that people have no “reasonable expectation of privacy” for information about phone calls such as the date, time and length of their calls and the numbers they dial.  Such transactional data inevitably belong to the service provider, not to individuals….

This is plainly fallacious: that I surrender some of my private data to a third party in no way alters my expectation of privacy.  I expect that third party to protect my data as I would; I expect that third party to protect my data as though they were the third party’s own.  We even have laws on the books requiring such safeguarding; the principle is well established.  It’s true enough that the Supremes have ruled on this before, claiming no expectation of privacy (on a wireless telephone wiretap case some decades ago).   However, that Court had to do a fair amount of mind reading to reach that lack of expectation, and it’s not the first time the Court has been wrong.  Leon is presenting the Supremes with a golden opportunity to correct this particular error.

Contrary to Judge Leon, the reality of the information age is that we all have less expectation of privacy.

This is simply wrong.  I’ve not at all lowered my expectation of privacy; in fact, I expect these advances in technology to enhance my privacy, not deprecate it.

No one who makes calls and emails on a smart phone, visits an e-commerce website, uses a credit card, drives with an Easy Pass or otherwise benefits from modern technology can truly believe that he is not entrusting data to third parties about personal behavior.

This is a careless conflation of two separate issues.  In no way do I reduce my expectation of privacy; I simply expect that third party to safeguard my data.  Those third parties even have procedures to allow me explicitly to instruct them either to safeguard my data or not collect them at all.  My smart phone even has the means to turn off the on-board GPS—and if I turn it on, there’s nothing in that act that permits my location data to be collected for any use but my own.  There’s nothing at all in my use of my smart phone (or my car’s mapping facility) that authorizes the collection of my behavioral data beyond the specific task for which it’s collected—most especially not for government collection.

And, to get to the conflation, the fact that a third party comes into possession of my personal data has absolutely nothing to do with the fact that those data concern my personal behavior.

Well, so what?  The NSA isn’t surveilling lighters at rock concerts, or creating personal mosaics.  The agency is collecting the same basic telephony metadata.

It’s amazing to me that the WSJ would make this argument at all, it’s so plainly fallacious.  The government might decide, at any point, that it’s time to begin surveilling lighters, or the rock concert performers.  Or anyone else about whom it decides to manufacture a suspicion.  Or create those mosaics just because—it certainly now has the data with which to make a good start.

No.  The whole structure of our social compact and of our Constitution is to effect prior restraint of government, not to correct it after it has done its wrong.  That’s a one way street, too: that we tell our government that it cannot engage in prior restraint of us in no way means we cannot engage in that prior restraint of government.

And this, written by Robert Turner, co-founder of the Center for National Security Law at the University of Virginia School of Law, in a separate WSJ op-ed about Klayman:

Consider another, more common, type of warrantless search.  Every time Americans catch a flight at a commercial airport, they first must submit to intrusive searches by federal agents without the slightest probable cause or individualized suspicion.  Yet every federal court to decide the issue has held that these searches are “reasonable” and thus consistent with the Fourth Amendment (which prohibits only “unreasonable” searches).

Clearly, the privacy interests infringed by airport searches are far greater than having a government computer glance through our telephone bills to make sure we have not been communicating with foreign terrorists.

This is a specious argument.  Turner carefully ignores the vast hue and cry over these searches—based entirely on their privacy invasion aspect—by the travelling public.  There is, indeed, a very strong expectation of privacy, the mind-reading a judiciary insulated by design from the public notwithstanding.

Expectation of privacy is alive and well everywhere but in the minds of most of that insulated judiciary.  Leon got this right.

How Does This Work?

The CMS has a Request for Proposal out [emphasis added]:

Solicitation Number: RFP-CMS-RMADA-2014
Notice Type: Modification/Amendment
Synopsis: Added: Nov 20, 2013 1:17 pm

The purpose is to develop a Research, Measurement, Assessment, Design, and Analysis (RMADA) IDIQ [Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity contracting/procurement type] to respond to expanded needs of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care ACT (ACA) and Health Care reform ACT (HCERA).  The work awarded under the RMADA will involve the design, implementation and evaluation of a broad range of research and/or payment and service delivery models to test their potential for reducing expenditures for Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP, and uninsured beneficiaries while maintaining or improving quality of care.

Section C of this RFP has this expansion [emphasis added]:

…the [CMS] will award task orders (TOs) for a wide range of analytic support and technical assistance activities that support models and demonstration programs created or derived under the auspices of the Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act (ACA), and future health reform legislation where new delivery and payment reform models are enacted.  The demands of new reforms created under ACA have redefined the way CMS approaches and conducts research activities and demonstrations affecting Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP, and uninsured populations.  The role of state and private sector payers is also redefined as many of the new models include multiple payers working in collaboration with CMS to reform the care delivery system.  The RMADA will provide CMS with a robust tool to meet those challenges.  Some of the major activities this umbrella contract will address include the following: designing, maintaining and refining model/demonstration design and operations; monitoring model site implementations; designing and carrying out surveys and other data collection activities; obtaining and analyzing secondary data sources including Medicare, Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and private payer sources that support model design and evaluations.  Some other evaluation activities envisioned under the RMADA include reporting on formative and summative analyses, providing rapid cycle quarterly evaluation feedback to all model participants and CMS, and the creation of summative annual and final program findings.

Aside from only just figuring out that “The demands of new reforms created under ACA have redefined the way CMS approaches and conducts research activities and demonstrations affecting Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP, and uninsured populations” and “The role of state and private sector payers is also redefined…,” they’ve also just discovered HHS, or its CMS ObamaMart Project “Integrator,” hadn’t thought about doing these things from the jump.

As a result, now they want to spend an additional $7 billion of our money on their failure.  Probably, it’s too much to hope for any of these billions being committed to saving pennies will be committed to reducing the costs of all that added reporting and paperwork.  Or even that the entire $7 billion could be saved (and sent over to Treasury to reduce our national debt) with withdrawing this foolish RFP.

More on ObamaMart

HealthCare.gov thinks it’s made an improvement: now we can browse—sort of—some notional health “insurance” plans and their notional premiums.  The images below (because the technology is smarter than I am, so I can’t meld them into the single image that exists at HealthCare.gov/how-much-will-marketplace-insurance-cost/) show just how meaningless this “improvement” is.

And

As you can see, the ObamaMart still is withholding any sort of idea of actual costs—explicitly, you don’t get to see deductibles and copays, and you only get to see “premiums” for two age groups—which lump together too many characteristics for these made-up numbers to be taken seriously.

We still have to give our personally identifying information to the ObamaMart doorman, we still have to open an “account” before we can get into the store and poke the shelves.

The IRS knows how to do tables of options based on income.  Adding options based on health conditions—the major factors, like heart disease history, smoking, weight vs height, and so on—for the five plan categories would make a table bigger, perhaps more complex (it might even—the horror!—require more than one table), but it’s eminently doable.  And Americans aren’t as dumb as the Progressives in the White House and HHS think—we can keep up with such a table or set of tables.

This page of notions is just mendacious.

A Failure from Not Bothering with Checking Backgrounds

We have the Obama administration’s decision not to bother with serious background checks on its…navigators…who will be collecting all of our personal financial and medical data as they “help” us choose an Obamacare “insurance” policy.

Now we have another outcome of that administration decision.  Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach’s home was trespassed against by one of these attackers and a crowd of her cronies.

Veronica Miranda…appeared with “four busloads of her friends” at [Kobach’s] home near Kansas City in June.

“She was more than trespassing,” [Kobach] said.  “She was attempting to intimidate a public official.”