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How is that ironic? The first is a rhetorical device for claiming a threat is inflated. The second is about negative consequences of inflating the threat.



I assume rayiner's point was that, as far as we know, nobody has been killed as a result of NSA surveillance of Americans' communication. Maybe a few people have been killed, but surely it's vastly less than the number of bathtub deaths. So by the logic of this inane post, nobody should get too upset about NSA surveillance.


> nobody has been killed as a result of NSA surveillance of Americans' communication

Maybe. We don't know that. We would have to know beyond any doubt how this information is being used. I can imagine it being a tool to play foreign politics; even affects places like Iraq, Afghanistan, you know, where people do die.

> nobody has been killed as a result of NSA surveillance of Americans' communication

Maybe. But its also ironic that being US citizen and living on US soil you are supposed to be protected by the law of the land. If they vacuum everything for 10 years or so, imagine how many people could be found not guilty of robbery, homicides, drug dealing, etc, only if their attorneys would have access to their clients' NSA files. Who knows? Maybe even there is someone recently executed in this country that their NSA chart would have proven they were innocent. That may be over-stretch but you believe noone innocent is doing a lifetime right now because they couldn't prove that they have not been where prosecution claims they were (don't get me even started on "innocent until proven guilty").


The whole point of terrorism is the chilling effects that result. They create a multiplier effect that increases the impact of a relatively few number of deaths.

It's ironic to talk about chilling effects in the context of NSA surveillance while in the same breath espousing a theory of terrorism that ignores the chilling effects of terrorist acts.


I get you now. That's a fairly subtle point!

I don't know if "chilling effects" is the right phrase to use either about terrorism or surveillance, or means the same thing in the two cases. The former is about fear. The latter is about encroachment on liberty, or something like that.




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