• Home
  • Life
    • Life in Europe
    • Narcissistic Personality Disorder
    • From Social Media
  • Politics
    • Mueller Report Facts
  • Video
    • Audio
  • Tech
Menu
  • Home
  • Life
    • Life in Europe
    • Narcissistic Personality Disorder
    • From Social Media
  • Politics
    • Mueller Report Facts
  • Video
    • Audio
  • Tech
Search
Close
Ro Saiciton

Ro Saiciton

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on pinterest
Ro Saiciton

Ro Saiciton

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on pinterest
  • October 31, 2019

Snowden, the other side of the coin

A few days back, one of my colleagues wrote about Edward Snowden’s appearance on the JRE. In his post, he talked about how freely Snowden was able to communicate his motivation for the actions he took in 2013. In another post, he wrote about the various changes that have taken place in the internet space since those revelations. In both cases, the posts have been from the perspective, or at least with the assumption, that in an aggregate, those revelations were positive.

I think it is important to listen to the other side. Not as a means to cancel each other, but as a means to better understand the circumstances and to be better prepared for such dichotomies in the future.

To get that perspective, I listened to an episode of “Making Sense” by Sam Harris (below). In the episode, Harris spoke with ex-NSA and ex-CIA director, General Michael V. Hayden. General Hayden was promoting one of his books.

During the interview, one of the points of discussion are the Snowden revelations, which occurred about 8 years after Hayden left the agency (1999-2005). However, one of the programs Gen. Hayden implemented was the collection of domestic communications meta-data. The General speaks about this program in the interview and makes it appear as inconsequential. Even though we know that by collecting these records, the government was able to create a database which could give them the general whereabouts and routines of its citizens, which by violated their privacy.

On the other hand, Hayden notes that while the program in question may have been something worth bringing to the public’s attention, the rest of the revelations had little to do with public safety and more to do with disclosing top secret means of interception.

What do you think? Does the General make enough of an argument?

Photo By: Ivars Krutainis

More to explorer

Doug Dlod

The two party system in the US is such a mirage

In the US, we have this idea there are two political parties. There are the democrats and republicans, liberal and

Read More »
February 26, 2020
Mario Aigoloncet

MotoGP Pre-Season update

MotoGP is set to begin the 2020 season in Qatar in 2 weeks. So far, the first pre-season test of

Read More »
February 22, 2020
Wen Ruoy

What is the most widely used drug in the world?

It is not cocaine, or marijuana, oxycodone or even nicotine. It is caffeine. Yes, that venerable cup of “joe” most

Read More »
February 21, 2020

Designed by alonsos.co