Spy
Back: How to View Your NSA or FBI File
The
NSA has been spying on us, but we can spy back by using the legal system to
find out what they know about us.
By Gordon
Rupe
Story Leak
June 14, 2013
Do you know what FOIA is?
No? Don’t be alarmed, most Americans don’t. It is better known as the
Freedom of Information Act (introduced by Sen. Edward V. Long in 1965 and
signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1966), and is most often used
by Americans looking for answers into the deep mysteries of government activity.
There is something else you should know, however: Freedom of Information Act
requests aren’t just for those who are seeking information on black ops
activities.Story Leak
June 14, 2013
You can use it yourself to discover what
organizations like the National Security Agency or the Federal Bureau
of Investigation have on your file. Amazingly, FIOA can be used by you to
get whatever files that the NSA or FBI or any other three letter agency has on
you. And with the latest round of leaks covered by Anthony Gucciardi detailing how
the NSA is tracking your activity through just about all of the major social
websites, this is big news.
Perhaps you are
politically active and have gone to a few protests and were arrested, or maybe
you post a lot of political articles on your favorite social networking
site.
Grabbing
Your File
There are two ways you can get your file. Your
first option is to get it straight from the source. For the NSA file, you can
go to the FOIA request form. Or for the FBI, you can go to their official
request form as well. Or perhaps you don’t feel comfortable going
through that process and would rather use another party, in which case you can
utilize the website Get My FBI File. This
website provides the forms for most agencies, CIA, DIA, FBI, NSA, etc.
Since the conception of
FOIA in 1966, it has been amended eleven times. Most notably by President
Gerald Ford in 1974. At first, President Ford was for bolstering various
privacy-related amendments, however he then performed a complete 180 on the
issue (after being persuaded by his Chief of Staff Donald Rumsfield, and Deputy
Richard Cheney), signing a Presidential veto that was eventually overturned by
Congress. This was only one of twelve vetoes that were overturned by congress
in regards to President Ford.http://intellihub.com/2013/06/13/spy-back-how-to-view-your-nsa-or-fbi-file/
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