Re: 2nd Term Part 4: Donkeys, Elephants, and Porcupines
I'm inclined to apply the cost/benefit standard here and in similar cases. Also, are the activities of the government being abused? We waterboarded a handful of savage jihadists and killed another handful with Hellfire missiles fired from drones. I'm not particularly concerned. As an example, if any administration used the immense power of the federal government to single out political opponents for "special treatment," then we'd have a problem. As we in fact do, with the IRS.
In the case at hand, we don't know enough about the NSA's activities to draw reasonable conclusions about that cost/benefit ratio. The NSA is very secret. And they like it that way. Remember when the Soviets shot down KAL flight 007? They lied comprehensively about the incident, until UN mbassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick produced audio tapes of conversations between the pilot and his ground control establishing beyond any doubt that his actions were not accidental and that he knew he was blowing up a civilian plane. Case closed. And the capabilities of the NSA have increased by many orders of magnitude since then. And that's a good thing. The agency is trying to protect American lives and interests. The program as explained doesn't concern me much. They might learn I'm phoning "Dial a date," but as long as they don't have the actual conversation, I can live with it. We all understand that 'phone companies keep records of who we've called and when and for how long. There is no expectation of privacy for those data.
Pio, it surprises me a little that you'd take this position.
The government can justify a lot of things in the interest of "protecting American lives and interests." Shutting down free speech and press. Searches of homes and offices. Intercepting mail.
I don't really care if our government wants to go out and tap into the lines of the Chinese, Saudis, Brits, etc... But our own citizens bothers me a little.
Here is the primary reason. They can say they gather this information in case they need it, or to make it available to target a specific individual suspected of terrorist activities. The problem is, once it's collected it's too easy for it to be misused, maybe not by the government as an institution, but people who have access to it.
As a marginally similar example, Minneapolis has a program of having cameras in it's police cars scan and track all license plates that car drives by. That data is then maintained in a large data base. It's presumably done in the interests of public safety, to help police find stolen cars, to help locate people who may be involved in crimes, etc...
But then the City finds out the information, once collected, is being used for more uncomfortable reasons. To track ex-wives. Maybe to see who is and who is not showing up at the local strip club. Once the information is collected in an easy to use format, it's too tempting.
And having your car parked on a city street, with it's license plate available to tracking, is a long, long way from the privacy you expect in your telephone calls or internet searches.