Snowden’s location and motives are interesting to speculate - TopicsExpress



          

Snowden’s location and motives are interesting to speculate about, but they shouldn’t distract attention from what really matters in all this: -- Twelve years after the Sept. 11 attacks (and two years after the killing of Osama bin Laden) the security apparatus created in response is growing, not shrinking. -- The U.S. government is monitoring its citizens’ communications on a scale that was previously unknown and is without precedent. -- The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court has declined just 11 of the government’s more than 33,900 surveillance requests. -- The legal interpretation of Section 215 of the Patriot Act, which is used by that court to rule on government requests for information, is classified. So the laws that enable this surveillance are themselves, in effect, secret. -- The group meant to guarantee appropriate privacy safeguards, the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, was authorized by Congress in 2007, but didn’t get a full-time chairman until last month, and has met with President Barack Obama exactly once. The government has a legitimate interest in pursuing Snowden. His leaks were a crime that has to be prosecuted. In doing so, the Obama administration could also show that Snowden’s concerns about a fair trial (and proportionate charges) are unfounded.
Posted on: Thu, 27 Jun 2013 14:25:25 +0000

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