Only, he had the wrong culprit, and after seeing all the uproar over the NSA collecting phone habits, apparently so do most Americans.
So how many phone calls are made a day? I'll take a simplistic approach to this question and say that I make 20 calls a day between home, work, and my cell phone. So, we multiply my 20 phone calls by the 265 million citizens of America (I said this was simplistic...) and I will claim that on a daily basis 5,300,000,000 phone calls, that's 5.3 trillion, are made every day, in America alone. That's probably a bit of an over estimate, but let's just say it's "a lot"!
USA Today had two quotes about the NSA incident worth reading:
"Actually, the program doesn't involve monitoring the content of telephone conversations, USA TODAY reported. The NSA is expert at using computers to review vast quantities of digital data — such as phone numbers — to identify patterns of activity."
"We doubt that people in general entertain any actual expectation of privacy in the numbers they dial," Justice Harry Blackmun wrote. He noted the court had said "a person has no legitimate expectation of privacy in information he voluntarily turns over to third parties."
So, if a lot of phone calls are being made every day and all the NSA is doing is connecting the dots between phone numbers, I will make the claim that YES this is smoke and mirrors, but it is the press who is pulling the wool over our eyes by making this to be more than it really is: the government doing its job, not the President being sneaky and deceptive.
Actually, to take it one step further, I will go so far as to say that the government can collect just about any information and data on me that they want: at least they're consistently being monitored and are readily held accountable for their actions. See, what gives me the Heebie-Jeebies is when I stop and think about everyone who data-mines my life and isn't held accountable for such actions.
So there's this big hub-bub about a possible breach of privacy by the NSA knowing American's phone habits, but then these very same people turn around and swipe their Safeway card at the grocery store and give Corporate America a detailed list of what time of the month and how frequently they shop, that they're buying diapers for children and in what age groups, how much alcohol they drink, what drugs they prefer, what parts of town they frequently shop in, what coupons they use (indicating which newspapers they read), their preferences toward organic or processed foods, the magazines they read, the cigarettes they smoke, the laundry soap they use, and every single bit of this information is collected, categorized, analyzed, prioritized, and sold to other corporations every stinking day!
Wait, there's more! Then these same people who are absolutely outraged over this breach in privacy use their credit card to make that supermarket purchase and instantly tell Equifax and some bank how much money they spend. This is the very same credit reporting agency who already knows how much money they make, where they work, who they have credit with, how good their credit is, where they own property, what type of car they drive, who they're married to, what schools they went to, what alimony they pay, who they bank with, where they're insured, where they travel on vacation, how they get there, how long they were gone, and you guessed it, sell this information to other companies who judge you by their reports.
I just want to laugh and cry out loud at the same time. You'd think the worst was over, but no!
Then our happy privacy advocate is so outraged that s/he comes home and jumps on the internet...
wait for it... wait for it...
where their local ISP keeps a log of every website they visit, which email providers they prefer, (and by the way all those emails are kept indefinitely by some computer somewhere), and even their searching habits--as in which political parties they read about and which nominees they like or dislike, what kind of car they're considering buying, the social diseases they're researching, the plants they're going to garden this year, the music they like where they get it and how they pay for it, the books they read, the sports they follow, the religions they practice, the high school sweethearts they want to reunite with, the social commentary they write on Blogspot when they should be working. Do I need to mention what type of snooping your employer is doing?
People are worried about the NSA data-mining the digits they dial and they've completely ignored the fact that Corporate American can predict the next time they're going to get sick, the average time it's going to take them to recover, and how much money they're going to pay for (and which brand of) Over-the-Counter cold-remedies.
Get a clue! The government is trying to do an impossible job against overwhelming odds for people who apparently are more concerned about 1984 than they are about 2001 where HAL can recreate your entire life at the flick of a database switch.
1 comment:
What is frustrating to me is that the media made a huge deal out of this, over two-thirds of people polled DON'T CARE (although don't get me started on the whole polling thing, unbiased my foot), and who does DC listen to? The media. When are they (the media) going to learn that they (the media) are way out of touch with us (US)?
Post a Comment