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by hackerlight
881 days ago
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So this is a change in topic, from "will surveillance help them catch more criminals", to "is surveillance a bad thing". Basically, your view is that surveillance is bad because it can be abused by an authoritarian and eventually lead to the erosion of liberal democracy and individual freedoms. Which has validity. What about terrorism, though? If we completely eliminated the surveillance apparatus, how many more terrorist attacks would there be, and what would the consequences of that be on the survival of liberal democracy? I ask these questions in earnest. Maybe the answer is "not many terrorist attacks would have been prevented". But then I read these news articles of multiple terrorist plotters being arrested before committing the act. What percentage of those arrests are attributable to the surveillance apparatus? And if that apparatus was removed, and these people successfully committed those acts (say, they blew up a bunch of people on NYE), what impact would this have on people's voting patterns? Well, people would be more inclined to vote for a strongman authoritarian to fix the terrorism issue, which then creates the very problem that you are concerned about with the surveillance state in the first place. Which is the erosion of liberalism and democracy and freedoms. The AfD will get elected. Forget any progress on climate change. Then we get climate refugees, leading to further destabilization. Etc. What I'm getting at is there is no solution that doesn't involve trade-offs when it comes to protecting freedoms and democracy. Maybe the answer in the modern world isn't that surveillance is always bad, it's that surveillance needs to be heavily constrained with newly designed checks and balances. |
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What about the principles the US was founded upon, though?
Will you maintain those principles even though terrorists are flying aircraft into your buildings? Or will you break and start stripping your citizens of their rights, surveilling them without warrant in a desperate bid to stop future terrorists?
The US made its choice. The price of freedom is high and paid in blood. They no longer want to pay it. The consequences will come.
> I ask these questions in earnest.
I hold that these questions are ultimately irrelevant. It seems like these terrorists won either way. America was destroyed, even if only spiritually. Principles it once stood for, stand no more.