Data is not intelligence.

I call people who are covering up NSA crimes traitors.

I think the FISA court's basically totally irrelevant.

The ultimate goal of the NSA is total population control

The spooks are all cowards. Sunlight is the solution to these things.

No NSA director did as much damage to the agency as Gen. Michael V. Hayden.

The problem with a group is, the more people you add, the lower the average IQ.

The NSA's vision statement is: keep the problem going so the money keeps flowing.

FBI wants to know everything about you, and you're not supposed to know anything about them.

When I left NSA, it was with an understanding that you can never underestimate the power of large numbers of stupid people.

As I have said in the past, revealing specific targets or successes of U.S. intelligence activities is not in the public interest.

If you're in government, that's one of the one things you have to do is to always avoid even the appearance of a conflict of interest.

You've got the NSA doing all this collecting of material on all of its citizens - that's what the SS, the Gestapo, the Stasi, the KGB, and the NKVD did.

Reagan used to say that 'we're a country with a government.' Well, now we're a government with a country, and we're making everybody else that way, too.

Trailblazer was the NSA's attempt to catch up with the digital age. The problem is, Trailblazer didn't do anything. As far as I know, it didn't produce anything for roughly a little over $4 billion.

The ultimate goal of the NSA is total population control, but I'm a little optimistic with some recent Supreme Court decisions, such as law enforcement mostly now needing a warrant before searching a smartphone.

At least 80% of fibre-optic cables globally go via the U.S. This is no accident and allows the U.S. to view all communication coming in. At least 80% of all audio calls, not just metadata, are recorded and stored in the U.S. The NSA lies about what it stores.

You don't hear anybody talking about what FBI is doing with the NSA collected data. That's because they're doing it in secret. I mean, they're also using it to convict people of crimes, and that's what they're doing - they're looking at it for criminal activity.

We're not getting a good return on investment on all that money we're pumping into the intelligence community. One of the first things I would suggest is that if there's an attack and they fail to stop it or to alert us before it happens, that we ought to start cutting their budget, and for every attack they should lose ten percent of their budget.

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