Some are cynical about everything to do with government. Being a Democrat, I am persuaded that sometimes the government is capable of doing good things and that it acts as a check and balance upon private power. But government's security apparatus certainly has proven itself capable of excess.
The Washington Post posted an article today about how the government has been spying on Americans through the Internet. The Guardian followed up with another article explaining how pervasive the government's spying is. I can't say I was surprised, as I have detected the shadows cast by agents on numerous occasions through the years. I rather suspected that widespread spying was going on, targeting ordinary Americans for a multitude of rationales which all boil down to keeping the poor in their place and bringing more power to those who already have it. Ah, those with power always want more! Is that not an accepted fact of human nature?
Those who believe that their communications on Facebook, Google or other online services are respected as privileged and private are fools. Those who believe the government does not release viruses and spyware are also deluded. There are many undercover agents posing as ordinary people on Facebook, Amazon, Google and every other social media site. To lie is nothing to them--a mere trifle.
The rich and the powerful crapped their pants upon realizing the levelling potential of Internet technology. Now governments around the world, including the U.S., are doing everything they can to subvert the technology in order to enforce the age-old paradigm, wherein the less privileged remain so and the aristocracy hold all the cards.
Blog Archive
-
▼
2013
(330)
-
▼
June
(59)
- Bonus Post for RISK Fans!
- This Week in Awesome (6/29/13)
- What was the Civil War About?
- You Shouldn't Wish People Dead (Spoilers?)
- Victory through Nonviolence
- Dog Park Jazz Recommendations
- Retro Video Unit (6/28/13)
- Fixing a Broken Shutdown Shortcut
- Things You Don't See Every Day
- Grooming Garage: Other Blades to Try
- I Hate George R.R. Martin and Hope He Dies Before ...
- Pastel Puzzlement
- Historic Life-Changing Ruling by Supreme Court
- My Brain is Sprained
- Blogger Fails in Firefox
- Steamy Ride
- Classroom Dream
- Mad (Wo)Men 6x13: "Well, aren't you lucky to have ...
- Confessions of a Blogger
- This Week in Awesome (6/22/13)
- I Like
- Fingertip Tip
- What Bing Means to Me
- All Kinds of Fans
- An Open Approach
- Mad (Wo)Men 6x12: "My father's never given me anyt...
- The Media's Ad Hominem
- Burrito Sandwich? YES.
- This Week in Awesome (6/15/13)
- Situational Ethics
- Retro Video Unit (6/14/13)
- Government Spying
- It Ain't So
- Social Skills and Those That Lack Them
- Copying Large Numbers of Files Over a Network in L...
- A Customer Service Dialogue
- Why Game of Thrones Repels
- Working Dreams
- Wordpress Security Vs. Wordpress Search Ranking
- Mad (Wo)Men 6x11: "Maybe I'll make it worth your w...
- Dads and Non-Dads
- Flashblock 1.5.17 Eliminates Annoying Flash Autoplay
- Spying on Americans
- Carter was Ethical
- This Week in Awesome (6/8/13)
- Dreaming of My Enemy
- An Interview
- Jonesin' for Wordpress 3.6
- Our Government is on the Wrong Track
- Utility Work
- The White House and Civil Liberties
- Watch Wednesday Wrist Want (6/5/13)
- Steven Alan Eyewear Follow-Up
- Mad (Wo)Men 6x10: "I have to do it by myself."
- Another Eyewear Option
- This Week in Awesome (6/1/13)
- Blexbot Content Scraper is Really Nielsen Media Re...
- Subscribing by Email
- Bot-Net Attack? What Bot-Net Attack?
-
▼
June
(59)
Popular Posts
-
I’m really happy with the way CBS is handling The Good Wife . With maybe the exception of Friday Night Lights , I think it’s the best networ...
-
For over a year, Jessica Chastain kept her role in Zero Dark Thirty a secret. Chastain plays Maya, a CIA operative who spends years of her ...
-
A couple years ago, the question which plagued the television landscape was: Can women be funny? Now a more relevant question would be: Wher...
-
In recent years, premium cable channel Showtime has provided meatier roles for women than either Hollywood studios or network television off...
-
Vera Farmiga is one of those actresses that sneaks up on you. She was Oscar-nominated for her role in Up in the Air opposite George Clo...
-
With all of the summer tent pole movies premiering, there's been outcry from audiences (and critics) for the studios to make superhero m...
-
Canonical's decision to embrace Mir and abandon X and Wayland has consequences for Ubuntu derivatives such as Kubuntu, Xubuntu, and Linu...
-
Can you stand a few more words about shoes? Because I have them. Words. And shoes, duh. I've been lamenting this week's return to su...
-
I've been trying to be more aware of potential photo opportunities as I go about my mundane business. It has led to some interesting sho...
-
(In case you're wondering, there was no TWiA this weekend due to a lack of suitable material.) The parking lot of our local Ocean State ...