Skip to content

Say Thanks to Qwest!

Say Thanks to Qwest!

Website created by Richard Kastelein
Text by Chris Floyd and Richard Kastelein

It’s not often these days that we have occasion to laud corporate behavior, but the stance taken by the telecom Qwest in resisting the Bush Administration’s covert program to ensnare every single American citizen in a vast web of telephone surveillance deserves our thanks.

Every other telecom sold out the privacy of its customers – literally so, taking money to turn over their phone records to the National Security Agency – but Qwest alone insisted on having a court order before complying with Bush’s unprecedented and “indefensible” (as Newt Gingrich put it) invasion of Americans’ personal lives and business affairs.

Bush’s domestic spies refused to supply any formal legal justification whatsoever for their extraordinary request, beyond the implied “plenary powers” of the “Commander-in-Chief”: the novel – and equally indefensible — doctrine that the Administration had adopted as the basis of what is effectively a presidential dictatorship, beyond the reach of law.

It is, of course, a sad commentary on our times that Qwest should be praised so highly for merely obeying the law of the land. But this is what we’ve come to. Our leaders are lawless, and it is now up to every citizen – including corporate citizens – to embody and enact the laws and values of the Republic, on our own, until Constitutional government can be restored.

One simple act we can take is to support those who take a public stand for the law. You can say thanks to Qwest by posting a comment below (you don’t need to join, or leave an email or website to post – just scroll down and hit the comments link).

And pass this man an email as well:

Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer
David J. Heller
email: Corporate.Compliance@qwest.com

Click here to visit Qwest website

USA Today first broke the story, and now we all know: the National Security Agency has been collecting the private phone records of tens of millions of American citizens since 2001, gathering the tainted bounty of this sinister harvest into “the largest data base ever assembled in the world,” as one insider put it. Under the direction of General Michael V. Hayden — the military spymaster now nominated to head the CIA — the NSA carried out this massive “black op” against the American people in total secrecy, without the court orders clearly required to obtain this information. So how did Hayden and his creepy peepers into America’s privacy get hold of the phone records?

Simple: the major U.S. telecommunications corporations — all but one — turned them over to the government, for money — your money. That’s right: the Bush Administration used your tax dollars to pay the Big Telecoms to hand over your private phone records.

From USA Today:

…The sources said the NSA made clear that it was willing to pay for the cooperation. AT&T, which at the time was headed by C. Michael Armstrong, agreed to help the NSA.

So did BellSouth, headed by F. Duane Ackerman; SBC, headed by Ed Whitacre; and Verizon, headed by Ivan Seidenberg. With that, the NSA’s domestic program began in earnest.

If you are among the multitudes who signed up, in good faith, to BellSouth, AT&T or Verizon, expecting your privacy to be protected, as required by laws going back more than seven decades, the record of every phone call you have made in the last four-and-a-half years is now in the hands of a secret government program operating without any genuine oversight or restrictions against abuse. This includes the call records of every government or corporate whistleblower, every investigative journalist digging up government corruption, every political opponent of the Administration’s policies. Imagine how useful it would be for the Bush Administration to type in the name of, say, Seymour Hersh, and find out every government insider he’s talked to on the phone for the past four years?

Rarely has such a powerful, all-pervasive tool for repression been placed in the hands of a government; and rarely has there a been a government which has proven itself less trustworthy to hold such power without abusing it.

After the September 11 attacks in 2001, the Bush Administration decided to ignore the existing laws governing surveillance, in particular the special secret courts set up under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) of 1978. This urge to bypass FISA is not surprising; the secret courts – which had almost never refused a single request for surveillance of terrorst or espionage suspects – had been created in response to widespread government spying on citizens in for decades, a mania for illicit intrusion that reached its height under the disgraced president Richard Nixon.

Two of the greatest proponents of these assaults on civil liberties were high-ranking minions in the Nixon Administration: Dick Cheney and Don Rumsfeld. After Nixon’s ignominious departure, with Congress finally acting to restrain the manifold abuses of the national security system, Cheney and Rumsfeld – now Chief of Staff and Defense Secretary for Gerald Ford – buried investigations of a covert telecommunications spy program remarkably similar to the current NSA scheme under the butt-covering rubric of “executive privilege.” The original FISA restrictions were, in fact, aimed directly at serial abusers of power like Cheney and Rumsfeld. It is no wonder that they discarded these restrictions at the first opportunity once they had returned in glory to the White House.

George W. Bush gave his full authority to the NSA program, whose ostensible purpose is to “data-mine” blind phone numbers — with no names or content of the calls divulged — in search of connections between suspected terrorists. Hayden in turn delegated the responsibility to lower-echelon shift supervisors – as in the Watergate days – further diluting the already soup-thin oversight of the operation. For years, it has been carried out in total secrecy; there is simply no way of knowing how they have used – or abused – this massive database, or what other information, such as call content, they have obtained from the phone companies, or by other means.

The Bush Administration pointedly refrained from using any existing legal mechanism in requesting the call records, when it could have very easily done so and doubtless obtained all the information it sought for the data-mining program. In the absence of any other credible explanation – beyond bland assertions of “trust us, it’s all legal” – we are certainly justified in suspecting that the Administration had purposes for the program which lay outside the scope of FISA or any other law governing domestic surveillance.

But the major telecoms were evidently unconcerned about the lack of legality. Once the NSA dangled a bit of long green in their faces, they passed over the call records without a by your leave. Only Qwest – the often beleaguered telecom with a checkered past and an uncertain legal future hanging over its chief – refused to cooperate without the sensible expedient of a court order. After all, that was the law, and had been since the 1930s. There is no doubt that Qwest, given the appeals to patriotism and national security in the tumultuous days after 9/11, would have willingly complied – if the request had been made in a legal manner.

Qwest’s stand is even more remarkable given the heavy pressure applied by Bush team.

From USA Today:

…Trying to put pressure on Qwest, NSA representatives pointedly told Qwest that it was the lone holdout among the big telecommunications companies.

It also tried appealing to Qwest’s patriotic side: In one meeting, an NSA representative suggested that Qwest’s refusal to contribute to the database could compromise national security, one person recalled.

In addition, the agency suggested that Qwest’s foot-dragging might affect its ability to get future classified work with the government.

Like other big telecommunications companies, Qwest already had classified contracts and hoped to get more.

Aside from concerns over legality, morality and liberty, the very utility of the NSA program has also been called into question. The blunderbuss approach of harvesting millions upon millions of phone records to be churned by supercomputers seems wildly at odds with the kind of careful, precise human intelligence and investigative work required to pinpoint the deliberately scattered, deeply buried, small networks of actual terrorists out there. And the already massive extent of the program is evidently just the beginning.

From USA Today:

It’s the largest database ever assembled in the world,” said one person, who, like the others who agreed to talk about the NSA’s activities, declined to be identified by name or affiliation. The agency’s goal is “to create a database of every call ever made” within the nation’s borders, this person added.

…The usefulness of the NSA’s domestic phone-call database as a counterterrorism tool is unclear. Also unclear is whether the database has been used for other purposes.

“Other purposes” is the operative phrase here. Because “data-mining” for terrorists in giant phone record banks is like trying to find microscopic needles in an ever-growing haystack. It is, in a word, impossible, according to expert to Bruce Schneier from Wired Magazine.

This unrealistically accurate system will generate 1 billion false alarms for every real terrorist plot it uncovers. Every day of every year, the police will have to investigate 27 million potential plots in order to find the one real terrorist plot per month.

Raise that false-positive accuracy to an absurd 99.9999 percent and you’re still chasing 2,750 false alarms per day — but that will inevitably raise your false negatives, and you’re going to miss some of those 10 real plots.

This isn’t anything new. In statistics, it’s called the “base rate fallacy,” and it applies in other domains as well. For example, even highly accurate medical tests are useless as diagnostic tools if the incidence of the disease is rare in the general population.

Terrorist attacks are also rare, any “test” is going to result in an endless stream of false alarms. This is exactly the sort of thing we saw with the NSA’s eavesdropping program: the New York Times reported that the computers spat out thousands of tips per month.

Every one of them turned out to be a false alarm. And the cost was enormous — not just for the FBI agents running around chasing dead-end leads instead of doing things that might actually make us safer, but also the cost in civil liberties.

The fundamental freedoms that make our country the envy of the world are valuable, and not something that we should throw away lightly.

So again, we are left with the question: What is the NSA program really about? Who are they really spying on? Remember, we are dealing with an Administration that has already declared – in open court, in Congressional testimony, in internal memos, in executive orders and “presidential signing statements” – that the president has the “inherent authority” as Commander-in-Chief during “wartime” to ignore or reinterpret any law that might restrict his “plenary powers.” We have seen this pernicious doctrine in action for years: it underlies the use of torture throughout the global system of detention centers, secret prisons and the concentration camp at Guantanamo Bay that Bush has set up; it underlies Bush’s outrageous claim that he can apprehend anyone on earth and hold them indefinitely, without charges or trial, simply by declaring them, on his own authority, an “enemy combatant,” a “terrorist” or even a “suspected terrorist.”

(For example, the Bush Administration has declared in open court that the U.S. government would be justified in capturing and holding a “little old lady in Switzerland” if she unwittingly gave money to a charity used as a front by terrorists. Deputy Attorney General Brian Boyle made the assertion in a hearing on Dec. 1, 2004, adding the chilling words: “Someone’s intention is clearly not a factor that would disable detention.” This admittedly innocent little old lady would then be subjected to a military tribunal, which alone would decide “whether to believe her and release her” – or keep her locked up.)

So we are dealing with an Administration that openly admits that innocent people can be “legimately” swept up in its vast covert nets and subjected to indefinite imprisonment at the mercy of a military tribunal. And we are supposed to believe that these same officials, willing to go to such draconian lengths, are acting with scrupulous circumspection when handling the private phone records of millions of American citizens? We are supposed to believe they are using this gargantuan NSA program solely to ferret out a few terrorists?

From USA Today:

…With access to records of billions of domestic calls, the NSA has gained a secret window into the communications habits of millions of Americans.

Customers’ names, street addresses and other personal information are not being handed over as part of NSA’s domestic program, the sources said. But the phone numbers the NSA collects can easily be cross-checked with other databases to obtain that information.

The NSA phone-spy program, which we are now told is only the “tip of the iceberg”, is designed to identify social networks – of any kind. It is far too large to have been created solely to find a few terrorists. It beggars belief – and belies the evidence of the Administration’s behavior over the past five years – to assume that other “social networks” are not also being targeted by the program: Democrats and other political opponents, internal dissidents, activist groups, journalists…basically anyone who is against Bush and the way he is fighting his self-declared, never-ending “War on Terror.”

But the dictatorial powers being claimed under the aegis of this “War” are not new measures in response to an unprecedented emergency – they are old abuses long championed by the most powerful elements in the Bush Administration. These powers of surveillance, secrecy and repression of dissent were being systematically restored by the Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld junta long before 9/11.

In the end, the NSA program is not about “national security” or fighting terrorists. It is just another front in a long-running war against the liberties of the American people: freedoms which are despised and feared by elites who believe that their power and privilege are the only genuine “national interests.”

Who knows? Tomorrow we may see Qwest in collusion with these elites on some other front. But right now, in this fight, they have been a champion of liberty and deserve our thanks. So go show them some love. But in the words of the late, great Johnny Cash: keep your eyes wide open all the time.

464 Responses to “Say Thanks to Qwest!”

Pages: « 1 2 3 4 [5] 6 7 8 9 10 » Show All

  1. 201
    Helen Says:

    I would switch from Verizon to Qwest

  2. 202
    George Connelly Says:

    As a good American and a paying customer I just wanted to thank you for not bending over for the Bully Bush.
    You just might have restored my faith in corporate America.
    Thanks again,
    George

  3. 203
    Sheri Says:

    Thank you for having the integrity and courage to do the right thing, it’s much appreciated by this Qwest customer.

  4. 204
    LMsytrofaniuk Says:

    I am happy to thank you for your integrity and the hope you give that all is not lost to greed and corruption.

  5. 205
    Donna Morrison Says:

    Thank you Qwest, this makes me glad I switched to you from Comcast a few months ago.

  6. 206
    Sheilagh Says:

    I sure do wish you offered wireless in Texas!!!

  7. 207
    Chris Says:

    Qwest offers long distance in every state but Alaska…its not a huge way to say thank you but its a start! I live in NC and signed up for the unlimited long distance today!!!! Thank you Qwest
    Here is the long distance link…click your state to see whats available

  8. 208
    Andrew Says:

    Loyal Qwest customer since 2000! And now even loyaler!

  9. 209
    Gizmo Says:

    Qwest is owned by the Carlyle Group (the same folks who brought you the Bin Laden Family & the Bush Family). They are major investors / holders of Qwest Communications and their connections to the millitary industrial complex is quite the connection. Bush 41 still has a lot of connections and Qwest may not be as “rightous” as you may think. There’s a name associated with Qwest, Robert Barr… something not quite right here

  10. 210
    admin Says:

    Did you read the last paragraph of the article?

    Who knows? Tomorrow we may see Qwest in collusion with these elites on some other front. But right now, in this fight, they have been a champion of liberty and deserve our thanks. So go show them some love. But in the words of the late, great Johnny Cash: keep your eyes wide open all the time.

  11. 211
    Sam Says:

    We should all take a very close look at Joseph Nacchio. Nacchio was indicted on 42 counts of Criminal Insider Trading on Dec. 20, 2005 – 13 days before the statute of limitations (5 years) on the alleged offenses would have passed and days after the domestic spying scandal broke. If it were not for Nacchio we, qwest customers, would have ended up in the ends of the government. But its not that customer calling patterns would have ended up in the hands of the government but more importantly, that the Government sought them in violation of due process by not seeking approval from the FISA court. Nacchio should be praised, called in front of congress to testify on what is really the right thing to do, and above all, not indicted when his trades were open and transparent.

  12. 212
    odanny Says:

    Thank you for standing up for the values many an American gave their life for in defense of.

  13. 213
    tsisageya Says:

    Thank you!!!

  14. 214
    Maldochi Says:

    I work for Qwest as a DSL Repair Screener (read Tech Support). I am very proud of how we handled this, and it makes me take a lot of pride in my company. Qwest, from its past history, isn’t exactly an angel, but the company itself has been working very hard to re-invent our image after the SEC scandals and stay true to our “Spirit of Service” motto. The results are beginning to show I guess.

    From a phone monkey, thank you all for the kudos.

  15. 215
    a hughes Says:

    I’m often angry at qwest, mostly concerning my 47 page bill, but also for dropped calls and poor connections. My cell phone loses calls in my own house, voice mail is sometimes 48 hours behind etc.
    At this time I am proud and lucky to be a qwest customer.
    We’ll work out the details later.

    KUDOS for taking a stand to defend existing laws!!!!!

  16. 216
    Matt Says:

    Thanks Quest ..great job .. Please let know if you have VOIP in my area .

  17. 217
    Matt Says:

    Thanks Qwest ..great job .. Please let know if you have VOIP in my area .

  18. 218
    Bonnie Says:

    Thank you, Qwest, for insisting that the Bush administration abide by the law.

  19. 219
    Ryan Says:

    Thank you Qwest. I’ve had some horrible expieriences with your company in the past but the decision you made to not provide call information to the government is laudible and encouraging. Again, thank you.

  20. 220
    Mike Sawyer Says:

    Thank You Qwest, and also T-Mobile, for not violating the law in this case. My phone service
    is through T-Mobile, and it will stay that way
    from now on. To all those with service plans from
    these other companies, you better switch over
    to a company that is at least willing to obey the
    law.

  21. 221
    odanny Says:

    http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=Q&t=1y

  22. 222
    C Ulbright Says:

    Thanks for saying NO to the nascent police state.

  23. 223
    Tim Jennings Says:

    Thank you. If I could, I would switch to Qwest right now.

  24. 224
    Scott L Says:

    Thank you for standing up for people’s rights, and not being bullied into giving up constitutional protections.

  25. 225
    Nancy Says:

    Thanks QWest for fighting the bullies and not capitulating to their bribery either! Thank you for being the strong holdout against this kakistocracy.

  26. 226
    Garrett Snider Says:

    I wish that there were options enough to allow people switch based on this information. At least there’s VOIP and pure cellular as phone service replacements. For data, it’s a different story. Thanks Quest, even if it was just for CYA!

  27. 227
    Johnny Says:

    Thanks for not selling out!

  28. 228
    Andrew Davidson Says:

    I would like to say so much to Qwest, for taking a stand with some corporate responsibility for once.

    Our job as citizens to protect our basic freedoms overrides any legal responsibility corporate officers have to achieve maximum return for their stock holders, and stock holders should want their corporation to be in line with what this nation was founded on.

    Let us all use Qwest

  29. 229
    Praveen Says:

    Thanks Qwest for being true patriots!

  30. 230
    sdunkley Says:

    Much thanks for your bravery and patriotism in standing firm against the administration. All you asked was that they show you the program was legal. Now that’s good lawyers!

  31. 231
    Joe Feise Says:

    Thank you for restoring some faith in corporate responsibility.
    If Quest would serve my area, I would switch to them.

  32. 232
    Chris Miller Says:

    I’m glad I’m a Qwest customer!

  33. 233
    Darin B Hershey Says:

    Thanks for standing up to “Big Brother”. Maybe someday we will live in a free country again.

  34. 234
    5uperman Says:

    Thanks for this one, Qwest. Nice. You took a stand, and didn’t use it for PR (at the time, anyway). Now it’s paying off. America, baby!

    But I’ll still be watching all that lobbying. Know what I’m sayin’?

  35. 235
    Mary Williams Says:

    We’re leaving Verizon and going to Qwest. That’s the best way we know to say “THANK YOU, QWEST!”

  36. 236
    David Says:

    Thank you

  37. 237
    ronb Says:

    Yeah, I’d switch to Qwest if it covered my area!

  38. 238
    scott Says:

    Thanks qwest!

  39. 239
    J Judge Says:

    Thanks Qwest — 10 years from now, America will look back at the enormous range of illegal behavior that occurred in this administration … and Qwest will be noted as doing the right thing.

    Hope this drives more customers your way !

  40. 240
    Connecticut Frank Says:

    Good for you, QWest. I’m going to search now to see if you offer service in my area of Connecticut.
    And, thank you, Floyd for organizing us like this.

  41. 241
    Daisy Says:

    I hope this is true about Qwest and not some scam just to help them keep customers. I stopped my AT&T service and hope to get a Cell phone from a reputable company that does not spy on their customers. I can’t believe we have to pay for this crappy service.

    Daisy

  42. 242
    kevin Says:

    I wish I could use quest for my local service (I’m in norcal). It sounds like the only just telco.

  43. 243
    Kartik Vaddadi Says:

    Laudable.

  44. 244
    Julio in Denver Says:

    Qwest pissed me off a few years back when they slammed my long distance service (switched me without my permission). But I’m over it and glad I stuck with them for my local service. Hopefully more patriots like Qwest will stick up for the Constitution and Bill of Rights against these lawbreakers.

  45. 245
    DaBlade Says:

    While I do not live in North America, or even in a english-speaking country, I’m still thankful to Qwest for standing up for privacy and democracy like that in the US, which is rapidly turning into a martial law hellhole. If I was in the U.S., I’d sign up with Qwest immediately.
    Thank you, Qwest.
    DaBlade, LinuxP2P.com

  46. 246
    Maccord Says:

    Qwest ……this will be remembered as a Super Hero battling the arch enemy, Bushit!

  47. 247
    Unforgiven Says:

    Right on! Finally a reason to cheer for a large telcom. If I had the money I’d even get my DSL re-hooked up through them. (I do miss my broadband)

  48. 248
    Riley Says:

    Never been a huge Qwest fan, as I have had a nightmare of billing issues with them (high speed circuits) but kudos for making the right move on this one.

  49. 249
    Tim Says:

    All Qwest did was ask, “Do you have a warrant?”. It probably seemed like a very straightforward thing to do. Thanks Qwest. Thanks for asking. Thanks for asking to see the warrant.

  50. 250
    Keith Steiger Says:

    I’m not amazed that Qwest stood their ground. I’m amazed all the other telecoms caved. But thanks nonetheless for having a spine, Qwest.

Pages: « 1 2 3 4 [5] 6 7 8 9 10 » Show All

Leave a Reply

 
Qwest's Refusal of N.S.A. Query Is Explained

...The telecommunications company Qwest turned down requests by the National Security Agency for private telephone records because it concluded that doing so would violate federal privacy laws, a lawyer for the telephone company's former chief executive said today.New York Times - March 12, 2006


Google Breaking News
Jailed Qwest CEO claimed that NSA retaliated because he wouldn’t participate … – Daily Caller,
Over Criminalization and the NSA – RedState,
Only One Big Telecom CEO Refused To Cave To The NSA … And He’s Been In … – Business Insider,
What is the NSA? – TechNewsDaily,
Bush-Cheney began illegal NSA spying before 9/11, says telcom CEO – DigitalJournal.com,
2006: NSA Massive Database of US Phone Calls – Cryptome.org,
Snowden: Obama’s election kept me from leaking earlier – Daily Caller,
NSA: Problem is the secrecy, not the program – ZDNet,
Lifelong love: Young children photographed as bride and groom celebrate 70 … – Daily Caller,
Herb Van Fleet, guest columnist: Big Brother is always watching and listening – Joplin Globe,
Black Ops: Using 9/11 To Take Down The Fourth Amendment – Talk Radio News Service,
Obama’s Humanitarianism as Window-Dressing for the US “Deep State” Agenda … – Center for Research on Globalization,
NSA secretly vacuumed up Verizon phone records – CNET,
Florida robbery suspect wants NSA phone records to exonerate him – Daily Caller,
US Agencies Said to Swap Data With Thousands of Firms – Bloomberg,
How the NSA Spies on the Entire World – NewsClick,
Inside the NSA’s Domestic Surveillance Apparatus: Whistleblower William … – Democracy Now (blog),
What the NSA can do with “big data” – Ars Technica,
How Obama Expanded and Consolidated the Bush-Cheney Domestic Spy … – Executive Intelligence Review (EIR),
US Agencies Said to Swap Intelligence With Thousands of Firms – Moneynews,
Uphill climb to appeal federal data mining – CNN International,
The NSA’s Greatest Hits: “We’re the Only Ones Not Spying on the American … – Center for Research on Globalization,
NSA Prism Data Mining Is All Up In Ur Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Facebook … – Huffington Post,
Experts: Only stronger laws can protect electronic data – Denver Post,
Geography fail: Sen. Landrieu says South Dakota borders Canada in anti-border … – Daily Caller,
When government Hoovers up information – Overlawyered,
Go Home Why Tech Companies Are Better Than Phone Companies at… – The New Republic,
US swaps data with thousands of tech firms: sources – Brisbane Times,
Police-State ‘Progressivism’ – Antiwar.com,
Dole to GOP: They ought to put a sign up that says ‘closed for repairs until … – Daily Caller,
Durbin not sure if bloggers should be ‘entitled to constitutional protection … – Daily Caller,
Author: Soviet agents subverted US in 1930s – Daily Caller,
Though liberals call him a ‘LINO,’ Ted Cruz founded Harvard Latino Law Review – Daily Caller,
PAPER: Gibson Guitar raids may be another case of Obama administration … – Daily Caller,
Yritysjohtaja ei antanut tietoja – väittää viranomaisten kostaneen – Tietoviikko,
Gli Stati Uniti confermano – PeaceLink,

Quick Comment


Grassroots
Banners

(HTML code here)






Recent Comments:

  • J.J.S.: Dear Qwest Thank you for not selling out to the Bush Push.
  • Mr. Robert Hill: == TUESDAY September 26, 2006 RE: CALL CENTER in Portland, Oregon Hey, hey, thank you Qwest, for...
  • Gregory Markowski: Dear Qwest, Thank you for your patriotism in defending the values which can make this country...
  • NavnDansk: Thank you Qwest. Very rare indeed for someone to stand up to these nazis.
  • Tyler: I pledge alligiance to the United States of America.. AS IT WAS DESIGNED. Not I pledge alligiance to the...

  • Blogroll




    Contact thankyouqwest.org

    thankyouqwest.org in Mainstream Media

    JACKI SCHECHNER, CNN INTERNET REPORTER: Wolf, a liberal blogger and his web master started the site thankyouqwest.org on Friday. They have had some 15,000 visitors since then. And 250 people going online to say thanks to Qwest. Even some people thinking about switching service are now going to stay to show their loyalty. We reached out to Qwest to find out if this was having any impact on their service. And they say they refuse to comment on this or any matter they say is relating to national security.

    Online reactions. At www.thankyouqwest.org, visitors applaud Qwest for not turning over phone records and say they're dropping carriers that did. The site is an offshoot of Empire Burlesque, a blog created by Chris Floyd, an American-born author in Oxford, England, and Canadian Richard Kastelein, who runs the website in the Netherlands. Floyd, a frequent Bush administration critic, is author of Empire Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime. The thankyouqwest.org site is getting about 6,000 or more unique visits a day, according to its founders. It was created Thursday.

    Website urges people to sign on with carrier. A pair of Europeans say they wanted to show their appreciation for the telecom's standing up to the NSA's call for data.

    Qwest's reported refusal to give its customer calling records to the National Security Agency is winning the Denver-based phone company big fans online. At least 15,000 people have visited thankyouqwest.org since two bloggers in Europe launched the website Thursday, said co-creator Richard Kaste lein. Most of the 269 comments posted as of Monday evening praised Qwest. "Thank you Qwest for behaving like a real American company!" exclaimed one visitor. The site links to dozens of other blogs also following the story.

    "Thank you Qwest! It's nice to see someone following principle over profits," wrote a user named Terra at ThankyouQwest.org, a Web site hastily erected by the purveyors of the left-wing blog Empire Burlesque. "When will you have cell service in Ohio?"

    "Thank you Qwest," wrote one commenter who was not really with the program at ThankyouQwest.com. "What will your next advertising campaign be — 'Qwest: Telecom provider to the terrorists'? Well done."






    One blogger even created a Web site, www.thankyouqwest.org, praising the company for its decision not to cooperate with the government's surveillance plan.


    Bloggers also have expressed their support, and Richard Kastelein, a Web designer based in the Netherlands, created thankyouqwest.org, which commends the company as the only holdout and declares: "Qwest customers are safe."

    Kastelein said he started the site "because it's about time someone stood up. Qwest has had a lot of bad press during the past few years and its fair share of problems. But they certainly deserve kudos for not buckling under to the heavy-handed tactics of the Bush administration."

    Kastelein's praise and reference to "bad press" capture the two faces of Qwest: the defender - of privacy - and the defendant - in securities litigation.




    "By Thursday afternoon, a Web site had gone up called thankyouqwest.org, which encouraged visitors to contact the company's chief ethics officer to express their appreciation for so-called "NSA-free" phone service."

    This new web site thanks Qwest for not turning over its customers’ phone records to the NSA.

    At least 250 phone customers posted messages to the hastily put together Web site ThankyouQwest.org. in the last five days. Chris Floyd, who created the Web site, also encourages readers to send a congratulations e-mail to David J. Heller, Qwest's chief ethics and compliance officer according to the site.

    Lastly, I'm having a real hard time understanding the celebration/worship of Qwest. They're the one big telecom that didn't hand over their phone records, instead asking for a subpoena, which of course, wasn't offered. So people are falling all over themselves to thank or reward Qwest for standing up for customers.

    And sure, Nacchio has a checkered past, but what’s a little insider trading when you’ve just stood up to the NSA and protected the privacy of millions of Americans? That’s heroism, and I say that with my tongue only slightly in cheek.

    Links

    Mainpage
  • Register
  • Log in