While looking for a blog article to
critique and I found this article on TexasFred.net by another
blogger, J.D. Longstreet, that TexasFred wanted to share with his
readers. The article is entitled Americans Are NEVER Alone; it goes
into the issue that we are no longer free in our country. I quickly
came to realize how the article is a bit of a dramatization on the
issue of Americans being watched by their government. The article is
more of a rant that can't be taken seriously. Granted this subject
does have some controversy and can be taken seriously but, when I
hear the extent he goes into it, I can't back this article. I know
there is the issue of the “patriot act”, even though I am not
fully aware of the details, where people are concerned about the
amount of power the government can have in their daily lives and
privacy. His first remark is that “Americans are no longer free”,
but to imply we are not free at all is an obvious exaggeration when
we are still able to make many decisions and act on our own and say
what we think and feel. To me that means that we are slaves, which he
does use in his argument, and I do not think that is at all the case.
He starts making more ridiculous comments like: we are watched and
listened to every moment of everyday; every phone call or email is
being monitored; even that facial recognition cameras watch our
movements on highways and city streets and that the government has
the ability to look at us through walls to monitor us. This is such
an unbalanced exaggeration with absolutely no proof to it. If you're
going to make statements of this sort, you need to have someway to
back it up with evidence. It's like he is taken any possible thing he
could think of or saw on a movie and accused the government of
actually making this happen to everybody...really everybody! He also
says that the government uses Back Scatter x-rays as a way to look
into cars, but this is what is used in the airports and has been
shown to be ineffective. Longstreet brings up the point that our
internet search engines pick up and keep lot of our own personal
information, which is becoming a problem, but he is attacking the
government when the fault lies with the actual Internet and the
individual companies that use this method to track spending habits
and so could end up knowing too much about their users. With this
point he veers off his course of attacking the government. Then he
goes back to how the government is putting RFID transmitters in
garments we buy so as to track the wearers. Again he gives no proof
, nor any reason why they would do so. He then starts comparing how
it used to be for his generation, when America was free, and says,
“we're just old fuddy-duddies muttering gibberish about an America
that was once the greatest on the face of the earth – precisely
because we are free!”. This isn’t realistic; the older generation
votes in record numbers and is often the reason politicians get
elected. It's called the blue vote. This whole article to me is just
a joke and a source of some entertainment. There is definitely a
logical way to talk about this issue that would make a convincing
argument and be taken seriously. One of the only statements I could
agree with is that the way we live our life effects how much we let
the government and other sources know about us. For example, we can
limit use of our GPS on our phones and the amount of information we
put on the internet for others to see. At best, the only thing this
article achieves is that I might look for a more reliable source that
gives actual facts, uses a moderate tone, and does not ONLY single
out the government, and therefore could be taken seriously.
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