‘Welcome to the United States of paranoia’

CaseyJones

Member
Joined
Dec 15, 2007
Messages
7,564
‘Welcome to the United States of paranoia’

http://nypost.com/2014/02/01/welcome-to-the-united-states-of-paranoia/

Between the NSA’s power and the IRS’s revenge, how can Americans not be worried about the opinions they express?

Feel like Big Brother is watching you these days? You’re not alone.

“This is not some far-out Orwellian scenario,” wrote the late William Safire of The New York Times in 2002, in the panicky aftermath of 9/11. “Here is what will happen to you: Every purchase you make with a credit card, every magazine subscription you buy and medical prescription you fill, every Web site you visit and e-mail you send or receive . . . will go into what the Defense Department describes as ‘a virtual, centralized grand database.’ ”

Twelve years on, this is the world we live in, but worse. Through a combination of fear, cowardice, political opportunism and bureaucratic metastasis, the erstwhile land of the free has been transformed into a nation of closely watched subjects — a country of 300 million potential criminals, whose daily activities need constant monitoring.
 
As my phone echoes, makes noises, etc. I'm asked stupid questions.

"Chilling" doesn't describe it. I had to upgrade to a smart phone recently, washed my other one. I don't even talk with that bullshit in my pocket. Not because I'm saying anything incriminating either. Simply considering every sentence one says, so as it cannot be misconstrued or bastardized in meaning, offering petty justifications or explanations to nothing more than invisible state's agents, should on the off chance they be there, is enough to discourage me from having a conversation. Shit's serious.

What kind of world will your children know? One where surveillance is always a constant consideration, no doubt.

Even the very [true] words of this post could be used against me. I have to explain that I am not exceptionally paranoid nor do I feel I am particularly important enough to be surveilled. I wonder if that would save one from a DSM spokesman's exaggerations, misconstructions, and lies? Probably not. There does come a point where life goes on, though. They will not dictate to me which way I sleep... nor will I be censored any more than I am now. The cunts.
 
633630631258716708-paranoia.jpg
 
The government goofs are the ones who are paranoid. Spending zillions on dollars on techniques that don't work--on people who are minding their own business.
 
Back
Top