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Majority of Americans Say NSA Phone Tracking Is OK To Fight Terrorism

An anonymous reader writes "While the tech media has gone wild the past few days with the reports of the NSA tracking Verizon cell usage and creating the PRISM system to peer into our online lives, a new study by Pew Research suggests that most U.S. citizens think it's okay. 62 percent of Americans say losing some personal privacy is acceptable as long as its used to fight terrorism, and 56 percent are okay with the NSA tracking phone calls. Online tracking is fair less popular however, with only 45 percent approving of the practice. The data also shows that the youth are far more opposed to curtailing privacy to fight terror, which could mean trouble for politicians planning to continue these programs in the coming years."

584 comments

  1. Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's not true!

    1. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      9/11!

    2. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    3. Re:Bull Shit! by Sparticus789 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I believe the poll results, but only for one reason. Because the responses were framed in the context of "to fight terrorism." Most mindless sheep would say that it is ok to sacrifice anything, to prevent terrorism.

      That's not the problem. The problem is what the government can/will do with the information when the political climate is favorable to the party in charge. Say for example, pull every phone call and e-mail from a political opponent to conduct opposition research. Or find out who has a gun in their house, and enact nationwide confiscation. Or scan their e-mails for keywords to indicate someone's political beliefs, and investigating or auditing those people because they disagree with the political party in charge.

      That is the danger. Not terrorism from outside, from terrorism conducted by our own government.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    4. Re:Bull Shit! by zwei2stein · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "I have nothing to hide" needs to die. And goverment actions are exactly the reason:

      Did judes have anything to hide from goverment before Nazis came to power?

      Nope. Yet they suffered greatly because of goverment knowledge of their ethnicity.

      Was being communist or friend of one crime in US before red scare?

      Nope. But then red scare came and whowledge of who is fiend with who destroyed careers and lives.

      Was Alan Turing doing anything wrong?

      Nope. But he was still brutalized and died as a result after nature of his sexuality was revealed.

      Was ownership of land of factories crime?

      Nope. But then commies came to power on many countries and people were shited to prisons, prison colonies or executed outright.

      In history, many people thought that their religion, political orientiation, sexual orientation, friendships and relationships, ownerships or opinions. ... that none of it would ever be issue because they are not doing anything wrong or illegal or even mean.

      And they were wrong. And died because of it.

      Laws change. Society changes. Rules change. People in power change. Things can be taken out of context, or put into another.

      You might be completelly fine one day, and monster another.

      And if list of "monsters" can be gotten as easily as simple database querry, it is best not to be part of it. And to not have any such database.

      --
      -- Technology for the sake of technology is as pathetic as eschewing technology because it's technology.
    5. Re:Bull Shit! by LurkNoMore · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the survey doesn't matter what level of privacy invasion is acceptable. "Some" invasion is okay. That means a lot to different people. Phone calls, internet monitoring, GPS tracking, car license plate readers and even grocery store receipts all count as privacy invasion but I'm betting more people get pissed at internet monitoring than grocery store receipt data mining. Of course, I would like to know how many terrorisms have been identified and prevented by any of the privacy invasions. Ultimately though I have to give a well thought out "Fuck you" to anyone that wants to start or continue privacy invasions for safety anyway.

    6. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone has things to hide. It's personal privacy and is not in any way indicative of any kind of criminal intentions.

      For those who think that is is, how about letting me install cameras in your house? You'll obviously say yes, unless you've got something to hide.

    7. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If its so necessary for terrorism, how did the Boston bombing happen then?

    8. Re:Bull Shit! by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Was Alan Turing doing anything wrong? Nope.

      Actually legally he was doing something wrong. By the standards of the day, I suspect most people would have considered his sexual activies/sexuality morally unacceptable as well. The rest of your examples have a "before" to compare them to, but that one doesn't quite fit.

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    9. Re:Bull Shit! by ebno-10db · · Score: 2

      I believe the poll results, but only for one reason. Because the responses were framed in the context of "to fight terrorism."

      I suspect you're right. Poll results are notoriously sensitive to exactly how the questions are phrased. The other problem is that those polled might not understand the entire scope of the program, or have considered how it can be misused and how little protection against misuse there might be (or might not be - that's the charming thing about a secret court). Nevertheless I find the overall results very depressing. IIRC there have been polls from time to time asking people if they believed in the principles of the Bill of Rights (but phrased in such a way that it wasn't obvious they were talking about the Bill of Rights). Unfortunately what many (including me) consider the most important part of American law didn't fare well. Thank goodness the 1st Congress was filled with radicals.

    10. Re:Bull Shit! by sumdumass · · Score: 2

      I'm wondering if the poll would have had different results if the questions were framed more like is it acceptable to ignore constitutionally protected privacy rights like being secure in your person, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures as long as its used to fight terrorism.

      Like you said, losing some personal privacy means a lot of different things to a lot of different people. Narrowing it down a bit might display a more accurate sentiment of what is acceptable.

    11. Re:Bull Shit! by Rubinhood · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "I believe the poll results"

      Well I don't. The kleptocracy that can invade everyone's privacy at will can easily sway statistics as well.

      Eisenhower's nightmare has come true. The monster that was created against the foes of both World Wars has turned against the society that created it. It's become the reason for its own existence.

    12. Re:Bull Shit! by ArcherB · · Score: 3, Informative

      Poll results are notoriously sensitive to exactly how the questions are phrased. The other problem is that those polled might not understand the entire scope of the program, or have considered how it can be misused and how little protection against misuse there might be (or might not be - that's the charming thing about a secret court)

      I wonder if the polls would have the same result if they were asked if their information were used in a presidential campaign?

      “Earlier this year, in an interview with TV One, Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) praised President Barack Obama for putting together a campaign database that "will have information about everything on every individual."

      “And that database will have information about everything on every individual in ways that it’s never been done before,” Waters told “Washington Watch” host Roland, referring to Obama’s “Organizing for America,” which was changed from a campaign organization to a 501(c)(4) called Organizing for Action. ...
      Martin asked if Waters if she was referring to “Organizing for America.”

      “That’s right, that’s right,” Waters said. “And that database will have information about everything on every individual in ways that it’s never been done before.”

      Waters said the database would also serve future Democratic candidates seeking the presidency.

      “He’s been very smart,” Waters said of Obama. “I mean it’s very powerful what he’s leaving in place.”

      http://cnsnews.com/news/article/waters-obama-campaign-database-has-information-about-everything-every-individual

      Remember, winning means everything. It's not about getting more voters. It's about getting more of YOUR voters to vote (or at least make it appear that way). The first step in getting your own voters out is to know who they are, where they live, what they are doing, etc. The other half of this is what is going to happen to use who do not vote for the (D) candidate?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    13. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Poll results are notoriously sensitive to exactly how the questions are phrased.

      For example: If you say you like it, you can have pizza!

    14. Re:Bull Shit! by Thud457 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
      -- philosopher George Carlin

      --

      the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    15. Re:Bull Shit! by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

      Oh, it's true...

      Yes. but notice the rider "to fight terrorism". If the NSA has to conduct surveillance on 300 million people to find one or two terrorists, then it is either under-resourced or it is fishing and profiling on a massive scale. If that survey had been phrased a bit more honestly, we should expect a totally different statistic.

    16. Re:Bull Shit! by Somebody+Is+Using+My · · Score: 5, Insightful

      According to that PewResearch article, 56% are in favor ofr un-Constitutional, unwarranted and illegal spying, and 41% against*.

      That initially sounds pretty damning, but in triuth it is a pretty slim majority, considering how these polls are typically rigged. It's a useful number that politicians can point to, but I'd wager that it doesn't accurately reflect what most people feel about the situation. Those polls have leading questions that almost force you to agree with whatever the pollsters (or their employers) are supporting, and leave no room for dissenting opinions (for example, sure somebody might support telephone monitoring if it were used to stop a terrorist attack, but do the pollsters ask if the querents mind if that information is used for /anything else/?)

      If there were a single-question poll made of the US public ("Are you in favor of the US government monitoring every communication you and every other American makes?") I think the results would be quite different.

      * presumably the remaining 3% want monitoring for some, miniature American flags for others).

    17. Re: Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      911 * 1000.....

    18. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget that it's worded phone calls... I make phone calls but my kids don't their cell phones are basically just another way to connect to the internet.

    19. Re:Bull Shit! by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

      Remember, winning means everything. It's not about getting more voters. It's about getting more of YOUR voters to vote

      Hey, you have a choice. Here in Australia, voting is compulsory.

      While I am actually in favour of that (on balance, at least, given that there are valid arguments both ways), it skews the electoral system to having to devote most effort to chasing uncommitted (i.e. swinging) voters. IMO, these individuals should be the least eligible to be on the electoral roll.

      However, it would be too radical (not to mention ironic) to disqualify sections of the electorate on the basis of stupidity or lack of values.

      :P

    20. Re:Bull Shit! by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In the abstract of 'keep you safe' most people will be in favor of that. Ask the nuanced question of 'in light of the IRS targeted profiling, are you in favor of the government tracking phone calls?' and you might get a different answer. I mean, if we have a Tea Party group clearly causing trouble, we really should see if anyone 'subversive' has been calling them or being called by them.

      Or in three words:

      Kevin. Bacon. Game.

      We can tie you to a terrorist in just 7 links. Good enough for a nice stern interrogation?

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    21. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. Given that because of the journalistic work of my dad and my old job as a assistant for political social engineers (not in the US though), I know how much the Pentagon influences public opinion with *exactly* these bullshit statements and "studies", I simply don't believe any of that anymore.
      Obviously I'm not believing the other side of evil crazy (Alex Jones) either, for the same reason. (If you thought I would, read up about false dichotomies. ;)

      For the majority of the people, there is no such thing as free will. They are only free to do what they think they want. But they only think it's what they want because they are constantly told so and it's repeated all the time. It's not because they're stupid or something... nobody really is free... not you, not me... *especially* not those who think they can tell.. because it's how the human brain works. We are made to trust each other blindly. Otherwise how could we even live? You couldn't even get out of bed because you would first have to check that you're not falling through the floor.

      But at least if you happen to know somebody constantly lies to you, stop believing it.

    22. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      People are slow to learn from History, a government spying on its people if allowed will be abused, governments will use patriotism against you and even get your children to spy for them as was done by Germany during WWII. Researching and storing information on people is dangerous too as Germany used their own and captured census data in invaded countries with IBM Hollerith machines to sort the Jews from the general population, round them up and send them to the death camps. These are far from the only examples.

      "Of course the people don't want war. But after all, it's the leaders of the country who determine the policy, and it's always a simple matter to drag the people along whether it's a democracy, a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism, and exposing the country to greater danger."

      -- Herman Goering at the Nuremberg trials

      Why do you think they called it the "Patriot Act" and congress voted for it unread? Almost unaminously at that.

    23. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If that survey had been phrased a bit more honestly, we should expect a totally different statistic.

      And that too, is true.

      But that is not what was asked, or what the survey concluded, or most importantly what the true headline said. And that is as far as most folks will read anyway. It does not matter what the situation is, what matters is what folks believe the situation is. And folks seems to believe that "NSA call and Internet tracking to fight 'terrorism'" is a good idea.

    24. Re:Bull Shit! by DarkTempes · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually, any statistician I talk to always intends "median" when they say average.

      When they want mean they say mean. This was a big surprise to me because in grade school it was the opposite.

    25. Re:Bull Shit! by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

      If its so necessary for terrorism, how did the Boston bombing happen then?

      A cynical answer (who knows if it's accurate?) might be that the NSA set it up themselves in the hope of getting an increased budget.

    26. Re:Bull Shit! by ArcherB · · Score: 2

      However, it would be too radical (not to mention ironic) to disqualify sections of the electorate on the basis of stupidity or lack of values.

      No Joke! I would love to see voters required to pass a basic test before being allowed to vote. And I mean something very basic like "Name one right protected by the Bill of Rights", or "True or False, The right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed""

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    27. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      When it comes to groups with normal "bell curve" distribution, there isn't much difference between average and median. Also - given how stupid the median person is, I don't think George expected them to know what median means. Take you, for example :)

    28. Re:Bull Shit! by msauve · · Score: 2

      "It's not true!"

      I suspect it is. But, that's why we have a Constitution which (ostensibly) grants only limited powers to government, and guarantees rights - to avoid a tyranny of the majority. Being a democracy however, politicians are inclined to ignore the Constitution in favor of votes from the majority, as the case at hand demonstrates.

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    29. Re:Bull Shit! by j00r0m4nc3r · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The only problem is nobody knows exactly what they're keeping us safe from, except freedom of course..FUDFTW

    30. Re:Bull Shit! by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Yes, and under this new era, they could start looking at everybody he had called in the last 7 years and out them as well. Hope you don't 'look' gay...

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    31. Re:Bull Shit! by Hydian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That isn't even the immediate problem. Those are simply potential problems that will occur when the system is inevitably misused.

      The immediate and very real problem is the Steve Jackson Games problem. Since they are using the overly broad data that they collect to look for connections that may or may not exist, everyone is in danger of being violated in the name of fighting terrorism just because someone they have had contact with has had contact with someone that is on a list.

    32. Re: Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Joker explicitly told Two-Face "twice as big as you can imagine" in 1986. How much more warning do you need sheeple?!!

    33. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So were the Jews. So were the property owners. So were the Communists and their friends.

    34. Re:Bull Shit! by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Carlin was right: intelligence is a left-bounded Gaussian distribution (there is a hard minimum, but no hard maximum). The mean of such a distribution is always higher than the median, so more than half of the population will have below average intelligence.

    35. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and alan turing helped make that possible...

    36. Re:Bull Shit! by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      62% of Americans would be okay with random ass-fucking if it were to fight arabs and niggers.

    37. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are being pedantic. It is a joke. Most people do not use precise mathematical terms when they do not matter.

    38. Re:Bull Shit! by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
      -- philosopher George Carlin

      The philosopher George Carlin wasn't very bright either.

      Smart enough to know the meaning and purpose of a literary allusion...

      FWIW, I'm pretty sure he didn't mean that statement to be interpreted literally.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    39. Re:Bull Shit! by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 2

      Congratulations on missing the point of both the OP's post and mine.

      Alan Turing is the odd one out because what he was doing was illegal at the time. The others weren't "illegal" (for the admittedly broad definition of word that the OP was using to demonstrate his point) until society - and subsequently the law - changed around them, and suddenly they had everything to fear, when previously they didn't.

      And that's the OP's point. Right now it's not illegal to watch wrestling, but what if one day wrestling falls out of favour with the authorities and they decide to trawl back through all that data they collected during the period when "no-one [had] anything to fear"?

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    40. Re:Bull Shit! by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Several things come to my mind about NSA's solution:
      * When all past empires that have run out of barbarians to conquer, will, empires create new ones.
      * I am reminded of deaths at the hands of Hitler's government , 6 million were Jews, but 9 million were murdered.
      * I question the intentions of those who loudly profit from a weak persons doubts.
      * Mercenaries cannot be trusted.

    41. Re:Bull Shit! by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 5, Funny

      Hope you don't 'look' gay...

      I look fabulous, thank you very much.

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    42. Re:Bull Shit! by Sparticus789 · · Score: 1

      There is no better quote to describe what is going on right now, and what has been going on for years, than that of Herman Goering.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    43. Re:Bull Shit! by Sparticus789 · · Score: 2

      Hope you don't 'look' gay...

      That would be a compliment by today's standards.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    44. Re:Bull Shit! by Mirvnillith · · Score: 1

      Yes, this is something I can't believe most people don't realise. Even if you're not breaking any laws, and most people are regularly breaking laws, you still have things to hide. Limiting the scope to "nothing criminal to hide" just isn't possible once the tracking/recording/whatever is in place!

    45. Re:Bull Shit! by tilante · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The monster that was created against the foes of both World Wars has turned against the society that created it. It's become the reason for its own existence.

      As Orwell put it, "The object of power is power."

    46. Re:Bull Shit! by MozeeToby · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He was doing something illegal, which isn't the same thing as wrong. No amount of moral relativism will ever convince me that the actions of 2 consenting adults is "wrong" in an ethical sense.

    47. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you really think anyone will give a shit?

      Truxton Spangler, Rubicon

    48. Re:Bull Shit! by cfulton · · Score: 4, Interesting
      You don't even need to go there to see how the data can be abused. Try these on for size:

      -- If you track the phone calls of the CEO of BigOlCorp and he is talking to the CEO of NewButGrowingInc a lot then purchasing NewButGrowing stock will probably be a good deal when the buyout happens.
      -- If you are, say, Walmart and you don't want to be unionized. Just have the NSA tell you which employees are calling the AFL/CIO and quietly let them go.
      -- If rival companies were working to get a contract that was at bid, knowing who called whom and when would give a competitive advantage.
      -- Hate gays. You could out every phone number that called a gay chat line.
      -- Hate porn. You could publish a list of porn watchers. (OK that would be everybody but...)

      Everyone who says that if you have done nothing illegal have nothing to fear has not thought the issue through. And as has been said here before we ALL have something to hide.

      --
      No sigs in BETA. Beta SUCKS.
    49. Re:Bull Shit! by interkin3tic · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I disagree, I think the sheep willing to give up anything to prevent terrorism IS the larger issue. It ensures that politicians will always be there to make that deal with them. Getting elected by playing to people's paranoia is much easier than getting elected by leading people to actually improve the country.

      Politician A: We need to fix the budget. We are spending a ridiculous amount of money on national defense, way too much for how much we're raising in tax revenue...

      Politician B: OMG DID YOU HEAR THAT?!?! He wants to RAISE TAXES and CUT THE MILITARY! At a time when terrorists are threatening your children!!!

      Politician A should win, but politician B will. That's already going on on a massive scale, while the possibility you present doesn't seem to be happening as much right now. And our grandchildren will be paying it off.

    50. Re:Bull Shit! by Dishevel · · Score: 2

      If that survey had been phrased a bit more honestly, we should expect a totally different statistic.

      I doubt it.
      Remember.
      If you can save just one childs life then chipping away at the second amendment is fine.
      3000 dead made the Patriot Act loved.
      For another 150 dead I bet we can get the fourth amendment completely removed.
      For another 500 I am thinking they can make a case to the American People that the first amendment is "A Tool of the Terrorist and Pedo."
      Americans used to be strong and independent people they wanted freedom and were willing "To pay the iron price" for it.
      Today freedoms are good but the illusion of safety trumps it every time.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    51. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it is true; you just don't understand them because you live in your own little world. Outside that little world, is an America teeming with voters who support Republicans and Democrats. Every two years, they go into the voting booth and assert that a police state is the best idea they ever heard of. You may think they're wrong but saying they don't exist and they aren't a supermajority, just makes you look silly.

      Until you work on those people, to change their pro-police-state outlook, government will spy on its citizens.

      So start building arguments. What is so great about freedom? Why would anyone want to live in the America that the founders founded? How is the "face" of USA better than the face of East Germany? We think these are obvious rhetorical questions but they're not.

    52. Re:Bull Shit! by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      You are being pedantic. It is a joke.

      No kidding. In reference to my response, I won't give the full Sheldon Cooper explanation of a joke, but it involves "irony".

    53. Re:Bull Shit! by ebno-10db · · Score: 3, Informative

      I don't think George expected them to know what median means. Take you, for example :)

      But I clearly do know what median means. My stupidity lies elsewhere.

    54. Re:Bull Shit! by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      That surprises me too. I don't work with statisticians per se, but a few mathematicians. They seem to avoid the word "average" whenever they're talking math.

      FWIW Merrian-Webster confirms the lack of mathematical precision in the word "average": a single value (as a mean, mode, or median) that summarizes or represents the general significance of a set of unequal values

    55. Re:Bull Shit! by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      What the hell?

    56. Re:Bull Shit! by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Informative

      There's another poll that says only 26% favor the government’s secret collecting of these phone records for national security purposes regardless of whether there is any suspicion of wrongdoing. Also, 56% of Likely U.S. Voters now consider the federal government a threat to individual rights rather than a protector of those rights. That’s up 10 points from 46% in December. So your suspicion is right, if you ask different poll questions, you get different results. (warning: those pages auto-play video with sound).

      The question in the story asks, "Are you willing to give up some personal privacy," and that question is too broad. I am willing to give up some personal privacy if it saves lives, for example, I am more than happy to tell you the color of my carpet is red and my walls are white, and my carpet is blue. I am annoyed, but willing to have my bags searched at airports if it helps. So saying 'some privacy'.......well that doesn't tell you anything about the NSA listening to phone calls.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    57. Re:Bull Shit! by cold+fjord · · Score: 1, Troll

      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
      -- philosopher George Carlin

      Two things: First, George Carlin was not a philosopher, but rather a profane leftist comedian,. Second, much of the disparity of views between the typical Slashdot poster and the American public can be found in the simple fact that a significant percentage of active posters on Slashdot have more extreme political views tending towards the fringe than the American public. Some of that is due to the fact that many of the posters aren't Americans and they are indifferent to, or even applaud actions that actually damage the United States. A previous example of the result of this is the strong support on Slashdot for the document theft by Manning and the publishing by Wikileaks of over 100,000 stolen classified US government documents. As a result, over the last couple of days it has been popular to depict Snowden as a hero and bashing dissent from that view. It has also been popular to depict the entire US government based in Washington as traitors that need to be punished by execution or removed en mass. Needless to say, these are distinctly minority views among the American public. So in this case the issue isn't the stupidity of the American people as a whole so much as the tendency of the population of Slashdot towards the what would be the political fringe in the United States. It would be interesting to learn exactly which countries people on Slashdot think the general population would welcome a massive theft of government documents from the security agencies, or the unauthorized disclosure of intelligence programs after the individual performing the theft and disclosure fled to a nation which is an ideological opponent. Would Britons welcome it? Russians? French? German? Spanish? I doubt it. And yet it would likely always be cheered on Slashdot.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    58. Re:Bull Shit! by Sparticus789 · · Score: 2

      Very well put. I have no problem giving up a little personal privacy (giving the government my phone number) to add my cell phone to a list that receives texts when an Amber Alert is sent out in my state, because there is the potential to save someone's life. I do have a problem with the government publishing how many firearms I have in my house because that puts me and my neighbors at risk of home burglary or getting into the situation where I need to defend myself with said firearms.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    59. Re:Bull Shit! by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      Smart enough to know the meaning and purpose of a literary allusion...

      It's not a literary allusion, which is typically defined as "a literary device in which the writer or speaker refers either directly or indirectly to a person, event, or thing in history or to a work of art or literature".

      P.S. I know I'm being incredibly pedantic, but that was the point of my original jest. As for me being too pedantic for Slashdot, the number and type of responses I got say that I'm in good company.

    60. Re:Bull Shit! by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      That is a rare insight. It is a pity it is seen at all.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    61. Re:Bull Shit! by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      There is enough information out there to know it is absolute rubbish.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    62. Re:Bull Shit! by vux984 · · Score: 1

      What they did affected quite a few non-consenting individuals. Troll fail.

    63. Re:Bull Shit! by idontgno · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Since they are using the overly broad data that they collect to look for connections that may or may not exist, everyone is in danger of being violated in the name of fighting terrorism just because someone they have had contact with has had contact with someone that is on a list.

      "And that's a small price to pay, as long as it it's them, not me. And it'll never be me. I'm a good American."

      It's never "me" until suddenly it is.

      The sad lesson of the past: the sad lessons of the past apply to everyone, but no one will believe it applies to them until reality proves it to them. People (rightly) complain about American exceptionalism, but exceptionalism applies to individuals and small self-identifying groups (e.g., "right-thinking patriots") as well.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    64. Re:Bull Shit! by erp_consultant · · Score: 1

      "Because the responses were framed in the context of to fight terrorism." - Exactly. This is the same sort of logic that brought us the TSA and airport pat downs. It hasn't actually "prevented" any terrorist action because it is impossible to prove one way or the other. All it has done is inconvenience millions of travelers.

      Does anyone really think that collecting phone and internet information is going to prevent terrorist attacks? Those people are using burner phones and encryption and hiding behind TOR servers.

    65. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Americans used to be strong and independent people they wanted freedom and were willing "To pay the iron price" for it. Today freedoms are good but the illusion of safety trumps it every time.

      I don't think that's true. I think the majority of Americans have always happily gone along with whatever they think the majority are doing. Prohibition. Separate-but-equal. TSA. It's always been fringe elements and radicals that get these policies changed. Radicals standing on soap boxes, putting up flyers and printing broadsheets. Now that the news is owned by six companies, and with the NSA watching which web sites you browse, and the rest of the internet looking like an echo chamber, it may be much harder to change opinion.

      NSA is building contact networks with their data. They're playing Six-Degrees-of-Terrorist, and I can't understand why more people aren't concerned that they might be subject to direct scrutiny because a friend-of-a-friend Googled "ricin poisoning symptoms." We're all six degrees of separation from a known terrorist.

    66. Re:Bull Shit! by pushing-robot · · Score: 1

      Actually, yes, yes, yes, and yes, depending on your point of view.

      Widespread antisemitism predated the Nazis. Socialism is just another anarchist/labor movement, which were criminalized and demonized by the powerful long before Spartacus. Homosexuality has been brutally suppressed by Abrahamic societies, and wealthy landowners and businessmen have always been criminals to the lower class. These hatreds were not created by decree. They stem from the instinctive fears and resentments we harbor for those who are different, isolated, secretive, or threatening.

      So feel free to cloister yourself, hide your differences, and pretend to be a pure, perfect and homogenous member of society. Only don't complain when a dictator comes along, for he will co-opt that false notion of homogeneity to rally the conservative masses, call your concealment proof of your guilt, and use your isolation like a predator who has isolated an animal from the herd.

      If you're lucky enough to escape his first culls, you will have the honor of becoming his minion; you will do his terrible bidding, always keeping your head down, always afraid of drawing attention, because of the secrets you harbor, because of the sword of Damocles ever suspended above you.

      So consider instead being friendly, open, harmless, and different. The things we accept and embrace in society today, after all, came not from isolation but from ubiquity, and what we call "normal" consists of all the things that showed up and refused to go away. Stand up and politely refuse to sit down. Connect with those who are as unlike you as possible. Not everyone will accept you, but many will, and you'll temper more attitudes than you realize. And in time, when a prospective dictator comes and preaches fear, hatred, and xenophobia, his words will gain little purchase.

      --
      How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
    67. Re:Bull Shit! by Rhacman · · Score: 2

      Well, if we are having a test on American history topics, lets start with: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literacy_tests

      --
      Account -> Discussions -> Disable Sigs
    68. Re:Bull Shit! by Applekid · · Score: 1

      Americans used to be strong and independent people they wanted freedom and were willing "To pay the iron price" for it.
      Today freedoms are good but the illusion of safety trumps it every time.

      I don't think that's true. I think the majority of Americans have always happily gone along with whatever they think the majority are doing.

      Sure, and now that the majority of people have no trouble getting food on the table (hungry or not), having a nice car in the driveway (job or not), and don't get pulled over for bribes in the middle of the night (breaking the law or not), there's no reason to fight. Tyranny isn't messing with their ability to watch Honey Boo Boo and buy fuzzy handcuffs for bedroom playtime.

      Prohibition. Separate-but-equal. TSA. It's always been fringe elements and radicals that get these policies changed.

      With the NSA watching, the heroic radicals of the future better be SPOTLESS. Who would follow, say, someone who's cheated on his wife, or pirated a CD, or made an off-color joke?

      --
      More Twoson than Cupertino
    69. Re:Bull Shit! by tragedy · · Score: 2

      Ok, I'll play along. MozeeToby clearly meant actions of two consenting adults with each other affecting only themselves and harming no-one. I'm sorry for you that you're incapable of understanding that from context.

    70. Re:Bull Shit! by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      intelligence is a left-bounded Gaussian distribution

      No, intelligence (by which I presume you mean IQ score) does not have a Gaussian distribution. They're kind of bell shaped, but that doesn't mean they're truly Gaussian (especially the tails).

    71. Re:Bull Shit! by Applekid · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I believe the poll results, but only for one reason. Because the responses were framed in the context of "to fight terrorism."

      I suspect you're right. Poll results are notoriously sensitive to exactly how the questions are phrased. The other problem is that those polled might not understand the entire scope of the program, or have considered how it can be misused and how little protection against misuse there might be (or might not be - that's the charming thing about a secret court). Nevertheless I find the overall results very depressing. IIRC there have been polls from time to time asking people if they believed in the principles of the Bill of Rights (but phrased in such a way that it wasn't obvious they were talking about the Bill of Rights). Unfortunately what many (including me) consider the most important part of American law didn't fare well. Thank goodness the 1st Congress was filled with radicals.

      Make no mistake, this poll was engineered to show the end result. The goal of this is to make people who feel disgusted with PRISM to question why they feel disgusted. If no one else does, perhaps they should just let go and consent.

      --
      More Twoson than Cupertino
    72. Re:Bull Shit! by astrodoom · · Score: 1

      Look, I don't mean to be a prick, but moral relativism by definition says wrong is subjective. Whatever you're trying to talk about, it's not moral relativism.

    73. Re:Bull Shit! by tragedy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Two things: First, George Carlin was not a philosopher, but rather a profane leftist comedian,

      Have you ever actually listened to George Carlin? He was a philsopher. Not many qualifications are actually required to be one, and he was one. He was also a comedian, and a profane one at that (imagine that, a popular comedian who uses profanity, unheard of). Describing his as leftist is ridiculous pigeonholing, however

    74. Re:Bull Shit! by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. I would expand the test to very simple things that would disqualify the vast majority of Americans: who are your senators? Who is your representative? Who is your governor? Who is vice president? Name three supreme court justices...

      This is not like a poll tax - you don't need any money to know this stuff, and if you can't be bothered to know this stuff, then you shouldn't be voting.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    75. Re:Bull Shit! by Applekid · · Score: 1

      However, it would be too radical (not to mention ironic) to disqualify sections of the electorate on the basis of stupidity or lack of values.

      No Joke! I would love to see voters required to pass a basic test before being allowed to vote. And I mean something very basic like "Name one right protected by the Bill of Rights", or "True or False, The right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed""

      We don't even have to be particularly nasty about it. The first few options on the ballot could be these test questions. The following questions are votes. When counted, the ballot of anyone who misses the test questions are ejected. Idiots still feel their voices were heard, those who care and have vested time into learning about the way things are going and where we were have their voices amplified.

      I mean, we can all have differing opinions on how to make things better going forward, left or right, but if you don't know who James Madison was you simply shouldn't have a say.

      --
      More Twoson than Cupertino
    76. Re:Bull Shit! by Applekid · · Score: 1

      There's another poll that says only 26% favor the government’s secret collecting of these phone records for national security purposes regardless of whether there is any suspicion of wrongdoing. Also, 56% of Likely U.S. Voters now consider the federal government a threat to individual rights rather than a protector of those rights. That’s up 10 points from 46% in December. So your suspicion is right, if you ask different poll questions, you get different results. (warning: those pages auto-play video with sound).

      The question in the story asks, "Are you willing to give up some personal privacy," and that question is too broad. I am willing to give up some personal privacy if it saves lives, for example, I am more than happy to tell you the color of my carpet is red and my walls are white, and my carpet is blue. I am annoyed, but willing to have my bags searched at airports if it helps. So saying 'some privacy'.......well that doesn't tell you anything about the NSA listening to phone calls.

      Whatever. They're still going to vote Democrat/Republican in the next election.

      --
      More Twoson than Cupertino
    77. Re:Bull Shit! by tragedy · · Score: 1

      I think perhaps you're not very bright. On a sample size as large as the set of all people and with a measurement like intelligence which naturally falls into a bell curve, how far apart do you think the median and the mean actually are? They're close enough that saying that half of all people are below average intelligence is true to within a reasonable margin of error whether you're talking about the median or the mean.

      Oh, also, the main intelligence scoring system, the Intelligence Quotient, is based on 100 as the average IQ. They determine that average based on the median, not the mean.

    78. Re:Bull Shit! by lister+king+of+smeg · · Score: 1

      If its so necessary for terrorism, how did the Boston bombing happen then?

      A cynical answer (who knows if it's accurate?) might be that the NSA set it up themselves in the hope of getting an increased budget.

      There is enough information out there to know it is absolute rubbish.

      Really? We were told by Russia to watch the bomber that he was dangerous and millitant, hell fricking Saudi Arabia warned us about him and the US government ignored them both.

      --
      ---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
    79. Re:Bull Shit! by Jawnn · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Couple that condition response ("Oh. To fight teh terrorist? Well, sure...") with the fact that the mainstream media has not called out the government's lame "but we're not actually listening to your calls" excuse, and you have a populace which is blithely letting precious Constitutional protections slip away.

    80. Re:Bull Shit! by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      And the reason that will not happen is because it is considered more useful for voter turnout than it is for the voters to make good decisions.

      Democracy isn't a method for making good decisions, it's a method of co-opting the majority into acceptance of your government. The more people who voted for a government, the more people who feel that actually have a say in things.

      And before you say that sounds cynical, look at most people. Do you think they know anything about economics, or diplomacy or anything else? No. All they need to do is ensure that these people are happy enough so they don't go berserk and overthrow the government.

    81. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      62% of Americans were most likely happy with Slavery too but that didn't make it right.

    82. Re:Bull Shit! by spiritplumber · · Score: 1

      "I have nothing to hide" needs to be symmetrical.

      --
      Liberty - Security - Laziness - Pick any two.
    83. Re:Bull Shit! by vux984 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      . I do have a problem with the government publishing how many firearms I have in my house because that puts me and my neighbors at risk of home burglary or getting into the situation where I need to defend myself with said firearms.

      Sorry to derail the thread a bit, but this is truly delusional.

      Why is it only the people WITH firearms are up in arms that "criminals might know that you have guns"?

      The people without firearms are the ones who are relatively defenseless if they get robbed. But they aren't complaining. They aren't worried about it. Why aren't they worried?

      But you, the one with a bunch of guns, is worried? Why are you worried? You have a house full of guns, and presumably know how to use them. Why exactly would you be at increased risk of burglary? Particularly relative to those who don't have firearms?

      Why would criminals target you if they knew you had guns? Because they want to dramatically increase their odds of getting shot? Because they crave the adrenalin rush of a shootout?

      Or is it because they want your guns? Why wouldn't they just rob softer targets and use the cash to buy guns? They could buy them legally, or even black market... its not like the black market for guns is primarily supplied by robbing random firearms from gun owners one or two at a time. You do know all this right?

      So what exactly is your fear predicated on here?

    84. Re:Bull Shit! by danceswithtrees · · Score: 1

      I find the number of Americans who don't mind this invasion of privacy amazingly high. Perhaps I should adjust my expectations. So many gun "enthusiasts" are worried about a government database of gun owners. I wonder how many of them are OK with blanket surveillance. Now the government can make a database for anything-- gun owners, church goers, lefties, righties, anyone who who has had an abortion, wants a girlfriend, has a girlfriend, has two girlfriends, two girlfriends and a wife... You name it, the government can make a list.

      Given the track record for how power corrupts, this is a dangerous road to travel. Power over prisoners -> Abu Ghraib. Police database ->
      http://www.itpro.co.uk/634774/police-database-abuse-hugely-intrusive
      http://www.policeone.com/police-products/software/Data-Information-Sharing-Software/articles/5360910-Cops-criticized-for-misuse-of-databases/
      Power to wage war -> Iraq, Afganistan.

      I think you would be hard pressed to come up with a government power that has not or will not be abused. This "total information awareness" carries the risk of even more abuse. If the government wants to quiet a dissident, what embarrassing information can they find out about him/her. What about family members? The governments ability to suppress dissent will become even greater-- imagine a world where the government "reminds" you the consequences of not toeing the line. America can become that.

      What happened to the country where men would say "Give me liberty or give me death!" or "I'd rather die on my feet than live upon my knees" (OK he was actually Mexican but same sentiment).

    85. Re:Bull Shit! by Sparticus789 · · Score: 1

      I'll leave out the "defense against tyranny" argument for you.

      Like some people, I work Monday through Friday and am not always present at my house. I do leave it once in a while.

      Think about it like this. Even a cheap gun is worth $300 or so. A good handgun retails for $800 easily. A so-called "assault rifle" goes for $1,500 for an entry level model, with some worth well over $3,000. So let's just say that I own a single handgun, 2 cheap rifles, and 2 "assault rifles". That means my gun collection is worth (on average) $4,500. That is not to mention ammunition, which is (on average) $30 a box. I could fit 30 boxes in a single backpack with ease, meaning this bag is now worth $900, and the grand total is $5,400. Now imagine someone going into a house to steal $5,400 worth of game consoles, computers, TVs, and other consumer electronics. Those 5 guns and backpack could be carried by one person in one trip. Consumer electronics, not so much.

      So if I were a criminal, I could case a place for 3 days, find out if they work a regular 9-5. Break in during the day, use a $150 drill and $50 drill bit to open a gun safe in 1 hour, and make off with a $5,400 pay day (minus $200 in expenses for equipment).

      I know of many instances where criminals have stolen guns out of people's houses and attempted to sell them. Happened to a friend of mine last year. It does happen.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    86. Re:Bull Shit! by danceswithtrees · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I think the apologist argument about "people who do nothing wrong have nothing to hide" needs to be applied to government and corporations first and foremost. The fact that the government kept this secret is tacit admission that they knew what they were doing was wrong or at best questionable. With precious few exceptions our government should be open and transparent. Their argument about how this program needs to be kept secret for it to work is not plausible. Do dangerous terrorists not already go under the assumption that they are under surveillance?

      Google once said that if you want something private, perhaps you should't be doing it in the first place (paraphrasing here). If Google has in fact cooperated with blanket surveillance, it would be ironic and hypocritical.

    87. Re:Bull Shit! by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      And we're not far down the list on the "thems." There's no point in keeping quiet, the NSA has already mined all the data they need, and these algorithms are trivially simple.

      First they were looking for "terrorists." But those were brown people with funny names.

      After Snowden, they're going to looking for "traitors." What do potential traitors look like? Well perhaps they look like Snowden. Let's see, let's see, what we can connect with our datacenter.

      Snowden's a young white male with a tech job. I'm a young white male with a tech job.

      Snowden donated money to Ron Paul's campaign. I donated money to Ron Paul's campaign.

      Snowden has an EFF sticker on his laptop. I've got one of those on the side of my desk. Got the t-shirts too from the donations I've made.

      I wonder if Snowden has a Slashdot account?

      What do you think is going to happen when they haul the guy into court and the protests start?

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    88. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are only finitely many humans! The left bound on the gaussian is so many sigmas away from the mean that the difference between mean and median might well be so small that 'number of people below mean' = 'number of people below average'! I didn't do the math, though.

      Of course, this all assumes intelligence ~ IQ.

    89. Re:Bull Shit! by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Have you ever actually listened to George Carlin?

      Yes. Did you know that he has a long history of releasing recorded comedy routines on various media? They are available on Amazon.

      Have you seen his "Al Sleet the "Hippy Dippy Weatherman" routine?

      He was still doing it years later: George Carlin 'The Hippy Dippy Weatherman'

      That is how he made his living. Could he be insightful? At times, sure. A philosopher? To the extent that anybody can be, in an informal sense, sure. But he was certainly no Buddha or Jesus.

      And he got some things very wrong that should have been obvious. After Saddam's Iraq invaded and annexed Kuwait in 1990, the UN took action against him. The US led a military coalition of 34 nations, including the armed forces of multiple Arab nations fighting as part of the coalition, to remove Saddam's army from Kuwait and restore Kuwait's sovereignty. There is no question about who was the aggressor, or why Saddam's occupying army in Kuwait was being attacked, and UN approval was explicit and strong. And how did Carlin respond?

      Carlin: Most overrated comic ever?

      Carlin had a coherent analysis once, but by the mid 80s if he was still the boldest standup guy out there, never missing a chance to attack U.S. racist-imperialism abroad (his 1991 HBO special made a lot of his audience nervous and/or confused when he dismissed the Gulf War as one more case of us bombing brown people because they’re brown — which he distinguished from WWII, the last time we bombed white people, which because they were muscling in on our game) , it was in the context of an increasingly cranky and humorless misanthropy. When you spend a fair chunk of your time complaining about the annoying habits of the people around you in various settings, no matter how reasonable your arguments, it makes your more overt politics seem too damn abstract, i.e. why exactly does what the U.S. or organized religion does bother you if you don’t like people to begin with? (Bill Maher also suffers from this contradiction, never mind Lewis Black.)

      He reduces the US action to racism, overlooking the fact that the US had many allied nations of the same group, Arabs, and was acting to restore the rightful government of an Arab nation after an attack by a "brother Arab." Wrong. Misleading. Dishonest.

      That doesn't mean that he didn't go after other groups and ideas as well.

      CARLIN: Let me tell you about endangered species, all right? Saving endangered species is just one more arrogant attempt by humans to control nature. It's arrogant meddling. It's what got us in trouble in the first place. Doesn't anybody understand that? Interfering with nature. Over 90%, way over 90% of all the species that have ever lived on this planet, ever lived, are gone. They're extinct. We didn't kill them all. They just disappeared. That's what nature does. We're so self-important, so self-important. Everybody is going to save something now. Save the trees, save the bees, save the whales, save those snails. And the greatest arrogance of all, save the planet. What?

      CARLIN: I'm tired of these self-righteous environmentalists, these white bourgeois liberals who think the only thing wrong with this country is there aren't enough bicycle paths, people trying to make the world safe for their Volvos. There is nothing wrong with the planet. Nothing wrong with the planet. The plane

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    90. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you pay too much for guns, and should move out of that crack infested crime ridden neighborhood.
      Also stealing from gun owners is a good way to end up dead.

    91. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was doing something illegal, which isn't the same thing as wrong. No amount of moral relativism will ever convince me that the actions of 2 consenting adults is "wrong" in an ethical sense.

      What if those two consent together to kill a third who doesn't consent, or even "just" torture animals? Might want to qualify your original statement better.

    92. Re:Bull Shit! by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      I am annoyed, but willing to have my bags searched at airports if it helps.

      Not by the government, I hope.

    93. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed""

      What the heck does a small castle and ursine limbs have to do with voting?

    94. Re:Bull Shit! by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      And, just to add to your argument, just remember that politicians rarely give up a power once obtained. Democrats celebrated when Obama was elected (and I'll include myself here too). Many of us were thinking "At last, those Bush-era government power abuses will end." Of course, being a politician, Obama suddenly realized just how "important" these were and kept them going. (Of course, don't think that Mitt Romney wouldn't have done the same. He's a politician too.)

      Even if you are a die-hard Obama fan and think that there's no way Obama abused this power, what about the next guy? Or the guy after that? How can we guarantee that two Presidents down isn't someone who will abuse this NSA program in horrible ways? There's a reason that our Constitution designed government with a system of checks and balances. It's so we don't wind up with another king (or, worse, dictator).

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    95. Re:Bull Shit! by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Even if we take your source's suggestion and use a log-normal distribution as our model, the mean is still higher than the median, so Carlin's point that more than half of the population will have below average intelligence still stands.

    96. Re:Bull Shit! by cfulton · · Score: 1

      My point is that the data is rife for abuse. It does not matter if the subjects are doing anything wrong. Having the data set in the governments hands can lead to all kinds of bad outcomes. The excuse that if your not doing anything illegal you have nothing to fear is BS.

      --
      No sigs in BETA. Beta SUCKS.
    97. Re:Bull Shit! by josepha48 · · Score: 1

      baaahhd! that's so baahd! mindless sheep = stupid people that don't get that terrorism is where it starts and then the mpaa, riaa move in and then whatever big business gets into that mix of what they want to crack down on

      --

      Only 'flamers' flame!

    98. Re:Bull Shit! by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Politician A should win, but politician B will.

      Its funny you say that because politician A isn't especially honest either. National defense is a constitutional responsibility of the federal government in the US, but social welfare isn't. And yet social welfare spending is about twice what national defense spending is, and social welfare spending is going to be increasing significantly over the coming years. National defense spending has been on a long decline since WW2 when it was nearly 40% of GDP whereas now it mainly bounces between 4-5%. Increasing taxes doesn't help if you don't control spending. And taxes are a drag on the economy which are slowing the recovery.

      Fiscal Headwinds: Is the Other Shoe About to Drop?

      Surprisingly, despite all the attention federal spending cuts and sequestration have received, our calculations suggest they are not the main contributors to this projected drag. The excess fiscal drag on the horizon comes almost entirely from rising taxes. Specifically, we calculate that nine-tenths of that projected 1 percentage point excess fiscal drag comes from tax revenue rising faster than normal as a share of the economy.

      And no, the "sheep" aren't willing to "give up anything". What has been revealed so far is far from that. It constitutes no rights or freedoms lost, and a what constitutes at most a limited intrusion on privacy as the program operates under the oversight of the FISA court.

      In a real sense you aren't suggesting a bargain any different that you complain about: fear the government instead of fear the terrorists. Your preferred fiscal solution leads to serious financial problems even faster than what you decry.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    99. Re:Bull Shit! by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Yes, they told the FBI. It was bungling by the FBI that probably let that attack through, not a plot by NSA. You help prove the point.

      Now the FBI has to answer questions about why they ignored the warnings.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    100. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look out behind you, it appears that you have an army of pissed off monkeys behind you. Oh, wait... that's just a low-intelligence, dark-skinned, minority group of humans...

    101. Re:Bull Shit! by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      I had a friend say just yesterday that maybe it was ok to have the NSA spying if it stopped a terrorist attack. I was pounding my head on my desk, he is smarter than that and yet he parroted the stereotypical line without a trace of irony. People do believe this for some reason. They see a very tiny number of people die in Boston and they want any and all things done to stop it; yet 25,000 people died in auto accidents and no one notices.

    102. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I actually think of Mark Twain: "It is not worth while to try to keep history from repeating itself, for man's character will always make the preventing of the repetitions impossible."

    103. Re:Bull Shit! by tragedy · · Score: 2

      Yes. Did you know that he has a long history of releasing recorded comedy routines on various media? They are available on Amazon [amazon.com].

      I did. I did know that. Wow, you mean I'm not the only one in on the secret?

      Have you seen his "Al Sleet the "Hippy Dippy Weatherman" routine [youtube.com]?

      That was quite funny. Thanks for the link. Did it have some point in your argument though?

      That is how he made his living. Could he be insightful? At times, sure. A philosopher? To the extent that anybody can be, in an informal sense, sure. But he was certainly no Buddha or Jesus.

      If you want to be a philosopher in a formal sense, I suppose you can get all kinds of academic degrees in philosophy, but the degrees don't make you a philosopher. Practicing philosophy makes you a philosopher. Anyone can do it. As for not being Buddha or Jesus, I agree that he wasn't. Buddha and Jesus probably weren't either, of course. Even if they were actually real people, the modern perceptions of them are mostly from millenia of people putting words in their mouths.

      And he got some things very wrong that should have been obvious. After Saddam's Iraq invaded and annexed Kuwait in 1990, the UN took action against him. The US led a military coalition of 34 nations, including the armed forces of multiple Arab nations fighting as part of the coalition, to remove Saddam's army from Kuwait and restore Kuwait's sovereignty. There is no question about who was the aggressor, or why Saddam's occupying army in Kuwait was being attacked, and UN approval was explicit and strong.

      Ha! Ha! Ha! So you're bitter that he disagreed with the war and the ridiculous entanglements that got the US into it and the basic racism and religious hatred that bolstered support for it?

      He reduces the US action to racism, overlooking the fact that the US had many allied nations of the same group, Arabs, and was acting to restore the rightful government of an Arab nation after an attack by a "brother Arab." Wrong. Misleading. Dishonest.

      You've just conjured up this hilarious image in my mind of you, red faced and constipated, stamping your feet and heiling the US flag. Trying to pretend the US had clean hands and pure motives in that whole mess is beyond ridiculous.

      Then you go on to quote a bit where Carlin is attacking liberal environmentalists and you seem oblivious to the fact that your own example blows a hole in your own argument pigeonholing him as a leftist.

      Carlin can be entertaining, but he offers nothing to follow, and little useful guidance on life.

      Ah, I think I see the confusion. I think we've already established that, to you, a "leftist" is anyone who ever disagrees with you on any political point. Aside from that confusion, I see you're confused about what the term "philosopher" means. Clearly you're getting it mixed up with "messiah" or "absolute moral authority". That's not the way it works. Everything philosophers come up with should be evaluated and considered on its own merits.

      Take Nietzsche, please. Most of his philosophy was awful and inhumane. He did come out with some deep statements, and reading some of his stuff can give you insights and perspectives about certain aspects of human nature, but you can't live by it. That would be insane.

      Same goes for Carlin. You can get some some surprisingly deep insights out of him for a comedian, but I don't recommend bringing back boiling in oil as a form of capital punishment and having Crisco sponsor it. Nor do I recommend fencing off a bunch of square states and throwing a bunch of armed convicts into them.

      Going back to the original point, the average person is pretty dumb. It's scary that half of all people are even dumber than that.

    104. Re:Bull Shit! by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      If the government wants to know something about us, then they need to ask. Doing it secretly, lying about it, and breaking the law, is the wrong way to go about it. This is a government that is intended to be run by the people and for the people, so the people can not be left out of the loop in this.

      And I am not kidding about breaking the law. This is patently screwed up and illegal. And yet you hear people defend this as all being legal. They say two administrations and congress all approved this, but this doesn't make make something law. If we all need to be advanced legal scholars before we understand why it's legal then something is seriously wrong with the system, because the law seems very clear and to the point that warrants are required and that probable cause to believe that a crime has been committed or is about to be committed is required before getting a warrant.

      First off the FISA court "interpreted" the PATRIOT act a certain way that is very dubious. Ie they are giving out warrants without evidence of specific wrongdoing for the purposes of vacuuming up the data (or hoovering) first but not looking at it, but then needing a later warrant to look over the data once it's all been collected. That violates the spirit and the letter of the provisions in the PATRIOT act. It's a bypass around the law in order to scoop up all the data and have it ready for future purposes.

      Next, the FISA has no oversight except for a tiny number of bozos in congress. There is no appeal here, data is secret, no one accused based on data found this way will ever know it happened and will be absolutely unable to bring it to a court of appeals or to the supreme court. This all happens outside of the normal framework of laws.

      Finally we've got the actual constitution. It doesn't matter what congress says, or what a president puts in a signing statement, it can't be stepped around just because some legal advisers claim it's ok. This data can not be legally acquired without a legal warrant, period. If the government does not like this then they need to change the constitution first. The constitution does not authorize the government to rule by decree.

      As an addendum, the whole thing about "it's only foreigners" is ridiculous. The constitution applies to foreigners also when they are within the US borders, and many parts applies to foreigners overseas also. Even the brown ones with the scruffy beards, you are absolutely required to get a warrant before tapping their phones.

    105. Re:Bull Shit! by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      There are supposed to be checks and balances. But there's been an end run around it all. Only a trivial fraction of congress knew about the spying and approved it, and a ridiculous court with no oversight approves it. In no way would a reasonable person conclude that this has approval of all three branches of government.

    106. Re:Bull Shit! by vux984 · · Score: 0

      I'll leave out the "defense against tyranny" argument for you.

      You had better. Because that isn't the subject. You complained specifically that the publication of this information made you more vulnerable to burglary. And that is the only point I am refuting.

      I don't disagree with the defense against tyranny to the -same- extent (although I do find it fallible in its own right) but it is beside the point. Nor am I generally disagreeing with any of your rights to have a firearm, not at all.

      I am ONLY disagreeing with your argument that it makes you more vulnerable to burglary.

      Think about it like this [...]

      Firstly, retail prices and fenced prices of used stolen goods are worlds apart and are pretty much at their lowest point on the end of the crook selling to a fence.

      I could fit 30 boxes in a single backpack with ease, meaning this bag is now worth $900

      Sure, new at retail... and 15 ps3 games at $60 each is $900. Better weight / value ratio; that won't fill the backpack.

      So if I were a criminal, I could case a place for 3 days, find out if they work a regular 9-5. Break in during the day, use a $150 drill and $50 drill bit to open a gun safe in 1 hour, and make off with a $5,400 pay day (minus $200 in expenses for equipment).

      You've just profiled a pretty smart pretty organized criminal. He has a plan. Casing the place. Bringing tools to break into a safe. And always carrying the risk he'll run into an armed homeowner. All to steal $5400 worth of stuff that is relatively "hot" (difficult to unload to anyone legitimate). Not to mention a product that the police are relatively interested in retrieving compared to say someone's Xbox 360 and games. And if they do get caught with a stash of stolen "assault rifles" that's going to be worse for them too.

      The recovery rate on firearms is relatively high compared to most other items. Due in part to registration and other controls, and in part because its higher priority to investigate in the first place.

      This criminal isn't a methhead looking for a smash and grab for his next fix. He's at least a bit of a thinker.

      So why would this so-called smart criminal bother with small firearms capers? Why not high end road and mountain bikes. Those go for $5000+ too at least list price new and are a LOT easier to unload etc. Or break into a store and steal high value density items. Anything from cigarettes to cellphone chargers, small power tools to monster hdmi cables.

      I know of many instances where criminals have stolen guns out of people's houses and attempted to sell them. Happened to a friend of mine last year. It does happen.

      No question that it happens. Criminals attempt to steal and sell absolutely anything they can get their hands on.

      But the trouble with your scenario of dramatically increased risk to yourself is it presumes criminals smart enough to do something else, something more profitable and less risky.

      Finally, suppose there were a criminal actually interested in the enterprise of profiling gun owners casing them out, and stealing their guns 2 or 3 at a time. He still has plenty of options even if there is no "national gun registry". Facebook, twitter, gun clubs, forums would provide him all the targets he'll ever need.

      And just like savvy car stereo thieves have friends or contacts in the car stereo sales / installation business. This gun-thief would have friends working at local gun ranges, and gun shops. Etc. So he'd have an inside track on who just bought some big expensive X or other, or who had a big collection of Zs.

      So if that guy were to exist, then he already exists, and he doesn't need a gun registry to help him.

    107. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But 30,000 per year hasn't made any dent on the second amendment.

      Discuss...

    108. Re:Bull Shit! by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      "Power don't come from a badge or a gun. Power comes from lying. Lying big and gettin' the whole damn world to play along with you. Once you've got everybody agreeing with what they know in their hearts ain't true, you've got 'em by the balls." -Senator Roark, Sin City

      --
      ~X~
    109. Re:Bull Shit! by stenvar · · Score: 1

      governments will use patriotism against you and even get your children to spy for them as was done by Germany during WWII

      Not just during WWII; that continued all the way until the 1980's. Many people living and working in Germany today, even many politicians, were spies and informants for the German "state security service".

    110. Re:Bull Shit! by Dishevel · · Score: 1

      Sure. 2nd Amendment rights have not been edited at all in the last 50 years.
      Are you an idiot or a troll?

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    111. Re:Bull Shit! by dryeo · · Score: 1

      I mean, we can all have differing opinions on how to make things better going forward, left or right, but if you don't know who James Madison was you simply shouldn't have a say.

      I'm not even American but even I know he was the madman who as President got Washington, including the White House, burned to the ground.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    112. Re:Bull Shit! by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Good idea. Which ever Party is in power can pick questions that the other party will fail. I like asking whether it was Liberals or Conservatives that were considered OK to tar and feather during the American Revolution.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    113. Re: Bull Shit! by jameshofo · · Score: 1

      No no we talked about this remember, the secret court that we have no insight into are using legal arguments. On one side is the nsa there's a judge and the other side is an empty chair to represent 'we the people'. No one objected so it passed, are you saying the american public has a reason not to trust the government with all their data from now until the end of time. Surely there's no possible way to abuse this.

      --
      Good leaders run toward problems, bad leaders hide from them.
    114. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is truly bullshit. Too bad they are in DC, and I'm a LONG drive from there.

    115. Re:Bull Shit! by Internetuser1248 · · Score: 1

      Well here is something to make you feel disgusted again: How many people in 2012 in the US were killed by terrorism (soldiers don't count)? How many people died in the US in 2012 due to malnutrition? How many people in the US in 2012 died in freak weather events? Prescription drugs? Inadequate health care? In jail while awaiting trial on marijuana possession charges? Assault rifle killing sprees? Go look up some statistics, I'll wait.

    116. Re: Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. Funny how the term people have a problem with is average when a mathematical definition of intelligence is even more difficult.

    117. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, the question of Pew Research is not
      fair: "Which is more important?
                A. Investigate terrorist threats;
      (or) B. Not intrude on privacy (of the general public)

      There is a third choice:
              C. Investigate terrorist threats AND not intrude on privacy (of the
      general public). We pay you people $X Billion dollars to do so.

    118. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It might very well be bullshit. It might be true. Fact it, it doesn't matter. The law is what matters. I'm tired of the government breaking it's own laws. The people we have placed in positions to defend the Constitution do not value the Constitution. I have watched this with grief for over a decade now. I fear I will live with these misguided "citizens" for the rest of my life, uncorrected.

      They are lawbreakers. They deserve the fate of lawbreakers.

    119. Re:Bull Shit! by Xest · · Score: 1

      "I am annoyed, but willing to have my bags searched at airports if it helps."

      FWIW it doesn't. Of all attempted plots to get bombs on planes since 9/11 they've either succeeded (underpants bomber, shoe bomber, DHL bomber) but failed to detonate because the plots were run by retards, or they've been caught by good old fashioned intelligence work before they even reached the check in area, let alone the security barriers.

      Literally every bomb since 9/11 that has actually got to the point of attempting to get through security checks has succeeded. Despite the billions of pounds spent screening travellers, parcels and luggage it's all failed to spot bombs that have gone by. Not one has been caught by those checks, though millions of people have had their bottles of water, tweezers, and other such "dangerous weapons" stolen by security.

    120. Re:Bull Shit! by oobayly · · Score: 1

      it skews the electoral system to having to devote most effort to chasing uncommitted

      Can't you just spoil your ballot? If I want to show that I'm apathetic (for example the UK Police Commissioner elections) I don't vote. However I normally vote, but in some instances have purposely spoilt my vote so that the turnout is higher (ok, it's only one higher), but I haven't voted for a candidate I want.

      However, the electronic machines (in Ireland anyway) don't allow you to spoil your ballot. I was back to Dublin for a weekend when there was [one of] the Nice referendums. I was going to vote Yes, but when I got to the polling station I saw the local TD with a minibus plastered with "Vote Yes", which was in direct contravention of the 24hr moroatoreum on campaigning. The guard (police man) was chatting away to the TD and couldn't care less when I mentioned it to them. So I decided to spoil my ballot, however the machine wouldn't let me do that, so fuck it, I voted no instead.

    121. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      National defense is a constitutional responsibility of the federal government in the US

      Which has nothing to do with whether or not the amount of money we spend on national defense is too much, which is what that hypothetical politician A was saying.

    122. Re: Bull Shit! by garaged · · Score: 1

      Damn you Kevin Bacon! I knew this would not be ending fine

      --
      I'm positive, don't belive me look at my karma
    123. Re:Bull Shit! by oobayly · · Score: 1

      Too right. My method was to have a T/F quiz with the ballot, from which the vote is weighted (minimum 1 so as not to disenfranchise people, +1 weighting for every correct answer). Not on policies as that is open to bias, but factual questions relating to the vote.

      eg:
      The name of the Labour leader is ... T/F
      The name of the Conservative deputy is ... T/F
      The alternative vote will require people place a number for every candidate T/F

      The last IMO was the most commonly misunderstood points about the suggested alternative vote concept in the UK. The amount of times I heard "but it will make me place a vote for the BNP/EDF/Monster Raving Loony Party candidate".

      I would also like to see on the ballot information about the incumbent: percentage of days in parliament; percentage attendance to parliamentary debates, etc.

    124. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that this is a direct assault on the 4th Amendment of our constitution. If the government can ignore the protections afforded by one of the Amendments they can ignore them all.

    125. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm waiting for someone to say, "The young only object because of all the stolen songs on their phones."

    126. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is simpler than that.

      I recently talked to one asshole who was a talking-point cocksucker for TSA. "If it makes us feel safe, I'm all for it."

      "By that logic, we should have rectal probes before flight, in case of hidden explosives."

      "If that's what it takes to be safe, then that's what it takes. Of course, I don't fly myself, but..."

      I look forward to that day. When they start fisting soccer mommies to look for "terrorists," I'm going to sit back and laugh.

      "Because terrorism."

    127. Re:Bull Shit! by Testudo+Kleinmanni · · Score: 1

      ehrm... bitching about politics is a prerogative of the upper classes. compare Orwell's 1984 with "the compilation of facts formerly known as Truth"

    128. Re:Bull Shit! by Genda · · Score: 1

      I've come to the opinion that there is certainly a limit to American (human intelligence.) Figure the simple space in a human head with which to form connections has an upper limit. On the other hand, the lack of intelligence seems boundless. Anytime you're certain you've just met the numbest skull in the universe, someone mouth breather will come along and make him look like a Nobel Laureate.

    129. Re:Bull Shit! by rtb61 · · Score: 2

      More accurately. If you have nothing to hide, why not notify the person that they are being investigated. If your excuse is but then they will not commit the crime, 'er', problem solved. If you have nothing to hide, why not indicate who initiated the investigation and why and if this proves false, why not prosecute them for bearing false witness. If you have nothing to hide, why not notify the individual of all information collected and then actively destroy that information if no prosecution is undertaken within a set 'short' period, we are not here to sate your privacy invasive perversions after all. If you have nothing to hide, why not inform every citizen of all legally retained information so that the citizen can correct any false information and if any false information is found, investigate the person who entered it and check whether malice was intended and they need to be prosecuted.

      It should never be one way open, then the intent is clearly power based and criminal at it's core, it needs to be fully open and the citizen has every right to be fully aware of the data held about them by their government and the right to have that data deleted or corrected.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    130. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody with a social science background trusts polls. Part of being a social science nerd is knowing the reasons why... I won't repeat them, because they've been discussed countless times already in past Slashdot discussions.

    131. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      those were my first words too - BS

    132. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people are not slow to learn from history. Rather, they never learn any history at all. This is esp' true in the u.s. Christopher Hitchens has written a great piece on the topic: Why Americans Are Not Taught History. It is the best piece of historiography i know of, Hegel and the others notwithstanding. You can see a copy at:

                public.callutheran.edu/~mccamb/hitchens.htm

      Tom Arnall

    133. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the sad thing is that the dit had no idea of what the words she was gushing actually meant. i shudder to think what her electorate must be like.

    134. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      kleptocracy

      Lets not use words with no real meaning. It isn't kleptocracy. WTFis kleptocracy?

      We live in a Fasicist State. Yes the US is the new Nazi's. If the media wants to play word games then there you are run a poll and see how US Citzens want to be a Nazi. Well we are. shitting on the world and on our own people. You see even you are falling into the media's trap using the word kleptocracy.

      Call it what it really is fascism
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascism
      http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/fascism

      You are right "Eisenhower's nightmare has come true".

      The ONLY real terrorist are in Washington DC.

    135. Re:Bull Shit! by phrackthat · · Score: 1

      No Joke! I would love to see voters required to pass a basic test before being allowed to vote. And I mean something very basic like "Name one right protected by the Bill of Rights", or "True or False, The right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed""

      Apparently, this test would disqualify four of the Supreme Court justices from being able to vote. (See Heller v. District of Columbia decision).

    136. Re:Bull Shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is total bullshit Pro-NSA assholes keep trying to push the lying commissioned Pew poll. More polls have been done since, and it should come as no surprise that people are opposed to surveillance:

      CBS, 58% opposed to surveillance: http://www.ibtimes.com/most-americans-object-nsa-surveillance-against-ordinary-citizens-not-terrorism-suspects-poll-1302793
      Gallup: 53% opposed to surveillance: http://www.gallup.com/poll/163043/americans-disapprove-government-surveillance-programs.aspx

      Guess what, violators of the Fourth Amendment, we're opposed to surveillance and it's independently verifiable.

      I wish slashdot would get rid of this slow-ass javascript. It's really annoying. It's like typing on an ssh connection to a machine on the other side of the world.

  2. Did anyone need reminding? by liamevo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That the majority of the public are short term thinking morons?
    It doesn't matter whether or not all that has been claimed of PRISM is true, they are happy to give up privacy and freedoms if it "helps fight terrorism"

    1. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      True. Lots of people accepted the TSA and Patriot Act, after all. You can't get much more moronic than that.

      I'm sure that cold fjord fellow will come here and tell us that we'd all be dead without this nonsense and that none of it violates the constitution; he's a government cheerleader, after all.

      I wonder what happened to "Land of the free, home of the brave"? Looks like we house sniveling cowards more than anything else.

    2. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      To be honest, I'm at least a tiny bit surprised that it's the younger people who were more opposed. I had somehow figured the younger generations to be a bit more indifferent.

    3. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This is why we have elections.

      Go vote for your buddy Rand Paul when he runs for President. Although read up about his famous filibuster where, after the Boston Marathon bombings, Paul not so famously took back some of what he said on the Senate floor about prohibiting government drones on US soil.

    4. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Rockoon · · Score: 5, Funny

      In other news, Pew Research has denied receiving a National Security Letter demanding that they release a poll with the numbers 62%, 56% and 45%.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    5. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by eriklou · · Score: 2, Insightful

      1,004 people responding to the poll DOES NOT EQUAL A MAJORITY!

    6. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by nucrash · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That pretty much sums up my opinion on the matter. Here we are bending over to the government action to "protect us." But then when the police and other government agencies get access to these technologies, what is to stop them? I think the best quote about this was the following:
      1960
      Government Agent 1, "Let's get everyone to wear a radio transceiver so that we can track their every move."
      Government Agent 2, "That will never work. People would never agree to such a thing"

      2010 Customer, "Can I get my second iPhone please?"

      --
      Place something witty here
    7. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That the majority of the public are short term thinking morons?

      50% of the country is happy to give up privacy and freedom if it hurts the other party. That the 50% who were against it when Bush was doing it are suddenly for it now, and the 50% that were all for it when Bush was doing it but are suddenly against it now just shows how nearsighted the whole lot are.

    8. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by MitchDev · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't think they "thinking" at all, just morons and sheep...

      I'm surprised that the younger generation is so against it, given the lax attitude schools have in teaching rational thought and logic and instead focusing on "zero tolerance", and mindless memorization...

      Maybe there is some hope for the future after all...

    9. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by CastrTroy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The question is also flawed because we don't know if this really "helps fight terrorism". Do they need to tap everyone's phones and internet? Or could they do just as well targeting a few specific people who might actually be involved in terrorism? Does this kind of activity actually create more terrorism by giving people, both the stereotypical Muslim enemy they want us to believe they are guarding us against, and the homegrown terrorist such as people like McVeigh who feel a need to lash out against the government/wall street/mega corporations. The question makes the assumption that this kind of surveillance makes catching terrorists before they commit their acts, and also assumes that terrorism is actually a big problem, where most likely neither of the two are correct.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    10. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      In other news, eriklou doesn't understand how statistics works.

    11. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It depends on the quality of the poll. If two or three polls from respected polling organizations came up with similar numbers that would be pretty convincing though. Even if the NSA got on the phone with their CEO, I'd expect they would simply cancel the poll or sit on the results instead of doctoring them.

    12. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you think they werent doing this anyway? Where have you been the last 30 years?

    13. Re: Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You think Americans have a high standard of living? You should travel more...

    14. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by buchner.johannes · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The German government has stated that collecting connection information beyond 1 week is unreasonable and unjustified to fight crime and terrorism. If you have reasonable suspicion, convince a judge and get a warrant, then you can wiretap as you wish, and you have the recent history. If not, don't store the data.

      The German government has a guideline for all IT projects promoting the principle of collecting the least data ("Datensparsamkeit" ~= "data frugality").

      Data tends to be illegally used for other things then intended. And it is not effective. It costs the government and companies real money. And it costs people their privacy without seeing something in return besides promises.

      --
      NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
    15. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by SirGarlon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The question is also flawed because we don't know if this really "helps fight terrorism".

      And we're not going to find out, because the program is classified. It could be wildly successful and thwarting a dozen bomb plots a day. It could be a total failure, resulting in dozens of arrests of innocent people a day.

      The thing that baffles me is not that people are willing to give up freedom if it "helps fight terrorism," it's that they believe what the government does in the name of fighting terrorism is working, when they don't believe anything else the federal government does is working.

      I wonder how different the poll results would have been if Snowden had released the documents six months after the Boston bombing instead of six weeks after.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    16. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by nickmh · · Score: 1

      OK, No problem. BUT. Do they realise it will be used against them during the next crisis from which they elect a saviour that says "I will protect you from the people and organisations that caused your grief", "I have all the tools I need to prosecute the criminals that caused this damage to our beloved father land"? It's not Obama. The saviour will be cleverer than that! Obama is just another getting you used to the idea of giving up freedoms and rights in the name of security. You know you don't need "terrorist laws". What a lot crud that is. You only need a functioning "Common Law" system. As Common Law is clearly not in practice and the people are clearly clueless as to it's operation and intent?.... The people of the USA should fear themselves and the world should fear the United States. Any population that has the Firepower, and still industrial power of the USA that thinks like this, is a worry for the rest. Those that give up their natural freedoms for the promise of security provided by others deserve neither!

    17. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      No, but it's another indication of what's already clear because you guys are already putting up with having your balls squeezed by low rent security guards in airports.

    18. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      +5 (insightful, not funny)

    19. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      There is a minor difference between when Bush did it and now. When bush did it, government agencies being used to squash political speech and to punish political enemies or to aid political oppositions was relegated to wild conspiracy theories and disgruntled campaigns looking to blame their losses on something other then their message. Now we know it to be fact, at least with the IRS.

      Had we known what we know now when bush did it, i doubt the support would be the same.

    20. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      "Did you think they werent doing this anyway? Where have you been the last 30 years?"

      Anybody that has consistently tried to warn/inform people about this crap, from Echelon all the way up to the present, has been variously criticized as being a "conspiracy theorist" or "paranoid".

      Now that the TRUTH comes out and demonstrates that these "paranoid" people were right all along, the reaction of the critics is:

      "Oh, we knew about that already."

    21. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No no no, the letter only contained METADATA of the numbers, not the actual % themselves

    22. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by vettemph · · Score: 1

      It's also about how nearsighted the controlling entity perceive the citizens to be. The controlling entity being the Repulicrates ... I mean Demicans!
      Follow the money as well. Who built these spy centers with tax payer hand-outs? The profiteers are a big part of the problem.

      --
      The government which is strong enough to protect you from everything is strong enough to take everything from you.
    23. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I was talking to my co-workers yesterday about the ben franklin quote (they had never heard of it; but they were not from here, they were from india and china and other asian countries). I was the only one at our table who knew of the franklin quote (trading liberty for security, etc).

      they were ALL FOR the spying if it 'saved any lives'.

      I could not convince them that this is not what america was all about.

      thing is: in the bay area, at least, native born US citizens are the minority now! those who KNOW what the american culture was about and was supposed to be about, we are now the minority and our voices are not even heard anymore. the guys from overseas were all happy to submit to surveillance. note, they were all married guys and those people tend to 'think of the children!' more than us single folk. they don't think rationally if they think their little snowflakes could be harmed, someday, even if its the most remote chance, less likely than being hit by an asteroid. they don't care, they buy the 'safety talk' hook, line and sinker.

      over time (in certain areas of the country) the conciousness of what america stood for is deteriorating. its no wonder that we sell our liberty out to FB, google, NSA, etc etc. there are so few americans left (experienced americans) in america, afterall.

      kind of sad to see my country be destroyed by those who aren't even fully familiar with what we used to be all about.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    24. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by thoth · · Score: 1

      You should study statistics and especially sampling theory. If those 1004 people are a random sample (and not biased, as in all drawn from certain age groups or professions) then you can draw a conclusion with a confidence interval based on their responses.

    25. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by elfprince13 · · Score: 2

      Younger person here (though not as young as my handle indicates ;) ). No offense, but unlike you, we haven't been brainwashed by the how-to-cook-a-frog treatment spread out over our whole lifespans. We have a very clear perception of having been dumped into scalding water, whereas you geezers are only feeling mildly jacuzzied.

    26. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      your quote reminded me of this quote:

      two wolves are up on a hill, looking down at the bunch of sheep. one says to the other, lets run down there and get us a sheep! the other says, no lets WALK down there and have them all.

      for some reason, it seemed appropos.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    27. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      True. Lots of people accepted the TSA and Patriot Act, after all.

      Are you basing your statement on what the people around you were saying at the time or some actual study?

      I'm not sure how many people "accepted" the TSA and Patriot Act. If by "accepted" you mean, "didn't riot in the streets and attack law enforcement" then you're right, but if you mean, "thought it was just fine", then I'm not so sure. I remember most everyone I knew at the time was pretty clear on the "Patriot Act" being a bullshit power grab and gift to the private industry contractors who were to implement it.

      There are wealthy suburbs in many parts of the US where the major industry fueling these extravagant lifestyles is Intelligence/Homeland Security. It's a bigger cesspool of graft and corruption than defense contractors. In fact, a lot of the big defense outfits have gone into cyber-spying because that's where the big money is, and you don't even need to really build anything.

      Those of you who run IT departments know what I'm talking about. There are certain words you can use to get the CFO to cut loose with money. Imagine how much easier it would be if you could accompany your funding requests with a fat check in an envelope as a "contribution", or host an expensive "retreat" for the bean-counters in some luxurious place. And, if it was all somebody else's money. It would make those budget requests a lot easier, no?

      That's what the Security/Industrial Complex multi-nationals have going on. And they can do it over and over in every country on Earth.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    28. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Aerokii · · Score: 2

      Bullshit we are. I hated it when Bush did it, and I hate it even more under the current administration. With Bush it was expected, but this felt more like a betrayal.

      Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.

    29. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by ebno-10db · · Score: 2

      Can you imagining telling vets just after WWII that someday Americans would (correctly) cite Germany as a bastion of civil rights? Granted, Germany has seriously cleaned up its act, but what bothers me is that's not the only change.

    30. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      I was against this crap under Bush and still am under Obama, then again I seem to be a fairly rare individual who wants to expand personal freedom not restrict it. To the partisan individuals on each side a good question when they start spouting how their guy won't ever abuse this power is: What about when the other side gets that same power? If they say it is fine then they probably don't fully understand how the law can be abused. If they are against the other side having the power then you have just made your case as to why it was a shitty idea.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    31. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

      I see where you're coming from, but I don't think the picture is as gloomy as you make it. The revolutionary ideas in the Bill of Rights are powerful and contagious. Many other countries had adopted them. I believe they will take hold, both of the immigrants and their kids. Look at what happened to the wave of immigrants from a century ago: the Italian-Americans, Irish-Americans, Polish-Americans, etc. are at least as patriotic as the WASPs now, even though their ancestors came here for largely economic reasons.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    32. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They collect all the data and analyze it with an AI assisted by real humans via computer-brain interfaces. This is why they keep saying they're not directly listening, but it's necessary to collect everything, but they can't explain any of the details.

    33. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've not heard any news of thwarted terrorist plots apparently it hasn't helped. Even if the details were not released any terrorist plot that had been thwarted would be likely be publicized.

    34. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm basing it on reality. It is an indisputable fact that most people are imbeciles, so it's not too surprising that most people support security theater as long as they feel it keeps them safe.

    35. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by F.Ultra · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually I think that if they had been wildly successful then we would hear about it, and hear about it alot. Consider all the plots that they have "caught" and how quickly that was posted to the media, and how unlikely plots they really where, to me that indicates that they are desperat to publish every success.

    36. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      they were ALL FOR the spying if it 'saved any lives'.

      I could not convince them that this is not what america was all about.

      Here's what I do to those people: point and laugh, and say things like "you still don't get this? hahaha". This makes them angry, but it keeps them thinking about it. Probably not well into the night; they will go suck down some cheap brewskies or what have you, and turn on the ol' idiot box, and forget all about anything like freedom. Not that I don't like TV and beer, mind you. Only, on my terms.

      kind of sad to see my country be destroyed by those who aren't even fully familiar with what we used to be all about.

      Even most people who grew up reading The Diary of Anne Frank in school don't get this, how do you think they have a hope?

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    37. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by buddyglass · · Score: 1

      they are happy to give up privacy and freedoms if it "helps fight terrorism"

      Not saying I agree, per se, but this is not entirely unreasonable. If all it takes is for some spooks to run algorithms on call metadata to significantly reduce a person's likelihood of being blow up, lots of people are going to opt for "not being blown up".

    38. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by msauve · · Score: 1

      You should study the real world, where a theoretical random sample doesn't exist.

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    39. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suspect the people who are for it don't understand how data mining works, how easy it is, how broad it is, the implications, etc. Remember the technically savvy generation really started with Gen-X which are now in their early 40s. It didn't really blow up until Gen-Y.

    40. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by kiwimate · · Score: 1

      But of course, you are a long term thinking genius with extraordinary insight. And not just you, but several hundred other random individuals who are also posting on this web site. Yes, we all are superior, more able to take a broad view of things, and hence develop a better, more rational strategy and philosophy.

      Sounds to me like someone is pining for an oligarchy. You (and lots of others posting this kind of nonsense) are smugly arrogant and confident that you know best. Isn't that what everyone was whining about with the NSA 24 hours ago, and praising that kid who took it on himself to leak secrets because he knew best?

      I think there are a bunch of people here who wouldn't mind in the least if the government continued to act in exactly the same kind of allegedly disgraceful fashion so long as the government was doing things they liked. Then you'd respond to any complaints by saying that the rabble rousers just weren't intellectual enough to understand what you were doing, and that it's for their own good so they just have to put up with it.

      Do you not see the hypocrisy and sheer arrogance of this?

    41. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by s.petry · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Exactly. Welcome to propaganda media 101. Yesterday, watching CNN people were given 1 opinion over and over with no facts. The opinion of course was that Snowden was a dangerous person needing to be imprisoned. No mention of the crimes he's revealed of course. I'm guessing other media this morning will follow suite, and provide a similar opinion without facts. What's really sad is that so many don't question our propaganda.. er media.. system.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    42. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Considering the size of a typical wolf's stomach, I can only imagine they can "have them all" if they're Welsh.

    43. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have the terrorist attacked China? No.
      By turning the US into China, they would prevent terrorist attack.

    44. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Sparticus789 · · Score: 1

      Glad that one of the mindless Obama sheep has finally opened their eyes to the truth.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    45. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by lightknight · · Score: 1

      So much effort to keep one species on one planet. Hahahahahahahahahaha.

      I find that highly suspicious. Armed guards who are always one step ahead of the prisoners? Technological genius seemingly raining from the sky if only to impede the progress of the only sentient species on the planet with the will to expand beyond it? A flame of malevolence that never seems to be extinguished, no matter how hard either side tries to finish the other off? My friends, we are being played, from without, or possibly, within. The details matter little, save locating the source.

      Surely you've noted the recurring error here, the inexplicable 'it' that cannot be accounted for, yet still is. There's a problem, represented in the calculations, that continuously reappears, but is mentally side-stepped. A little something something which says "pay no attention to this."

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    46. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But of course, you are a long term thinking genius with extraordinary insight.

      You don't have to be a genius to see that it is 100% idiotic to support policies and laws which blatantly violate the constitution and/or people's fundamental rights.

      I think there are a bunch of people here who wouldn't mind in the least if the government continued to act in exactly the same kind of allegedly disgraceful fashion so long as the government was doing things they liked.

      It doesn't really matter what you think. Why are you trying so hard to imagine scenarios where such people are hypocrites? What good will that do, and what will it prove?

      Do you not see the hypocrisy and sheer arrogance of this?

      Of your imagined scenario? Maybe. Not that it matters, though.

    47. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The best part is, it doesn't *actually* have to help fight terrorism. The agency just needs to claim that it helps fight terrorism. They can (and will) do whatever they want with the data, and hide behind a wall of "national security" and "trust us, we are fighting terrorism" to justify whatever their corrupt little hearts desire.

    48. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by RoccamOccam · · Score: 1
    49. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by thoughtlover · · Score: 1

      I think you mangled a quote from a movie called "Colors".

      Bob Hodges: [to his new partner] There's two bulls standing on top of a mountain. The younger one says to the older one: 'Hey pop, let's say we run down there and fuck one of them cows'. The older one says: 'No son. Lets walk down and fuck 'em all'.

      --
      No sig for you! Come back one year!
    50. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by dcollins · · Score: 1
      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    51. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by dcollins · · Score: 1

      "The thing that baffles me is not that people are willing to give up freedom if it 'helps fight terrorism,' it's that they believe what the government does in the name of fighting terrorism is working, when they don't believe anything else the federal government does is working."

      That is a good point. But: Third article link points out this is a partisan issue (52% GOP, 64% Dems now support) -- so Dems mindlessly support it because their man is in office, while GOP tends to be hyper pro-police and military anyway (to expand the point that you made). So it's somewhat consistent in its insanity. Of course, absurdly, these numbers are flipped from seven years ago (75% GOP, 37% Dems), which is the most depressing and unprincipled thing of all to me.

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    52. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by dcollins · · Score: 1

      If parent is flamebait, then here's more -- For a truly depressing conversation, try out this Ben Franklin quote: "That it is better 100 guilty Persons should escape than that one innocent Person should suffer, is a Maxim that has been long and generally approved."

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    53. Re: Did anyone need reminding? by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Anyone who believes that the USA has a low standard of living needs to travel more.

      Seriously, I've been to Egypt, Peru, Mexico, and the Caribbean. It makes you appreciate the government, services, culture, and general prosperity of home. It may have it's flaws, but it's certainly better than some of the alternatives.

    54. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by liamevo · · Score: 2

      That'd be weird, me voting in an American election for someone who I think is a dangerous idiot brought up by a looney father.

    55. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by liamevo · · Score: 1

      Stop with your strawman. If you're ok giving up your privacy for a vague threat, a threat with incredibily low chances of occuring, then I do think you're not thinking it through completely, but me pointing out how the majority is often wrong is not me saying "I know best, these should be the rules, everyone listen to me because I'm smarter then you".

    56. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      The phone company isn't clueless about the location of its landlines either you know. In fact it was the loss of actual location information in moving to cell phones that resulted in them reporting GPS location. Otherwise you would need to triangulate with the towers, and they aren't necessarily set up to do that. Any act of two way communication is going to make establishing some sort of location information possible
      .
      The mechanisms for possible future oppression are being put in place for our convenience, and efficiency. Cell phones, the internet, social media, and a cashless society using some sort of payment card are building an infrastructure that can be liberating and open many creative possibilities. Or if turned to oppression it can potentially be used for oppression such as the world has never seen.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    57. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      There have been terrorists operating in China, and I believe actual attacks as well. I don't think that is going to help.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    58. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by meta-monkey · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Incorrect, sir. Those who are "fine with it" are called the Baby Boomers. The Worst Generation. The Bootlicker Generation. They who looted the empire, shipped the jobs overseas, voted themselevs every entitlement and paid for none of it. They who will take everything but responsibility.

      Clinton, who can't define "is."

      Bush, whose idea of sacrifice during a war of choice is "go shopping."

      Obama and McCain, who "welcome a debate" about which rights we'd like to trade away.

      They who will label a young man of conscience who has traded his life, his fortune and his sacred honor in the name of liberty for his countrymen a "traitor."

      They who will enslave their children and their grandchildren to their debts to make sure the Social Security checks keep coming. They who will enslave their children and their grandchildren to their corporations to keep their stock values high.

      They who stood athwart history and yelled "meh." They will always go along to get along.

      The creed of the Boomer:

      "First we came for my parents, and I did not speak up because I'm sure those World War II vets will love the nursing home.

      Then we came for my children, and I did not speak up because of course they'll need two jobs to pay for my entitlements.

      Then we came for my grandchildren, because I need a barista."

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    59. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by meta-monkey · · Score: 2

      I was completely appalled reading CNN yesterday. I saw the same thing. They ran "stories" that consisted of interviewing a "security expert" about what a worthless, high school dropout terrorist Snowden is. Then for "balance," they quoted a supporter, including a quote that started with "Hey, man..." to make him sound like he's on drugs, and another quote that included a misspelling so they could include a (sic) to make sure their readers know only the uneducated support him. Of the 10,000+ comments on CNN about him, they picked the sentence with the misspelled word? Why?

      It was sickening.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    60. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by liamevo · · Score: 1

      If the chances of walking out your house and being blown up where around 10% then I think you'd have a point.

    61. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given that so many pundits are coming down on different sides of this issue than I would have expected, I'm waiting to hear Noam Chomsky inexplicably coming out in agreement wiith majority of the survey.

      Followed by rumors that he did so after surveilance leakage outed him as a furry and a bronie.

      If you needed a reason to demand this surveillance madness stop, just think about it. Noam Chomsky. Serious, Esteemed Academic. Confirmed Furry And Bronie.

      Some metadata is best left uncollected.

    62. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by liamevo · · Score: 1

      *were

      seriously want that edit feature.

    63. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by SuperTechnoNerd · · Score: 1

      Because it's their future at stake.

    64. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your memory is quite short friend. Bush and Cheney did the exact same stuff, it just never made it out into the general public. Rest assured a quick googling will find all sorts of abuses that rival Obama's.

    65. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the thing, it IS biased; it's only people with landlines. Who has a landline these days? I don't know anybody under 60 with one. And it's only people willing to answer polls (I won't, the only poll I answer has a ballot box). This particular poll would be weighted toward elderly retired folks.

      Plus, people will lie on polls, as I found out when we were commissioned to do one for State Government. They wanted to know what welfare recipients thought of their new jobs program, the results were overwhelmingly negative and every negative, profanity-laced one had the document number at the bottom torn off! They obviously thought it was a tracking number. People fear government. Think about it -- there's a scandal about Americans being spied on by the feds, then you get a phone call (they know who you are!) asking what you think of it. This is the fucking SPIES, who hasn't seen a James Bond movie?

      How many said they approved because they didn't want to go on the no-fly list? Or were even afraid of going to Gitmo?

    66. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not dumb; it's reality. I know some people like to live in ivory towers, but individual people can vary widely, so there is little more you can do than say, "Well, this is most likely a good enough sample." You usually can't know whether or not you're right with 100% accuracy and spew forth 100% accurate numbers and statistics.

    67. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by kiwimate · · Score: 1

      me pointing out how the majority is often wrong is not me saying "I know best, these should be the rules, everyone listen to me because I'm smarter then you"

      Of course it is. If you claim the majority is often wrong, you're saying you are smarter the majority of people because you know what's right and they don't. That's what it means to say "these people are wrong in their opinion/belief". You may claim you're not forcing your beliefs on anyone else, but this is just so much semantic stuff.

      Seriously, be honest, and keep it simple. Do you think the majority of people are wrong? Then you're saying you're right and you're smarter than them. It's not any more complicated than that.

    68. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, anyone that disagrees is a short term thinking moron.

      Well articulated logic and insightful.

      I see ./ groupthink is as strong as ever.

      Signed -
      Kool-Aid Drinking Sheep who disagrees with ./ Majority

    69. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure how, but I'm sorry your Liberty has been threatened by the copying of your self-proclaimed important information that no one really gives a rats-ass about.

      Liberty is the new religion and Privacy is the new god because American Individualism tells us we live in a vacuum with unlimited resources and that I can be trusted because I hold a little blue booklet with a stamp which I earned by memorizing all 52 states and signing a little sheet of paper.

    70. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, because it makes total sense to feed media sensitive information.

      Consider referencing some of "the plots that they have 'caught'" instead of making a broad generalization?

      What about the plots that they "caught" and you didn't hear about? Oh wait...

    71. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      Infuriating, isn't it?

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    72. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      But of course, you are a long term thinking genius with extraordinary insight. And not just you, but several hundred other random individuals who are also posting on this web site. Yes, we all are superior, more able to take a broad view of things, and hence develop a better, more rational strategy and philosophy.

      Sounds to me like someone is pining for an oligarchy. You (and lots of others posting this kind of nonsense) are smugly arrogant and confident that you know best. Isn't that what everyone was whining about with the NSA 24 hours ago, and praising that kid who took it on himself to leak secrets because he knew best?

      I think there are a bunch of people here who wouldn't mind in the least if the government continued to act in exactly the same kind of allegedly disgraceful fashion so long as the government was doing things they liked. Then you'd respond to any complaints by saying that the rabble rousers just weren't intellectual enough to understand what you were doing, and that it's for their own good so they just have to put up with it.

      Do you not see the hypocrisy and sheer arrogance of this?

      You make a good point. Who's to say my ideas are any better than the status quo? Besides me of course! But things have to be some way. There is nothing wrong with advocating they way you think things should be or not be. The dangerous part is when we start shutting out discussion and the exchange of ideas; or advocating that those who disagree be silenced or worse.

      Unfortunately, we already live under an oligarchy. It's just masquerading as a representative democracy. I have thought a lot about this and I think it comes down to honesty and transparency. We can talk about the way things are or ought to be and we can disagree. We all have our own version of the truth and vision of a better world. As long as people are honest and willing to hear other points of view we can maybe get somewhere. But this government, this oligarchy, is not transparent or honest. That's really the issue for me; that they do things in secret and try to manipulate opinion rather than being open and honest about what they are doing and why.

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    73. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Given your screen name, F. Ultra , it is a staggering irony that you believe that the US would disclose a highly successful Top Secret intelligence program at the first success, and possibly render it either ineffective or subject to counter-measures.

      Ultra was one of the most closely guarded secrets of WW2 and aspects of it weren't declassified until the 1970s. Strenuous safeguards were in place to prevent the Germans from having even a clue that their codes were cracked.

      I don't think many people on Slashdot particularly care if anyone engaged is terrorist activity is caught before an attack, or maybe at all. I can't tell you how many times I've seen people deny that there are terrorists at all, or that it is all a "false flag," or that there have been no arrests, and so forth despite the fact that information is readily available. I'll post a list of fairly recent arrests and I have little doubt the next time the discussion comes up it will be more of the same. Disclosing an intelligence operation's role in capturing a terrorist group wouldn't be likely to change that. To get any real attention a terrorist group will have to destroy a city with a nuke. Then there will be discussions back and forth until somebody points out that there was a year with a higher number of fatalities in automobile accidents, and it will be back to business as usual:"Terrorism? Meh. They aren't killing me." Or maybe the ever popular, "we can't give in to fear," as in: "Now that the terrorists have nukes, we can't give in to fear by doing anything about it."

      FBI’s Top Ten News Stories for the Week Ending January 27, 2012

      Denver: Man Arrested for Providing Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization

      Jamshid Muhtorov was arrested by members of the FBI’s Denver and Chicago Joint Terrorism Task Forces on a charge of providing and attempting to provide material support to the Islamic Jihad Union, a Pakistan-based designated foreign terrorist organization.

      Baltimore: Man Pleads Guilty to Attempted Use of a Weapon of Mass Destruction in Plot to Attack Armed Forces Recruiting Center

      U.S. citizen Antonio Martinez, aka Muhammad Hussain, pled guilty to attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction against federal property in connection with a scheme to attack an armed forces recruiting station in Catonsville, Maryland.

      Washington Field: Man Pleads Guilty to Shootings at Pentagon, Other Military Buildings

      Yonathan Melaku, of Alexandria, Virginia, pled guilty to damaging property and to firearms violations involving five separate shootings at military installations in northern Virginia between October and November 2010, and to attempting to damage veterans’ memorials at Arlington National Cemetery.

      FBI’s Top Ten News Stories for the Week Ending January 13, 2012

      1.Tampa: Florida Resident Charged with Plotting to Bomb Locations in Tampa

      A 25-year-old resident of Pinellas Park, Florida was charged in connection with an alleged plot to attack locations in Tampa with a vehicle bomb, assault rifle, and other explosives.

      2.Baltimore: Former Army Solider Charged with Attempting to Provide Material Support to al Shabaab

      A man who secretly converted to Islam days before he separated from the Army was charged with attempting to provide material support to al Shabaab, a foreign terrorist organization, and was arrested upon his return to Maryland after traveling to Africa.

      FBI’s Top Ten News Stories for the Week Endin

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    74. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by F.Ultra · · Score: 1

      That is a complete different thing. You are talking about keeping intelligence programs top secret while I talk about keeping the results of the program secret. The two are very very different.

      Defending things like Ultra means that you have to let some of the "attacks" proceed like the many warships that the US and the UK allowed to be sunk by the Germans during WWII in order to keep Ultra a secret.

      And I do not think that the US allowed things like 9/11 to happen or ever happen again just to protect the program. Stopping the attack by either making the people disappear or by prosecuting them would alert the terrorists that the program is in action. And also there cannot be a terrorist in the world that doesn't already assume that these programs is in effect.

    75. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by F.Ultra · · Score: 1

      I don't live in the US so I have no day to day references of these cases, I have several from my own country however in which _no_ case as of yet that has been brought up due to intelligence programs like this have survived in the courts even once. All combined show how desperate the secret services are to present just one case that can justify the programs.

      However I have heard about several cases in the US in where the FBI seams to have infiltrated some groups, and when the groups didn't act as the undercover agent wanted (i.e there was only talk and no action) the agent provided the group with arms, explosives and plans. And then the FBI would strike and call it a successful anti terrorist bust. I think that I read about some of these in Bruce Schneiers monthly CryptoGram.

    76. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by sumdumass · · Score: 0

      My memory is not short at all- even if I weed through your unsupported claims. I said before the IRS scandal was known to be true, it was brushed off as conspiracies and other kook claims.

      I suspect that the reason you posted AC is because you know you're full of it but had to reply and attempt to defend your hero. Something your rush to post failed to notice is that I did not blame or even mention Obama- yet you think he is guilty enough to jump in ans try to blame bush..

    77. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by buddyglass · · Score: 1

      Sure. But, then, one could argue the odds of a given person suffering due to (or even being inconvenienced by) algorithmic sifting of call metadata is also vanishingly small. Even lower if said person is not someone who engages in behaviors likely to increase his odds of being singled out.

    78. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Jesrad · · Score: 1

      Nice strawman. Enjoy your gulag of a country.

      --
      Maybe we deserve this world ?
    79. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by billd10 · · Score: 0

      "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety."--Benjamin Franklin Just as true today as it was in Franklin's time. We have become a nation of short-term thinking sissies who would give our hard won freedoms over to an ever more powerful government for the promise of a little more convenience in our lives which the government cannot and will not provide.

    80. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Boston bombing? I just don't get it... I understand what you're saying, and people do think that way(OMG we still have all of these terrorists! We need to be monitored). But, all of this monitoring and we weren't even watching these guys?! The Russians warned us about the older brother, he was also publishing terrorism related info on the web... We didn't catch him before!? No, and you know what I think. If a mass survailence system was setup to monitor for terrorism, you'd think these guys would have been gotten for sure.
      It doesn't seem to me that this is it's main objective. Just sayin.

    81. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That AND the "somebody else's money." is yours and mine. Johnny Q. Taxpayer is footing the bill for PRISM.

      Just like the billions Goerge Bush "lost" in Iraq. Some of the money was mine. Some was yours. Some was hers, his ... ours.

      The government does not actually pay for much itself (the gov does generate their own funds, through bonds and such, but those pale in comparison to that which they reap from us - the common American taxpaying worker bee). All these programs to "protect us" from terrorism, or more likely, ourselves are bought with our own hard worked earnings.

      So, if the NSA gets PRISM ... where the hell is my damn jetpack?!!!

    82. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Agent0013 · · Score: 1

      note, they were all married guys and those people tend to 'think of the children!' more than us single folk. they don't think rationally if they think their little snowflakes could be harmed, someday, even if its the most remote chance, less likely than being hit by an asteroid.

      I don't understand why people like this don't think the government might be a danger to their little snowflakes. I fear the government and police forces much more than I do any terrorist or common criminal. So far I have had numerous run-ins with police. I have only had my house broken into once. And the police didn't even help with that except to give the the paperwork for insurance filing. I am sure many of those police I have dealt with are breaking laws each and every day. And if they aren't, then they are keeping quiet about their coworkers that are. Just because I haven't been a victim of police or government abuse yet, doesn't mean it won't happen. You can sure bet that my little snowflake will understand her rights and have the proper (dis)respect for our government.

      --

      -- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
    83. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First of all, it's not your country, it's our country. And by "our" I mean that "america" means we all have origins from somewhere other than North America.

      Secondly, while I understand your point about the Franklin quote, I think even Franklin would understand that ultimately there aren't really any absolutes in this life. Not all goverment is bad or all of it good. Don't like war but like the ability to say whatever you want and think whatever you want? Thank a veteran. Don't like oil companies but still drive a fuel combustion engine or have plastic products in your house? What's up with that? I'm not saying you're a bad person but there is a cost for everything and the ideal you wish for and certainly some of the benefits you appreciate now sit upon foundations of things that may not appeal to your preferences.

      Finally, I sympathize with you to some degree because the choice between life/safety and freedom is tough. On one hand, as a parent, I would not want anything bad to happen to my children and counter-terrorist measures are some of the things I have to accept. Then again, is a world of surveillance and misuse of power really going to make for a world worth living in?

    84. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      That AND the "somebody else's money." is yours and mine. Johnny Q. Taxpayer is footing the bill for PRISM.

      Exactly. How easy is it for a senator on some powerful committee to support an expensive cyber-snooping contract with a private company who has just dropped a fat contribution on him, especially when it's not his money he's spending? As you say, it's yours and mine.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    85. Re:Did anyone need reminding? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      jackie mason quote, recalled from memory:

      "I don't have a problem with crooks; I have a problem with cops. I've never been pulled over by a crook but I have been pulled over by a cop. if a crook bothers me, its done and over with; but if a cop bothers me, it will run on and on and affect my life much deeper and for far longer a period of time"

      yes, it was a joke from jackie but there's some truth to it, too.

      crooks don't steal from you on moral grounds; they just want your money. the government, otoh, is in the business of judging you and their 'punishment' is far more insulting; and they, like crooks, also want your money and are prepared to take it via a plethora of quasi-legal ways.

      similarly, I don't worry about terrorists. they won't ever do anything to me in my lifetime (given the probability). otoh, the overreaching government has already affected all our lives and stolen (forever) many of our dearly valued freedoms.

      the bad guys are noise-level. the 'good guys' are the new bad guys.

      (eat that, prism database. go ahead and store it for future use. and, oh, btw, FUCK YOU PRISM.)

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  3. And? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This shows that 62% of Americans surveyed are morons and 56% of Americans have no clue how invasive this project is.

    Stupidity at its finest - give'em bread and circuses and they will do exactly what you want...

    Captcha: bewitch

  4. Majority don't understand the extent & issues by captainpanic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The majority of Americans (1) don't understand the extent of the surveillance, and (2) don't understand why privacy is so important.

    I totally believe this poll.

    This article says that 70% of Americans don't know what the constitution is: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1368482/How-ignorant-Americans-An-alarming-number-U-S-citizens-dont-know-basic-facts-country.html

  5. Well played, Slashdot by benjfowler · · Score: 0, Troll

    Click bait for the countless 14-yo libertarians who infest these boards.

    And who be just OUTRAGED, that somebody dared to point out that the government is the collective will of the people, and may actually have our interests and safety as their core mission (as opposed to merely making a handful of rich people richer?)

    Now having made this comment, I'm sure I'll be modded down into a smoking crater. But I suppose there's a little pride to be had in being reviled and hated by idiots.

    1. Re:Well played, Slashdot by stanIyb · · Score: 4, Informative

      Click bait for the countless 14-yo libertarians who infest these boards.

      What about the 14-yo non-libertarians who whine that there are countless 14-yo libertarians on Slashdot?

      And who be just OUTRAGED, that somebody dared to point out that the government is the collective will of the people, and may actually have our interests and safety as their core mission

      Collective will or no, the government isn't supposed to violate the constitution; the majority do not and should not have absolute power, and neither should the government. Individual rights need to be protected, and I probably couldn't even be considered a libertarian.

    2. Re:Well played, Slashdot by MitchDev · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Seeing as you deserve to be modded down as a moron, I'm glad you aren't surprised.

      The government stopped being about the will of the people as soon as corporations were allowed to buy laws...

    3. Re:Well played, Slashdot by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      I probably couldn't even be considered a libertarian

      But are you 14? If so I'm glad they're still teaching Americans about the Bill of Rights.

    4. Re:Well played, Slashdot by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      No, I'm not.

    5. Re:Well played, Slashdot by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The federal government was never designed or intended to be the will of the people. It has always been about regulation commerce between the states, settling disputes between the states, and providing a unified face to foreign affairs for the United States as well as protection from enemies. That's why the state department deals with international and foreign matters rather then the state.

      Within those bounds, the house of representatives are supposed to represent the people and commerce in their districts (not their political party). The senate is supposed to represent the state's interest (not their political party's), and the president is supposed to represent the country itself which at times absolutely means going against the will of the people but generally following it (not the party line). In all that, the economic health and well being of the country and states are part of the duty- even if it seems to not be what the people want.

      This all started to change after the civil war and has been eroded ever since to the point that no one is happy with the federal government all the time, nor do they understand its intended role. Most of the will of the people is beyond the scope of the federal government- yet pandering for reelection seems to muddle that fact.

    6. Re:Well played, Slashdot by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      No offense, but I'm disappointed. I was really hoping it was evidence that "they're still teaching Americans about the Bill of Rights". I should also add, that despite the "are you 14" crap one always hears on Slashdot, there is no reason a thoughtful person of any age shouldn't post.

    7. Re:Well played, Slashdot by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

      It's a step in the right direction to actually have a Bill of Rights. A quick check at Wikipedia shows European countries being (largely) well-represented, but there are some conspicuous absences. It isn't good enough to say that the existing legal system works "well enough" without one.

  6. Which majority? by Crimey+McBiggles · · Score: 1

    When you ask the right people the right question, you'll always get the right answer. "Majority of Americans", really? There is no way they managed to poll all voting Americans in this study.

    --
    Crimey
    1. Re:Which majority? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With the magic of statistics, that is indeed possible!

    2. Re:Which majority? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Majority of 1004 adults polled. Whole article is full of this nonsense.

  7. Cycles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Human civilization seems to run in cycles.

    What goes up ...

  8. Most people are weak and prefer not to think... by Coeurderoy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most people are weak and prefer not to think about "bad things", and prefer security with freedom, they would not know what to do with it if they would have some...

    This said it would be interesting to ask the same questions in the following way:

    Assuming that of the two leading parties the one you like least has the majority in senat and house of representative, and presidential powers.

    Would you agree to warrent-less investigations of phones calls, emails, instant messages, social network posting, microblogging posting, private forum messages in order to fight terrorism is:
    - a good thing
    - necessary
    - undecided
    - useless
    - bad for the society
    - where is my second amendment demonstrator !

    1. Re:Most people are weak and prefer not to think... by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      Also, surveys are rather a waste of time...
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G0ZZJXw4MTA

  9. Bull shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BULL SHIT. Did you someone on staff get a call last night from a suit?

  10. Pew Research... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So... the needs of the many outweigh the rights of the few?

    1. Re:Pew Research... by Stolpskott · · Score: 1

      So... the needs of the many outweigh the rights of the few?

      No, the desires of the few (1%) outweigh the rights of the many (99%).

    2. Re:Pew Research... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the desires of the few (1%) outweigh the rights of the many (99%).

      If that was true, my sexlife would be a lot kinkier and there would be a lot more of it.

    3. Re:Pew Research... by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      No, the desires of the few (1%) outweigh the rights of the many (99%).

      If that was true, my sexlife would be a lot kinkier and there would be a lot more of it.

      If you had more money, it would be.

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  11. When was this taken? by JodyWilliams556 · · Score: 1

    No mention of when this most recently was conducted. I imagine most peoples' attitude was "Well, I know they aren't tracking me, I do nothing wrong (or bad enough)." I have a feeling that more people are starting to wake up to the fact that it doesn't matter if they did anything or not, they are under 24 hour surveillance.

    1. Re:When was this taken? by JodyWilliams556 · · Score: 1

      http://www.people-press.org/2013/06/10/majority-views-nsa-phone-tracking-as-acceptable-anti-terror-tactic/ Better article on the study. The polls were taken earlier this month (Jun 6-9). So, the study was started right before the major leaks came out.

  12. 'Leading' questions? by abalacha · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Opinion poll can be easily be 'lead' into a specific conclusion.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G0ZZJXw4MTA

  13. no problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't have a problem with it as long as the FISC and congress stay informed. By law and executive order the NSA can't target a citizen unless there is authorization from the FISC. Collecting records is not the same as targeting specific individuals or organizations. In order to act on the information they still have to get another warrant for each individual or organization that is investigated.

    1. Re:no problem by alci63 · · Score: 1

      Mind, people outside the US are also citizens (of their own nations). And they deserve some privacy also. Regarding only basic self-interest, maybe these people will be thinking twice before using US driven technologies...

    2. Re:no problem by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      "Collecting records is not the same as targeting specific individuals"

      Collecting records without a warrant is CLEARLY prohibited by The U.S. Constitution, Amendment #4. You're suggesting that it's OK from them to copy all of your hard drives and scan every piece of paper in your home is OK as long as they promise not to look at it without a warrant. Nonsense. The collection IS the violation.

      Every elected or appointed official that knew about this and every government employee who participated should be investigated and prosecuted for treason.

    3. Re:no problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are naive and credulous.
      FISC is a rubber stamp, 1789 out of 1789 requests to conduct electronic surveillance approved.
      I agree collecting data is not the same as targeting individuals but once the data is collected it is rife with possibilities for abuse.

  14. It's all about the questions... by Knightman · · Score: 2

    You can strongly influence the result of questionnaire by using leading questions.

    For example:
    o Do you believe it's OK for the government to track and monitor private citizens email and phone calls so they can fight terrorism?
    vs.
    o Do you believe it's OK for the government to track and monitor private citizens email and phone calls?

    The general population has been more or less brainwashed to give up their rights as soon as the phrase "fight terrorism" or "war on terror" is used.

    --
    --- Reality doesn't care about your opinions, it happens anyway and if you are in the way you'll get squished.
    1. Re:It's all about the questions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forget the last one: 'think of the children'.

  15. The majority of Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Know nothing of history.

  16. I was shocked... by belgo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... the first time someone commented re: PRISM and other NSA directives, along the lines of, "Whatever, as long as it prevents another 9/11!" Now that it's been a few more days, I'm starting to break the habit of facepalming. We as a nation are affirming our commitment to the implementation of a police state, in the name of preventing something that was already about as statistically impossible as getting hit by lightning while claiming your Powerball jackpot.

    Inasmuch as this is the will of the majority and of the representatives in our Republic, you can bet I'll be claiming my winnings from within the safe confines of an OSHA-approved rubber suit.

    1. Re:I was shocked... by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      We as a nation are affirming our commitment to the implementation of a police state, in the name of preventing something that was already about as statistically impossible as getting hit by lightning while claiming your Powerball jackpot.

      Well, yes. Big business, Madison Avenue, the Media and government spokespeople have been scaring the crap out of people for the past 12 years if not longer. People feel like they have no control over terrorism. You're in the wrong place at the wrong time and you're dead. 9/11 was so shocking, it burned that fear into the psyche of everyone who was alive back then. People are scared and they only know what they are told by the people who simultaneously define the threat and the solution.

      What amazes me is that more people don't realize it's being done on purpose. It simply does not fit into their worldview that their government and corporate institutions would deliberately take advantage of the fear of terrorism for their own gain. Who would do such a manipulative thing?

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  17. Give up freedom to fight terrorism? by fredrated · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Fer christ sake, more people die from nose hair complications than terrorism, what have we come to?

    1. Re:Give up freedom to fight terrorism? by mortonda · · Score: 1

      Proof that the measures are protecting us from terrorism, right?!

    2. Re:Give up freedom to fight terrorism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, you can die from that? now I'm going to be paranoid about pulling out my nose hair.

    3. Re:Give up freedom to fight terrorism? by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

      "Oh my god, really? Jesus, we should tell them to get their priorities straight! How dare they waste my tax on such useless projects! I'm so voting third-party next time... We need reforms!

      "Oh, this was hyperbole? Huh... Well, you'd have used real facts if you had any. This is serious stuff, after all. I guess this monitoring is a proportionate response then. I'm glad they're looking out for us; I had no idea. Definitely going to be more skeptical of the detractors, though. What do they have to hide?"

      This is why your hand-waving is not helpful.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    4. Re:Give up freedom to fight terrorism? by Isao · · Score: 1

      [Citation Needed]

    5. Re:Give up freedom to fight terrorism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have some elephant repelling powder for you to use in your front garden. Has been shown 100% effective in millions of European and American households. And it will only cost you 20USD per month.

  18. Rename this place to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slashbait or SlashAd.gov

  19. A majority want to blame someone else by Aqualung812 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most people fear things that are very unlikely to happen:
    -Death from terrorism
    -Death from oppressive government

    We rant and shout with each other over which one is the bigger threat.

    Meanwhile, most of us die from lack of proper personal health (diet, exercise, etc) or automobile wrecks, all of which are 100% within our ability to control.

    --
    Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    1. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by stanIyb · · Score: 2

      Most people fear things that are very unlikely to happen:

      Both of those things are rather unlikely to happen, but the mere act of violating people's rights is evil. The government need not kill you in order for their actions to be evil. The government doesn't need to kill you, either; they could abuse their powers in other ways.

    2. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree with you, I was simply making the observation that we spend a great deal of energy worrying about this in comparison to working on our own actions that have a far greater impact into the enjoyment of our lives.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    3. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, most of us die from lack of proper personal health (diet, exercise, etc) or automobile wrecks, all of which are 100% within our ability to control.

      In more promising news on the freedom front: if you try to limit the people's ability to buy large sodas, you'll find out just what kind of tyrannical monster you really are . . . And even Nixon knew he had to gave up on any kind of national health plan.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    4. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      The Joker was right -- one or the other of those ships would have blown up quickly. How cloyingly strained was that scene.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    5. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Many of those who die for health reasons are dying because of an oppressive government. A government that provided health care and subsidized healthy food instead of sugar would keep people healthier for longer.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    6. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      Most people fear things that are very unlikely to happen:
      -Death from terrorism
      -Death from oppressive government

      There is a difference?

      --
      Time to offend someone
    7. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by SecurityGuy · · Score: 1

      Interestingly, a lot more people have died from oppressive government than terrorism.

      You're right, though. Eat well, exercise, and don't drive like a moron. Also watch out for your country going down the tubes.

    8. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people fear things that are very unlikely to happen:
      -Death from terrorism
      -Death from oppressive government

      We rant and shout with each other over which one is the bigger threat.

      Meanwhile, most of us die from lack of proper personal health (diet, exercise, etc) or automobile wrecks, all of which are 100% within our ability to control.

      Much like the war against pedophiles is predicated on the idea that your child will be abducted, raped and killed by a stranger. Yet the statistical likelihood of that is infinitesimal. Your child is much more likely to die of cancer or any other number of causes, and is much more likely to be abused and killed by his or her own parents than by anyone else. But people cannot handle that statistical fact.

    9. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have 100% control over your personal health? You are an immortal god!

    10. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you implying that restricting what I may eat and drink isn't tyrannical and monstrous?

    11. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by tapspace · · Score: 1

      Most people fear things that are very unlikely to happen:
      -Death from terrorism
      -Death from oppressive government

      No one fears death from oppresive government. We fear loss of quality of life and God given liberties at the hands of an oppressive government, something which is highly likely to happen. If anything, the American experiment is the abberation and living under government oppression is the norm. Regardless, it looks like the American experiment is failing, and we'll be just like every other country (if we already aren't) where the government decides what you can say, where you can assemble and what the press dictates, and gives you no right to privacy.

    12. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      100 million people were murdered by their own, oppressive governments in the last 100 years.

      It's really not as uncommon as you think.

    13. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the history of the world, far more people (orders of magnitude) have died from oppressive government than from terrorism.

      Just because it hasn't happened here yet (which may be debatable if we look at the history of the country and include what happened to Native Americans), doesn't mean it never will.

    14. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by udachny · · Score: 0

      Most people fear things that are very unlikely to happen:
      -Death from terrorism
      -Death from oppressive government

      - and yet I have had over a dozen family members murdered by oppressive government.

      Hundreds of millions of people died since 1900 due to oppressive governments yet you are under the impression that it didn't happen.

      Also you probably vote.

    15. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      It's crap like this that makes me wonder if things would have just been better if we paid the damn 3 penny tax on tea.

      --
      ~X~
    16. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I inferred that to mean it is providing a first taste of tyrannical and monstrous actions and that politicians think it tastes good.

    17. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by ZFox · · Score: 1

      It's crap like this that makes me wonder if things would have just been better if we paid the damn 3 penny tax on tea.

      We have already nearly brought back writs of assistance, given the scope of these latest FBI warrants that have come to light.

    18. Re:A majority want to blame someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many of those who die for health reasons are dying because of an oppressive government.

      Don't forget nose hair complications! And car accidents. And stubbed toes. And any number of things that the government needs to protect you from.

  20. Benjamin Franklin said it very well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
    Benjamin Franklin

  21. Hi cousins! British 'subject' here... by Bearhouse · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just calling to see how that new-fangled "liberty" thing is working out for you?

    Oh, you don't give a shit anymore?

    1. Re:Hi cousins! British 'subject' here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just calling to see how that new-fangled "liberty" thing is working out for you?

      Oh, you don't give a shit anymore?

      Mod this up.

      This is possibly the most powerful phrase I have read in years.

      I am going the have to copy this.

    2. Re:Hi cousins! British 'subject' here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We used aliens' weapon to redefine reality, so freedom means fuhrerdom under the hood. It kind of works for now.

    3. Re:Hi cousins! British 'subject' here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ho-hum,

      FYI; MI5 is all online now and gets information about you from Prisim; how's that whole house of lords thing working out for you?

    4. Re:Hi cousins! British 'subject' here... by kiwimate · · Score: 1

      Just curious, how old are you? Mid-40s or older, i.e. old enough to have lived through and have some awareness of the IRA terrorist extravaganza of the seventies?

    5. Re:Hi cousins! British 'subject' here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is that Revolutionary butthurt or just happy someone is suffering as much as your citizens?

    6. Re:Hi cousins! British 'subject' here... by thrich81 · · Score: 1

      Doesn't London have about four cameras trained on each resident 24/7? Last I heard, England was supposed to be a free democracy, too. Where are your protests and riots?

    7. Re:Hi cousins! British 'subject' here... by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Implying your government isn't doing the same thing?It sure sounds like they are. So, as we say in the colonies, put that in your pipe and smoke it, you wanker.

    8. Re:Hi cousins! British 'subject' here... by Incadenza · · Score: 1

      Was just going to say that. 1 CCTV per 14 subjects in the UK, in 2006: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6108496.stm And the the fuckers can't even elect their head of state. Greetings from another medieval society, the one with the most wiretaps in the world: http://www.volkskrant.nl/vk/nl/2686/Binnenland/article/detail/766686/2006/02/11/Nederland-is-kampioen-afluisteren.dhtml I guess we all have our cross to bear.

    9. Re:Hi cousins! British 'subject' here... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      He didn't imply anything of a kind. His country didn't have a revolution and a war over that whole freedom and liberty thing in the first place, but yours did. You had it, and you couldn't keep it.

  22. Re:I think the key difference is the "everyone" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so it would be daft not to monitor them.

    All citizens have constitutional rights. Just because they have a particular belief system (and far from all of them actually resort to violence) doesn't mean their rights should be violated.

  23. But will that be all it's used for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We need a debate to decide if the risk of the govt using this data for something bad is worth the benefit of using it for something good.

    Pew asked if it is ok to use it for something good, but didn't mention the risky part.
        (Also, even on the 'good' part, if a three letter department is paid to fight terrorists, then there is a tendancy to call every thing bad an act of terrorism.)

    We need a defined, high bar for what qualifies as terrorism, and auditable/visable safeguards to make sure this data is not used for less noble goals.
        The current anything qualifies definition, and friendly oversite scheme are not up to the task.

  24. Odorifus by Stumbles · · Score: 1

    Pew that study stinks.

    --
    My karma is not a Chameleon.
  25. "Those who would give up Essential Liberty by korbulon · · Score: 1

    to purchase a little Temporary safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." -- Benjamin Franklin

    This, this, a thousand times this.

  26. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by 0ld_d0g · · Score: 2

    I think that's because most of the prosecution under the BS Espionage act isn't very public. I think some celebrity should get sued by the government so that it would be written all over the popular trashy magazines... :)

  27. Also opposed are loner computer nerds by Andover+Chick · · Score: 1

    Also opposed to curtailing privacy is loner computer nerds who fear their voracious appetite for kinky will be unveiled, many of whom are readers here.

  28. Statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's because americans don't know statistics.
    http://www.smbc-comics.com/?id=2980

    1. Re:Statistics by canadiannomad · · Score: 1
      --
      Hmm, the humour and sarcasm seem to have been be lost on you.
  29. Re: Majority don't understand the extent & iss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    That's the Daily Mail. It's a tabloid. Half of everything they say is made upi.

    Use some common sense. If 70% of Americans didn't know what the constitution was, thhere wouldn't be so much a backlash evrytime someone mentions gun control.

  30. Obvious push poll by Aug+Leopold · · Score: 1

    Just like the Gallup poll that showed that 90% of Americans supported universal background checks, it takes a lot of mental gymnastics and creative verbiage to consider 550 people a "majority of Americans".

  31. That's the heart of the issue. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The majority of Americans (1) don't understand the extent of the surveillance, and (2) don't understand why privacy is so important.

    I totally believe this poll.

    This article says that 70% of Americans don't know what the constitution is: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1368482/How-ignorant-Americans-An-alarming-number-U-S-citizens-dont-know-basic-facts-country.html

    Yes, exactly! That's the heart of the issue!

    Recently, I had a very interesting conversation with a relative who's a bank economist.

    To make a long story short ...

    The reason why college costs have risen so much in the last couple of decades is because our colleges are doing the job that our k-12 schools should be doing. That's why college has become the new "high school diploma" is because high school sucks - our public schools have failed. They are not teaching the things they need to teach and as a result, our colleges and universities have to take up the slack.

    This survey and the parent comment shows the problem with this.

    And one of the reasons why our schools are failing is that instead of educating am electorate, they have been pushed into educating workers - and still failing at that.

  32. Statistics by sociocapitalist · · Score: 0

    "62 percent of Americans say" means that all Americans have been polled.

    I certainly have not been polled.

    I doubt the validity of these statistics.

    --
    blindly antisocialist = antisocial
  33. The sampling is robust. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1004 people gives an error in determining the percentage response for the larger pool of "everyone in the USA" of 3.2%. Therefore a gap of more than 9.6% is statistically significant and reliable to indicate that there IS a gap and the majority accept tracking.

    You would need to show that the sampling was biased toward those liable to accept or the wording was partisan and leading if you wish to call this study bullshit.

    1. Re:The sampling is robust. by kbolino · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There are other factors in determining the "robustness" of a poll besides how the questions are worded and how many people were surveyed. For example, what people were surveyed, and what population they represent. Pew surveys homes (not individuals) with landline phones (which younger people don't bother with) that are listed in the phone book. That is not even a representative sampling of households, nevertheless of individuals.

    2. Re:The sampling is robust. by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      Given that, the number are probably worse (from an individual rights perspective) given how many young people will shared every stupid thought they have with the general populous.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    3. Re:The sampling is robust. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Statistics freaks me the fuck out. Mainly because of:

      "1004 people gives an error in determining the percentage response for the larger pool of "everyone in the USA" of 3.2%."

      How? How is that possible, exactly?

      Having spent time in the Northeast, South and West of this country, I can say with certainty that people and their morals differ greatly from region to region.

    4. Re:The sampling is robust. by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

      You would need to show that the sampling was biased...

      No. You just have to ask the question carefully so that you get the answer you want.

      Looks like they did just that.

    5. Re:The sampling is robust. by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1
    6. Re:The sampling is robust. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since people can vary widely from individual to individual, this seems more like a case of "Well, this is probably the case." rather than "This is magically mathematically true."

    7. Re:The sampling is robust. by Herkum01 · · Score: 3, Informative

      The sampling is only valid for the question posed. If you change the question, you can also change the results. Sometimes even changing the order of the question can ALSO change the results.

      To imply that only potential problem with this study is sample bias, you would be wrong.

    8. Re:The sampling is robust. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Did you even read the article? Half the respondents were on landlines, half were on cell phones. Of the cell phone respondents, about half didn't have a landline.

      There may be additional factors in the robustness of the poll, but at least make an informed argument as to what they might be.

    9. Re:The sampling is robust. by kbolino · · Score: 0

      Fine, they've added cell phones to their methodology. It still doesn't create a representative sample. Did they ask how many of the landline respondents have cell phones to account for the overlapping sub-population? Did they ask people with landlines how many adults lived in their household? Did they generalize the opinion of one householder to the entire household? Did they account for deactivated, temporary, and multiple cell phones? Did they account for the outsized influence of people who answer to strange numbers and choose to participate in surveys? How did they survey Luddites and the homeless? Did they control for the wording of the question? Did they randomize the order of questions?

      None of this is unique to Pew or this survey, but you can call it "robust" all day long, it doesn't change the fact that it's a meaningless number one step removed from being pulled out of a hat.

    10. Re:The sampling is robust. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NItpick: populous is an adjective. The noun referring to the people is "populace."

    11. Re:The sampling is robust. by Politburo · · Score: 1

      You got called on it, just admit you were wrong.. everyone can spot the bullshit deflections from a mile away.

    12. Re:The sampling is robust. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1004 people gives an error in determining the percentage response for the larger pool of "everyone in the USA" of 3.2%. Therefore a gap of more than 9.6% is statistically significant and reliable to indicate that there IS a gap and the majority accept tracking.

      You would need to show that the sampling was biased toward those liable to accept or the wording was partisan and leading if you wish to call this study bullshit.

      Proof that "statistics" is starting from the result and developing data that fits it...

    13. Re:The sampling is robust. by kbolino · · Score: 1

      Pew surveys homes (not individuals) with landline phones (which younger people don't bother with) that are listed in the phone book.

      This claim is wrong. I admitted as much. It doesn't change my point.

    14. Re:The sampling is robust. by lahvak · · Score: 1

      If the sampling was done by phone, it is quite possible that it was biased with respect to this particular question, since it is quite possible that people who are more privacy conscious refuse to participate in phone surveys. I did not RTFA, is there an information on how many people were they unable to reach and how many they refused to participate? Did they try to compensate for such possible bias?

      --
      AccountKiller
    15. Re:The sampling is robust. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sampling is biased towards those with landlines. No longer representative at all, the only two people I know with landlines are my parents, and they're in their eighties. Hell, I haven't had a landline in over ten years.

      It's also biased towards those who are dumb enough to waste their time answering the survey questions without hanging up on the survey company.

    16. Re:The sampling is robust. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are other factors in determining the "robustness" of a poll besides how the questions are worded and how many people were surveyed. For example, what people were surveyed, and what population they represent. Pew surveys homes (not individuals) with landline phones (which younger people don't bother with) that are listed in the phone book. That is not even a representative sampling of households, nevertheless of individuals.

      I'm pretty sure the GP covered all of that with "You would need to show that the sampling was biased"

    17. Re:The sampling is robust. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1004 people gives an error in determining the percentage response for the larger pool of "everyone in the USA" of 3.2%. Therefore a gap of more than 9.6% is statistically significant and reliable to indicate that there IS a gap and the majority accept tracking.

      You would need to show that the sampling was biased toward those liable to accept or the wording was partisan and leading if you wish to call this study bullshit.

      No, this is not correct.
      It gives a statistical margin of error of approximately x%, assuming that the selection was a completely random sample of ALL members of the public.
      It was not.
      It was a phone survey consisting of:
      500 people with "landline" phones and 500 people with "mobile" phones, who answered the phone, and spoke English. And it's also important to note that the people doing the polling asked to speak to the youngest person in the house who was 18 or over.

      In other words, the people actually polled are not even close to being a random representation of the American Public in general, so statistically the poll is invalid.

    18. Re:The sampling is robust. by kbolino · · Score: 1

      The burden of proof falls on the poll taker to show that the sample is unbiased. Pew (like most polling outfits) has failed to meet that burden.

    19. Re:The sampling is robust. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Robust?

      The current population, or "everyone in the USA" is roughly 311.6 million persons (men, women, children). This means 1,004 persons is actually 0.0003222% of the population (1004 / 311.6 million = 3.222 x 10^ -6).

      How can 3 ten-thousandths of a population be a "robust" sampling of that population? That would be like polling one person in a city of approximately 320,000 persons and calling it a "robust" sample, or claiming that the opinions of that one person reflect the opinion of the other 319,999.

      Further, the fact that the 1,004 persons surveyed are spread throughout the country and span (supposedly) several age or political groups, makes the sample practically useless, mainly due to regional and generational disparity (young Texans, Nebraskans, Californians, etc. do not think like elderly Floridians, New Yorkers, Alaskans, etc., and that's not taking political opinion into account).

  34. NO WAY by HannibalRex · · Score: 1

    This makes me sick. If anything it only proves the Terrorism-Propaganda is working, now anytime the gov't wants to get something by the public, they strap a "for terrorism" label on it, and it flies right through. This is a sad time right now, I'm ashamed to be an "American" and sick that ANYONE could be complacent or accepting of this type of privacy intrusion.

    1. Re:NO WAY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Poor libertardian baby!

  35. Almost as disturbing as the act itself by korbulon · · Score: 1

    is the lack of anything approaching a healthy reaction on a sufficiently large scale, by people, by officials, by media. Then you have the apologists for the current administration, and those who try to paint Snowden as some kind of traitor - many of them representatives of the US government (and notice my sardonic use of the word "representative"), and now this survey - I have seldom been more disgusted with my former country.

  36. Nobody voted for the NSA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There was no NSA candidate in the last elections, Obama promised to reign in this surveillance crap, and he did the opposite. The only poll that mattered was the election. This is just marketing, trying to make it acceptable to throw away the constitution.

    1. This secret was know to low level defense contractors, but the Judiciary, the branch of government supposed to keep the executive branch in check, couldn't even get the count of pages in the documents that discussed the program. How can the voters make a choice if they're fed lies?

    2. Lying to Congress is a crime, Clapper lied to Congress. He denied data was regularly captured on Americans. This is why he's bringing charges against whistleblower Snowden. He's afraid the politicians will turn on him, and make him the scapegoat, so he's trying to make Snowden the scapegoat first. But Snowden is a whistleblower on a crime, and Clapper is a liar.
    http://www.democracynow.org/2013/6/7/a_massive_surveillance_state_glenn_greenwald

    3. The congress critters are scared. Here's one asking Holden if they spied on congresscritters in any way that might give the executive branch leverage over them Holden declines to answer, the answer is yes, their phones were recorded, and the graph algorithm would rank the Paul Revere figures among them as influencers. In other words the executive branch knows who is who, who is important, who are the influencers in the party and what dirty secrets they have.
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/video/2013/jun/07/verizon-phone-records-holder-video
    (See the 18:00 mark, he lies to congress and his body language is that of a liar)

    4. What has this got to do with terrorism? It monitors speech, messages, emails, text, discussions. Terrorists don't discuss terror in public forums. People, ordinary people discuss stuff openly.

    5. All US cloud services are subject to these warrants, are they with the Bill of Rights? Or Clapper Feinstein and Holden? Which side are they on? It seems the they're on the bad guys side. If Page had gone before Congress, would he have lied to them too?

    6. There is no enabling law for mass surveillance. The Judiciary have been kept out of the loop in this, the legal claim is a joke.

  37. I call BS by Phoenix666 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The government has been running a full-court press on the media and everyone else to get them to shut up and get in line. Yesterday there was a poll saying the exact opposite, like 59% saying the opposite across the partisan divide, and now magically it's the other way. I've been monitoring the blogs Left & Right and even Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh are tamping down since calling it a "coup d'etat" last week.

    The government is scared at how nonpartisan the outrage has been. The Whitehouse and Congress are complicit in this all-out assault on the Constitution and the American Republic. They know that if they can cow the American people into swallowing this that they will then have carte blanche. But whether the people do swallow this or not, things go rapidly downhill from here.

    And note, which party is in office is totally irrelevant here. The Republicans and Democrats have both been in on it.

    I hug my family very close these days, because it's about to get very ugly and we all could lose everything.

    --
    Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.
    1. Re:I call BS by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh are tamping down since calling it a "coup d'etat" last week

      With Beck there's the cocaine history, what's Limbaugh's excuse?

      because it's about to get very ugly and we all could lose everything

      This is not as big as Watergate so don't worry. Where are the riots? See - whatever happens is not even showing up on a scale of from zero to Syria so you don't have to worry about your house being bombed or your family dragged away. Nobody is dragging way Glenn Beck.

    2. Re:I call BS by thoth · · Score: 1

      And note, which party is in office is totally irrelevant here. The Republicans and Democrats have both been in on it.

      Don't leave out the corporations... they are also interested in keeping the wheels greased since many feed at the government trough. And are happy to lobby for the need for various services and also supply them.

      Basically, there is profit to be made this way.

    3. Re:I call BS by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      With Limbaugh it might have do with his doctor shopping for oxycodone which was well known but has been forgotten.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    4. Re:I call BS by Sparticus789 · · Score: 2

      When Glenn Beck, Michael Moore, Rush Limbaugh, Arianna Huffington, Al Gore and Van Jones all agree on something, you can definitely say that the issue is non-partisan and actually transcends politics. That should tell the American people all they need to know.

      --
      sudo make me a sandwich
    5. Re:I call BS by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      And note, which party is in office is totally irrelevant here. The Republicans and Democrats have both been in on it.

      Just to be clear, I'd argue that's a function of most of the voters being on board with it. It's not ideology or party lines, it's democracy and economics at work in the worst way. When you have such a huge amount of people calling for a sincerely bad idea that politicians can get elected by exploiting, pretty much any politician with a chance of getting elected will parrot the same thing.

      Leaders who are capable of telling everyone how stupid this is don't work in politics, and are drowned out by those who want to use the paranoia to their advantage.

    6. Re:I call BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It hasn't been forgotten since no thread on any forum with more than one liberal can have a mention of Limbaugh without the word oxycodone following within 50 posts.

    7. Re:I call BS by dbIII · · Score: 1

      There's a joke about that with the line "it was only one goat".
      Once something's done it follows you around.
      However, it's the first I've heard of the oxycodone but I'm not in the USA, and the main point is about displaying hysterical stupidity Glenn Beck style. For Beck it's part of a show but Limbaugh is supposed to be more than a freak.

  38. The War on Nose Hair by SirGarlon · · Score: 3, Funny

    Hush! Don't give the government its next pretext for an expansion of the police state! I can see it now: "nose hair complications are *deadlier than terrorism*"!

    --
    [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
  39. land of the free, my ass by Tom · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's official then, it's not the land of the free anymore. Because if you don't want your freedom, you don't deserve it.

    Oppressed people at least know that things should be different. They might lack the resources or resolve to fight the system right here and now, but they know things aren't right and just might stand up any moment.

    The US, on the other hand - and to be honest, lots of the west - has become the worst kind of oppressive system, worse than 1984. The kind where the oppressed believe the lies they are told. Russians knew that Prawda wasn't telling them the truth. Way too many americans believe Fox does.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    1. Re:land of the free, my ass by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Look at the history of the FBI. The USA has tried to get to the current stage ever since it was formed and to be frank, there has been far worse behaviour from US intelligence for the past but the place didn't fall apart.
      Get the rogue agencies under control but don't throw the baby out with the shitty bathwater. It should have been clear when the FBI managed to get the head of the CIA thrown out on some sort of petty morality bullshit that these groups are out of control.

    2. Re:land of the free, my ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's official then, it's not the land of the free anymore. Because if you don't want your freedom, you don't deserve it.

      Oppressed people at least know that things should be different. They might lack the resources or resolve to fight the system right here and now, but they know things aren't right and just might stand up any moment.

      The US, on the other hand - and to be honest, lots of the west - has become the worst kind of oppressive system, worse than 1984. The kind where the oppressed believe the lies they are told. Russians knew that Prawda wasn't telling them the truth. Way too many americans believe Fox does.

      It hasn't been free for some time. I count from the time when Reagan did a double hit on "Innocent until proven guilty" by forcing pre-employment drug tests and presentation proof of residency (didn't work very well, either, did it?). But that may be just when it began to impress me.

      I've begun to wonder however if the whole "I'm from the Government and I'm here to help you^w^w keep you safe" isn't just another symptom of our current obsession with "being safe" - helicopter parents, "all strangers are sex offenders", mandatory safety equipment for chewing gum, etc. Which in itself is a symptom of how much control we've gained over our lives. 50+ years ago, when people still routinely died suddenly from things that can by cured simply and cheaply today, they also were (necessarily) more accepting of external disruptions in life, whether it was "God's Will" or simply "ce'st la vie." Now we think we can control such things totally - though we can never do that - and as a result, we're willing to put up with almost anything to do so.

    3. Re:land of the free, my ass by wdef · · Score: 1

      ^^THIS. The safety obsession, as if we can control freak everything and live forever. Maslow's hierarchy of needs.

    4. Re:land of the free, my ass by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Even in "1984" the citizens knew they were being spied upon. Would the US citizens feel better if the government stopped lying and said "we're borrowing some ideas from the Soviet Union"?

  40. Re:I think the key difference is the "everyone" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Christians and Jews have done more to harm amerika than Muslims ever did. They're the ones we should be monitoring.

  41. Phone tracking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The phone company records this already.
    My cell phone bill includes a list of every phone number and the cities we were in.

    If the phone company is recording and saving this, why wouldn't the Government have access to it if they needed it?

    1. Re:Phone tracking by moeinvt · · Score: 3, Informative

      The government can have access ... IF they have probable cause that you are involved in criminal activity AND they obtain a warrant precisely describing what information they want to seize.

      They CANNOT just copy all of your personal data and save it for future use.

      We fought a revolution partly because we didn't want the government to be able to arbitrarily spy on innocent people and the Fourth Amendment clearly elaborates this prohibitions on government.

    2. Re:Phone tracking by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1

      Funny how now we sit here and they are doing exactly that and we are allowing it.

      And oh look that whole "to fight terrorism" it isn't working.

      --
      I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
    3. Re:Phone tracking by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      The phone company records this already. My cell phone bill includes a list of every phone number and the cities we were in.

      If the phone company is recording and saving this, why wouldn't the Government have access to it if they needed it?

      Needed it for what?

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    4. Re:Phone tracking by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      We fought a revolution partly because we didn't want the government to be able to arbitrarily spy on innocent people and the Fourth Amendment clearly elaborates this prohibitions on government.

      I remember most of the arguments against were about seizure and locking up people for doing nothing. Technological surveillance however does not require the use of seizure. This leaves the argument of locking people up for doing nothing - As I understand, despite the fact the NSA is doing surveillance on a massive scale, they don't appear to be locking up a significant amount of people for doing nothing?

      Do you think it is possible that because the impact cannot be felt as directly anymore (search and seizure as opposed to the new 'spying' methodology) that people don't mind as much and would be more willing to live with this?

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  42. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by MalachiK · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The article that you link to in the Daily Mail panders to a peculiar kind of 'stupid american' stereotype that we Brits cling to when we want to feel better about the end of empire and the decline of our military and industrial might. You could replace the questions with ones of similar obscurity from British history and get a similar set of responses from a random selection of British folk. Try going out onto any street in the UK and asking the yokels about the 1689 Bill of Rights. Or get them to point to the location of the Battle of Trafalgar / Waterloo / Balaclava on a map.

    The average guy on the street is just as ignorant everywhere in the world.

  43. Congratulations! by no-body · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Mission accomplished - brainwashing succeded.

  44. Why the Secrecy? by dataxtream · · Score: 1

    Why are the government being so secretive? If they want to spy on everyone for the (supposed) benefit of the nation, then just say so. After all, "if you have nothing to fear, you have nothing to hide." Isnt that what they keep telling us?

    1. Re:Why the Secrecy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why are the government being so secretive? If they want to spy on everyone for the (supposed) benefit of the nation, then just say so. After all, "if you have nothing to fear, you have nothing to hide." Isnt that what they keep telling us?

      Tell someone you're going to spy on them using X channel. I don't think that person is going to use X channel for their communications. Are you dense?

    2. Re:Why the Secrecy? by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      So they do have something to hide, then.

    3. Re:Why the Secrecy? by canadiannomad · · Score: 1

      Tell someone you're going to spy on them using X channel. I don't think that person is going to use X channel for their communications.

      They already told you, and you keep using them... Telephone, celular, internet, banks, city wide surveillance...
      Problem is, it is really hard to opt out of such services these days.

      --
      Hmm, the humour and sarcasm seem to have been be lost on you.
  45. Active vs. Passive by moeinvt · · Score: 1

    Looking on the bright side of things, I believe that the opposition is far more angry than the supporters are enthusiastic. If there was massive protest against this, I find it hard to imagine a counter-demonstration supporting it.

    The MSM is also doing their part to brainwash people into thinking it's all good. I don't watch TV, but I heard two stories on the radio this morning which were basically blowing the whole incident off and saying that public "might be" OK with this.

    Well, as part of the minority, I'm at least going to be steadily e-mailing, calling and writing snail-mail to my elected asshats.

    The story also suggested that certain members of Congress and the Senate were fully aware of this, but could not legally reveal the details. I'm trying to find out WHO exactly. Was it the entire intelligence committee in both houses? If your Rep or Senator was aware, maybe it's time for a recall? Or maybe have them arrested by the state police?

  46. DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Neo-Rio-101 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, did it?

    --
    READY.
    PRINT ""+-0
    1. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No, but that's because they don't track us *enough*. That's their reasoning believe me.

    2. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Well, did it?

      You have no idea what it has or has not prevented, which is the fact of the matter. For all you know the government thwarted several more 9/11s

    3. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, did it?

      You have no idea what it has or has not prevented, which is the fact of the matter. For all you know the government thwarted several more 9/11s

      Except I know it was really my anti-terror rock that stopped them.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    4. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by RoTNCoRE · · Score: 2

      We can be fairly confident it hasn't. The public relations victory that would be achieved if something like that had been prevented would all but assure reelection for the sitting president at the time. Hell, if no one would leak, there would be lots of incentive to manufacture a prevented attack. We're creating the conditions with secret courts and swaths of classified information that we have little way to verify what we're told. Bigger picture, it's becoming increasingly prudent not to trust the government.

    5. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Please pick an answer:

      [ ] No, it did non prevent $event - what just prooved that we need more surveilance.
      [ ] Yes, it did prevent $event - what just prooved surveilance works, we need more.

      Dont try to reason, this argument is unwinnable...

    6. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by RabidReindeer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well, did it?

      If you'll recall, several much lower-tech warning signs were already there, even without having to snoop personally into the lives of everyone on the planet.

      And they dropped the ball anyway.

    7. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 2

      Lets make some big assumptions here that yes every year they stopped ten 9/11 level events every year with all of their snooping. Granted this is assumption is completely false but it works to show what a waste these programs are even when we assume phenomenal results from them. So each year we would prevent about 30,000 deaths which if not prevented would put terrorism as the number 9th leading cause of death in the US just behind firearm related ones (19,000 of those are suicide but that is another subject) but just above STDs. A better question would be is there a better way where we could have prevented those same 30,000 deaths per year and gotten to keep our rights. I think they answer would be a clear yes and as an added bonous we probably would have saved even more lives.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    8. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Kirth · · Score: 1

      No, it bloody well didn't. But if the British only had social networking theory, they would have gotten this Paul Revere.

      --
      "The more prohibitions there are, The poorer the people will be" -- Lao Tse
    9. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by intertrode · · Score: 1

      Then why are all the terrorists that get thwarted that we do hear about ones that the FBI helped train

    10. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by intertrode · · Score: 1

      Then why are all the terrorists that get thwarted that we do hear about ones that the FBI encouraged?

    11. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      You have no idea what it has or has not prevented

      It doesn't really matter, either. It seems extremely unlikely that it thwarted "several more 9/11s," so that's off the table immediately.

      Freedom is more important than security, anyway.

    12. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by PortHaven · · Score: 2

      Oh no, if they did...they would brag about it. And nearly everything they thwarted, they also fanned the flames of and provided the means.

    13. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      .. I would like to buy your rock.

    14. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "IT helps us fight terrorism" is nonsense rhetoric. I 'understand' (read: disagree with) the concept that they can't tell us about attacks they've thwarted, but they need to at least say "we've stopped X major attacks with this that could have resulted in Y casualties if successful"

      it's bullshit. please do see through it.

    15. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by rastoboy29 · · Score: 1

      well said.

    16. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the government had thwarted even one more 9/11, we would have heard them crowing about it for days if not weeks afterwards.

      No, I think Rob the Bold's anti-terror rock is doing a fine job, we don't need NSA phone tracking. It's also doing a pretty good job of keeping wild tigers from roaming the streets.

    17. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Subm · · Score: 1

      DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON?

      Well, did it?

      You have no idea what it has or has not prevented, which is the fact of the matter. For all you know the government thwarted several more 9/11s

      I have a pretty good idea this spying didn't prevent Boston.

    18. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by sjames · · Score: 1

      I do know that government agencies and programs have a habit of crowing about every minor success from the rooftops. I don't ghear any crowing.

    19. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually we KNOW it did not prevent Boston

    20. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have no idea what it has or has not prevented, which is the fact of the matter. For all you know the government thwarted several more 9/11s

      That's well within their power, considering some element of the intelligence community pulled it off the first time.

    21. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just as I suspected, for you the Constitution is a suicide pact. Well, that explains it.

      You take things "off the table" without actual knowledge.

    22. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      You take things "off the table" without actual knowledge.

      Well, of course. For all intents and purposes, it's so unlikely it's not even worth mentioning. I suppose you entertain the notion of Santa Claus existing, too? History has shown us that giving the government the benefit of the doubt is a very, very bad idea. Surely you're not also naive enough to think otherwise?

      That said, freedom is more important than security. Surely you can see this, yes?

    23. Re:DID THIS SPYING PREVENT BOSTON? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Although I appreciate the reference, and the joke, there is an issue.

      Does your "anti-terror rock" have a list of arrests and convictions of terrorists? The FBI has one for terrorism. This is just a small sample.

      FBI’s Top Ten News Stories for the Week Ending January 27, 2012

      Denver: Man Arrested for Providing Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization

      Jamshid Muhtorov was arrested by members of the FBI’s Denver and Chicago Joint Terrorism Task Forces on a charge of providing and attempting to provide material support to the Islamic Jihad Union, a Pakistan-based designated foreign terrorist organization.

      Baltimore: Man Pleads Guilty to Attempted Use of a Weapon of Mass Destruction in Plot to Attack Armed Forces Recruiting Center

      U.S. citizen Antonio Martinez, aka Muhammad Hussain, pled guilty to attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction against federal property in connection with a scheme to attack an armed forces recruiting station in Catonsville, Maryland.

      Washington Field: Man Pleads Guilty to Shootings at Pentagon, Other Military Buildings

      Yonathan Melaku, of Alexandria, Virginia, pled guilty to damaging property and to firearms violations involving five separate shootings at military installations in northern Virginia between October and November 2010, and to attempting to damage veterans’ memorials at Arlington National Cemetery.

      FBI’s Top Ten News Stories for the Week Ending January 13, 2012

      1.Tampa: Florida Resident Charged with Plotting to Bomb Locations in Tampa

      A 25-year-old resident of Pinellas Park, Florida was charged in connection with an alleged plot to attack locations in Tampa with a vehicle bomb, assault rifle, and other explosives.

      2.Baltimore: Former Army Solider Charged with Attempting to Provide Material Support to al Shabaab

      A man who secretly converted to Islam days before he separated from the Army was charged with attempting to provide material support to al Shabaab, a foreign terrorist organization, and was arrested upon his return to Maryland after traveling to Africa.

      FBI’s Top Ten News Stories for the Week Ending December 9, 2011

      Seattle: Man Pleads Guilty in Plot to Attack Military Processing Center

      A former Los Angeles man pled guilty in connection with the June 2011 plot to attack a military installation in Seattle.

      FBI’s Top Ten News Stories for the Week Ending December 2, 2011

      San Diego: Woman Guilty of Conspiring to Provide Material Support to al Shabaab

      Nima Yusuf, 25, a resident of San Diego, pled guilty to conspiring to provide material support to al Shabaab, a foreign terrorist organization.

      More here.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  47. PATRIOT Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't help but feel that everyone has forgotten that the US government has the right, under the PATRIOT Act, to monitor and record all electronic communications(within the US). Which was signed by President Dubya. In addition, the government doesn't need a warrant for such monitoring or recording, and they don't have to notify the person(s) they're monitoring that they are monitoring them.

    In the before time, the government would need a warrant to initiate such monitoring. And even then, after 48 hours they would be obligated to notify the parties being monitored that they have been monitored.

    All I'm saying is that this news about phone records is not news. The government has had a right to our electronic communications for over a decade now.

    1. Re:PATRIOT Act by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      Actually the government always required a warrant to monitor communications, even under the Patriot act. That's what the Fisa court is for....in fact the Patriot act was amended when abuses were found to ensure warrants were obtained and that only terrorist related communications and not all communications monitored.

      So your post is wrong.

    2. Re:PATRIOT Act by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      No law supersedes the U.S. Constitution. They absolutely need a warrant and probably cause for this monitoring. It's clearly elaborated in the Fourth Amendment.
      The criminal government has been ducking this issue by refusing to allow lawsuits challenging this power to proceed, so there isn't even a court ruling on whether or not the Bush program was legal or illegal.

      Sorry to pick on your terminology, but governments do not have "rights" they have "powers.

    3. Re:PATRIOT Act by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      It's not good enough to just have a warrant, though, and that's really the entire problem.

    4. Re:PATRIOT Act by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      I think the issue is that people voted for Obama, under the auspices he'd reverse those decisions. Not further, and expand them.

      Seriously, Obama is Dubya III & IV

  48. Pussies by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

    Is what it really comes down to. The older they get the more Americans want a "dad" or "mom" to take care of them. OMFG terrorists! Their chances of winning Lotto are better. Add in that older people remember a time when the government was preceived as "more trustworthy" (true or not) and you get these types of results. Not to disparrage Pew, but I have also seen surveys leaning slightly the other way. The real figure is probably a pretty even split.

    1. Re:Pussies by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Having never been allowed to take full control of their own lives, they, of course, in time, regress to an infantile childlike state. Such is the price of choosing security over freedom -> an enslaved mind is a child's mind, incomplete; a free mind is an adult's mind.

      Many humans will never attain an adult's mind. Even among the rich and powerful, the web of societal conditioning that ties and binds prevents the full emergence of such a mind.

      Go, live for seven years in the wilderness; do not make contact with anyone human. If you survive, your mind will have developed.

       

      --
      I am John Hurt.
  49. What is this thing you call "privacy"? by eggstasy · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Privacy is not a universal value. Different cultures have different notions of privacy. In some places, people use the toilet with the door open. In some other places, anonymous feedback is frowned upon, and people want to take responsibility for their criticism.
    Slashdot must be completely detached from reality: the average person wants to be famous, voluntarily puts their entire life on Facebook etc.
    People's lives are all the same and extremely boring. If you can't understand this, it's because you've never spied on people :D
    Whenever I stumble upon people complaining about targeted advertising etc... I'm like... have these people never lived in a traditional place, bought their stuff at a traditional grocer, who knows everything about you and your parents and grandparents etc.?
    Have you never lived in a small town where everybody knows each other? You do realize that is the norm, right?
    Most cities are small, and truly large cities are an artifact of mechanized agriculture, having become widespread only in the past 50 years or so.
    When you ask yourself, "Who watches the watchers?", do you not realize that you, yourself, are also a watcher? And that it is only by watching each other that social norms are enforced, so we don't descend into barbarity and chaos? Ever noticed how the anonymity of a rioting mob compounds upon itself and leads to more and more vandalism and looting? I could go on. Freedom is an illusion. You can only be truly free of obligations if you can isolate yourself from society and be totally self-sufficient. Which is not how normal people work.

    1. Re:What is this thing you call "privacy"? by wdef · · Score: 1

      And that is apropo of what exactly?

    2. Re:What is this thing you call "privacy"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you talking about? This has nothing to do with privacy from normal everyday interactions with people and everything to do with a government that ignores our Constitionally protected right of privacy from them.

    3. Re:What is this thing you call "privacy"? by Shortguy881 · · Score: 2

      You are discussing a different issue. This is invasion of privacy from our government not from individual to individual. This is all used for population control by our government. We've moved from a government that is in place to serve the people to one that manipulates and controls them.

      Imagine if the Nazi regime had access to this amount of data mining?

      "Are you jewish?"
      "No"
      "What about this tweet- 'Oy Vey'"
      "Crap..."

      --
      Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
    4. Re:What is this thing you call "privacy"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You do realize that the NSA is not quite the same thing as your grocer? In particular, you do realize that a major part of the outrage is exactly because the NSA defies being watched? The grocer knows everything about you and you know everything about the grocer, that makes for some symmetry in the power structure. The NSA knows everything about you but prevents you from knowing anything about it. Also you might consider that the typical grocer does not have a police force and an army.

      And no, freedom is no illusion. By your standard, dryness is an illusion. Clothes could only be truly dry if we banned water from the planet. You don't need "absolute dryness" in order to have dryness, and you don't need "absolute freedom" to have freedom.

    5. Re:What is this thing you call "privacy"? by anegg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Many years ago, when I was a computer science student (1980 or so), I thought a lot about predictions of a loss of privacy due to computerization of record keeping. I postulated an argument similar to yours - perhaps the computerization of all records is merely returning our overgrown towns and cities to the previous status quo, when everyone knew (mostly) everything about everyone else. Then I realized that there was a big difference. In the small town, everyone knows everything about everyone else; its reciprocal. But with widespread electronic record keeping, there will inevitably be a state where a few people (relatively) know just about everything about most people, yet the bulk of the people will know next to nothing about those few. That is the inequity. I think its even more troubling that the mining of these massive quantities of data may be used to justify discrimination and further scrutiny against people who would otherwise not be suspected of evil thoughts. Who will watch the watchers, indeed? If the watchers are all hidden behind secrecy laws, and even the watchers interpretations of laws are secret, what is the basis for the two-way communication of knowledge that is found in a "small town"? How can we agree to be governed by laws that don't mean what we believe them to mean on their face, but which have secret meanings that are used to carry out activities many would believe illegal if those secret interpretations were made public?

    6. Re:What is this thing you call "privacy"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Your confusion is a result of fuzzy description of the issue at hand.
      The actual answer has NOTHING to do with the prevailing opinion of society.
      The correct answer was penned in the Fourth Amendment:

      "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

      We have the right to be secure. They have to have a warrant, they have to have probable cause, there has to be a swearing witness, and the search cannot be general, but must be focused upon the data elucidated in the probable cause.

      We MUST get back to the original words and the original meaning. A right is no longer a right if it can merely be ignored without consequence.
      Impeachment at ALL levels of government is way too rare for Freedom to survive.

    7. Re:What is this thing you call "privacy"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " And that it is only by watching each other that social norms are enforced, so we don't descend into barbarity and chaos?"

      Sorry, no. Hobbes was completely incorrect...we don't need a Leviathan or a Panopticon (Foucault). Our education/socialization system installs most of these norms before we turn 12...they are internally enforced by actors in most cases, and we use a legal system for those who will not internally enforce. But the scolding nosy neighbor is not a major driving force of normative compliance.

    8. Re:What is this thing you call "privacy"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Article 12 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

      No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honour and reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such interference or attacks.

    9. Re:What is this thing you call "privacy"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is that my neighbor can spy on me all he/she wants, but he can't lock me up or shoot me (at least without impunity).

  50. Well.. by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

    Well, looks like its time to move.

    --
    Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
  51. taking the oath seriously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I, _____, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; and that I will obey the orders of the President of the United States and the orders of the officers appointed over me.

    It seems pretty clear he took the oath seriously, and recognized there is a reason defending the constitution comes before blindly following orders.

  52. we have an ignorance problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bet that same 62 percent can't tell you what the first ten amendments are.

  53. In the words of Sam Adams by MikeRT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's rare that I quote a famous figure, as so often it's cliche to the point of deserving a cluebat-induced coma. However, I think this quote from Sam Adams accurately describes the state of America (better than the famous Franklin quote so often cited here) and how so many would sacrifice their rights to ensure their happy consumerist lifestyles:

    “If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, go home from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains set lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen.”

    1. Re:In the words of Sam Adams by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sam Adams also warned us to be wary of harpoons, whether they "proceedeth from the prow of another whaling vessel" or "from a brewer of inferior means from across the town".

  54. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by idji · · Score: 1

    It's very simple. Just make sure no American teenager studies the Constitution or their rights in school.

  55. Idiots by DaMattster · · Score: 1

    I conclude then that the majority of Americans are idiotic sheeple willing to give up their freedoms for only a small amount of security in return. I'm reminded of the saying, "Those that would willingly give up liberty for secure deserve none and get neither." That is somewhat paraphrased but you get the gist.

  56. No, it's ILLEGAL and was done anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    In 2011 this was ruled illegal by the FISC court, and they kept the ruling secret and did it anyway:
    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/06/government-says-secret-court-opinion-law-underlying-prism-program-needs-stay

    "the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC), the Justice Department today urged continued secrecy for a 2011 FISC opinion that found the National Security Agency's surveillance under the FISA Amendments Act to be unconstitutional. Significantly, the surveillance at issue was carried out under the same controversial legal authority that underlies the NSA’s recently-revealed PRISM program."

    So the secret court designed to decide what was legal, said this was illegal. They kept the ruling secret and did it anyway.

  57. Protect the minority from the majority by jfdavis668 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When it comes to rights, you can't use public opinion polls. The Bill of Rights is designed to protect the minority from the majority. Phone tracking is not a threat to most people. The government has no reason to be concerned with them. But the few who are a concern have the right to live their lives without unnecessary oversight from the government.

    1. Re:Protect the minority from the majority by kiwimate · · Score: 1

      Congratulations, you have been modded +4 Insightful for suggesting a dictatorship should be put in place.

    2. Re:Protect the minority from the majority by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      No, he suggested that the majority shouldn't have absolute power. That should be obvious, right?

    3. Re:Protect the minority from the majority by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Uh, the bill of rights is hardly a dictatorship, it's more like lauding the rule of law. Perhaps you should read that again.

  58. Because they don't keep porn on their phones by kaizendojo · · Score: 2

    That's why the number for online tracking is less popular.

    1. Re:Because they don't keep porn on their phones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speak for yourself! My phone's Micro SD Card is chock-full of copies of Goatse! And I hope those Gubmint spies download it, watch it, and get nightmares for weeks afterwards!

  59. An apt quote by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

    "Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that."
    - George Carlin (1937 - 2008)

    Let me guess. This was asked of 1000 people at 14.00 on a Tuesday in the advertisements between Maury Povich and Americas Next Flop, right?

    --
    Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    1. Re:An apt quote by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      "Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that." - George Carlin (1937 - 2008)

      Carlin on Countdown (in 2007)

      ” Power does what it wants, and now they’re just more naked about it. Now they just put it right out front and say, ‘This is what we’re doing to you folks’. It’s, you know, this country is finished. It’s been sliding downhill a long time. “

      “And everybody’s got a cell phone that makes pancakes, so they don’t want to rock the boat. They don’t want to make any trouble. The people have been bought off by gizmos and toys in this country, and no one questions things anymore.”

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
  60. U.S. of A = United Stasi of America by fonske · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is the headtitle of some European editorials.
    For the younger people: Stasi (Staatssicherheit) archived "information" on *everybody* in former DDR.
    1 on 50 in former DDR was linked to Stasi as one of 90000 employees or 200000 informants.

    1. Re:U.S. of A = United Stasi of America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I saw major German newspapers compare the NSA to the Gestapo. I think it fits better. The US system isn't a "communism". It's a industrial-feudalist fascism.

      And yeah, I *still* think most people in the US are actually great and kind people. They just grew up with bad influences and suffered a lot.

      ___
      (I actually even like the stereotypical southern rednecks. When I see videos of what they do I mostly think "sounds like a lot of fun!". (excavator water ski anyone?) Yes, even when most might be dumb and racist, how the hell is it their fault? All the money went to wars instead of education, infrastructure, hurricane relief, etc. They need some good times *so much*!
      I'm friends with ex-Neonazis here in Germany, and they've been nothing but good and honest people to me. Simply because their life had become better, they got a loving family, and friends that understood their suffering and anger. The exact same thing even works for religious extremists of all kinds, and helps a lot with schizotypical illnesses in general.)

    2. Re:U.S. of A = United Stasi of America by jfdavis668 · · Score: 1

      Also, DDR is the old East Germany, Deutsche Demokratische Republik. It is not a type of computer RAM, or Dance Dance Revolution.

    3. Re:U.S. of A = United Stasi of America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn those dancing nazis!

  61. Majority of Non-Americans.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... Say Americans are Morons.

  62. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by internerdj · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Half of American households make $50520 or less a year. When my household was below median income, I know we had bigger things to worry about than privacy. It may be important but it isn't pressing for most people.

  63. Re:U.S. of A = United Stasi of America WHOOPS by fonske · · Score: 1

    This comment is originally from Daniel Ellsberg...sorry to answer my own post.

  64. Poll taker by jitterman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I was one of those who was surveyed. I am happy to report that in this case I was one of the minority - in fact, I'd say this level of invasion is akin to terrorism itself, in that many are terrified that this egregious act of domestic espionage is only the tip of a very large iceberg.

    --
    For conscience is the wound, and there's naught to staunch it
    1. Re:Poll taker by ax_42 · · Score: 1

      In other words, your answer was probably not added to the statistics as it didn't seem in line with the result they were looking for.

  65. In other news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    - XBox One is "always listening" for voice commands
    - Apple launches iCloud keychain

    Seems they read the market well, sigh

  66. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

    The article that you link to in the Daily Mail panders to a peculiar kind of 'stupid american' stereotype that we Brits cling to when we want to feel better about the end of empire and the decline of our military and industrial might.

    I'm surprised that a majority of Slashdotters are British. The 'stupid American' thing is very popular here too.

    You could replace the questions with ones of similar obscurity from British history and get a similar set of responses from a random selection of British folk. Try going out onto any street in the UK and asking the yokels about the 1689 Bill of Rights. Or get them to point to the location of the Battle of Trafalgar / Waterloo / Balaclava on a map.

    IIRC I have seen such polls. Could they also have been Daily Mail stories?

    P.S. I confess to not knowing about the Battle of Balaclava. It sounds confusingly like the Battle of Baklava, but everybody fights over the last piece.

  67. First they came... by kbg · · Score: 1

    First they came for the terrorists,
    and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a terrorist.

    Then they came for the criminals,
    and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a criminal.

    Then they came for me,
    and there was no one left to speak for me.

  68. The number could be 99% by spacepimp · · Score: 1

    And it wouldn't make it Constitutionally appropriate or legal. Luckily the Constitution serves to limit the powers from the Government. Secondly it also serves to other citizens who would seek to limit or impinge on the liberties framed in the Constitution from doing so. Our founding fathers knew how easily coerced people are.

  69. Re: Majority don't understand the extent & iss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If 70% of Americans didn't know what the constitution was, thhere wouldn't be so much a backlash evrytime someone mentions gun control.

    [citation very much needed]

    The urge to bear arms does not equate intimate knowledge of the constitution. That shouldn't be necessary to explain, but apparently it is.

  70. I believe it, but it's the implementation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "62 percent of Americans say losing some personal privacy is acceptable as long as its used to fight terrorism"

    Okay, I can believe that. But do those same people really realize what sort of information about them can be obtained merely by phone metadata?

    Oh, I see that you have twice the number of cancer screening appointments as most other people. Does your family have a known genetic risk factor that your insurance company would be interested to know about? Oh, that's an interesting number. A known common bawdy house. And did you know that your best friend is a well-known drug dealer and user that the police are actively investigating? Oh, I see you booked an appointment to a well-known medical specialist in sex-change operations. How interesting. And why would you be calling the phone number of a competing company all the time? Planning an innocent job change? Or is it industrial espionage?

    There's all sorts of mischief that can be begun with only the most superficial of metadata being available to someone.

    Someone needs to get all the phone metadata information, both from "work" numbers and home/personal numbers, for a random member of congress for at least a year. Then we'll see how popular this level of privacy loss really is once the whole thing is carefully analyzed and the implications of it become well-known. Put some public figure's communication metadata under the microscope and let's see how long this lasts.

  71. What price freedom? by garyoa1 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Years ago we would call this communism. Strange how language changes. Orwell would be proud.

    --
    Wuddooeyeno? IITYWYBMAD? Like nuts? eclecticallyincorrect.com
  72. So? by c · · Score: 1

    The majority of Americans appear to be okay with rent-a-cops groping sick children flying to Disneyland. As long as it's to fight terrorists.

    It's like "to fight terrorists" is some kind of magical key phrase which turns off higher brain functions.

    --
    Log in or piss off.
    1. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The majority of Americans appear to be okay with rent-a-cops groping sick children flying to Disneyland. As long as it's to fight terrorists.

      It's like "to fight terrorists" is some kind of magical key phrase which turns off higher brain functions.

      Proving that pedophiles are a lesser evil than terrorists. One must have these things straight.

  73. Another question that should have been asked by ebno-10db · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Another question that should have been asked in this poll: Are you aware that 9/11 could have been prevented if FBI headquarters had simply paid attention to reports from their field offices, and no dragnet monitoring would have been needed?

    1. Re:Another question that should have been asked by PortHaven · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And followed by "Are you aware that the Russians called both the FBI and CIA to inform them the Boston terrorist was a threat. And both times regardless of the Russians concern, the U.S. agencies failed to conduct a thorough investigation.

      Here is my proof, why Americans should basically burn PRISM to the ground.

      ***

      FBI/CIA informed of a signficant potential threat. But apparently cannot be bothered to track or monitor threat. But want threat as an excuse to monitor EVERYONE in the U.S.

    2. Re:Another question that should have been asked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FBI/CIA informed of a signficant potential threat. But apparently cannot be bothered to track or monitor threat. But want threat as an excuse to monitor EVERYONE in the U.S.

      The FBI/CIA received vague "concerns" from Russian authorities about a family that were refugees from Russian authority and ethnically associated with a dissident minority in Russia.

      Should the former KGB be pulling the FBI's strings to harass American citizens?

      Obviously, these particular suspects were up to no good. But of a completely unprecedented kind. Under the circumstances, I am not inclined to blame the FBI/CIA for not dancing to the FSB's tune with sufficient vigor.

    3. Re:Another question that should have been asked by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Yes, enough to investigate, and monitor and see if any actions followed behavior pattern.

      At least THEN there is a reasonable suspicion, that can warrant getting a warrant to track and monitor. And they couldn't be bothered to do THAT.

      And they feel terrorism justifies their doing to me, what they wouldn't do with the Boston Bomber, DOES NOT COMPUTE

  74. The privacy isn't about the average yokel. It's about people in power tracking and hassling political opposition.

    Was nobody listening to this Snowden guy? He said he could start listening to conversations of anyone at any time, including powerful people, and proceeded to do so as a test. No alarm bells went off somewhere -- "Whoa! Phone tap but no warrant!". He didn't even worry about internal tracking.

    It's not about you. It's about inserting an operative as one of hundreds of terrorist agents, but who listens to opposition conversations, or, hell, business discussions for that matter.

    By asking, "Do you care if they track your phone?" you've already missed the point.

    I feel like Willy Wonka sarcastically admonishing kids for the umpteenth time, sighing and pointlessly mumbling halfheartedly, "Stop. Come back. Don't do it."

    We are violating the American principle of not allowing the tools of tyrrany to be built in the first place.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  75. the Majority by mexsudo · · Score: 1

    the "Majority of Americans Say..." let me get this right... 51% like/approve/or are ambivalent about "X" so the other 49% MUST submit

  76. It's OK to spy on OTHER people by feepcreature · · Score: 1

    Of course most people will say that. It's about Terrorism, after all, and they are not Terrorists, so the government is only spying on Other People, right?

    And it's not so bad that other bad people give up a little of their privacy to keep US safer.

    --
    Paul "Say no to feeping creaturism"
  77. Benjamin Franklin said it best.. by e3m4n · · Score: 1

    "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety."

    - Benjamin Franklin

  78. Nope by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

    It doesn't matter if a majority thinks it's ok. It violates my constitutional rights, so it's illegal. That's what the constitution is for, to prevent the idiot masses from doing shit like this. And lets not forget, as long as we're allowing the NSA to do crap like this, we can't trust ANYTHING we hear in the media.

  79. Loosing my rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I fought for this country and it's rights. I will not stand by and watch them be whittled away. I say NO!

  80. Terrorists Win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People are terrorised. This is what they were after. They win, we loose. End of story.

  81. Worded all wrong by Charliemopps · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm reading these questions and they are completely misleading:

    "Should the government be able to monitor emails if it prevents future terrorist attacks?"

    How much more misleading could it get? At the very least it should read:

    "Should the government be able to read YOUR emails in an attempt to find terrorist activity?"

    or better yet:

    "Would you give up your constitutional rights and the rights of your children and grandchildren to change your chances of dieing in terrorist attack from 1 in 20 million to 1 in 20.1 million?"

    1. Re:Worded all wrong by Solandri · · Score: 1

      The main question is misleading too. "NSA getting secret court orders to track calls of millions of Americans to investigate terrorism..." That makes it sound like they had reason to suspect those people and got individual court orders to track the calls of each of them, who just happened to number in the millions.

      The question should have made clear that it was a blanket court order which allowed surveillance of millions of people who had never done anything suspicious, unless you count talking with foreigners as being suspicious. It's the presumption of innocence which is being eroded here.

  82. It's all in how you ask the question by wcrowe · · Score: 2

    These people are just not thinking through the issue. If you asked the question, "Should the president be given the power to track all of the phone calls of his political rivals?" you would get a different response from these people. Yet, that is precisely the power that the president wields now that this program is in place.

    --
    Proverbs 21:19
  83. I'm Agreeing With Bill O'Reilly by Jason+Levine · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I thought I'd never type the above words, but on this morning's Today Show, Bill O'Reilly was on and talking about Snowden and the NSA spying. He said that if Snowden is right and the NSA is spying on everyone then Snowden is a hero and the NSA is wrong. If Snowden is lying, then, then what he did was very wrong. O'Reilly went on to say that it is not acceptable to spy on everyone just to catch a few terrorists (if this is even effective... there's no transparency at all so we don't know) and there should be measures in place to ensure that they only collect data on people they need to spy on (e.g. suspects).

    Do you see what you've done, Obama and NSA? You've got me agreeing with Bill O'Reilly! Surely, this is one of the signs of the apocalypse!

    (In all seriousness, I'm sure O'Reilly supported programs like this under Bush and is only opposed to them now because Obama's doing it. I'm also sure that, had I listened to the interview a bit more I'd have disagreed with him on something - or he toned down his rhetoric for the Today Show audience. Still agreeing with him for as long as I did was scary.)

    --
    My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    1. Re:I'm Agreeing With Bill O'Reilly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did Bill O'Reilly ever criticize the Bush administration for the Patriot Act or any kind of intelligence surveillance overreach? Even one time?

      BORe hates Obama.

    2. Re:I'm Agreeing With Bill O'Reilly by Solandri · · Score: 1

      In all seriousness, I'm sure O'Reilly supported programs like this under Bush and is only opposed to them now because Obama's doing it.

      That's probably the most sickening thing about the survey, and it's not just Republicans.

      2006:
      75% of Republicans thought NSA surveillance was acceptable, 23% did not.
      37% of Democrats thought NSA surveillance was acceptable, 61% did not.

      2013:
      52% of Republicans thought NSA surveillance was acceptable, 47% did not
      64% of Democrats thought NSA surveillance was acceptable, 34% did not.

      So it's actually Democrats who were more partisan (27% shift, vs 23%-24% shift for Republicans, though the difference is right on the cusp of the margin of error of the poll). We're gradually turning into a country where whether a D or R will be helped by an issue is more important than the issue itself.

    3. Re:I'm Agreeing With Bill O'Reilly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any terrorists stupid enough to act as though their phone calls weren't being spied upon are probably too stupid to worry about.

      I'm reminded of a military war game, exercise, where the red team assumed their phone calls and radio traffic would be monitored so used couriers, hand-carried messages, and unconventional warfare techniques to take out a navy carrier group. Does anybody really think that organized terrorists are unaware of this?

  84. Phrasing by intermodal · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure that respondents to such a poll would be as confident of this if the line of questioning got more specific.

    I also think that most Americans at this point have clearly not familiarized themselves with our founding fathers or our Constitution.

    --
    In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
  85. Yeah right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The Pew Research Center is one of the many "Think Tank" beltway bandits in Washington DC. They will "create" data for whatever "research" the government pays them to.

    Not enough time has passed to do a mail survey; they are forbidden by law from cold calling anyone on the Federal "do not call list", which will skew any results since these are generally people most concerned with privacy; "man on the street" interviews have too small a sample to be considered valid research; and I personally have received enough political questionnaires to know that the questions are deliberately worded to produce the desired results. I thus find their results highly dubious at best.

    1. Re:Yeah right by Meneth · · Score: 1

      +1 Insightful. Pew is chaired by Madeleine Albright, for crying out loud.

  86. Lie and statistic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1004 people give that error only if the sampling is representative. Let us say I only interrogate red neck without internet and phone or somebody city dweller with dozen of gadget you get different answer. So yeah without knowing how they sampled, good luck.
     
    The second best way to lie, is to frame the question to get the answer you want. There are a lot of example of those. You orient the question , giving it a subtext, so that if the persons answer a specific way, they will agree to something msot people find repugnant or are against.

  87. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by baKanale · · Score: 2

    That article can't seem to make up its mind. First the caption for the first image says, "In the U.S. citizenship test, only 38 per cent of Americans passed [...]", and then below that it says "Although the majority passed, more than a third - 38 per cent - failed [...]". Which one is it? Did 38% fail, or did 38% pass? If Americans don't understand their government then apparently the Brits don't understand numbers, or at least are willing to ignore their meaning if it means a juicier headline.

  88. Time to call it by The+Cat · · Score: 2

    There's no America left to defend.

    1. Re:Time to call it by c0lo · · Score: 1

      There's no America left to defend.

      There's no America right to defend either.

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  89. said best by Benjamin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.

  90. 62% says a lot of things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In other news: 62% of Americans are fucking morons and don't actually deserve the freedoms they're squandering.

  91. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pretty sad that, from what I saw in the comments, only one or two of you are smart enough to realize that 1,004 people DOES NOT constitute, nor do they speak for, the majority of U.S. citizens. I HATE polls like this. 1,004 people? Really? That's only a few more people than ONE college graduating class. And they speak for MILLIONS of citizens.

    Here's a super accurate poll. I interviewed 20 of my friends, they all disagree with govt. tracking, there for 100% of U.S. Citizens do not support it.

    Get real people.

    1. Re:Really? by NotSanguine · · Score: 1

      Pretty sad that, from what I saw in the comments, only one or two of you are smart enough to realize that 1,004 people DOES NOT constitute, nor do they speak for, the majority of U.S. citizens. I HATE polls like this. 1,004 people? Really? That's only a few more people than ONE college graduating class. And they speak for MILLIONS of citizens.

      Here's a super accurate poll. I interviewed 20 of my friends, they all disagree with govt. tracking, there for 100% of U.S. Citizens do not support it.

      Get real people.

      Through appropriate Statistical Sampling methodologies, accurate assessments of an entire population can be made based on responses from just a small group within the population.

      I suggest you educate yourself, lest you become the poster boy for "It's better to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to speak and remove all doubt." Oops. Too late.

      --
      No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
  92. Well of course by lazlo · · Score: 1

    Of course the Pew poll showed a majority in favor. I mean, how do you think they conducted this poll? Over the PHONE! (cue dramatic music)

    So basically this means that 56% of the people surveyed either believe that this is OK, or believe that their answers to the pollster are being monitored and may be used to target them.

    --
    Pound! Bang! Bin! Bash! is this a shell script or a Batman comic?
  93. Yes, and 30% of Muslims think terrorist attack on by mbeckman · · Score: 2

    You can't make a wrong right with a poll.

    In the instant case, they phrased the question wrong. They should have asked "Are you willing to give your government utter and total access to the most intimate details of your life, empowering it to extort you into complying with anything it desires, in order to give terrorists exactly what they seek: the destruction if your freedom?"

  94. So says the paid-for survey.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In my circles everyone claims the opposite.

  95. How would say the rest of the world? by gmuslera · · Score: 2

    PRISM affects far more than just americans. Of course, as they don't vote (not that americans vote mean or will accomplish anything, unless they are called Lester), they will act. That should give with time a big push to foreing search engines, social networks and open source software (specially mobile one)

  96. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by BrokenHalo · · Score: 2

    ...that we Brits cling to when we want to feel better about the end of empire and the decline of our military and industrial might.

    ...whereas anyone who has read Oscar Wilde will know that the reason why the sun never set on the British Empire was because God couldn't trust an Englishman in the dark.

  97. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

    It sounds confusingly like the Battle of Baklava, but everybody fights over the last piece.

    On the other hand, it might be entertaining to watch a bank robbery where the participants wear baklava. A sticky business...

  98. Americans seem to be unaware of History by gweihir · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This type of snooping is only practiced in states like the 3rd Reich, the DDR and Northern Korea. US Americans seems to be unaware what extreme risks come with it.

    Also, this does not help against terrorism at all. No, not one bit.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    1. Re:Americans seem to be unaware of History by wdef · · Score: 2

      Risks? But it's for our own good!. They said so.

    2. Re:Americans seem to be unaware of History by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Indeed. I recommend fleeing to Europe while there is still time.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  99. Obligatory Ben Franklin quote! by wdef · · Score: 1

    Dangerous subversive thinking these days it seems:

    Those who would trade in their freedom for their protection deserve neither. Those who give up their liberty for more security neither deserve liberty nor security.

    http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Benjamin_Franklin

  100. Seriously, Do Something by Goboxer · · Score: 3, Informative

    ACLU Petition to Stop Massive Government Spying Program

    Please sign that petition. Or Write your Representative or Write your Senators. They are easy enough to find. Seriously. If you aren't telling the people that represent you how wrong, awful, and downright unacceptable the NSA actions are they have no reason to stick their neck out to change it.

    Nobody is asking you to fight a war, like previous generations of Americans have. Just sign a petition. Write a letter. It is that easy to improve this country. Whether you think that is true or not, remember that an outcry from a small group of people have altered politics before and it can happen again. The only thing preventing this country from getting better is silence.

  101. Land of the Free*... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and Home of the Brave*

    * some restrictions apply

  102. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by Deflagro · · Score: 2

    A population is easy to control if you keep them poor and ignorant. Mix in some government controlled media to tell the plebes what to think and how to vote and now you have full control without anyone really knowing or caring. The dissidents can be silenced and shunned by the majority as the nationalistic ideals emerge that true patriotism is doing what uncle sam tells you to do.

    --
    Der Tod ist der einzige Weg hier raus!
  103. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exactly! If you are trying to make ends meet, these discussions regarding privacy are completely irrelevant. You are worried about paying rent next month.

    In all honesty, I am with the majority of Americans on this. Perhaps because I am poor as well. I don't undestand why people are so outraged. To me this is just as ridicoulous as people on the right claiming that they must cling onto their gun rights in order to counter balance a possible oppressive government .... yeah... right.... like you are going to take on the US Army with drones and all, right ? HAHA :D

    This whole discussion about the NSA program sounds just as ridicoulous to me. Give me a break. Everyday we give up so much privacy to private companies. Just think about how much information we share on facebook. Just think of how much privacy you give up when you use a credit card. And yet, you don't see Americans avoiding credit cards, right? You don't see Americans in hordes using Tor to protect their privacy, right? This is because most Americans don't find this discussion relevant and I am one of them.

  104. Out of Peekaboo by hastalapasta · · Score: 1

    Nothing to hide is really "out of site out of mind." If an Ameri-fine man can understand the spy tech then he won't like it since he can Middling Mind it and imagine what it is. - sore on

  105. Constancy problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    which could mean trouble for politicians planning to continue these programs in the coming years."

    No problem! Just make a constitutional amendment requiring constant surveillance and it becomes eternally carved in stone. Nothing can be done about it. Absolutely nothing.

  106. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I beg to differ - the lower your economic status, the more important it is for you to have your rights protected by society at large in order to survive long-term.

  107. Re:I think the key difference is the "everyone" by Sparticus789 · · Score: 1

    The American 2-Party system of corrupt politicians have done more to harm amerika than Muslims ever did. They're the ones we should be monitoring.

    FTFY

    --
    sudo make me a sandwich
  108. Re:Hi cousins! American 'subject' here... by Sparticus789 · · Score: 1

    Hey Cousins,

    Can we get a refund? I don't have the receipt anymore, but I would like to at least get some store credit.

    From, An American subject

    --
    sudo make me a sandwich
  109. NOT robust at all... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...if those 1004 people were all "cherry picked"... lets say all were from in and around the DC area or some other "bluest of the blue" regions.

    The article is silent on were those polled came from.

    I guarantee if you polled only people from places like Oklahoma, Idaho, Kansas and Wyoming then you'd see the percentages reversed.. but that would not provide fair numbers either.

    1. Re:NOT robust at all... by JaiWing · · Score: 1

      um. you are saying the "bluest of the blue" (which I read as "liberal") would be more likely to agree that PRISM (or whatever surveillance program is de' jour) is acceptable? Really?
      Why? Because that 'liberal' Obama (PRISM, ) is for it? Or maybe that 'liberal' Bush (TIA, Patriot Act, TSA)? which one?

      This is not a conservative vs. liberal problem. This is a all government becomes corrupt problem.

    2. Re:NOT robust at all... by cfulton · · Score: 2

      I don't know about that. I live in Missouri on the border with Kansas. Folks around love their guns and hate the government and all that, but oh my are they war hawks and terror haters. They all think "I don't have anything to hide; If it gets them turban headed bad guys I'm in favor of it". The far right in Kansas is in favor of not paying taxes and guns without boarders, but they support both the military and security industrial complexes.

      --
      No sigs in BETA. Beta SUCKS.
  110. Doublethink by CanHasDIY · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "We must sacrifice our freedoms, in order to secure our freedoms."

    --
    An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    1. Re:Doublethink by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only questions remaining relate to how much money and thought we should put into the sacrificial altar. I think it should be red-white and blue, red to mask the spilled blood, white to signify the wash and blue to capture the spirit of those who think there is any sacrifice. We should add stars to imitate the last thing one sees before it goes dark. Fifty should be enough. I'm not sure about the stripes but OK. We should have alternating stripes to represent both political parties contribution to the building of the altar. How many? Let us pick a lucky number, like thirteen.

  111. security professionals employment act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And then all calls become encrypted... and the Idaho server farm got upgrades to go even faster to decrypt... and encryption improves...

  112. Maybe they should first define... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 2

    Maybe they should first define terrorism before polling people about tracking phone use to prevent it. Terrorism used to be things like blowing up subways or flying planes into buildings for a political purpose. Now it has been expanded to all sorts of domestic violence (meaning on our homeland, not in our homes), to get around things like existing laws on surveillance, wiretapping, etc. Just like the RICO laws have been abused by using them against other groups than organized crime, so have the terrorism laws.

    Another issue is how are the questions phrased? If asked if tracking people's phone use to prevent another 9/11 is okay, you will probably get a different response than asked if it is okay for the government to monitor your phone conversations to make sure you are not a terrorist. The first is in regards to generic people out there. The second is about you, yourself and implies if you don't have anything to hide, you don't have anything to worry about. But that isn't a sign of a free people, but instead a controlled people.

    It was James Madison who said "I believe there are more instances of the abridgement of freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachments by those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations."

    1. Re:Maybe they should first define... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, now a days Terrorism is the new WITCH-HUNTING era. People just don't learn from History

  113. They believe the Big Lie by bl968 · · Score: 1

    They only say this because they have absolutely no idea of what is actually going on and they believe the claims the government is only collecting meta data which is a outright lie.

    --
    "GET / HTTP/1.0" 200 51230 "-" "Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; Setec Astronomy)"
  114. Nothing to do with terrorism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The intelligence that the NSA gathers has very little to do with terrorism. It is mostly about economic and political intelligence gathering. Perhaps if the US public really understood what the NSA's real mission was then they wouldn't like it so much. Knowledge is power, and knowing that billionaire A has regular contact with person B is worth much much more than what some tinpot terrorist searches for on Google.

  115. Baa Baa Ameri-sheep have you any spine? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    No sir, no sir, none of mine.
    None for the government
    None for the corps.
    None to stop the war crimes,
    Ours or yours.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  116. NSA now biggest business security risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A low level contractor was able to get data for ideological reasons. How long before some entrepeneurial group like Goldman Sachs realizes that this treasure trove of data is monetizable, particularly the data recorded by competitors? How many other NSA contractors and subs will soon have rather large amounts of money waved in front of their noses to get the emails from the CEOs of Arthur Anderson, top IMF personnel, or congressmen who oppose legislation favorable to Goldman Sachs? And Goldman Sachs is just one example. There are banks. There are oil companies. Large concentrations of wealth almost guarantee this.

    Think it can't happen? We used to think this kind of surveillance couldn't happen. We used to think LIBOR couldn't be manipulated. We used to think no scam the size of Bernie Madoff's couldn't happen.

    So think again. Think long.

  117. "Majority of Americans" = B.S. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bullshit poll for bullshit numbers.

    I love it how they pull these numbers out of somebody's ass and call it the majority.

  118. Phone Survey about Phone Spying? by bengoerz · · Score: 3, Funny

    From TFA:
    The analysis in this report is based on telephone interviews conducted June 6-9, 2013, among a national sample of 1,004 adults 18 years of age or older living in the continental United States (501 respondents were interviewed on a landline telephone, and 503 were interviewed on a cell phone, including 247 who had no landline telephone).

    Is it really reasonable to survey the public's opinion of telephone spying via telephone?

  119. Headline is not accurate by Dave_Minsky · · Score: 1

    This stupid headline is not accurate. A sample was based on a few thousand people, if that; a few thousand out of more than 300 million. Give me a break.

  120. Too bad that's not who gets to vote on this one by daveywest · · Score: 1

    Until you get 2/3rds of both houses of congress to repeal the 4th amendment of the US constitution, it doesn't matter what a survey says. Interesting thing about the legal foundations of our country – it's designed to protect the minority's rights.

  121. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How come I have NEVER been contacted for any poll? Separately I fully believe all communication should be encrypted and if you are not the intended recipient you deserve the death penalty.

  122. Can we done please? by crossmr · · Score: 1

    Can we, as a world, just be done with America already? Can we get say North Korea, or Cuba to invade and give them back the human rights they've lost?

    It is just beyond reason that a country that is so willing to completely fuck itself up is in the position of power that they are in..
    the other 95% of the world is just getting tired of it.

  123. Diluting the issue. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hunting terrorism was not the case here! Damn Sheep, you must like grass.

  124. What a spit in the face... if true. by everslick · · Score: 1

    What a spit in the face of whistleblowers, especially Snowden. Those who sacrifice themselfs for whom they love, will end hating who they sacrificed for.

  125. Anonymous eh? by Almost-Retired · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Anonymous my ass, this was planted by some government drone specifically to make the justifiably worried sheeple think its ok.

    Well, this is one of those sheeple who doesn't think its ok. Not on this planet,not even in this universe.

    When our, and other governments are carrying on such activities in the name of safety, go back to a traitor named Benjamin Franklin, who once said that those who would give up a little liberty for safety, will have neither. Ben wasn't exactly a dummy. As for the traitor part, I expect the King of England considered him a traitor, to be hung where ever he could be found. So were a lot of the other names on our Declaration of Independence.

    We have already apparently given up, because it seemed convenient and less hassle to the sheeple to let it happen than to go find somebody (or be that somebody) who would actually do something about what has become in my lifetime, a nearly complete dictatorship simply because it was too much trouble to call the trouble makers out and remove them from public office by whatever means that reduced them to standing on the corner shouting about some subject they aren't qualified to pronounce. If they still sucked air enough to do that.

    We now have all these 3 letter agencies that don't have to answer to anybody, not even the president, costing us untold billions, even trillions in productivity interference of the public at large, each justifying their existence on selling this magic thing called safety.

    What has this so-called safety got us? Because we are disarmed for the most part (in the name of safety of course), we get the Columbines and Sandy Hook scenes simply because somebody who needed to be contained or stopped long before their thinking became that errant, wasn't stopped with a busted butt or nose when it would have done some good, but today some idiots can't be stopped until they actually DO something, at which point its too late.

    I can imagine that 100 years ago, these similar personalities likely would have not made it past their first drink in a bar as they would have been 'educated' right then and there by somebody who did know the difference between right and wrong. But we can't do that today because we'd spend 20 to life in a lock-up for removing such a person from the gene pool before he/she went on a rampage, taking 10 + other lives before somebody decides its time to stop them by whatever means is hanging on the belt, or on the back window gun rack of the pick-up truck.

    As for the terrorists, lets all agree that the 2nd amendment says exactly what it says. And let nature take its course, get the law the hell out of judging who's right or wrong in such cases. I'll help them meet those 72 Virginians they are so hell bent on meeting, its absolutely not a problem to me.

    So lets hear it from those who do give a shit about freedoms. Pew Research indeed. Figures lie, and liars figure out the stats they way they want them to be, every time. And I think this is one of those times.

  126. Apparently, by John+Chu · · Score: 1

    the samples can't stand for all the netizens.

  127. So why did they need to hide it? by Skapare · · Score: 1

    So why did they need to hide it? Why all the secrecy?

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  128. Majority of Americans are idiots. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Majority of Americans are idiots.

  129. No, no they don't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The oldest psychological 'play' used against a population is to tell people that while THEY, as an individual has a real concern about the king's powers and laws, their neighbours fully approve of what the king is doing, in the name of security, prosperity, expansion- whatever.

    So-called polling organisations PROMISE any poll outcome you desire, when the purpose of polling is public propaganda, NOT research. The method runs from simple lying about the results to the more sophisticated careful choosing of the poll subjects using the mass of meta data that exists describing who we are, and what we believe.

    A similar system is used (especially in the UK) when it is important to rig jury trials in certain 'important' court cases. The idea that your masters leave anything to chance is laughable.

    There is another, totalitarian, psychology in play. This is the process of self-censorship when people feel expressing anti-government sentiment out-loud is:
    - a cause for arguments in the family
    - a cause for growing depression
    - detrimental to workplace prospects
    - likely to have one marked out as a trouble-maker by government informers ("see something, say something" Stasi programs)
    - an opinion not shared by others (the common paranoia that we are 'unique' and everyone else different)

    Racist right-wing filth like Bill Maher exist to reinforce all of the above in the minds of sheep dumb enough to watch shows like his.

    Get a clue, people. Despite the endless propaganda pushed by people like the owners of Slashdot, every sane person is sickened to their core by the activities of Team Obama. And this majority now understands that whoever they are stupid enough to vote for (when you vote, the most important thing you vote for is the system itself- each person who refuses to vote dis-empowers the system), they will get more of the same, and worse.

    Everything Team Obama does is designed to move us further down the road to World War. If you bother to study history, you can see the exact same preparations significantly before the start of WW1 and WW2. The irony, given this story, is that we can 'poll' history itself. A time of true peace does NOT have massive and increasing military spending by the dominant world power. A time of true peace does NOT have the dominant power claiming enemies under every bed and in every shadow. A time of true peace does NOT have the dominant power pushing a rolling program of aggressive wars across the planet, each targeting peaceful secular regimes in their regions, and replacing them with rule by a psychopathic band of war-lords.

    These are the worst of times, and once they finally get it to kick off, OUR world war will make WW2 look like a playground fight between toddlers.

  130. I didn't get a vote. I call bullshit. by Stan92057 · · Score: 1

    I didn't get a vote. I call bullshit.

    --
    Jack of all trades,master of none
  131. NSA and CIA didn't used to be LEGAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The NSA didn't used to be LEGAL. They had a blank check to record whatever they wanted... But it didn't follow the fourth amendment, so it wasn't legal to admit in court... And because they were spies, courts would not allow them to lie or withhold evidence.

    PATRIOT ACT is what broke all that. Now regular police can obtain illegally gathered evidence and use it in court. And the gathering methods get to stay secret from the COURTS even.

  132. I weep for the United States and it's founders ... by MondoGordo · · Score: 1

    A simple majority and their ideals are screwed over in the name of "safety". We are so fucked!

  133. The terrorists have won. by fishnuts · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Everyone who hates the US is loving this news, just like they cheered when they heard we all have to take off our shoes and have our nuts inspected at airports.

  134. Reddit post sums it up by handofpwn · · Score: 1

    http://www.reddit.com/r/changemyview/comments/1fv4r6/i_believe_the_government_should_be_allowed_to/caeb3pl

    This guy sums up why, even if you think you have nothing to hide, you should still have a BIG problem with this.

    TL;DR- your fate is not your own. You do not determine how 'the public' percieves you. All someone has to do is portray you in a bad light, or associate you with a few bad labels (suspected terrorist, enemy of the state, etc - whether true or not doesn't matter) and they can turn the masses against you, allowing the government to do whatever they want to you in the name of the 'public good'- blackmail, kidnapping, or even murder.

  135. Sure, go with the flow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As soon as 'terrorism' begins to include things such as speeding on the freeway and getting traffic tickets for driving while talking on your cell phone, it's A-O-K to have all your rights rescinded, one by one. Because, most Americans are dumber than a doorstop "Dontcha' Know"? A new poll says that 80% of people don't care what the government does or how it does it - and they don't want to know either.

  136. Don't like it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't like it? Why don't you all take those guns you were so desperate to keep and use them for the intended purpose of putting the government in their place and stop them oppressing you.

  137. So, this is how liberty dies... by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 2

    ...to thunderous applause.

    --
    I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
  138. The timing of this by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

    Most of this stuff is old news to those of us who've been complaining about it for at least 10 years. More contemporaneously (before this story broke), about a month ago I watched Erin Burnett laughing it up with an ex-FBI guy over how the government was storing all of our phone conversations and could retrieve them later. There was zero concern then and the media was obviously aware this was going on.

    I just read a commentor on another forum suggesting the MSM got pissed off when they found out their precious privileges no longer apply (a valid concern when you need anonymous sources), so now they've launched a full-court press to get the public on board getting privacy rights reinstalled.

    --
    I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
  139. I agree with most US citizens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "most U.S. citizens think it's okay. 62 percent of Americans say losing some personal privacy is acceptable as long as its used to fight terrorism"

    Well guess what, I think it's ok to lose SOME personal privacy to fight terrorism.

    That would be something along the lines of getting a Judge to agree that there is due cause to suspect I'm a terrorist before you wire-tap me.

  140. NSA and copyrights violations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, let's all go file a billion copyright violation lawsuits against the U.S. government (death by a thousand cuts, and you don't need to be an American to file). We can even ask the movie and music industry to help out. They mostly definitely have violated their copyrights at some point, if they are just sucking up everything on the internet.

    Just getting all those cases dismissed (even claiming national security), would cripple them to the point they would not be doing much else for a very long time.

    1. Re:NSA and copyrights violations by NotSanguine · · Score: 1

      So, let's all go file a billion copyright violation lawsuits against the U.S. government...would cripple them to the point they would not be doing much else for a very long time.

      Aside from either side of the same ruling class sniping at each other and spying on us, what exactly has the government been doing? Well, aside from kowtowing to their corporate masters, not much IMHO.

      --
      No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
  141. If the answer is a goverment program.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the answer is a government program then it was a stupid question.

  142. Limited survey demographics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What they likely won't tell you is the survey was limited to a dozen member of Congress :|

  143. Don't care..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A minority does not have the right to control a majority. End of discussion.

  144. Tinfoil Hat Timing by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    Anyone happen to notice a bunch of bomb threats today? Princeton, an airliner....

    Thank Red State God, the Security Organs are doing the Lords work to keep us sheeple safe. /s

  145. EFF the NRA by cervesaebraciator · · Score: 1

    Or... sorry, the other way around. The NRA has been fantastically successful at defending second amendment rights. (Full disclosure--I'm a former member, having quit during the Bush years when they repeatedly failed to hold Republicans, esp. the president, accountable according to the same standards.) While many will say that the NRA's success is predicated on gun industry funds, this is only part of the story. They've 5 million members, regular citizens for the most part, who pay into their coffers. If everyone of these paid annual dues (many pay a larger lump sum to become lifetime members, but just to get an idea of what they might be working with) they'd end up with a gross income of 175 million. They've got the cash. They've got members who care passionately about gun rights. Above all, these members are happy to give to an organization that will generously support or strongly oppose a candidate on the basis of their treatment of the second amendment.

    I've given money to the EFF and I hope you have as well. But I wonder what might be done to enhance its profile. With enough support for the EFF, could we turn it into the NRA (in terms of efficacy) for the first and fourth amendments?

  146. One wonders by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 1

    I wonder if the polls will tell a different story when further revelations come out from the Guardian. They say there is more to the story.

    The second thing I wonder, is why some politicians act the way they do. So much support for the capture and use of secret information. Could it be that the NSA has some dirt on those politicians and they know better than to piss off the NSA. And how high does it go? Lets ask Darrel Issa to start and investigation, when he finishes finding out where exactly Benghazi is.

  147. As a former NSA civilian... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a former NSA civilian, I have to say that this was completely against the rules pre-2005. Wiretapping and surveillance on domestic-to-domestic communication was completely illegal and was only allowed via FBI authority. There was a pilot program circa 2003 where the FBI worked in conjunction with NSA to scan domestic e-mails, but at the very least, permission was explicitly obtained by the FBI before any surveillance work could begin (at least this is what I am assuming).

    I'm a bit surprised how much has changed since. What has happened in recent days is very illegal in terms of the pre-2005 rules. The classification markings on the leaked slides show that the program falls under a very compartmentalized program -- meaning, even the majority of civilians working within NSA would have no knowledge of the program.

  148. more lies from the obama media commie complex ??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    one of those 'studies' crafted with the results already determined??

    lets see the data , the demographics, the sample counts, the questions asked, the order and manner delivered

    statistics like this are usually BS - 1700 people are supposed to determine the opinion of 300 million

    this statistical methodology is flawed as it was meant for things as simple as nuts and bolts NOT PEOPLE

    jits ust another way of lying to people ...

  149. At least half are below average. by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    Americans have a lot of confidence so they don't know they are ignorant and stupid.

  150. One thing to keep in mind about polls by scottbomb · · Score: 2

    From my daily interactions with lots of customers, I venture to say that most people under the age of 50 don't even have a landline phone at home.Most people are using cellphones exclusively and it's illegal for pollsters to call them. This leaves out vast numbers of people that will never be asked their opinion on anything. Therefore, I don't give polls much credibility.

    1. Re:One thing to keep in mind about polls by Myopic · · Score: 1

      You know they correct for that, right? Do you think pollmakers are mentally retarded? These are mathematicians, they use math to work around such problems.

  151. interesting quote by volvox_voxel · · Score: 1
    "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty." --Benjamin Franklin

    This is a rather extreme sentiment, but it has a point.. Democracy is an experiment, one that is easily broken. People and governments are fickle creatures. Seasons change, and one might find themselves under unwanted scrutiny. A lot of lives were destroyed because of their political affiliations (Frank Oppenheimer lost his physics professorship, etc) Nixon has his enemies list, and now we find out that the IRS specifically targeted Tea party organizations. I can understand the want and need for information, but it can too easily be abused. Perhaps now so much in our current environment, but it can set a bad future precedent.

  152. Simple Logic by SuperTechnoNerd · · Score: 1

    The government's logic is dead simple.

    A. The 4th amendment says nothing about digital/electronic possessions or privacy.
    B. Therefore anything you have of yours that's "digital or electronic" does not apply at all, it's fair game.
    C. Everything in our lives now, and more so in the future, will be digital/electronic.
    D. The forth amendment has not been violated, simply circumvented, since it no longer applies.
    E. Do the math


    A nice road into the future we are paving, don't you think?

  153. Sad day in America by ilec_geek · · Score: 1

    And the vast majority of those polled are what I like to call "Low Information Voters." Benjamin Franklin is rolling in his grave! Is this America 2013, or Germany 1938? I can't tell anymore.

  154. That percentage by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1

    Should be taken and shot. They don't deserve the freedoms they have.

    --
    I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
  155. my Opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello /, :D. My 2 cents. How can they say things like "if you have nothing to hide" then why does it matter. why not turn that around at the government? if they have nothing to hide with the "PRISM" program then why hide it? if they only want to fight Terror then why hide in the shadows?

  156. What a fucking Mess by sycodon · · Score: 1

    What a fucking Mess this is.

    I think the best that can be said of all of it is that the Feds are just out of control. Where are the adults?

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  157. And that's why we have a Constitution by ebunga · · Score: 1

    The scared masses will do anything to feel safer, for the children, and their children's children. We restrict the ability of the rabid hordes with just laws, rules, and a system that was supposed to make passing laws at the national level a major pain. Unfortunately that system has failed and we are left with mandatory sexual molestation at airports. But hey, if it saves just one life, it's worth it.

  158. Get a life, NSA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I pity the fool, even the software fool, responsible for tracking my boring life.

  159. Born in 1956 here ... by alispguru · · Score: 1

    ... and emphatically NOT fine with PRISM or its derivatives.

    --

    To a Lisp hacker, XML is S-expressions in drag.
  160. NSA Phone Tracking Is OK says NSA by dgharmon · · Score: 2

    "a new study by Pew Research [and paid for by the security people] suggests that most U.S. citizens think it's okay".

    Who paid for this study. What was the nature of this study. What questions were asked and in what order. How was the sample population chosen.

    --
    AccountKiller
  161. Bullshit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Americans have been hearing that crap for the last 12 years. All the stupid acts and infringements that took place, all in the name of making us safe.

    Why is it that mr. Obama is so against provisions to require that no evidence, no information obtain could ever be used against an American? He is against it because that is part of Obama's plan. he wants to skirt responsibility to law, in order to have his stormtroopers do whatever he wants.

  162. Pew Research by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The "Moody's" of public rating/opinon

    Pew research and their ilk are no different than Moody's who classifies complete junk as AAA best credit ratings - that is - they are parasitic manipulators of society and public opinion. They both have their functions and are very useful tools for the powers that be. But make no mistake about it, they are all bullshit, completely manipulated, to keep you enslaved by your "public opinions", and keep the powers that be, in power.

  163. Re: The question is also flawed .. by dgharmon · · Score: 1

    "The question is also flawed because we don't know if this really "helps fight terrorism". Do they need to tap everyone's phones and internet?

    And it's well known that terrorists use email and mobile phones to communicate .. :)

    --
    AccountKiller
  164. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually the majority of Americans, and most on /. know how intelligence gathering and usage works-- mainly from our buddies Michael Bay and Jerry Bruckmihimer.

    We all need to take a step back and look at what is considered. I can say there's no right or wrong here, but agendas in this discussion. FYI, and that's how intel works.

  165. yeah right... you can make a poll say anything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    especially if you spend a week lying in the media beforehand.

  166. Stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The majority of Americans are steeple....

  167. Re:I think the key difference is the "everyone" by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

    Well since there are 7,000,000 muslims in the USA, of course ">millions of Americans" should be monitored. These people follow a belief that explicitly calls for the destruction of non-Muslim societies and the establishment of a world-wide caliphate, and are responsible for many terrorist attacks, so it would be daft not to monitor them. Most other Americans are not a threat to society so monitoring them is not justified.

    And all Catholics are members of a religion that forbids sex before marriage and the use of contraception. So obviously Catholics never have sex before marriage and never use birth control. Am I doing it right?

    --
    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  168. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, it's all about trust in the folks (in gov't) to stand up for the good of the country on issues like privacy--when you need to focus more dearing issues (i.e. eating).

    Sure he was the creator, but I mean we all trust Linus and his decision making for the Linux kernel.... and he wasn't even elected.

  169. Gladio B by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The terrorist threat is not what we have been told. See FBI whistleblower Sibel Edmonds discussions about CIA/NATO Operation Gladio B operating on behalf of western powers out of their ally Turkey. Two known Gladio B operatives: Bin Laden and Al-Zawahiri.

    The war on terror is preparation for martial law and widespread civil unrest as TSHTF at the end of the oil age. We have energy solutions, but TPTB realized that releasing them in an open(-ish) society would result in undermining of their own power. Instituting a tracking and control matrix then releasing the energy solutions will keep them in power while keeping humanity dependent on them.

  170. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    Isn't it still required to study it? It was mandatory for graduation from 8th grade for me.

  171. Bit of Clarification... by ChainedFei · · Score: 1

    Moral relativism is the theory that Morality is a subjective component and, thusly, relative to the viewer. Moral Relativism is directly antithetical to theological morality. Moral Relativism, as a theory, is that Morality does not exist and as such... it says nothing about Homosexuality being wrong.

  172. The spying establishment got what it wanted by Burz · · Score: 1

    Recent [in 1999] remarks to CIA veterans by the head of staff of the US House of Representatives Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, ex CIA officer John Millis illustrate how NSA views the same issues:

    "Signals intelligence is in a crisis. ... Over the last fifty years ... In the past, technology has been the friend of NSA, but in the last four or five years technology has moved from being the friend to being the enemy of Sigint.

    The media of telecommunications is no longer Sigint-friendly. It used to be. When you were doing RF signals, anybody within range of that RF signal could receive it just as clearly as the intended recipient. We moved from that to microwaves, and people figured out a great way to harness that as well. Well, we're moving to media that are very difficult to get to.

    Encryption is here and it's going to grow very rapidly. That is bad news for Sigint ... It is going to take a huge amount of money invested in new technologies to get access and to be able to break out the information that we still need to get from Sigint".

    http://www.cyber-rights.org/interception/stoa/ic2kreport.htm#_Toc448565560

    They got their budgets *and* general approval from the public, who would rather fantasize about "justice" as portrayed in superhero and spy fiction.

  173. FAKE FAKE FAKE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Are you kidding me??? WHO ASK "THE MAJORITY OF AMERICANS"???????? You telling me they asked more than 200 million people about this in less than a week???? Just cause some website on the internet ask its users what they think about what the NSA did does not mean that is " the majority of americans" you are talking about a huge number of people and just cause 1,000 said it was ok does not mean more than 200 million people agree. Posts like this really bother me because whoever post this just doesnt show any respect for people's intelligence.

  174. NSA most have their trolls bashing psting stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you share an MP3 file and that is called PIRACY, they copy your entire Internet Data and that is just COOL and a MORAL THING TO DO LOL. Hypocrisy to its maximum potential.

    If we haven't done anything wrong why worry right? Then why aren't they declassifying all their stuff if they are doing nothing wrong? They will say because of the security of the country, well in that case I don't want to share my information because of my personal security against kidnappers, punks and what not.

  175. majority of us love nsa phone tracking by beefoot · · Score: 1

    .... I did my survey on 2 people, the one who answer they love NSA phone tracking get a carrot from me.

  176. Re:Hi cousins! American 'subject' here... by c0lo · · Score: 1

    Hey Cousins,

    Can we get a refund? I don't have the receipt anymore, but I would like to at least get some store credit.

    From, An American subject

    I suspect a refund won't be possible: you see, you threw overboard quite an amount of good tea that remained unpaid to this day. Considering the compound interest and the duration, your account with the Brits is still in red.

    From
    a heartless multinational banker

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  177. Both conflict & cooperation seem baked in... by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

    ... to this plane of existence. As I wrote:
    http://www.pdfernhout.net/a-rant-on-financial-obesity-and-Project-Virgle.html
    ----

    Or as I wrote elsewhere in my own words: ... I agree with the sentiment of the Einstein quote [That we should approach the universe with compassion], but that sentiment itself is only part of a larger difficult-to-easily-resolve situation. It become more the Yin/Yang or Meshwork/Hierarchy situation I see when I look out my home office window into a forest. On the surface it is a lovely scene of trees as part of a forest. Still, I try to see *both* the peaceful majesty of the trees and how these large trees are brutally shading out of existence saplings which are would-be competitors (even shading out their own children). Yet, even as big trees shade out some of their own children, they also put massive resources into creating a next generation, one of which will indeed likely someday replace them when they fall. I try to remember there is both an unseen silent chemical war going on out there where plants produce defense compounds they secrete in the soil to inhibit the growth of other plant species (or insects or fungi) as a vile act of territoriality and often expansionism, and yet also the result is a good spacing of biomass to near optimally convert sunlight to living matter and resist and recover from wind and ice damage. I try to recall that there is the most brutal of competition between species of plants and animals and fungi and so on over water, nutrients (including from eating other creatures), sunlight, and space, while at the same time each bacterial colony or multicellular organism (like a large Pine tree) is a marvel of cooperation towards some implicitly shared purpose. I see the awesome result of both simplicity and complexity in the organizational structure of all these organisms and their DNA, RNA, and so on, adapted so well in most cases to the current state of such a complex web of being. Yet I can only guess the tiniest fraction of what suffering that selective shaping through variation and selection must have entailed for untold numbers of creatures over billions of years. To be truthful, I can actually *really* see none of that right now as it is dark outside this early near Winter Solstice time (and an icy rain is falling) beyond perhaps a silhouette outline, so I must remember and imagine it, perhaps as Einstein suggests as an "optical delusion of [my] consciousness". :-)

    So much for "world peace" when even the tranquil seeming forests have so much Yin-Yang complexity going on within and around the trees. :-) The best I feel we can hope for is balance (like Ursula K. Le Guin's writings):
    http://www.ursulakleguin.com/
    or maybe, transcendence to some form of universe certainly way beyond our present understanding; example, with its own flaws:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Metamorphosis_of_Prime_Intellect

    But still, no matter what examples the universes sets before us, or in what proportion, as *ethical* and *spiritual* beings, we humans can choose a different way, and at least approximate world peace among ourselves as best we can. Something I learned from an old and wise biologist (Larry Slobodkin) who studied both philosophy and nature.

    What a dangerous game life is, especially living in "interesting times". :-(
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_you_live_in_interesting_times

    The good news is, no one will get out of this infinite game alive anyway, so we might as well have some fun with it 'till then. :-)

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
  178. There is no "Terrorism" by chrismcb · · Score: 1

    There is no such thing as "terrorism." It isn't a country, or even a large group. This so called "terrorism" is just one or two criminals (or small groups) that try to incite terror. Fighting "terrorism" is like fighting murder, or any other type of crime. They make this sound like these "terrorists" are out to destroy our country and way of life, and yet this is exactly what the NSA is doing, destroying our way of life.
    Boehner, the speaker of the house, claims Snowden is a traitor, saying Snowden is hurting national security. Boehner also said that, while they collected the data, they won't use it, unless they find a connecton... The problem is Boehner took an oath of office, promising to defend the Constitution, against ALL enemies. Instead he is supporting the attackers of the Constitution, and attacking the defenders of it. Boehner is the one who is a traitor.

  179. Ignorance or Scam? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We all know that people will easily and willingly follow the media so long as you paint a pretty picture for a negative ordeal. Unpopular politician that 'Big Brother' wants to win? Newspapers, TV, Radio, Internet searches all point out to all of the "great things" they have done and are wanting to do without letting you know how they plan to accomplish it (Obama anyone?). This poll can easily fit into propaganda designed to sway our opinions and encourage us to give up because we are smart enough to know that people are sheep. As you can see, not one person posting on here is in agreement with it, why do you think that the author of the article or post remained anonymous? Don't let up. I've already switched phone companies (for what good it does) and given up on Microsoft for apple (which could also be a corporate scheme as well). To all of this I say pick your poison and look outside of the immediate context at everything, because when we focus in on one set-up we're going to miss the real agenda in left field.

  180. Majority? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The majority of Americans are therefore complete idiots. Do you really think this will be used "only" against terrorists? Of course they'll expand the definition of terrorist until it includes everyone if they haven't already. Just like the bogus no fly list.

    First you dumb down the population so much that they can't find shit in an outhouse (read "The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America") then you "protect them" by taking away all liberties.

    Enjoy your Nazi State of America folks.

  181. Keep Dreaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK with American until the NSA looks your way....Then watch out. Plus I have heard some high level politicians have used such info to find out what their opponents are doing.....

  182. conscience by NewYork · · Score: 1

    "Never do anything against conscience even if the state demands it." -- Albert Einstein

  183. Bah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those who would trade Liberty for security, deserve neither. (Benjamin Franklin)

  184. Bah! by flochucky · · Score: 1

    Those who would trade Liberty for security, deserve neither. ~ Benjamin Franklin

  185. Government Stalking and Phone Tapping by KimS77 · · Score: 1

    I made a complaint against the city of minneapolis way before I put my most recent video out. My phone was tapped and they were very bold about it as they put what I was saying on the phone on the internet via google adsense and various other methods. They showed me all the corporations in on their bullshit government stalking and spying game. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FmUuMsazO38

  186. Majority of Americans Say NSA Phone Tracking Is by carolynblake · · Score: 1

    Baaaaa....

  187. The bottom line answer. by Nov8tr · · Score: 0

    People are sheep. They have always been sheep. And it will take a very long time before the majority are intelligent enough to make their own decision and to have their own opinion. They have always had someone telling them what to do, to believe. From Ancient clans to War Lords, Barons, Kings, Presidents, Dictators, etc. You can manipulate a handful of people and the rest follow and will believe it is "OK". sigh.

    --
    I'm old, not dead. Well that's my 2 cents worth, your mileage may vary. I say what I think, not what you want to hear.
  188. six degrees of separation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who knew that dialing a wrong number might get you on a terrorist watch list, or worse yet, that the person that keeps calling and asking for Achmed would cause you to get investigated and keep you from flying? And that pizza delivery guy that calls? Who knew he was a also delivering pizza to a terrorist? There is nothing more dangerous than false conclusions based on bad data and the certainty that this will happen with this "metadata" is almost 100%. There are at most only six degrees of separation between you and any potential bad guy. You are already connected. Get ready for the knock on the door.

  189. Re:Majority don't understand the extent & issu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A population is easy to control if you keep them poor and ignorant.

    But not *too* poor or *too* ignorant. They have to have someone to look down upon and some reason to consider themselves superior. You want them just comfortable enough and afraid of losing that comfort but not idle, and you sure as heck don't want them to be desperate or to be willing to listen to dissenting voice because that's the only people who will tell them what they want to know.

  190. Tracking calls by kmoser · · Score: 1

    56% are okay with the NSA tracking their calls because nobody uses phones for making calls these days.

  191. Good thing the NSA database tracks gun shows by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    As we all know, the NSA metadata, combined with their other data collection methodology, easily allows them to track all interactions by people at gun shows and gun stores, based on your cell location and interfaced with video feeds.

    What second amendment?

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  192. idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The majority of people voted for Bush (once) and Obama (twice).

    where is the news?

  193. Government spying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Land of the free
    home of the brave

    bs

  194. Yes Prime Minister demonstrates how it's done by Bruce66423 · · Score: 1

    In this clip from the political series, you see how the questions asked before the central question is raised force the person to come up with the 'right' answer http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G0ZZJXw4MTA Enjoy

  195. Only if the poll is honest by Bruce66423 · · Score: 1

    Given how easy it is to skew the results by the questions before the actual one, as demonstrated by this clip from Yes Prime Minister, poll results need to be treated with great caution http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G0ZZJXw4MTA

  196. Humbug; doesn't prove anything. by Bruce66423 · · Score: 1

    Resistance in the forests of Lithuania to the Soviet occupiers lasted for SEVEN YEARS after WWII before being finally crushed.

  197. Ask clever questions first before the crucial one by Bruce66423 · · Score: 1

    As this clip demonstrates, it can easily be tweaked to the right result http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G0ZZJXw4MTA

  198. Watch this by Bruce66423 · · Score: 1

    to see how to bias a poll to the 'right' result http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G0ZZJXw4MTA (3 mins)

  199. Sad a freedom for some by Bruce66423 · · Score: 1

    at the cost of decades of further enslavement for others. The British Empire got rid of slavery in the 1830s, the USA in the 1860s. But don't let that inconvenient truth rain on your parade...