By Charlie Kirk
Wednesday, March 05, 2014
After WWI the code breaking arm of the U.S. Army was
dismantled due to budgetary constraints. Prior to the Great War the United
States had little capability in the area of surveillance and code-breaking, but
beginning in 1918 it developed a quite prolific proficiency. When the Army
ended the program the civilian side of the government stepped in with sponsorship
from the State Department. Master code-breaker and otherwise bon vivant Herbert
Yardley was tasked with heading the new Cipher Bureau, a position he held until
Herbert Hoover’s Secretary of State Henry Stimson abruptly deep-sixed the
agency uttering the famous line “Gentlemen do not read other gentlemen’s mail”.
But the seeds of today’s National Security Agency (NSA),
named in 1952, had been sown and gentlemen have been having their mail read
ever since.
Enter disclosures of the PRISM surveillance program and
those from disgruntled NSA contractor, now passport-challenged, Edward Snowden
to the scene in 2013. Snowden created international news and outrage with his
revelations of the extent of NSA spying on U. S. Citizens including, but not
limited to, the collection of meta data from cell phone use and monitoring of
email activity. The disclosures, piecemealed out over time, have created a
lively debate over the balance between the need for privacy and the need for
the government to collect information to keep us safe. Millennials have been a
big part of that discussion.
It had been assumed that this particular generational
group so accustomed to having their personal information posted on the internet
through Facebook and other social media platforms would be, at the very worst,
indifferent to the monitoring of their information by the government. Inductive
reasoning is so perilous. Polling of this group actually suggests they are more
sensitive to the loss of their privacy under the auspice of security concerns
than are people over the age of 50.
In the landmark Supreme Court case Griswold v.
Connecticut argued in 1965 the Court found that there was a right to privacy
imbedded in the Constitution. That case, involving the banning of
contraceptives, left us the axiom that what happens between consenting adults
in the privacy of their bedroom is their business. Overlaying the NSA
surveillance protocols on top of the Griswold decision a young person might be
led to conclude it is ok to privately have sex, but certainly not to talk about
having sex on their iPhone.
The backlash to the NSA revelations from Millennials is
real, it is deep and it is wide. President Obama’s poll numbers have plummeted
within this group since the secrets leaked and they are not rebounding. It
seems that the generation that places everything on the internet wants only
what’s public at their discretion to become public. They have an expectation
for their privacy for anything other than that. Where could they have gotten
such a notion? See Griswold reference above.
This fear of young people regarding the government’s
blatant violation of their privacy creates a wide opening through which
conservative political figures can drive a voter-filled bus. Fox News
Contributor Britt Hume has noted that the two ideological sides, left &
right, touch each other at their extremes and that is why there was outrage
over the NSA matter from both parties. The assertion is incorrect. This isn’t
about political parties bending political light like Einstein. This is as
simple as human nature screaming at the top of its lungs “It’s none of your
business”!
Conservatives are the ones who caution the electorate at
every opportunity as to the risks associated with big government intervention
and control. It is the members of Mr. Obama’s Brain Trust that speak of all the
great things a leviathan state can accomplish and how its every move is
directed toward serving the public good and providing social justice. How can
anyone take seriously the protestations of progressives about privacy rights
when simultaneous with the NSA scandal they are instituting policies that tell
you how much health care you can have and from whom you can have it?
As the powers and capabilities of government increase,
the tools it possesses become available to more than just the well intentioned.
It is unwise to assume a powerful sword is only wielded by a benevolent state.
History conclusively tells us otherwise.
Conservatives need to use this as a clarion call to
Millennials to take a serious second-look at the advocates of smaller, less
intrusive government. If they dare, they can even send them text messages or
emails.
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