Imagine being a United States Army soldier stationed in Afghanistan under a unit that has poor leadership and may result in the deaths of fellow officers. This exact scenario happened to Bowe Bergdahl. Bergdahl is a United States Army soldier who was trying to inform the Army about the poor leadership of his unit. His technique was going to try to create a “DUSTWUN,” or “Duty Status Whereabouts Unknown.” Bergdahl fled from his post in Afghanistan, he traveled to a small village outside the base called “OP Mest.” While he was there, he bought a local outfit and traveled on foot across the desert. However, while walking across the desert, he had forgotten to check his compass for several hours, resulting in a major detour. Bergdahl was then captured…
9/11 was as significant as the end of the Cold War in changing the structure of the international politics.…
Joseph McCarthy was a former U.S Senator that created much controversy in the 1940’s and 1950’s. Around this time, a lot of Americans worried and feared about communism coming to United States. Joseph McCarthy took advantage of this and made a huge allegation that 250 of the U.S. government official were communist. McCarthy was able to make this claim without any evidence because people already feared the thought of communism being in America.For about 5 years, McCarthy claimed several athletes,actors, and even the military to be communist. A term called “Red Baiting” became popular for what McCarthy was doing, wrongfully accusing people of being communist. Even average Joes feared this because they could easily be accused by someone just…
months of 2004, one of the largest military scandals in U.S. history became the center of worldwide controversy. It has been said that the degrading acts by the U.S. military at Abu Ghraib were responsible for the suffering of innocent Iraqi civilians, the humiliation of the world's strongest defense, and for negatively affecting the United States' reputation in the world overall.…
The set of documents I will be reviewing are documents 118, 1, 4, and 26 regarding The Snowden Affair. The Snowden Affair is about a national security controversy that had to do with the National Security Agency (NSA) and its undisclosed surveillance of communications of American citizens under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). The information was leaked by Eduard Snowden, a former NSA agent and was published by a British newspaper, The Guardian. The Guardian revealed the NSA’s surveillance operations which included the archiving and tracking of vast amounts of data regarding use of electronic devices of U.S. citizens U.S. citizens and any foreign communications. The data revealed that Internet traffic and…
Al Capone was born on January 17, 1899 in Brooklyn New York. Died on January 25…
The National Security Agency has been collecting the phone records of all U.S. citizens—which numbers have called which other numbers, when, and for how long—in an enormous database. The government says this mass collection is OK because the database is “queried”—i.e., searched—only under court supervision. In theory, this two-tiered approach, with judicial scrutiny applied at the query stage rather than the collection stage, is defensible. But does the judiciary—in this case, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court—really examine the database queries?…
Back in the beginning stages of the War on Terrorism, President Bush enacted the Patriot Act. This allowed the government to spy on citizens, monitoring their activities in order to discern whether or not someone is a terrorist. It brought about changes in law enforcement that allowed agencies to search phones, financial records, etc.…
Technological Advances and Ethical Issues precipitating the passage of the Patriot Act and the Federal Information Security Management Act…
In the past, there has always been conflict between the free press and the government. This conflict was very evident in the Pentagon Papers case, also known as New York Times Co. v. United States. Historically, the Supreme Court has disagreed on the limitations that can be placed on the First Amendment. The Supreme Court faced these issues in the case of The New York Times. The newspaper obtained a copy of a Defense Department report that explained government deception in the Vietnam War. The Pentagon Papers emerged when the American people disagreed on the United States involvement in the war. Under the First Amendment, The New York Times argued for the right to publicize the Pentagon Papers. In 1971, a Supreme Court ruling allowed The New York Times and The Washington Post to publish classified Pentagon Papers without the risk of government censure.…
The “no snitching, no stitching” code, also known as the silence code, has resulted in an increase of violence, fear, and insecurity in the community.Before discussing the harm that it does, we must first become acquainted with what that term means. According to the Collins English Dictionary, a snitch means to steal; to turn informer, and the term is also closely linked to a betrayer. According to that same source “stitching” refers to a repairing, usually of clothing. Moreover, Merriam Webster dictionary states that the word “snitch” is of unknown origin and was first used in the year 1875. Although the sources mentioned above offer an official definition of the word, in the inner city communities, a snitch carries a deeper meaning. Some people have become intensely upset to even hear of the term…
“Under observation, we act less free, which means we effectively are less free.” People have been living in a world where technology controls them.. What they do not know is that the NSA has been treating people as if they were criminals. Do we really have freedom when the NSA is collecting and reading more than 200 million messages per day. Has our 4th amendment been overthrown by NSA? A country is not free, if its citizens are constantly being spied on. In the present day, people surround themselves in technology compared to the novel 1984 where people have no choice but to have a telescreen in their houses and in their workplaces. The novel accurately portrayed the NSA Surveillance problem because it shows how the government spies on its citizens, it effectively describes the ways…
Since the aftermath of the terrorist attack of September 11th. 2014. The Patriot Act was enabled to enhance domestic security of the state, and federal branch of the government, it was ushered in out of the fear the terrorist were here in masses. While we all were concerned with the safety of the people and our country, few knew the underlying damaging message of The Patriot Act to our Bill Of Rights of the United States. Our founding fathers created the constitution to protect us against these cruel and unethical practices. The Patriot Act discards these constitutional…
Over the past seven years the Bush administration, possibly longer the U.S government has been monitoring the internet and telephone activity of American citizens in secrecy. Many of the American citizens being monitored have not been convicted of any crime and have caused no suspicion of wrong doing. Despite these circumstances these private citizens are being unlawfully monitored by the U.S government without consent. This scandal has caused a split decision in the American society; whether the U.S. government is justified for their actions, when the secret surveillance began, why and how long it will last, also is government monitoring really a method to protect U.S. citizens and how do citizens feel about this scandal, lastly where is the line drawn and what can citizens do to ensure their voice is heard.…
George Soros, the prosperous chairman of Soros Fund Management, founded the Open Society Foundation as his vehicle for making grants to organizations promoting free speech in countries with authoritarian regimes. Soros also favors improving education, reducing poverty and any other programs which indirectly support democratic resistance in countries with repressive governments.…