If you define the level of an advanced civilisation by how much freedom its citizens experience in their day to day lives – along with the protection of individual liberties as we have come to expect in the 21st century – then the march of the mass surveillance state over the last 15 years should be of serious concern. Despite public pleas from our leaders that, ‘if only we pass this next law or security measure’, or ‘if we can just launch one more month of airstrikes’, or ‘if the public will allow just a bit more access to their personal information…’ and so on, the state and its corporate partners have developed a firm grip on power over, and intrusions into, our personal lives that is only increasing.
In the West, a type of cognitive dissonance has already set in regard
to this and other related issues – partly due to the sheer dominance of
the ‘war on terror’ and national security narratives that overtook
society after 11 September 2001. Since then, it seems that every six
months or so the narrative is revised; as one perceived threat subsides,
another emerges in its place....<<<Read More>>>...