| the government's paranoia a fear of alleged domestic and foreign threats to our safety, well-being, way of life, etc. Ostensibly. In real life these powers have been used for all sorts of activities outside this sort of apparently existential threat - for example spying on lawyers in civil rights cases. It's not clear they are useful against well-organised terror, that terror is actually the existential threat you seem to think it is, or that any usefulness outweighs their dramatic effect on our civil society. Your fear of the extremely unlikely event of you being killed in a terror attack is being used to blind you to the other consequences of surveillance. while the people's paranoia is that the NSA knows what I ate for breakfast. False. The people's paranoia is that these powers will be used to spy on innocents who are rightly or wrongly suspected of any sort of wrongdoing, collect their communications with their politicians, lawyers, and accountants, and undermine the very democracy and open society spy agencies claim to be defending. http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/06/intelligence-ag... You don't have a choice about this, it's already happening, with or without your consent, because our spy agencies are determined to dominate every aspect of your digital life. |