By the time self-acclaimed whistleblower Edward Snowden blew the cover on the National Security
Agency (NSA) forever more known as ‘Spies are Us’, it was already way too late for the privacy of online online private citizens.
Privacy, like commonsense and government altruism, doesn’t live here anymore.
Before NSA, we were already big-time data-based with every nuance and details of our private lives spied upon and standby stored by Google, FaceBook and other unsavory social networks on the take.
Blowback from the Snowden-exposed NSA has über dominated the Big Brother spydom we’ve been talking about ever since. Public outrage was guaranteed mostly because the NSA is a billion dollar government agency.
Little did we know when Snowden dropped his NSA bombshell that the IRS was spying on American citizens too, especially TEA Party members that the current administration regards as “bigoted”, “bible-thumping””, “racist” dissidents.
The NSA can only throw public citizen perceived dissidents into a data base and pass on information to other government agencies, like the EPA and IRS who aim to first control, then shut down all government dissidents. Problem is the The IRS does not just data base the enemy, they first harass then gauge them right out of business.
Google, FaceBook, et al get cut a break by Internet users because they’re not government agencies, per se.
Try this on for size: Google is a de facto government agency. As soon as he was elected, savvy President Barack Obama held his very first formal business meeting with...
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