On keeping track of the likes of the Farooks and the Maliks .........
There is room for reasonable debate on how this should be done and if it should be done at all.
I get the reference to John Mitchell. One could add Joseph McCarthy to make their point.
I know Jon is not going to trust the government to do anything right in this regard. Hack, having similar views from what I can tell of his posts, is going to side with him. Jon and I have been on opposite sides of this discussion before. That was probably 7-8 years ago and I've become way more liberal since then so, let me say out of the gate, I get your point but don't keep making it with one liners that evoke the specter of Big Brother and the Surveillance State.
Having said that, everyone posting here knows that this issue has been debated for at least the last 8 years ...... National Security v. Privacy rights. It should be a presidential debate issue but it probably won't be.
My view is that there are very likely to be acceptable ways to conduct surveillance while protecting personal privacy. There are also effective means to manage the huge amounts of data that surveillance produces. Given that I would expect authorities who are empowered to do so to act on it such that responsible government, whose Constitutional roll it is to defend and protect its citizens, to actually defend and protect them.
We'll find reasonable points to disagree on in the first two parts of the paragraph above, no doubt, but reasonable people should be able to come up with reasonable ways to do this in the age of the vast technology we have at our disposal to do this.
But there should be absolutely no disagreement on the second part of that paragraph. None.
There is room for reasonable debate on how this should be done and if it should be done at all.
I get the reference to John Mitchell. One could add Joseph McCarthy to make their point.
I know Jon is not going to trust the government to do anything right in this regard. Hack, having similar views from what I can tell of his posts, is going to side with him. Jon and I have been on opposite sides of this discussion before. That was probably 7-8 years ago and I've become way more liberal since then so, let me say out of the gate, I get your point but don't keep making it with one liners that evoke the specter of Big Brother and the Surveillance State.
Having said that, everyone posting here knows that this issue has been debated for at least the last 8 years ...... National Security v. Privacy rights. It should be a presidential debate issue but it probably won't be.
My view is that there are very likely to be acceptable ways to conduct surveillance while protecting personal privacy. There are also effective means to manage the huge amounts of data that surveillance produces. Given that I would expect authorities who are empowered to do so to act on it such that responsible government, whose Constitutional roll it is to defend and protect its citizens, to actually defend and protect them.
We'll find reasonable points to disagree on in the first two parts of the paragraph above, no doubt, but reasonable people should be able to come up with reasonable ways to do this in the age of the vast technology we have at our disposal to do this.
But there should be absolutely no disagreement on the second part of that paragraph. None.
Comment