They do, criminal psych, they just aren't allowed to ask certain questions
any more and haven't been since the Clinton years. 


--
Timothy Heald
Analyst, Architect, Developer
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
W: 202-228-8372
C: 703-300-3911
-----Original Message-----
From: Dana Tierney [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2006 12:01 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: Re: this kind of stuff really pisses me off

well actually I guess what they ask on the citizenship application is
whether you are now or have ever been a communist, a war criminal, or an
advocate of the overthrow of the US government. But that is close enough?
But it seems to me that giving someone significant powers is more dangerous
than making your average immigrant a citizen, just because of the difference
in potential damage. 

So yeah a national security position should require giving up some privacy
rights. Hell yeah... they have a background check to work in a freaking
hospital, are you telling me that they don't to speak for the Homeland
Security department?

>This is once you are a citizen.  They consider it an invasion of privacy.
>
>Me personally, I think that when you decide to seek a national security 
>position, you give up some of those rights.



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