[QUOTE="jimkabrhel"][QUOTE="chrisrooR"] Great. Question his motives, but ignore the larger issue of the government DIRECTLY taking emails, texts and phone calls with NO screening or probable cause. It's against your constitution. That seems, to me at least, to be the important part of this whole ordeal. Person0
Except that much of the information was obtained with a court order. I'm not naive. I know that the government spies and has done so for YEARS. I have yet to see evidence that the government is using this information indiscriminatly to arrest random citizens.
How is there a difference between the government monitoring communications and corporations doing the same thing or major webiste, taking a recording private information?
All of this anger against the government is one thing, some of it warranted, but data mining is something that companies and corproations do, but they never get criticism for it.
Well warrants were approved 99.97% of the time so its not like a warrant means anything. Private companies don't have as big of a picture as the government does.Considering all the corporate money involved in politics, there isn't a clear line between the two. I don't have any faith in the SCOTUS providing any leadership on this issue, nor Congress. They were complicit in the Patriot Act, and are supporting this now.
As I said, my biggest concern isn't the whistleblowing of government surveillance. That's just stating the obvious. If there are important secrets that Snowden leaks that could hurt American citizens, that concerns me.
Veiled threats from Snowden and Greenwald about more information seem like retaliation, rather than elightenment.
Log in to comment