Foundation
for Better Government
(www.bettergovt.blogspot.com)
January 12, 2014
Security v/s Liberty
By T.S. Khanna, January 12, 2014.
Advanced
technology has forced a seismic shift in opposing political ideologies:
dictatorial governments will have to be less dictatorial for the sake of
stability and democratic governments, less democratic for the sake of security.
Americans have
come to regard liberty and privacy as their birthright. But now security demands are compelling for a
compromise.
Good citizens
would welcome surveillance for preventive action to assure security. However, they have a “bureaucracy phobia”:
tempering and abuse of surveillance records by the National Security Agency (NSA)
bureaucracy.
Bureaucracies are
immortal and ever expanding and bureaucrats work with a singular purpose of
expanding their power and income. Quiet
power of a bureaucrat can be aphrodisiac.
Bureaucrats with coercive power and discretion are perceived as
terrorists themselves. Hackers are equally dangerous.
Circumstances
demand that emphasis should not be on curtailing the necessary surveillance
programs but on adopting the foolproof measures assuring that the records would
be accurate, unalterable and there could be no possibility of abuse.
Some Newspapers
have been supportive of Snowden, once a trusted worker at NSA, for not
violating any written laws. They ignore
the fact that every citizen has an unwritten moral obligation of protecting the
national interests. This obligation is
rooted in the conscience of every good citizen. NSA Director
believes that America is more vulnerable after Snowden’s disclosures.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home