Weโ€™re being spied on by a domestic army of government snitches, spies and techno-warriors.

This government of Peeping Toms is watchingย everythingย we do, reading everything we write, listening to everything we say, and monitoring everything we spend.

Beware of what you say, what you read, what you write, where you go, and with whom you communicate, because it is all being recorded, stored, and catalogued, and will be used against you eventually, at a time and place of the governmentโ€™s choosing.

This far-reaching surveillance has paved the way for anย omnipresent, militarized fourth branch of governmentโ€”the Surveillance Stateโ€”that came into being without any electoral mandate or constitutional referendum.

Indeed, long before the National Security Agency (NSA) became the agency we loved to hate, the Justice Department, the FBI, and the Drug Enforcement Administration wereย carrying out their own secret mass surveillanceย on an unsuspecting populace.

Even agencies not traditionally associated with the intelligence community are part of the governmentโ€™s growing network of snitches and spies.

Just about every branch of the governmentโ€”from the Postal Service to the Treasury Department and every agency in betweenโ€”now has its own surveillance sector, authorized to spy on the American people. For instance, the U.S. Postal Service, which has beenย photographing the exterior of every piece of paper mailย for the past 20 years, is also spying on Americansโ€™ texts, emails and social media posts. Headed up by the Postal Serviceโ€™s law enforcement division, theย Internet Covert Operations Programย (iCOP) is reportedlyย using facial recognition technology, combined with fake online identities, to ferret out potential troublemakers with โ€œinflammatoryโ€ posts. The agency claims the online surveillance, which falls outside its conventional job scope of processing and delivering paper mail, is necessary to help postal workers avoid โ€œpotentially volatile situations.โ€

Then there are the fusion and counterterrorism centers that gather all of the data from the smaller government spiesโ€”the police, public health officials, transportation, etc.โ€”and make it accessible for all those in power. And that doesnโ€™t even begin to touch on the complicity of the corporate sector, which buys and sells us from cradle to grave, until we have no more data left to mine.

Itโ€™s not just what we say, where we go and what we buy that is being tracked.

Weโ€™re being surveilled right down to our genes, thanks to a potent combination of hardware, software and data collection that scans our biometricsโ€”our faces, irises, voices, genetics, even our gaitโ€”runs them through computer programs that can break the data down into unique โ€œidentifiers,โ€ and then offers them up to the government and its corporate allies for their respective uses.

All of those internet-connected gadgets we just have to have (Forbesย refers to them as โ€œ(data) pipelines to our intimate bodily processesโ€)โ€”the smart watches that can monitor our blood pressure and the smart phones that let usย pay for purchases with our fingerprints and iris scansโ€”are setting us up for a brave new world where there is nowhere to run and nowhere to hide.

For instance, imagine what the government could do (and is likely already doing) with voiceprint technology, which has been likened to a fingerprint. Described as โ€œthe next frontline in the battle against overweening public surveillance,โ€ the collection of voiceprints is a booming industry for governments and businesses alike. Asย The Guardianย reports, โ€œvoice biometrics could be used to pinpoint the location of individuals.โ€

We are now the unwitting victims of an interconnected, tightly woven, technologically evolving web of real-time, warrantless, wall-to-wall mass surveillance that makes the spy programs spawned by the USA Patriot Act look like childโ€™s play.

Fusion centers. See Something, Say Something. Red flag laws. Behavioral threat assessments. Terror watch lists. Facial recognition. Snitch tip lines. Biometric scanners. Pre-crime. DNA databases. Data mining. Precognitive technology. Contact tracing apps.

These are all part and parcel of the widening surveillance dragnet that the government has used and abused in order to extend its reach and its power.

The COVID-19 pandemic has succeeded in acclimating us even further to being monitored, tracked and reported for so-called deviant or undesirable behavior.

Consequently, we now live in a society in which a person can be accused of any number of crimes without knowing what exactly he has done. He might be apprehended in the middle of the night by a roving band of SWAT police. He might find himself on a no-fly list, unable to travel for reasons undisclosed. He might have his phones or internet tapped based upon a secret order handed down by a secret court, with no recourse to discover why he was targeted.

This Kafkaesque nightmare has become Americaโ€™s reality.

Despite the fact that itsย data snooping has been shown to be ineffectiveย at detecting, let alone stopping, any actual terror attacks, the government continues to operate its domestic spying programs largely in secret, carrying outย warrantless mass surveillanceย on hundreds of millions of Americansโ€™ phone calls, emails, text messages and the like.

The question of how to deal with government agencies and programs that operate outside of the system of checks and balances established by the Constitution forces us to contend with a deeply unsatisfactory and dubious political โ€œsolutionโ€ to a problem that operates beyond the reach of voters and politicians: how do you hold accountable a government that lies, cheats, steals, sidesteps the law, and then absolves itself of wrongdoing?

Certainly, the history and growth of the NSA tracks with the governmentโ€™s insatiable hunger for ever-great powers.

Since its official start in 1952, when President Harry S. Truman issued aย secret executive orderย establishing the NSA as the hub of the governmentโ€™s foreign intelligence activities, the agencyโ€”nicknamed โ€œNo Such Agencyโ€โ€”has operated covertly, unaccountable to Congress all the while using taxpayer dollars to fund its secret operations. It was only when the agency ballooned to 90,000 employees in 1969, making it theย largest intelligence agencyย in the world with a significant footprint outside Washington, DC, that it became more difficult to deny its existence.

In the aftermath of Watergate in 1975, the Senate held meetings under the Church Committee in order to determine exactly what sorts of illicit activities the American intelligence apparatus was engaged in under the direction of President Nixon, and how future violations of the law could be stopped. It was the first time the NSA was exposed to public scrutiny since its creation.

The investigation revealed a sophisticated operation whose surveillance programs paid little heed to such things as the Constitution. For instance, under Project SHAMROCK, the NSA spied on telegrams to and from the U.S., as well as the correspondence of American citizens. Moreover, as theย Saturday Evening Postย reports, โ€œUnder Project MINARET, the NSA monitored the communications of civil rights leaders and opponents of the Vietnam War, including targets such as Martin Luther King, Jr., Mohammed Ali, Jane Fonda, and two active U.S. Senators. The NSA had launched this program in 1967 to monitor suspected terrorists and drug traffickers, but successive presidents used it to track all manner of political dissidents.โ€

Senator Frank Church (D-Ida.), who served as the chairman of the Select Committee on Intelligence that investigated the NSA, understood only too well the dangers inherent in allowing the government to overstep its authority in the name of national security. Church recognized that such surveillance powers โ€œat any time could be turned around on the American people, and no American would have any privacy left, such is the capability to monitor everything: telephone conversations, telegrams, it doesnโ€™t matter. There would be no place to hide.โ€

Noting that the NSA could enable a dictator โ€œto impose total tyrannyโ€ upon an utterly defenseless American public, Church declared that he did not โ€œwant to see this country ever go across the bridgeโ€ of constitutional protection, congressional oversight and popular demand for privacy. He avowed that โ€œwe,โ€ implicating both Congress and its constituency in this duty, โ€œmust see to it that this agency and all agencies that possess this technology operate within the law and under proper supervision, so that we never cross over that abyss. That is the abyss from which there is no return.

The result was theย passage of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Actย (FISA), and the creation of the FISA Court, which was supposed to oversee and correct how intelligence information is collected and collated. The law requires that the NSA get clearance from the FISA Court, a secret surveillance court, before it can carry out surveillance on American citizens. Fast forward to the present day, and the so-called solution to the problem of government entities engaging in unjustified and illegal surveillanceโ€”the FISA Courtโ€”has unwittingly become the enabler of such activities, rubberstamping almost every warrant request submitted to it.

The 9/11 attacks served as a watershed moment in our nationโ€™s history, ushering in an era in which immoral and/or illegal government activities such as surveillance, torture, strip searches, SWAT team raids are sanctioned as part of the quest to keep us โ€œsafe.โ€

In the wake of the 9/11 attacks,ย George W. Bush secretly authorized the NSA to conduct warrantless surveillanceย on Americansโ€™ phone calls and emails. That wireless wiretap program wasย reportedly ended in 2007ย after theย New York Timesย reported on it, to mass indignation.

Nothing changed under Barack Obama. In fact, theย violations worsened, with the NSA authorized to secretly collect internet and telephone data on millions of Americans, as well as on foreign governments.

It was only after whistleblowerย Edward Snowdenโ€™s revelations in 2013ย that the American people fully understood the extent to which they had been betrayed once again.

Even so, nothing really changed.

Since then, presidents, politicians, and court rulings have come and gone, but none of them have done much to put an end to the governmentโ€™s โ€œtechnotyranny.โ€

At every turn, we have been handicapped in our quest for transparency, accountability and a representative democracy by an establishment culture of secrecy: secret agencies, secret experiments, secret military bases, secret surveillance, secret budgets, and secret court rulings, all of which exist beyond our reach, operate outside our knowledge, and do not answer to โ€œwe the people.โ€

Yet the surveillance sector is merely one small part of a shadowy permanent government comprised of unelected bureaucrats who march in lockstep with profit-driven corporations that actually runs Washington, DC, and works to keep us under close watch and, thus, under control. For example,ย Google openly works with the NSA, Amazon has built a massiveย $600 million intelligence databaseย for the CIA, and theย telecommunications industry is making a fat profit by spying on usย for the government.

Most recently, the Biden Administration indicated it may be open toย working with non-governmental firmsย in order to warrantlessly monitor citizens online.

This would be nothing new, however. Vast quantities of the governmentโ€™s digital surveillance is already beingย outsourced to private companies, who are far less restrained in how they harvest and share our personal data.

In this way,ย Corporate America is making a hefty profitย by aiding and abetting the government in its militarized domestic surveillance efforts.

Cue the dawning of whatย The Nationย refers to as โ€œthe rise of a new class in America: the cyberintelligence ruling class. These are the peopleโ€”often referred to as โ€˜intelligence professionalsโ€™โ€”who do the actual analytical and targeting work of the NSA and other agencies in Americaโ€™s secret government. Over the last [20] years, thousands of former high-ranking intelligence officials and operatives have left their government posts and taken up senior positions at military contractors, consultancies, law firms, and private-equity firms. In their new jobs, they replicate what they did in governmentโ€”often for the same agencies they left. But this time, their mission is strictly for-profit.โ€

The snitch culture has further empowered the Surveillance State.

As Ezra Marcusย writesย for theย New York Times, โ€œThroughout the past year, American society responded to political upheaval and biological peril by turning to an age-old tactic for keeping rule breakers in check: tattling.โ€

This new era of snitch surveillance is the lovechild of the governmentโ€™s post-9/11 โ€œSee Something, Say Somethingโ€ programs combined with the self-righteousness of a politically correct, technologically-wired age.

Marcusย continues:

โ€œTechnology, and our abiding love of it, is crucial to our current moment of social surveillance. Snitching isnโ€™t just a byproduct of nosiness or fear; itโ€™s a technological feature built into the digital architecture of the pandemic era โ€” specifically when it comes to software designed for remote work and Covid-tracingโ€ฆ Contact tracing apps โ€ฆ have started to beย adapted for other uses, includingย criminal probes by the Singaporean government. If that seems distinctly worrying, it might be useful to remember that the worldโ€™s most powerful technology companies,ย whose productsย you are likely using to read this story, already use a business model of mass surveillance, collecting and selling user information to advertisers at an unfathomable scale. Ourย cellphones track us everywhere, andย our locations are bought and soldย by data brokers at incredible, intimate detail.ย Facial recognition softwareย used by law enforcement trawls Instagram selfies.ย Facebook harvests the biometric dataย of its users. The whole ecosystem, more or less, runs on snitching.โ€

As I make clear in my bookย Battlefield America: The War on the American People, what we are dealing with today is not just a beast that has outgrown its chains but a beast that will not be restrained.

John Whitehead