The Atlantic: E.L. Doctorow Wishes There Had Been More Outrage About the NSA

The Atlantic: E.L. Doctorow Wishes There Had Been More Outrage About the NSA by Emma Green:

E.L. Doctorow has been writing about spies for a long time. In 1971, he published The Book of Daniel, a fictionalized account of the trial of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, two Americans who had been accused of passing information about the atomic bomb to the Soviets. More than 40 years and many novels later, Doctorow is focused on a different kind of spy: the government. He worries that government surveillance programs, like those revealed this summer by Edward Snowden, aren’t being kept in check by the president, the press, or the American public.

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