Domestic Surveillance Pros And Cons

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Domestic surveillance under the Federal Government is not new to Americans, as there have been several agencies and acts passed by Congress used to monitor Americans. In 1919, “the United States Department of State quietly approved the creation of the Cipher Bureau, also known as the ‘Black Chamber.’ The Black Chamber is a precursor to the modern-day National Security Agency and it was the United States’ first peacetime federal intelligence agency” (Debenedetti). In 1952, President Truman created the National Security Agency, known as the NSA, which permitted the Defense Department to consolidate surveillance activities after World War II (Timeline of NSA Domestic Spying). In 1978, “Congress passed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, …show more content…

The NSA is a dangerous agency that infringes on our right to privacy and hinders “The American Dream”, and unnecessarily stores private information of innocent Americans for years. “The NSA program reaches into homes and businesses across the nation by amassing information about the calls of ordinary Americans — most of whom aren't suspected of any crime (Cauley). The NSA’s invasiveness has proved that the agency is warrantless and taps American’s phones and emails on a massive scale. Although the NSA argues that their goal is to defer terrorist activity and only use calling patterns to detect threats, they are hurting Americans by violating their right to privacy through the Fourth Amendment. In response to these accusations, the Supreme Court in the case of US v. US District Court of 1973 unanimously ruled that domestic intelligence surveillance is permitted only with a warrant in order to comply with the Fourth Amendment (Timeline of NSA Domestic Spying). Despite this ruling, the …show more content…

Many would argue that giving Americans too much privacy and freedom potentially could lead to another terrorist attack. The point of agencies like the NSA and the FISA are to monitor traces of acts of terrorism against the United States and use that information to prevent these acts, which would endanger public safety. President Obama stated in a speech that, “throughout American history, intelligence has helped secure our country and our freedoms” (Obama). Domestic surveillance has been used to expose criminals in cases such as shoplifting and robberies, but it hasn’t been as successful on a larger scale. According to Justin Elliott and Theodoric Meyer, the Federal Government has thwarted only 54 attacks, with a mere 13 being in the United States. This proves that the actions of the Federal Government and its intelligence agencies aren’t as effective as they advertise to Americans. With agencies that are over 60 years old, the rate at which they have thwarted attacks should be substantially higher. The reoccurrence of mass shootings in our country, for example, could be prevented if the government focused on real threats and utilized their agencies to monitor potential threats rather than waste money, resources, and time on innocent civilians. Regardless of their lack of success and the outrage expressed towards the NSA’s

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