The Surveillance State Threatens Our Entire Way Of Life
Peggy Noonan writes in the WSJ:
What is privacy? Why should we want to hold onto it? Why is it important, necessary, precious?Is it just some prissy relic of the pretechnological past?
We talk about this now because of Edward Snowden, the National Security Agency revelations, and new fears that we are operating, all of us, within what has become or is becoming a massive surveillance state.
...Privacy is connected to personhood. It has to do with intimate things--the innards of your head and heart, the workings of your mind--and the boundary between those things and the world outside.
A loss of the expectation of privacy in communications is a loss of something personal and intimate, and it will have broader implications. That is the view of Nat Hentoff, the great journalist and civil libertarian. He is 88 now and on fire on the issue of privacy. "The media has awakened," he told me. "Congress has awakened, to some extent." Both are beginning to realize "that there are particular constitutional liberty rights that [Americans] have that distinguish them from all other people, and one of them is privacy."
Mr. Hentoff sees excessive government surveillance as violative of the Fourth Amendment, which protects "the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures" and requires that warrants be issued only "upon probable cause . . . particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
But Mr. Hentoff sees the surveillance state as a threat to free speech, too. About a year ago he went up to Harvard to speak to a class. He asked, he recalled: "How many of you realize the connection between what's happening with the Fourth Amendment with the First Amendment?" He told the students that if citizens don't have basic privacies--firm protections against the search and seizure of your private communications, for instance--they will be left feeling "threatened." This will make citizens increasingly concerned "about what they say, and they do, and they think." It will have the effect of constricting freedom of expression. Americans will become careful about what they say that can be misunderstood or misinterpreted, and then too careful about what they say that can be understood. The inevitable end of surveillance is self-censorship.
All of a sudden, the room became quiet. "These were bright kids, interested, concerned, but they hadn't made an obvious connection about who we are as a people." We are "free citizens in a self-governing republic."







Well said. I've made it a rule for a while now that I do not post anything even remotely political, anywhere, under my real name. I believe a lot of the self-censorship is already happening. We've speculated here over the last few weeks why opinion polls seem to show that so many people are OK with the surveillence state. Well, in a surveillence state where the government (possibly) has access to your opinion poll responses, what else are you going to say? Especially when it's coupled with a legal regime in which it's impossible to go about your daily life without breaking a law somewhere.
Cousin Dave at August 16, 2013 5:16 AM
...and yet, securing the border would offend a group.
Stinky the Clown at August 16, 2013 6:47 AM
There is a fundamental quality to surveillance that many miss.
It allows authority to determine your associations.
You may continue to associate freely, to exercise individual rights in concert, until that authority decides otherwise.
Gun owner? Authorities will knock first when you have them. Then, they won't have to knock first.
This has been demonstrated in American cities and homes.
No one has ever thought this would happen to them, but it does, because the goal of authority is power, not your freedom or liberty.
Have you noticed something about "free speech" - other than the hypocrisy of some groups who wouldn't exist save for that treasure, which now oppose it for others? Why, some people think something has actually been done merely because they run their mouths. History is lost on them. America wasn't founded by talk.
Radwaste at August 16, 2013 7:10 AM
2,776 NSA privacy violations.
From the NSA's own documents, leaked by the American hero Snowden.
Gog_Magog_Carpet_Reclaimers at August 16, 2013 8:43 AM
I don't put much faith in the objectivity of Peggy Noonan. After her really perverse commentary about the Terri Schaivo debacle, her blantant lies about the memorial to Paul Wellstone, I'm genuinely perplexed that she has an audience at all.
Patrick at August 16, 2013 12:42 PM
@Patrick - Peggy Noonan's reliable. Nat Hentoff's a communist creep. Since when does putting faith in anyone matter to distracted Americans?
Andre Friedmann at August 17, 2013 6:04 AM
"Peggy Noonan's reliable."
Not even close.
No idea who the other person is.
Patrick at August 17, 2013 9:54 AM
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