Nick Gillespie | May 12, 2006
Update: For an earlier and more extensive discussion of this very poll, go to Dave Weigel's post here.
According to a new Wash Post/ABC News poll, about two-thirds of Americans agree that it "is more important right now...for the federal government to investigate possible terrorist threats, even if that intrudes on personal privacy"... than for the goverment "for the federal government not to intrude on personal privacy, even if that limits its ability to investigate possible terrorist threats."
The good news: Back in June 2002, almost 80 percent of Americans felt that way. So the percentage is receding as time goes on.
The bad news: Sixty-three percent don't have a problem with the NSA phone surveillance program. And 66 percent wouldn't be bothered to learn that the NSA has recorded their calls. Because, of course, as with all other goverment programs, this one will stay narrowly focused on its stated goal and not expand in other ways and directions (such as, say, to drug interdiction, because we know terrorism is really a front for drug trafficking, right?).
Poll results here.
And let's not automatically buy in to the embedded equation in the first poll question listed above: that somehow rule-of-law procedures keep the government from being able to get the bad guys. If the Moussaoui trial should have taught us anything, it was that the FBI and other elements of the U.S. law enforcement industry had what they needed to stop the 9/11 attacks. As Jeff A. Taylor wrote, it wasn't procedural roadblocks that let the killers pull off mass murder, but something far less sexy: "Dull, common, gross incompetence is again at the heart of a deadly government cluster-hump." Read "How the FBI Let 9/11 Happen" here.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
Isn't that the basis of all government anyhow? You give up some
freedom in exchange for some safety.
It doesn't really bother me. The government's most egregious
intrustion into my personal privacy is income taxation.
Do you think the fact that over 60% of the polace use their
phones for nothing more than vacuous conversation, American Idol
voting, and a test bed for new Hoobastank ring tones might have
skewed this opinion poll?
This horse is dead, y'all. Move on.
I mean no one's even shown any love for Floyd Patterson yet. What's
up with that?
"And let's not automatically buy in to the embedded equation
in the first poll question listed above: that somehow rule-of-law
procedures keep the government from being able to get the bad guys.
If the Moussaiou trial should have taught us anything, it was that
the FBI and other elements of the U.S. law enforcement industry had
what they needed to stop the 9/11 attacks. As Jeff A. Taylor wrote,
it wasn't procedural roadblocks that let the killers pull off mass
murder, but something far less sexy: "Dull, common, gross
incompetence is again at the heart of a deadly government
cluster-hump."
Which makes Jennifer's comment from last night (regarding the 'Bin
Laden to Attack US' memo being "missed" because it was a needle in
a haystack of intelligence) all the more poignent.
It's the quality, not the quantity, of the intelligence. If the
drug runners/dealers on "The Wire" can figure out how to evade
spying on their conversations---even when the spying is focused
directly on them, unlike the NSA spying---then surely terrorist
can. It's not like it takes alot to do the whole "drive up and down
the interstate buying rechargeable non-registered cellphones at all
the convenience stores" thing. And if they're not actually
listening to the calls, then I would just love to know what the
actual chances of anything being prevented by this really are.
"Those who would sacrifice essential liberties for a little
temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Ben
Franklin.
The problem is defining "essential". I don't care if the government
has a record of me calling my mom, I do mind if they've recorded
the call without a warrant. This program hasn't done that. The
so-called "domestic" wire-tapping program hasn't done that either,
contrary to mainstream media implications...
So no, I'm not happy about this, but neither do I consider it an
"essential" liberty that I be able to order a Pizza without the
government knowing about it.
Now, on the other hand, I would rather risk dying than to give up
what I consider essential, including anything contained in the bill
of rights. I just don't see this as being one of those things.
Jeff,
Another old guy, who used to punch other people in the abdomen and
face for a living, dies of old age.
Sorry, but Patterson never did anything to garner "love" from me,
other than give me a good title run on 'Championship Boxing' on my
Sega Genesis back in the day. And, well, I guess, for that, I thank
him. Thanks, Floyd. You'll always live on in our "best fighters of
all time" video games.
Look at the way the question is worded.
44. What do you think is more important right now - (for the
federal government to investigate possible terrorist threats, even
if that intrudes on personal privacy); or (for the federal
government not to intrude on personal privacy, even if that limits
its ability to investigate possible terrorist threats)?
"Investigate possible terrorist threats" is not an equivalent
phrase to "listen to every phone conversation". It's possible,
although sadly unlikely, that if the question had mentioned total
phone surveillance, the numbers would have been totally
different.
With that said, god, this country is full of maroons.
Evan, it was a joke. H&R usually has the best coverage of off-center pop culture deaths.
Fred,
That's all well and good, but it also depends on the government
being altruistic. Problem is, once you give the State the power to
surveille your life, all it has to do is change the laws, and
you're suddenly a criminal. All it has to do is decide that it's
going to use its intelligence to screw over "enemies of the
state".
In other words, your decision to trade what you view as
"unessential liberties" for supposed safety, is contingent on the
state of the government right now---which I'm not convinced is
altruistic anyway, but assuming for the same of argument it
is.
Problem is, the state of the State changes rapidly and constantly,
and before you know it, since you decided to give up your
liberties, it's using that as an excuse to bust you for smoking a
joint in your own living room.
It's the old parable of the frog in the pot of water. Drop a frog
in a boiling pot of water, and it hops out because it's hot. But
put him in lukewarm water and slowly turn up the heat...he boils to
death without really noticing what's going on, because it's so slow
and incremental.
Today, it's tapping your phone calls. Tomorrow, it's installing
video cameras in your homes. And why not? Who gets to decide
whether video cameras in your living room constitutes giving up an
"essential" liberty? I'm sure that most of the same fools who
support the NSA wiretapping would also be okay with the government
installing video cameras in their house---after all, it's in the
interest of national security!
These liberties which you consider inessential are certainly
essential to someone, and you never miss them until they're
gone---a la Phil K. Dick's Minority Report.
The deal is that you get a graph, and if you find one bad guy
somehow, you get a whole net of other bad guys to check out, and
from them, others, until after a few links you're down to
hairdressers and barber shops, and have then wiped out the whole
cell.
That sounds like a good idea, but the hazard is that you could use
it also on bookies, houses of ill repute, or anything else.
So my proposal is let it drag through the courts until the need for
it disappears, and then find it illegal.
" I would rather risk dying than to give up what I consider
essential, including anything contained in the bill of rights.
"
Um, Fred? Most people still recognize the Fourth Amendment to the
Constitution as being in the Bill of Rights.
I guess I really ought to amend my previous assertion. Cross out "most" and replace it with "a few."
I have my due process rights and my right to be free from
unreasonable searches and seizures violated every damn time I get
on a plane. I'm pretty sure almost nobody cares about good ol' #4
anymore.
Also, the illiterate TSA screeners don't like it when you call them
"petty tyrants" and ask if they'll stop violating your
substantiative due process rights for a minute so you can pick up
your cellphone.
Fred, I love the Ben Franklin quote you used. You yourself
deserve neither liberty or safety. It's the public's complacency,
lack of indignation, lack of rage, that make it possible for the
government to slowly strip away our privacy.
"So no, I'm not happy about this, but neither do I consider it an
"essential" liberty that I be able to order a Pizza without the
government knowing about it."
I DO consider it an essential liberty that i be able to order a
pizza without the government knowing about it. I can't even begin
to explain how strongly I feel about this. IT'S NONE OF THEIR
FUCKING BUSINESS!
Freedom is largely illusory, any way. Power is the thing. Nick has managed to be a big fish in an exccedingly small pond. Don't be fooled by his prating on about freedom. It's part of his gig. Your part, faithful psoters, is to keep the faith.
To my nay-sayers,
I understand the points you make. I'm not thrilled that they're
doing this, and I think it's a giant waste of time and resources
anyway. The question is wether ordering a Pizza without the
government knowing about it is an essential liberty.
And I know about the "frog" story, I call it "creepism" or
"incrementalism", and I see it all the time (especially, for
example, against the second amendment) - and yes, it bothers
me.
However: The right of the people to be secure in their persons,
houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and
seizures, shall not be violated...
Does the government having these records: make you insecure in your
personal being? Your house? Your papers? Your effects?
Perhaps it's time we had an amendment that clarifies what "papers
and effects" means, the same way we need an amendment that
clarrifies that "public use" actually means, you know, public
USE.
What I'm saying isn't that it's not a bad thing, it's that no
essential liberties are being lost. Moreover, there is no security
being gained, either.
Now, if they were recording my calls, I'd be with you on this one.
The content of my communications are as good as "papers", which is
partly how I read the 4th. But the fact that I made the call was
never "private", as it involved at least one third party
anyway.
Evan wrote: Today, it's tapping your phone calls. Tomorrow,
it's installing video cameras in your homes. And why not? Who gets
to decide whether video cameras in your living room constitutes
giving up an "essential" liberty? I'm sure that most of the same
fools who support the NSA wiretapping would also be okay with the
government installing video cameras in their house---after all,
it's in the interest of national security!
The 4th amendment specifically protects you in your house... that's
the difference. Being secure in your home is a guaranteed right,
unlike freedom from someone knowing you made a phone call to
someone else.
The Washington Post poll - what gives? 502 respondents! That is not even close to statistically significant. A poll with this sample size doesn't deserve a headline - it doesn't even deserve to be published. Yet, I haven't read any serious criticism of it. So what's the story? Is this just old-fashioned sensationalism meant to attract readers - coming at the expense of what should be a serious public debate - or is the Post taking sides? Please tell me why anyone is taking this garbage poll seriously.
The stupid reality of the situation is that the NSA won't be
able to do anything useful with all that info. The intelligence
agencies in this country have been unable to do much of anything
against terrorists with sweeping information searches: all of their
reputed victories (stopping a plot against the LA Library Tower
coming from The Philippines, the Lodi Pakistani, the black
militants in LA, the training camps in upstate NY and in OR) all
came from human intelligence.
All these mega-searches do allow them to proceed with buisiness as
usual and continue using Cold War techniques of communication
interception, satelite intelligence, and technological superiority
to inflate budgets, justify promotions, and ensure their
indisposability. Oh, and tread on the Bill of Rights. Let's not
forget that people in power are there because they like to enforce
the rules but not follow them.
What's particularly irksome is how legalistic the defenses of
these practices have been. At no point has there been an
acknowledgment that such activities are bad public policy and set a
bad precedent, even if they can be folded and mutilated into some
sort of "legal" formulation. Honestly, if we made an effort to
comply with all of the Constitutional protections, would we
really be at any greater risk? Even if we were, what the
heck is all the talk about protecting our freedoms about,
anyway?
This holds true for these crazy assertions of national security
that are used to block suits against the government. Now, let me
just guess that the government will always attempt to
restrict access to such information when it's facing liability
and/or embarrassment. If the courts can't hold the executive branch
accountable, exactly who can? I can't until my army of
flying robots is complete :)
The question itself is biased. This wasn't a matter of investigating terrorist threats. If they had presented this as being what it is, the government making records that they knew had nothing to do with terrorism, the numbers would have been much lower.
Following the Bush administration's logic on this, would there
be any legal resource if Bush had used these records to trace, say,
Joe Wilson's phone records, and then leak any embarassing
contacts?
Is there any legal recourse he would have if Bush tapped and
recorded the content, and secretly leaking anything
embarassing?
As far as I can tell, if Bush claims it is in the national security
interest, they believe he has the inherent power to do pretty much
anything. Is that not there assertion?
Why can't you just trust your god-fearing president? America is one nation under God. It even says so on out money. If we're obedient to the will of God and don't let homosexuals marry or take guns out of the hands of law-abiding Americans, all will be well with us. Right now we're threatened by the non-Christians who run Hollywood more than by Al-Qaeda. Muslims want to destroy our bodies, but some other non-Christians want to enslave our souls. They own the banks and control international finance. They may even have got us to attack Iraq.
Jeb,
Will you be our next President?
Are you aware changing one letter in your name could be your ball
and chain?
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245