Excuse me but is public indifference considered to be a new phenomenon is that 
really what it is? Remember Daniel Ellsberg, the Pentagon Papers? 
Levels of domestic and international surveillance have intensified 
logarithmically in the post-war period; just imagine what J. Edgar would have 
done if he could Hoover up data the way the NSA does. The highest echelons of 
this behemoth of a security apparatus have taken on a life of its own 
independent of the governmental controls that are supposed to monitor its 
activities. Quite presciently Norman Mailer wrote about this ages ago in 
reference to the CIA; he described how the various entities and fronts that it 
created began to take on their own economic realities far removed from any 
governmental controls and now, far beyond what Mailer might have imagined, the 
government officially and openly sub-contracts security and policing to 
companies effectively working outside the law. All this just increases daily 
despite shut-downs and economic crises (after all its sucking up tax dollars 
just like all the data its accumulating). Indifference is an inaccurate 
description of wha!
 t the public is feeling right now. What might be more accurate is a profound 
sense of cynicism, confusion and fear because the world most of us live in is 
littered with enormous uncertainties and where survival is high on the daily 
agenda; and because politicians and government leaders are baffling in terms of 
their levels of incoherence; and because the omnipresent cloud of some kind of 
terrorist act lingers in the not far distance (and never mind the kind of 
atrocities that occur daily enabled by the same systems that govern the 
surveillance apparatus). So, indifference is not quite appropriate when you 
start thinking about the future and how it appears or manifests itself stitched 
into people’s daily routines. This is not to belittle or diminish the 
importance of what Snowden has done; the impact of his act is hard to quantify 
as its ramifications will be still felt years from now; the Pentagon Papers had 
a shock value when they came out also and the NY Times eagerly pub!
 lished them (and the Times then still had journalistic stature). But, indeed 
now the times they are a’changing. The real indifference lies not with the 
public but rather with the shamble of what we politely call the Fifth Estate 
and the obscene level of public discourse… 

bye for now
allan


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