Argumentative Essay: Mass Surveillance

1676 Words4 Pages

Tania Mulherkar Volpe- Debate September 27, 2014 As Jodi Rell once stated, “At the end of the day, the goals are simple: safety and security.” Keeping this quote in mind for all citizens of all countries, our collective, main goals in life follow somewhere along the lines of staying well and leading healthy lifestyles. Although goals like this seem effortless to achieve, in a current society like todays, they are quite the challenge to accomplish. Today, there are dangerous threats and possible actions from terroristic groups to be concerned about, the usual crimes committed for either amusement or necessity to be aware of and prevent, bullying situations to put an end to, and a multitude of lives lost to suicide to later on marvel about. Now, this raises the question: How are all of these situations easily preventable, considering the amount of money, time, and thought invested into thwarting them? The government’s current method of regulating terroristic attacks, crime and punishment, intense bullying situations, and suicide cases is through mass surveillance. What is mass surveillance exactly defined as? Mass surveillance is the way government groups such as the National Security …show more content…

For example, Huffington Post shares with us that the NSA helped foil a terrorist plot to bomb the New York Subway in 2009, otherwise known as the “Zazi plot.” This plan was thwarted by the collection of emails off of foreign suspects. Another terrorist plan that was halted was that of the New York Subway Station, as shown to us by Money News; in this case, the NSA provided the FBI with monitored information off of a known extremist in Yemen in order to perform the task of halting the expedition. This very same article shares that the NSA has contributed to stopping around fifty terrorist attacks internationally, twenty percent of which were domestic to the

Open Document