Monday, November 7, 2022

Consequences of Being Subject Citizens of the US Corporation

Editor's note: In its simplest terms, as subject citizens of the US corporation at birth the US corporation can tap into this information anytime it wants to and has every "legal" right to do so, unless you extract yourself from the US corporation that owns you. If the US corporation doesn't like what you are doing that it finds a risk to its integrity, its corporate enforcers can and will retaliate on you. You must act to return your political status back to the land.
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Source: Yahoo News

Exclusive: State Dept. gives law enforcement, intelligence agencies unrestricted access to Americans' personal data

By Jana Winter | November 4, 2022
Sen. Ron Wyden. (Rod Lamkey/Pool via Reuters)

The State Department is giving law enforcement and intelligence agencies unrestricted access to the personal data of more than 145 million Americans, through information from passport applications that is shared without legal process or any apparent oversight, according to a letter sent from Sen. Ron Wyden to Secretary of State Antony Blinken and obtained by Yahoo News.

The information was uncovered by Wyden during his ongoing probe into reporting by Yahoo News about Operation Whistle Pig, a wide-ranging leak investigation launched by a Border Patrol agent and his supervisors at the U.S. Customs and Border Protection's National Targeting Center.

On Wednesday, Wyden sent a letter to Blinken requesting detailed information on which federal agencies are provided access to State Department passport information on U.S. citizens.

"I write to express serious concern that the Department of State is providing law enforcement and intelligence agencies with unfettered access to personal data, originally collected through passport applications, of the more than 145 million Americans with a passport," states the letter sent to Blinken, a copy of which was obtained by Yahoo News.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken. (Michael A. McCoy/Reuters)

Wyden, D-Ore., wrote that "the breadth of this access highlights the potential for other abuses. In a July 13, 2022, briefing for my office, State Department officials confirmed that 25 other federal agencies have access to the Department's database of passport applications."

According to documents posted on a Department of Homeland Security website, data collected on U.S. citizens include: names, addresses, birth dates, biometric data like fingerprints and facial images, email addresses, phone numbers, gender, race, Social Security numbers and other types of personal information.

Please go to Yahoo News to continue reading.
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Unbelievable. An intelligence operation against voting Americans:



Option? Leave:

US citizens crossing border in record numbers — to live in Mexico: report

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