Frontline’s two-part series, “The United States of Secrets,”
was quite an eye-opener. For many of us, perhaps, our eyes were already open a
crack, thanks to Edward Snowden. But the program added some length to the
toothpicks.
If you’re like me, you probably had it in the back of your
mind, at least, that the NSA and many large tech companies knew
everything about you based on your behavior online or on mobile, but thanks to
the whistle-blowers (of whom Snowden is the most famous in a rather long line),
now you know the extent of it.
Now we have to decide how much it bothers us, and what we’re
going to do about it as individuals. Because it doesn’t bother everyone
equally. You may insist that the practice of storing your data stop, on
principle, but that’s probably not going to happen, at least for quite a while.
So the only thing left that you control is your own behavior. Are you willing
to drop out and disconnect? Again, probably not. But at least now, you can’t
say you don’t know what the price of living in the modern world is. And in the
end, if it doesn’t change your daily life, you may actually make peace with it.
If not, are there enough of us out here so outraged by what
we have learned that we are willing to put our vote where our anger is and
elect those who would forbid these practices? To be honest, if Barack Obama
were running for a third term, I don’t know if I’d vote for him again. A big
part of his platform was transparency, but it seems there’s even less of it in
government now than there was under W. His director of national intelligence lied
to Congress about the extent of data collection. It wasn’t prevarication, or
dissembling, or misleading – it was a LIE.
OK, so are we safer for what’s been going on, now that we know
about it? Is 9/11 going to be our last Pearl Harbor?
What major attacks have been broken up, thanks to the Program? Well, of course,
they won’t tell us that (I’m almost ready to shout, “So at least make something
UP!”).
As for search engines and other information companies, are
there any out there promising NOT to collect our data, that can perform as well
as Google or the other biggies? That we might even have to pay for to use?
Mr. Snowden et al have done their jobs. Now it’s down to us.
No comments:
Post a Comment