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PRIVACY
Opinionopinion

Right or wrong? But you can’t doubt Edward Snowdon’s bravery

Christopher Bucktin writes "Since I arrived in America every phone call I’ve made, email I’ve sent and internet search I’ve carried out has been monitored unlawfully by Uncle Sam".

Demonstrators in New York’s Union Square Park supporting Edward Snowden(Image: AP Photo/Richard Drew)

This week – in fact ever since I arrived in America – I have been violated.

Every phone call I’ve made, email I’ve sent and internet search I’ve carried out has been monitored unlawfully by Uncle Sam.

And if it wasn’t for Edward Snowden – the whistleblower turned fugitive – I, like millions of Americans, would never have known.

Whichever side of the fence you sit on, the 29-year-old is either a traitor or a hero but, much to the annoyance of the government, there is no denying his courage for he told the US public exactly as it was.

He put into layman’s terms what the Senate had not wanted their voters to hear – that their National Security Agency is recording everything everyone does. Nothing is off limits to the NSA.

Chat sessions, financial transactions, web searches, phone calls and emails are all on their radar.

The agency can then use the information to target any individual, requesting a warrant to dig further into their business.

It’s a little like playing Cluedo but unbeknown to everyone else someone has had a good luck at the solution cards and still plays on.