In yesterday’s comments section Tip drew our attention to
Peggy Noonan’s blog post about the current debate between liberty and security.
Noonan’s post is thoughtful and incisive. It is well worth
some serious reflection.
Opening her article with an observation on the anxiety
politicians feel about terrorism, Noonan writes:
The
thing political figures fear most is a terror event that will ruin their
careers. The biggest thing they fear is that a bomb goes off and it can be
traced to something they did or didn’t do, an action they did or didn’t
support. They all fear being accused of not doing enough to keep the citizenry
safe.
Surely, this is slightly cynical. Isn’t it
possible that at least some politicians are motivated by a desire to protect
the people they are sworn to protect?
The responsibility to protect people is part of governance.
It is part of being a parent. Isn’t there more to it than the interest in
evading responsibility in case something bad happens?
Even if we accept that government should be able to do what
is necessary, within prescribed limits, to protect the populace, it is also
true, as Noonan says, that the power will inevitably be abused.
Witness, Edward Snowden.
In Noonan’s words:
So if
we have and develop a massive surveillance state, it will be abused. And that
abuse will, down the road, do damage not only to individuals but, quite
probably, to the nation’s morale, to its very vision of itself.
But it
will make us – or allow us to feel — physically safer. And it may help break
real terror networks bent on real mayhem.
As always, the choices are not clear cut.
The surveillance state missed the Tsarnaev brothers, even
after it had been told by Russian intelligence that they were dangerous. And it
missed the Fort Hood shooter, who had advertised his intentions in public.
Is it something like: be careful whom you vote for. Does the
potential for abuse increase or decrease when we have a new president? Does an
administration create an atmosphere where surveillance is more or less likely
to be abused?
Noonan also debunks the notion that Congressional oversight
can rein in the excesses and abuses that must occur.
Congress is too small and too underfunded. It is too full of
people who do not have the time and the inclination to become Darryl Issa. Thus government employees have been abusing their power and their authority, with impunity.
Noonan points out that very few of those who were committing the most egregious
breaches of trust were in any way scared of Congressional oversight.
When Noonan asks whether this state of affairs is forever,
she intimates that government, once given powers, is unlikely to give them up
without a fight. In part, this devolves from the fact that government employees organize to elect candidates
who favor their interests. But then again, most politicians are unwilling to
stand up to the bureaucracy.
It is also true that we have the surveillance state because
of the threat of Islamist terrorism. As long as this threat exists, there would be good reason for surveillance. There might be better
reason for more competent surveillance, but the need is a function of the
threat.
As of now, it doesn’t look as though Islamist terrorism is
going to end any time soon.
Unless, of course, you are sufficiently foolish to take President Obama at his word. Remember, Obama declared that the War on Terror is over, and that the
surveillance state should limit itself to finding homegrown terrorists … like
Major Hasan and the Tsarnaev brothers.
2 comments:
Barry Rubin chimes in
http://pjmedia.com/barryrubin/2013/06/10/why-expanded-government-spying-doesnt-mean-better-security-against-terrorism/#comments
"Remember, Obama declared that the War on Terror is over, and that the surveillance state should limit itself to finding homegrown terrorists … like Major Hasan and the Tsarnaev brothers."
He lied. That's NOT multi-culti!
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