Tuesday, January 14, 2014

The Real Reason We Need to Revamp NSA Surveillance Programs

I don’t usually go super political on here, but with the recent revelations concerning the NSA’s activities, as well as all the legal issues starting to arise from them, I feel a need to voice my opinions.  Like everyone else, I have a lot of concern over the surveillance programs run by the NSA.  At the very least, they are so broad that they vastly overreach, and some of them at worst are clear violations of domestic law, the United States Constitution and international laws and treaties.  The response I often hear is that if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to worry about, that they are doing this only to keep the country safe from terrorism.  While I agree that their motive is not inherently bad, their execution has been.  But I see a problem far beyond the flagrant violation of laws and treaties, and I’m as disturbed by it as I am that no one has mentioned it yet.  The problem I see is that this spying is creating an atmosphere of distrust that we haven’t seen since the cold war.  As a result, all that we have worked for since World War I is in danger of being lost.

In recent months, we have learned a great deal about just what the NSA is doing, largely through the tens of thousands of pages leaked by Edward Snowden.  While I don’t condone his actions, I don’t condemn them either because he was trying to bring attention to what he believed were brazenly illegal actions.  The legality of said actions is beyond the scope of this post, but the content and motive behind them is what needs to be paid attention to.  Now, much of what was revealed was not actually that shocking, at least to me.  I’d known since the Patriot Act was passed (I will refrain from opining on this law, suffice it to say that I consider it one of the worst pieces of legislation in my lifetime) that much of our digital communications were being collected and read.   We have engaged in a great deal of international surveillance as well, such as wiretapping the phones of those making international calls to certain areas and monitoring international emails.  In recent weeks, it came out that this went beyond ordinary citizens, all the way up to world leaders, such as the chancellor of Germany. 

Now, spying on foreign neighbors is certainly nothing new.  Frankly, we’ve been spying on one another for as long as societies have existed.  But look at the way we have related to one another as a result of such activity.  There is always some degree of mistrust which, when combined with our apparently natural lust for things we can’t have, often leads to varying degrees of fighting.  Virtually every war ever waged has been born of some combination of these factors, not to mention the nasty assumption that we’re right and everyone else is wrong.  But we can’t keep living this way, especially if we want to be civilized as we claim to be, because we will never have a unified world if we do not stop with this distrust.

Given the horrible things countries have done to each other over the centuries, we do seem to have reason to mistrust each other.  But why on earth would we want to give ourselves even more reason to distrust each other?  I believe that this was one of Woodrow Wilson’s motives behind his idea for the League of Nations, the predecessor to the United Nations.  He knew that we needed a forum in which we could discuss our concerns so that we could better understand them.  Prior to the LoN and the UN, countries largely reacted in a knee-jerk manner to the actions and inactions of other countries, which could easily fuel tensions and lead to war.  But by having this forum we could begin to build a more united world.  Unfortunately, as many have observed, neither of these institutions have worked particularly well (the LoN in particular is regarded as an utter failure), but it is not because they are not powerful organizations (although there is something to be said for the lack of power the UN sometimes seems to have).  It is because we still have such complete distrust in each other.

In order to understand just what distrust can do to the relationships between countries, we need look no further than the Cold War, specifically the McCarthyism of the 1950s.  We became obsessed that the Soviet Union was plotting a means of destroying us (whether or not this is actually true is not the subject of this blog, so I will not opine on that.  This is a blog of fact, not conspiracy theories.) that we started spying not only on them, but on our own citizens.  The entire country was consumed by what most people now regard as a mass hysteria.  Unknown numbers of people were accused of being communist or communist sympathizers.  Many were dragged before committees and unjustly accused and sometimes imprisoned or worse.  Yet there was no legitimate basis for this; just the paranoia of Joseph McCarthy.  The nightmare endured by the country at the time was entirely of our own construction.

Many people have drawn parallels between McCarthyism and the actions taken by our government in the decade since 9/11.  Although we are not even remotely close to being that paranoid, the potential is certainly there.  Moreover, many of the actions taken are disturbingly reminiscent of those taken during the 1950s.  Our government is spying on its own citizens illegally by collecting massive amounts of metadata.  Many minorities, both individuals and organizations run by them, have been targeted simply because of their ethnicity.  Federal agencies are continually trying to find new ways to track people physically and digitally.  Yet every time someone tries to bring these concerns to a courtroom, the case ends up being quashed due to concerns over national security.

These actions, as we saw during the 1950s, breed a great deal of distrust.  However, this is not limited to just citizens of one country.  In the 1950s, the Soviet Union was easily as terrified of us as we were of them simply because of the way we behaved toward each other.   I fear that we could see a repeat of this paranoia today if government surveillance programs are not reigned in; we have already seen some damage to our relations with Germany after the NSA was caught tapping the phone line of their Chancellor.  Continuing to behave in this manner will only drive bigger wedges into our foreign relations, further dividing the world instead of unifying it.  Think of it like Facebook stalking someone; although you may find out interesting and pertinent information about them, there is a strong likelihood that you will do irreparable harm to their relationship, possibly destroying it in the process.

Now, to be fair, these programs were created to protect people from potential dangers.  Certainly we need to take steps to ensure safety, and in all likelihood these programs have created some degree of benefit, but at what point does cost outweigh benefit?  We have seen a gradual erosion of rights, mostly those that traditionally fall under the Fourth Amendment, for the sake of protecting the country.  The Founding Fathers wrote the Constitution in an attempt to prevent this; they had seen such actions in the years leading up to the Revolutionary War. The only reason the Bill of Rights was even put in was because there was great fear that without it, the government would never respect the rights of the States and the people.  Yet now, we appear to be fulfilling exactly what they feared.

Several years ago, there was a mediocre film called “Eagle Eye” that explored this concept.  While the plot was rather ludicrous, it did come with a message that while trying to protect people and our freedoms, we sometimes go too far.  Many of the programs enacted by the Patriot Act are an example of this; in an effort to protect our freedom, they are in fact quashing it.  At that point, the threat is from within, not without.

Instead of succumbing to paranoia that the world is out to get us, we need to start trusting each other.  This is, of course, far easier said than done, but as long as we continue down the current path, we will only continue alienating people.  The Cold War raged for decades simply because both sides were convinced that the other side wanted to nuke them into oblivion.  Yet when we started talking, both sides were able to disarm and eventually become allies.  No two countries have to like each other in the slightest, but if we stop alienating each other, we can slowly build up an atmosphere of trust.

Fortunately, there are already signs of hope.  The Courts are becoming less tolerant of surveillance programs.  President Obama seems to have noticed that the agencies executing these programs need more oversight and, where possible, a bit more transparence.  Most of all, people have taken to the internet and social media to show their disgust.  I contend that this factor is the most important because in the digital age, nothing can stay quiet for long.  Information travels farther and faster than ever before, meaning people are now better informed and connected (although there is something to be said for the damage this seems to wreak on interpersonal communications; however, that is a subject fit for an entire blog post in itself) than ever before.

This interconnectedness shows how we as a country, a member of the global community, and as a species must grow.  I have often compared us as a species to being teenagers; we are arrogant, petty and bigoted.  We believe that we know better than everyone else.  Most of all, we believe that those who disagree with us are not only wrong, but also are automatically our enemies.  But we can no longer cling to the paranoid, xenophobic attitudes we have had for thousands of years.  Instead, we must begin to foster trust and respect with each other, on all levels.  As that trust begins to grow, we will see that there was never a reason to be so petty and suspicious of each other.


Just as a person grows out of their adolescence and eventually matures, so too will humanity.  Then, and only then, will we be able to see that none of our aberrant behavior was really warranted; as the saying goes, someday we’ll look back and laugh.