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Comment by Ross Wolf
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How difficult is it to avoid government surveillance? Tougher Each Day.

With or without warrants law enforcement is tracking in real time Americans use of credit cards, documenting what they bought, who they paid, e.g. their doctor; law enforcement is documenting Americans’ travel and hotel reservations, when and where they rented and return a car; track Citizens’ phone card calls; calls made and received on their cell, home and office phone. Law enforcement can do all this by alleging to a judge that a person is a person of interests, without providing provable cause or evidence a person targeted for surveillance committed a crime.

Honest Americans are less likely to believe they could be the subject of warrant-less government surveillance. At the increasing rate government is spying on lawful Americans, it wouldn’t be surprising in some investigative cases, if law enforcement without warrants bugged products Citizens bought using a credit card and had shipped to their home, such as electronic equipment purchased on the Internet e.g. fax machines and computer equipment that have a power source for voice transmission when plugged in; law enforcement tracking someone’s credit card use would be alerted, to intercept a credit card user’s shipped purchase, and know the address a package was sent.

Lawful Americans may have to go to extreme lengths to protect their privacy by exploiting weaknesses in government warrant-less surveillance. It would be funny if it weren’t so serious. For example, a lawful Citizen might have a friend rent the hotel room where he or she wants to take their boss’s spouse for a tryst. Law enforcement relies on credit cards and phone records to track Citizens. So someone leaving town who wants privacy and does not want to be tracked, might (lawfully in writing) not breaking any law, give permission to a friend to use their credit card while they are out of town, at restaurants and coffee shops where they don’t ask for ID’ for small purchases—provided the intent, is not to establish an alibi for the person leaving town to commit a crime elsewhere. If you use a credit card in a restaurant or store that has time/dated video, the feds need only match the time a credit card was processed at a commercial establishment with the user’s face shown on the video to determine who used a credit card. I remember reading someplace I can’t recall, about a guy on the run who gave his calling card to a stranger enabling the pursued person time to travel the opposite direction 2,000 miles to leave the country. Law enforcement surveillance has gotten so intrusive, it is believed but not confirmed, that criminals to travel undetected are having people with clean records buy RVs to drive them around the country and sign the check in form at RV Parks while the criminal passenger(s) stay hidden in the recreational vehicle enjoying the comforts of almost home.

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