pkt77242
IPA Man
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Yes, someone in intelligence will have a better idea of the methods being utilized and the threats we face than a layman. But such a person's opinion on whether the liberty (4th amendment/ privacy) we're sacrificing to achieve a certain level of security means f*ck all compared to yours or mine. A constitutional lawyer is the only one who could claim to be an expert on that subject, and even then, everyone is entitled to an opinion on how to best make that compromise.
And it's not like we're even at a point where we could choose to take the spooks at their word, because there's been no word. The methods, the threats... everything is classified. So we're being asked to blindly accept that shredding the 4th amendment is worth it in this case.
But from what little we know already, serious skepticism is warranted. Keith Alexander testified before Congress that ~20 terrorist plots have been foiled with the help of intelligence from this dragnet, but not a single one wouldn't have been solved but for the intelligence. Every one was foiled primarily by traditional police work.
This is an oversimplification. The "radicals" are an extremely diverse group of people. To state that they all hate American equally and for the same reasons, so we should continue indiscriminately bombing their communities with killer flying robots, is absurd.
I would say that the Supreme Court will be the final determiner of whether it is allowable or not. Though I will say that if we are talking about the metadata, then the FISA court or FISC allowed it (which in this case is the relevant authority for the government to go to for permission, and yes I do know that the FISA court is pretty much a rubber stamp for the government). Maybe what we need to do is fix the FISA court?