It's not that the Feds should never have access to your records.
The problem is that under "administrative subpoenas" they can have anything they want--no "cause" needed.
Administrative
subpoenas are issued unilaterally by government agencies -- meaning
without approval by neutral judges -- and without probable cause stated
under oath and affirmation as required by the Fourth Amendment. There
are now 336 federal statutes authorizing administrative subpoenas,
according to the Department of Justice.
In U.S. v Zadeh,
the DEA obtained the records of 35 patient files without showing
probable cause or obtaining a warrant issued by a judge. Citing New
Deal-era case law, Judge Reed O’Connor noted that “[t]he Supreme Court
has refused to require that [a federal] agency have probable cause to
justify issuance of an administrative subpoena,” and that they may be
issued “merely on suspicion that the law is being violated, or even just because it wants assurance that it is not." (Emphasis added).
In other words, the government may now use “fishing expeditions” for medical records.
Remember that over the weekend, Obozo ordered that SocSec recipients can be denied gun possession if they are 'mentally incapable of managing their own affairs' (meaning any damn thing one wants it to mean, including Alzheimer's....)
It is reported that the NSA is jealous.
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