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Who Watches The Watchmen: How The NSA Gets Around Oversight

Who Watches The Watchmen: How The NSA Gets Around Oversight
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Whistle-blowers like

Bill Binny, Thomas Drake, and Edward Snowden, along with wrongly accused U.S. citizens, have been fighting for their rights. Not from terrorists, but from the U.S. government.

While they fight, many Americans have become complacent with their diminished rights and lack of privacy.

The Patriot Act passed 6 weeks after 9/11 in a climate of fear and imminent threat. It diminished freedom in the U.S., providing the government sweeping powers to spy on, arrest, and detain individuals. The original legislation provided little oversight. Since 2001, there has been a major struggle between protecting constitutional rights and increasing government powers to battle imminent terror.

Through legislation and executive orders, at least 12 actors provide oversight for the NSA program:

There are a few confounding things to consider about the extent of NSA oversight, and the breech of Fourth Amendment rights: loopholes in federal law that escape oversight, moral congruity and procedural justice within the NSA and the country, and the apparent conflicting mission of the NSA to violate, but also ensure, constitutional rights.

Loopholes in Federal Law

Oversight Reports

Moral Congruity and Procedural Justice

The Conflicting Mission of the NSA

The Freedom Act is the latest legislation passed to sure up constitutional freedoms, and is lauded by the ACLU, though they have reservations still about legal loopholes. At the same time, the government is pushing Google, Facebook, Hotmail, and Yahoo to bend cyber security to government’s spying structure. Again, warning of imminent threats after the terrorist attacks in Europe, if the government does not have invasive powers.

No amount of oversight can protect US Americans from a system, and mounting legislation, that allows breeches in constitutional protections.

In 2013, a federal judge ruled against NSA surveillance for the first time, saying:

“I cannot imagine a more ‘indiscriminate’ and ‘arbitrary invasion’ than this systematic and high-tech collection and retention of personal data on virtually every single citizen. Surely, such a program infringes on ‘that degree of privacy’ that the Founders enshrined in the Fourth Amendment.”

In contrast, FBI Director James Corney commented on 60 Minutes in October 2014:

"As a country, I don't know why we would want to put people beyond the law. That is, sell cars with trunks that couldn't ever be opened by law enforcement with a court order, or sell an apartment that could never be entered even by law enforcement." The U.S. has a constitution for that. The people are in a fight for their rights, and it's a barn-burner.

Photo Credit: Rena Schild / Shutterstock.com

Kathryn Bullington

Kathryn is a freelance writer covering politics, civics, and agriculture.

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