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Hey, Kids: Spying Is Fun!

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proud2BlibKansan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-11-06 10:33 AM
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Hey, Kids: Spying Is Fun!
By Simon Maxwell Apter, TheNation.com. Posted February 11, 2006.

Move over, McGruff. The trench-coated canine mascot of the National Crime Prevention Council has some youthful competition in the battle for the hearts and minds of America's children. Now in virtual training on the website of the National Security Agency are the CryptoKids, the code-makers and code-breakers of America's future.

The NSA, based at Fort Meade, Maryland, has seven CryptoKids in its trademarked menagerie, including Crypto Cat, versed in Navajo, the language of the storied code talkers of World War II; Decipher Dog, a cryptanalyst who learned the fine points of broadband networking from his stepmother, an NSA network engineer; T. Top, a turtle who knows how to design and build computers; and a language analyst named Rosetta Stone.

This Toys 'R' Us approach to spying is nothing new for the fifteen agencies that comprise the "intelligence community" of the US government, including the CIA, the NSA and the National Reconnaissance Office. In 1997 President Bill Clinton mandated that all government agencies set aside virtual space on their websites for child-friendly material. Today, these sites serve as recruiting portals for America's youth.

The CryptoKids were born in February 2004 within the bowels of Fort Meade and, according to Kwanza Gipson of the NSA public affairs office, were designed "strictly" to reflect only the official information contained within the main website. Of course, since the official stance of the agency concerning the recent warrantless wiretapping scandal has been to deny the program's illegality and to treat domestic spying as business as usual, this strict adherence to the office line conveniently recuses the CryptoKids from having to discuss the issue with children. After all, if General Michael Hayden insists that the program is not "domestic spying," as he did at the Washington Press Club recently, then what more could Sergeant Sam possibly add to the debate?

http://www.alternet.org/story/31929/
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matt819 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-11-06 11:53 AM
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1. Hey, this could be fun. . .
They could encourage kids to spy on their parents and neighbors. This was real popular in 1930s Germany, and maybe it's time for this fun game to be resurrected today. It was also practiced pretty darn seriously in the Soviet Union. Okay, the Soviet Union doesn't exist any more, but who's to say some of their nifty policies couldn't be applied in 21st century America. They may be onto something here.
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