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notyou2 wrote:http://www.dcclothesline.com/2014/02/11/edward-snowden-interview-blacked-u-s-media-banned-youtube/
Worth watching.
notyou2 wrote:http://www.dcclothesline.com/2014/02/11/edward-snowden-interview-blacked-u-s-media-banned-youtube/
Worth watching.
aage wrote: Maybe you're right, but since we receive no handlebars from the mod I think we should get some ourselves.
In written testimony to the European Union (EU), Edward Snowden explained in patient, well-written, detailed prose exactly why what the NSA is doing is so dangerous. Snowden reveals himself an articulate writer, and through that moves from mere whistleblower into an almost philosophical role. His testimony deserves your full read, so you should best stop right here and just go read it.
For those who prefer some highlights, with commentary, please follow me deeper down the rabbit hole.
Snowden says:The suspicionless surveillance programs of the NSA, GCHQ, and so many others that we learned about over the last year endanger a number of basic rights which, in aggregate, constitute the foundation of liberal societies.
The first principle any inquiry must take into account is that despite extraordinary political pressure to do so, no western government has been able to present evidence showing that such programs are necessary. In the United States, the heads of our spying services once claimed that 54 terrorist attacks had been stopped by mass surveillance, but two independent White House reviews with access to the classified evidence on which this claim was founded concluded it was untrue, as did a Federal Court.
...There are indications of a growing disinterest among governments for ensuring intelligence activities are justified, proportionate, and above all accountable. We should be concerned about the precedent our actions set.
Snowden understands that the programs he revealed are fundamentally in conflict with the very basis of a just society; the two cannot co-exist. When the government turns its full resources to spy, without suspicion or reason or legitimate purpose, on its full citizenry (including the Senate, charged with in theory a check-and-balance role on the executive), a fundamental shift occurs: the Government is no longer of the People, it has made the People its enemy. The opposite follows by course. Deceiving your enemy is part of any war.
More:
I know the good and the bad of these systems, and what they can and cannot do, and I am telling you that without getting out of my chair, I could have read the private communications of any member of this committee, as well as any ordinary citizen. I swear under penalty of perjury that this is true. These are not the capabilities in which free societies invest. Mass surveillance violates our rights, risks our safety, and threatens our way of life. If even the U.S. government, after determining mass surveillance is unlawful and unnecessary, continues to operate to engage in mass surveillance, we have a problem.
Indeed we do Edward. The problem is that following the events of that one day -- 9/11 -- America went, quite simply, insane. For a short period of time, nearly every American, naw, let's all look at our shoes and feel ashamed, because EVERY American agreed that anything that even might make us feel safe again was OK. We went out and bought duct tape when told a gas attack might happen, and we eyed our neighbors cautiously.
But as the dust literally settled, the government realized that they could cite 9/11 as justification forever, for anything. Evil people took this opening to slip a still-metastasizing national security state into the fabric of our lives, then enlarge it to cover the globe. Snowden in his testimony acknowledges that the NSA's reach covers billions of people. I am certain that if we could ever catch those anti-freedom figures and their helpers in a private moment, they would all say: "If we knew it was going to be this easy to create an omnipotent executive, we would have done it years ago."
Snowden:
Whether we like it or not, the international norms of tomorrow are being constructed today, right now, by the work of bodies like this committee. If liberal states decide that the convenience of spies is more valuable than the rights of their citizens, the inevitable result will be states that are both less liberal and less safe.
Snowden wrote:But as the dust literally settled, the government realized that they could cite 9/11 as justification forever, for anything. Evil people took this opening to slip a still-metastasizing national security state into the fabric of our lives, then enlarge it to cover the globe.
mrswdk wrote:Snowden wrote:But as the dust literally settled, the government realized that they could cite 9/11 as justification forever, for anything. Evil people took this opening to slip a still-metastasizing national security state into the fabric of our lives, then enlarge it to cover the globe.
Hadn't the US, UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand already agreed to jointly spy on the whole world shortly after WW2? It's not like 9/11 was some sort of tipping point.
Also, 'evil' is a bit of a silly label to apply to the NSA fuss. What has the NSA actually been doing, other than invading people's privacy a bit?
notyou2 wrote:It's OK to spy on all the others, but not on yourself
The government has turned against the people and we are no better than any communist or nazi country.
the government, by spying on the checks and balances (senate and judiciary), has essentially become the enemy of the people instead of working for the people
mrswdk wrote:Where do you draw the line between what the government can and can't keep a secret though? One of the things I saw coming out in the Snowden leaks was that government agents sometimes lurk online games looking for terrorists/criminals who are using the games as a place to chat. I can't see the publishing of that information benefitting anyone except the 'bad guys', who now know not to use WoW (or whatever) for their secret conversations.
mrswdk wrote:I get that accountability is an issue, as unaccountable people can easily go on a power trip. Still though, this 'power tripping' seems to have materialised in the form of nothing more than snooping so far. No one is disappearing, nothing is being disrupted. They're just gathering some pretty boring data. The US is still a country where the legal system has authority over public institutions, so no one is going to be getting dragged off the street for opposing the government any time soon.
mrswdk wrote:Plus, in theory Obama already has the power at his fingertips if he wants to abuse it. He controls the CIA, FBI, regular police and the military. If he really wanted to dig his claws into society, he could've been doing that since day one. Who would have the power to hold the American security apparatus accountable if it decided it wanted to assert itself? No one. The reason that the US is not run on the same kind of lockdown as Syria or China is because the government chooses not to behave like that.
I was just tossing over the impact that a seizure of power such as this might have on America's attractiveness as an ally or place to invest, and even then I'm not so sure it would matter that much if the take over was conducted with little mess (i.e. just an announcement that the GOP and Democrats have merged into one party, voting will no longer take place and everyone has to just accept it or else). 'Good standing' (by which I take it we mean moral authority and a secure investment environment) in the international community may have its merits, but many, many times we have seen countries with not-very-good standings get along just fine. China's moral reputation is a bit of a mess, and the nature of the CCP's hold on society still presents risks for international investors, but China is nonetheless continuing to prosper and develop more ties with other countries (for now, anyway).
notyou2 wrote:Every individual right that is rescinded through known or unknown methods is a step towards an authoritarian state. It's as simple as that.
notyou2 wrote:Every individual right that is rescinded through known or unknown methods is a step towards an authoritarian state. It's as simple as that.
BigBallinStalin wrote:mrswdk wrote:Where do you draw the line between what the government can and can't keep a secret though? One of the things I saw coming out in the Snowden leaks was that government agents sometimes lurk online games looking for terrorists/criminals who are using the games as a place to chat. I can't see the publishing of that information benefitting anyone except the 'bad guys', who now know not to use WoW (or whatever) for their secret conversations.
We can always imagine all sorts of scenarios where the bad guys would benefit from x, y, and z, but from what I recall, that MMORPG effort was largely fruitless. Had it not been exposed, the state would've still been wasting valuable resources which could've been put to better use--much like the recent NSA data-mining ops.
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