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Pursuit of Privacy and The National Security Agency

Decent Essays

Officially given its name on the fourth of November 1952, the National Security Agency was developed to ensure the safety of American citizens (Howe 11). In an effort to prevent any unauthorized spying on innocent civilians a court known as FISA was created in 1978 to regulate the NSA. Up until the events of September 11th, 2001, the NSA was used strictly as a tool for foreign investigation to decipher international communications (“Frequently Asked Questions About NSA” 1). Twenty-three days after the Twin Towers fell, President Bush passed the Patriot Act (“Timeline of NSA Domestic Spying” 16). This act ushered the NSA into a position of limitless capability. Millions of Americans are having their personal lives followed, tracked, and recorded into mass data pools. This unethical acquisition of personal information is in strict violation of the Fourth Amendment. Immediate action must be taken by the Government to return the rights assured by our Founding Fathers and the Constitution.
The NSA was established in 1952 by order of President Harry Truman (Howe 11). Preceding the official announcement of the National Security Agency the United States had an organization called the Armed Forces Security Agency (AFSA). The Armed Forces Security Agency played a key role in the United State’s victory over the Axis Powers, which entailed Japan, Germany, and Italy, during World War II (Howe 17). The NSA was developed as a way to continue surveillance into the post-war era.

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