eff.org: Campus Activism Against NSA Spying is Growing Fast [Oh? Not so fast]

eff.org: Campus Activism Against NSA Spying is Growing Fast by April Glaser:

EFF has been on the road, traveling to cities and towns across the country to bring our message of digital rights and reform to community and student groups.

And while we had the tremendous opportunity to talk about our work and our two lawsuits against the NSA, the best part of the trip was learning about all of the inspiring and transformative activism happening everyday on the local level to combat government surveillance and defend our digital rights.

Dreamer. History is a brutal teacher.

eff’s enthusiasm reminds me only slightly of the ’60’s, but only in that young people are getting marginally involved. Big difference: In the ’60’s, every male my age was at risk of being drafted, with the risk of going to fight an unpopular war, and 58,286 died there, 153,303 were wounded, and 1,643 are MIA. That motivates the hell out of you. In fact, a week from today is the 44th anniversary of the Kent State Shootings where Ohio National Guardsman shot into a crowd and killed four students.

Today, however, young people have grown up having already lost or willingly given away all their privacy because of cell phones, the Internet, and specifically because of Facebook and other such Internet inventions of the Prince of Darkness. If you grew up already with a mindset that nothing is private anymore, will you ever come around to appreciate the invasions of privacy we now tolerate in the name of capitalism or national security or both?

My wife, a college professor, is appalled how her students are so easily manipulated by Rand Paul on this, and if they can get motivated to do anything (they sure don’t read the class assignments) they might halfheartedly bitch about their lack of privacy while they’re posting to Facebook what stupid irrelevant things they are doing that nobody else should care about, and didn’t before Facebook, Twitter, and God knows what else told them that irrelevant BS is worth sharing. And, Paul intends to co-opt the younger voters on privacy. If anything, older voters should appreciate it more because they remember that privacy used to exist.

Which brings up another point: Why isn’t Rand Paul trying to get any of the legislation he touts as protecting our privacy before a committee and then for a full vote? If he is, it isn’t apparent. Is he failing only because the other 99 are oblivious, or is it because it was all for show in the first place?

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