[or should we learn to love Him?]

from SLATE:

I Am Worried. You Should Be Too.

We shouldn’t have to wait for an abuse of power to know that the NSA’s
snooping has gone too far.

By Emily Bazelon | Posted Friday, June 7, 2013, at 4:36 PM

After the Guardian’s revelation that the National Security Agency is
mining the data of Verizon customers on Thursday, some of my
colleagues told me to settle down. Some volunteered to be spied on in
exchange for reduced rates. I figured that the level of outrage would
rise only if people thought the government had access to the actual
content of their communications. But apparently I was wrong. The
second shock wave about PRISM—the NSA’s program for vacuuming up
online content including “emails, file transfers, photos, videos,
chats, and even live surveillance of search terms”—has hit. And my
Twitter feed and my email inbox are still filled with jokes and
shrugs.

Why is that? To me, it’s kind of a mystery. I’m disturbed by all the
secrecy—the secret legal interpretation of the Patriot Act that’s
behind the court order to Verizon, as Noah Feldman points out, and the
secret decisions of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which
approves almost every request for information it gets from the
government. And I’m also with Rebecca J. Rosen, who traces the history
of “security-state creep” and worries about how it is increasing.
That’s what creep means, after all. She notes, however, that the
Supreme Court dismissed a recent challenge to the 2008 amendments to
the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act—the law that enables
PRISM—because no one who sued could prove that he or she had actually
been spied on.

Maybe that’s the problem. We now know the government has access to all
sorts of our Internet data. But we don’t know whose has been targeted
or what has happened because of the snooping. It’s not like the NSA is
sending a note telling you to stop cheating on your boyfriend or even
to shut down your cocaine business. NSA snoops are not all up in our
business, as far as we can tell. The danger is that they could be.
Once the government has access to all this data, it has untrammeled
power over it—which it could abuse. How you feel about that
possibility is probably a function of how much you care about privacy
in general and government intrusions on privacy in particular, and how
much you imagine that you’d personally be at risk if some NSA agent
did actually read your email. If you think your life is already spread
all over the Internet, and that the agent would only be bored by your
mundane messages about work and whose turn it is to pick up the kids,
then hey, you’re good.

But then ask yourself: What would it take for you to be disturbed by
massive data trawling by government agents? What if a nugget of
information unearthed through PRISM surfaced when the president was
vetting a nominee for confirmation? What if the NSA used such a nugget
to embarrass an enemy of the president? Would that be Nixonian enough?
Or would it take a series of abuses before the public decided that the
country had traded away too much civil liberty? I can’t tell you that
what the government is doing is illegal. The government’s defenders
are correct that Congress has given the executive the opportunity to
use these powers, and that the executive branch has followed the
process for judicial oversight, such as it is. But that doesn’t mean
we shouldn’t dial back these laws now that we have a real glimpse into
the full scope of their reach.

President Obama offered two reassurances Friday. “When it comes to
telephone calls, nobody is listening to your telephone calls.” Right,
except they’re scrolling through emails and online chats. Oh but wait,
“With respect to the Internet and emails, this does not apply to U.S.
citizens and it does not apply to people living in the United States."
Right, except that NSA agents only have to be 51 percent sure the
target they locate in the mounds of data is foreign. Everyone seems to
acknowledge that they will inevitably sweep in “incidental”
information about Americans. And when they pick up “U.S. content” by
mistake, we are told they will put it into a separate database and
then “it’s nothing to worry about.” Yes it is, as Amy Davidson points
out. And it is depressing to watch this president become a misleading
parser of words in the service of arrogating authority.

The government has admitted to unconstitutional NSA spying before—last
year. The existence of these newly reported databases should be
worrisome because once the information is collected, it is so much
easier for the government to misuse it. The more data mining, the more
it becomes routine and the more tempting to come up with more uses for
it. If you trust President Obama and his people not to go too far,
what about the next president, or the one after that? We have now had
a Republican and a Democrat administration sign up for a broad
expansion of warrantless wiretapping and other surveillance, and
bipartisan support in Congress for the tradeoffs we have struck. And
yes, there is more to the current revelations than we know—in
particular, the rationale for the FISA court’s long-standing order for
the phone data, and the rationale for PRISM. Let’s concede that a
terrorist attack somewhere has probably been prevented as a result of
these efforts. So how do we ever go back?

We probably don’t. And someday, the abuses will begin, in all
likelihood long before we know about them. I’m not usually moved by
slippery slope arguments. But this one looks so very easy to slide
down.
-- 
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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