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Why do so few American citizens care that our own government is spying on us?

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The NSA's Political Fiction

By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. Posted May 22, 2006.


Why do so few American citizens care that our own government is spying on us?
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Here's what disturbs me: in light of recent revelations that the National Security Agency has been illegally collecting vast databases of information about every single phone call made in the United States since late 2001, only 53 percent of US citizens polled by Newsweek think the government has gone too far in its efforts to stop terrorism.

That's a majority, but not a very large one. And in the same poll, 41 percent said they thought spying on phone calls made to and from everyone in the country was necessary.

This arouses the same sinking feeling I got many years ago when I was a young graduate student at UC Berkeley, grading my very first set of papers. From that sample, and many others in subsequent courses, I learned that 70 percent of college students in an upper-division English course at a top university cannot construct a coherent argument using evidence taken from books they've read.

That's what convinced me that most people, even highly educated ones, go through their lives without ever examining the way rhetoric works, and the way evidence is used (or abused) in its service. These people weren't stupid by any stretch of the imagination. They simply didn't understand how narrative persuasion works, in the same way that many people who are smart nevertheless don't understand how their car works.

And just as technical naïveté makes you vulnerable when your car breaks down on a deserted road, so too does narrative ignorance when your nation is breaking down right before your eyes. That such a paltry majority is convinced the government has gone too far with surveillance is a perfect example of this. The Bush administration has cited no evidence to justify snooping on innocent people's telephone calls. In fact, government analysts have admitted that the reason they didn't know about the impending Sept. 11 attacks had to do with poor foreign intelligence.

You can't remedy poor foreign intel with domestic spying on the telephone network. Nor do you strengthen your nation's cohesiveness by allowing the government to break the law, gathering private information from corporations like AT&T, Verizon, and Bell South without any court oversight, without any warrants.

Certainly the government can and will argue that certain interpretations of the USA-PATRIOT Act allow the NSA to snoop on my telephone calls in the name of national security. But where is the proof that it's necessary to log my telephone calls? When my fundamental right to speak privately is violated in such an extreme manner, along with the rights of all my fellow US citizens, we deserve some hard facts to back up the claim that this unambiguously totalitarian strategy is for our own good.

Instead of evidence, however, we're given incoherent emotional appeals. We're told that the danger from terrorism is so great that the government should be allowed to do anything it likes -- including emulating the blanket surveillance strategies of the now-defunct USSR. We're told that civil liberties groups like Electronic Frontier Foundation can't sue AT&T for handing over personal information to the government without a warrant because examining the evidence in a court of law would violate national security and endanger us all.

But appeals to fear are not counter-evidence. They do not bolster a logical argument. They simply add punch to what is nothing more than a fictional narrative about how monitoring electronic communications will somehow magically stop terrorism.

Cyberpunk author William Gibson has said that this disastrous episode in our nation's history is about our struggle to deal with the scope of new technologies. Our vast telecommunications network, including cable, phones, and the Internet, has made it easier than ever for telecom companies to expose our private lives to authority figures with the power to punish us severely -- even kill us. What the NSA has done, Gibson argues, is the result of evolved but unregulated computer storage and search capacities that make it possible to record, search, and maintain archives of the whole nation's telephone calls.

Certainly technical evolution has made it easier for the government to place us under surveillance without revealing it -- and without any oversight by the judicial system. But it's not technology that's stoppering the country's outrage. That's a problem as old as recorded communication itself. Most people cannot take apart a piece of rhetoric and tell you whether its component parts are facts and evidence or merely seductive fiction.

Digg!

Annalee Newitz is a surly media nerd who invented the first argument with interchangeable parts.

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Straight from the white-man's mouth
Posted by: Third_Eye_Open on May 22, 2006 12:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Any country who is willing to trade a little freedom, for a little security will soon find it has neither" -Ben Franklin

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connect the dots people!
Posted by: wavesrgreat on May 22, 2006 2:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
..and while MOST of us can't be bothered to think through the argument vs. rhetoric problem, the corrupt federal government is doing pretty much what it pleases. Do you REALLY think they are ONLY listening in on what they SAY they are? Or is it more likely that they are eavesdropping on their political enemies as well? Think about it! The GOP is in serious trouble and they are desperate to hang on the Congress come November. With this powerful tool in their hands don't you think they will use it? Don't you think Rove (who is now focusing on the mid term elections instead of his other "duties" at the White House, which btw, has nothing to do with the fact he'll soon be defending himself against Fitzgerald's indictment) won't hesitate to do anything he can to acquire the phone logs/conversations of democratic party officials and their strategies for the mid terms? Combine that with Diebold's voting machines and it's a GOP lock on the majority.

Do you think people would care if they were able to connect those dots? It's more likely they will cling to complacency and stay in their American Idol induced coma.

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I'm sometimes at odds...
Posted by: Techubus on May 22, 2006 2:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With your technical articles Annalee, but not today. Your examples and explanations are spot on here. William Gibson's observations are correct. What we need is new legislature to bring our civil rights in line with modern technology. Instead we see the opposite, abusing the legal loopholes these technologies create to monitor and track us in ways our founders could never have forseen.

I find your comments regarding university students pretty disheartening. I can't help but feel public education is at fault here. That kind of critical thinking should be hammered into us at an early age. What we have instead is an entire society that falls for endless streams of circular logic, red herrings and strawmen. People everywhere choose to go with what FEEL's right to them, facts be damned.

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why don't Americans mind being spied on?
Posted by: Ellie1 on May 22, 2006 5:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is no underestimating the general intelligence of the American public, especially in red states. They are content to live in ignorance, as long as their bubble of existence isn't pricked. I say BRING BACK THE DRAFT. When their precious little brats are drafted, they'll wake up. If it isn't too late by then.

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A great example of exactly the kind of “incoherent emotional appeal”
Posted by: Taylor on May 23, 2006 12:44 AM   
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you’re talking about comes from this Alberto Gonzales quote, from a discussion on ABC's "This Week" about the possibility of prosecuting journalists for reporting NSA wiretapping activities. Gonzales states: "It can't be the case that [the First Amendment right of a free press] trumps over the right that Americans would like to see, the ability of the federal government to go after criminal activity." In that statement, Gonzales flat out asserts that some speculative, “right Americans would like to see,” trumps a basic right GUARANTEED IN THE CONSTITUTION. Wha? It just dumbfounds me that something like that could fly, but it does.
In the interview, Gonzales framed the debate in terms of national security vs. freedom of the press. I’m sure many people will be tempted to take the bait and accept that frame and be drawn into arguing about which is more important, national security or freedom of the press. This is all crafted to distract us from the fact that nowhere in the Constitution and Bill of Rights is there language guaranteeing the right to national security. There is, however, a guaranteed right to a free and independent press. Obviously, the neocons want to steer us away from looking at that inconvenient (for them) truth. They argue, "What good is a free press if you're dead?" We all know how at least one of our Framers would've responded: "Give me liberty or give me death."

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Why?
Posted by: owlbear1 on May 23, 2006 4:16 AM   
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Americans enjoy being victims.

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» RE: Why? Posted by: donmac
Dangerous Ignorance
Posted by: sweetmorganlefey on May 23, 2006 5:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Many Americans have accepted the phrase ‘ignorance is bliss’. We feel we have far too many other distractions to pay attention to what those in authority are actually saying. This is exactly what we are expected to believe.

Chomsky, perhaps the greatest linguist of our time, wrote a small book called What Uncle Same Really Wants. In it he outlines the pact government made with Corporate America to control parts of the world that are crucial in maintaining corporate supremacy for our country. He deciphers the rhetoric and points to the obvious. It’s a chilling reminder how close we are to reliving a recent time in history where the populous was completely controlled.

One of the outcomes of this is our youngsters can’t form articulate arguments because our education system has lost it’s teeth. Corporate America and the government want it’s population to work not think, and the education system reflects that.

Our kids take cell phones to school because their social life is more important to them than learning how to think. And we as parents cave to the age-old cry “But everyone ELSE is doing it, Mom” out of guilt for working long hours, spending little time actually parenting.

We are at ‘war’ now because it is profitable for Corporate America to be at war. We aren’t educating our children because Corporate America doesn’t want thinkers (contrary to what it ‘says’), it wants low wage workers which is why the immigration issue plays right into their hands.

The not so subtle message if we listen is don’t question, don’t think, spend and don’t worry, Big Brother will take care of you.

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I think
Posted by: rsaxto on May 23, 2006 5:34 AM   
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I think that the low poll number is simply due to the fact that a large number of USA citizens do not yet realize that very bad people are running our current government. If more people come to realize the bad component of current government then they would definitely not want the vast intrusion on privacy that the BAD government would use to arrest GOOD folks.

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a concerned teacher
Posted by: concerned Canadian on May 23, 2006 5:46 AM   
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It is not the fault of the school systems; it is not anyone's fault per se. It is, a condtion that Americans have been tricked into through a series of calculated acts - wars, economic globalization, fear mongering through focusing the public's hearts and minds against some 'terrorist' - now a Muslim, whereas before he used to be a Commie and before that he was a Nazi or whatever. The enemy is here and has been here for a long, long time. It is the complacency within us to look closely to see that the safeguards of America, its checks and balances, have been under attack for many years now and finally it seems that the endgame is near. The question is whether American citizens will be the victims of the present regime's endgame or will they wake up to end their game??

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» Maybe it is... Posted by: fool-on-the-hill
» RE: Maybe it is... Posted by: lissajayne
» RE: a concerned teacher Posted by: mclare
"Terrorism vs. Privacy"
Posted by: KeepsonTickn on May 23, 2006 6:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Those who argue for more lattitude in wiretapping use the graphic symbols of terrorism to bolster thier argument - 9/11, Zarcawi, suicide bombers, beheadings. On the other side we have the nebulous terms, "privacy" and "rights". No wonder people cannot see where the greater danger lies.

Phone records allow those with access to find out who we call, but through cellphone records they can also track our every move. What privacy advocates must do to win the case is to develop scenarios that will result when this information is abused.

What happens when someone with intimate knowledge of my behavior takes a sinister interest in me? What can they do to me when they know exactly whom I've spoken with, where I've been, whom I've seen, and where, and when? How long will purely internal and unmonitored protections last?

Describe what can happen to ordinary people, and you will win converts. If you can't tell a story that illustrates the danger, then to most people it doesn't exist.

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you got it
Posted by: joncehart on May 23, 2006 7:17 AM   
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Annalee,
You''re right on. The crucial factor in all the many things that are wrong is the (our) inability to think (discuss, negotiate, be affected by horrors large and small, care). Power at the bottom can correct and even shape power at the top and in between, but only if the bottom empowers itself. A bottom-up laser beam. From chaos to coherence. Being ill-informed, reason-flabby, morally insensible, and disorganized disempowers radically.

michael@ganas

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if you don't have anything to hide
Posted by: repo on May 23, 2006 7:22 AM   
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then why should you mind if anyone is listening to your phone calls?

............just kidding.

anyone know where i can get an anonymous cell phone with no id required

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Why would we destroy our own irrational beliefs?
Posted by: lamar on May 23, 2006 7:23 AM   
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We're prepared for this from the day we utter our first word. We're taught that Santa gives us presents, a fairy gives us money for teeth, a rabbit hides eggs, etc. Then when we "grow up" we're told that Jesus rose from the dead, Lot's wife turned to salt, and virgins await martyrs in paradise. Is it any wonder that we'll fudge a few facts or believe in something vague, for the purpose of continuing to believe what we want to believe? We are a religious country, and religion and reason don't mix. So quit all your logic talk and making sense. It doesn't square with the kreator.

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Wrong question
Posted by: jesme on May 23, 2006 7:37 AM   
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As one who thinks the NSA program makes sense, I think you can understand the public's relative indifference easily enough. To do so, just modify the question slightly, and ask this: Why has virtually no one in the US Congress demanded an end to these activities? Think about that one, and I suspect it'll all become clear to you.

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» RE: Wrong question Posted by: lamar
» RE: Wrong question Posted by: jesme
» RE: Wrong question Posted by: donmac
» RE: Wrong question Posted by: Techubus
» RE: Wrong question Posted by: jesme
» RE: Wrong question Posted by: donmac
» RE: Wrong question Posted by: lamar
» RE: Wrong question Posted by: jesme
» RE: Wrong question Posted by: donmac
MORE THAN A FEW AMERICANS DO MIND
Posted by: VZEQICVA on May 23, 2006 7:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well, maybe more than a few. Americans have become indifferent & apathetic. It's tragic. They know nothing about Iraq. The steady diet of corruption and incompetent government is just more noise (news). I am anti-war. But a Military draft makes people pay attention. They have a vested interest. If young people were looking at 2 yrs. service after high school, their parents would be very well informed. Thank you, ANNA

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Congressmen doing nothing? The same ones who voted to go to Vietraq?
Posted by: lamar on May 23, 2006 9:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No one, not even you, actually knows what's going on. All we know is that the President has allowed an illegal spying program, and that the same congresspeople who voted to go to Vietraq are doing the same thing now as then: playing both sides, looking for political gain. Perhaps you could point to some evidence showing that this program has had any effect on terrorism whatsoever? When that fails, perhaps you could ponder the likelihood that such a powerful tool could be used for, gasp, political purposes a la Nixon.

What about this program do you agree with? Let's start with the basics, what part of this program do you know anything about?

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Actually, I wish I didn't know anything about NSA spying...
Posted by: jesme on May 23, 2006 9:52 AM   
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Just as I'm glad the average man on the street didn't know about the Manhattan Project until the sky lit up over Hiroshima, or that he didn't know we were reading the German and Japanese codes until years after the war was over. To win a war, you must engage in a host of covert intel operations. I expect my leaders to conduct those operations in absolute secrecy. If this cannot be done, it's hard to see how any war can be won.

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Why so few Americans care....?
Posted by: CJC on May 23, 2006 11:04 AM   
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Jesme's several posts reveal the lack of critical thinking that Newitz is writing about.

1. The secret domestic spying is wrong because it's illegal. There's nothing in Article II of the Constitution that says the executive can override the laws in time of war. (Hayden didn't know what he was talking about!)
Article II, Section 2.
"The President shall be commander in chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the militia of the several states, when called into the actual service of the United States;" (The rest of section 2 is about other executive responsibilities.)
Attorney General Gonzales is also wrong on matters of law.

2. The domestic spying is wrong because it gives the executive the power to harass and blackmail citizens - eg journalists.

3. The President et al have not offered a SHRED of evidence that the spying has made us safer - not even hinted that nudge nudge they foiled plots or found terrorists but of course that information has to remain secret.

Review the history of Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia for what happens when governments spy on their citizens and control the news.
Read Sinclair Lewis "It Can't Happen Here."

Jesme and other complacent and frightened citizens will benefit from the skepticism and outrage of those of us who insist on the rule of law and don't trust any Big Daddy to take care of us.

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» I'm a troll? Posted by: jesme
» RE: I'm a troll? Posted by: Techubus
» Begging the question Posted by: LeeAnnG
» RE: I'm a troll? Posted by: catfish
» RE: I'm a troll? Posted by: donmac
» RE: I'm a troll? Posted by: jesme
Dont be brainwashed by the media
Posted by: Jeffersonista on May 23, 2006 12:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I stopped paying any attention to polls reported in the press or TV back during the Vietnam War when according to them nobody gave a rats ass about Vietnam. I knew different, I knew my friends felt differently. You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows. If you had been awake in the last two weeks you might be commenting on the massive media barrage immediately following the breaking of this story, that consisted of absolutely nothing but BUSH and his solution for the border 'problem'. The talking heads had thier scripts and none of those scripts had the word NSA or spying in them. You are so gullible.

As your contrition, write 5 articles with in depth research on just how prevalent this spying is and the legality or criminality of it.

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Passivity Kills
Posted by: hotlipsin61 on May 23, 2006 3:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'd like to know why those 41 percent said they agreed with the government monitoring our phone calls. Oh, yes, they must be employees of Verizon, AT&T, and Bell South.
We have become a nation of sheep when we don't make a stand. We will fight back.

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Why so few people care
Posted by: willymack on May 23, 2006 4:16 PM   
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Goddamit, I care!

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liberal plan to secure US?
Posted by: jonwilson on May 23, 2006 8:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why do so few American citizens care that our own government is spying on us?

Well I don't know sweetie. But I do know that not even the Democrats (ones who can actially do something, not the loosers like Kuciniche) are not calling for the government to stop spying on terrorists.


I am still waiting for the liberal left plan to secure the US.

I think it is called the 'hug a terrorist' plan, but I haven't seen anything in writing yet.

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TV causes both apathy and fuzzy thinking.
Posted by: TerryS on May 23, 2006 11:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
TV causes both apathy and fuzzy thinking.

For anyone wondering why democracy is floundering,
it's because of citizens spending most of their
free time in front of the tube.

Apathy:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?
cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=1256942&dopt=Abstract

http://www.prospect.org/print/V7/24/putnam-r.html

Fuzzy Thinking:

http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2004-04-05-tv-
bottomstrip_x.htm

http://www.otago.ac.nz/news/news/2005/05-07-
05_press_release.html

http://www.limitv.org/stats.htm

For more on how TV is destroying democracy visit:

http://www.tvsmarter.com/documents/democracy.html

http://www.trashyourtv.com/node

http://www.whitedot.org

http://www.turnoffyourtv.com/

http://www.tvturnoff.org/

Remember TV = Soma

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» RE: TV causes fuzzy thinking. Posted by: Dennis_Menace
I have some theories on the subject...
Posted by: tanstaafl28 on May 24, 2006 2:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I suspect some people so desperately want to believe their government is trustworthy, (despite insurmountable evidence to the contrary). Perhaps maintaining the status quo is preferable to taking responsibility for themselves.

Others are so busy trying to earn a decent living and feed their kids that they cannot afford an opinion.

Still others have confused their feelings of nationalism for patriotism, and believe it is their duty to support our government, whether right or wrong. These folks appear unaware that a truly free democratic-republic is defined by its people, not its government.

Others are simply dumb sh*ts.

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Excellent article!
Posted by: hagwind on May 24, 2006 4:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You are so right: the ability to construct a coherent argument is crucial, in part because it implies the ability to recognize and dismantle an incoherent argument. Much of the irrational persuasion in our lives doesn't come from government, or our parents, or religion. It comes from advertising. Advertisers just want to persuade or manipulate into buying their clients' stuff. If the lifelong, continuous barrage of bogus information teaches us chronic gullibility or its flip side, knee-jerk cynicism -- well, to quote a songmeister of my youth, "That's not my department, says Werner von Braun."

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Cause People Are Idiots, That's Why
Posted by: outtolunch on May 24, 2006 10:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In defense of domestic spying, Bush or someone from his administration would often say, "If you're not doing anything wrong, then you have nothing to worry about." And the sad thing is that most Americans bought into this line of thinking. But it proves two things about such people. One, they're idiots for actually taking the government at its word. How anyone can continue to trust what this administration says is beyond me. Two, they don't deserve the freedoms they take for granted. I wish we could take all the people who are OK with the domestic spying and publish everything about them. All their phone calls, emails, regular mail, etc. After all, if they haven't done anything wrong, then they have nothing to hide. And if they trust their government to be responsible with this information, surely they can trust their fellow Americans.

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I have plenty to hide
Posted by: Burton on May 25, 2006 6:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The usual rationale for allowng the government to spy on you is that "I have nothing to hide."

But consider what has been illegal in this country: inter-racial sex; oral sex; abortion; alcoholic drinks; birth control; sex work. Would you like to have had the government monitoring phone calls during the segregation era?

Look at the ongoing demented war on drugs. Ever smoke a joint? Heck, you can not even smoke a ciagareet in some parts of the country today!

Point is, people break the law every day -- so you do have plenty to hide. And if not -- are you planning to post your income taxes online?

Since when did the government become a judge of right and wrong?

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Let's watch the watchers
Posted by: Burton on May 25, 2006 6:58 AM   
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In defense of domestic spying, Bush or someone from his administration would often say, "If you're not doing anything wrong, then you have nothing to worry about."

Then I guess "W" will have no problem if we stick a videocamera in his bedroom? And in the bedrooms of all politicians, police chiefs, and bureacracy chiefs? Wouldn't this make great reality TV: "The W and Laura Show"?

Bush couldn't complain, unless he has something to hide!

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Education? - at School??
Posted by: Dennis_Menace on Jun 1, 2006 7:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just discovered your column. Good job, Annalee.

The bigger question is why is it an accepted 'fact' that all the best learning takes place at a school? Most people end up there because they just don't have a better idea, or had no motivation to think up a better idea. So you were grading papers written by people who 'just ended up' in your class.

I have had a discussion with many church ministers - when did it become accepted that the way to get closer to God (and be a good minister) is to read more books about 'him/her/it'? In what sense is this learning?

People don't develop skills unless they are motivated to develop them. Why don't people question government? They have been 'educated' at school/factories to sit down, shut up and do what you are told. We know what is best - so just trust us, and quit acting 'different'.
Questioning, reasoning, arguing are discouraged activities from day one at 'school'. So it should come as no surprise that folks in college freshman English don't have these skills.

People who think, question and argue don't make good football players or soldiers or church members.

But they make great journalists.
Keep up the good work.

Dennis_Menace

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