I guess the point I wanted to make was that people will vehemently and aggressively defend Greenwald and Snowden as if they're godlike, while it deserves acknowledging that they certainly aren't perfect. I guess the borderline-insulting way you reply to my argument sort of proves that.
They are imperfect human beings. The fact that human beings are imperfect is
exactly why something like this would be a problem even if it was only being run by people we could trust. And none of it's relevant to whether the actual issue at hand is a problem, and the government has practically confirmed most of it is true so unless you're accusing them of being part of some lie they've created in conspiracy with the US and UK governments, I'm... not sure what your point is? And even then, it's incredibly tangential "evidence". I mean, I could argue that we should never trust the government doing surveillance because they have a history of stealthily drugging their own citizens until that person dies, but you'd be right to say "That's fucked up, sure, but not actually relevant" because, as stated, it wouldn't be. If I was using it as a general example of the fact that great secret powers with poor safeguards are often abused by the petty egos in charge of the program who will often end up using it as a vehicle for their own ends, and cited the MK-Ultra experiment as a whole with some details, that would be relevant, but I'd have to actually
say that - I'd have to make a point that demonstrates it's relevance.
So the important question is - assuming your right, why do we care? What relevance does it have to the issue at hand? How important is the connection? How should it change our views on the situation as a whole and why?
You might be able to make an actual argument out of it, but right now you're doing not doing anything of the sort, so if it's an issue that actually concerns you, you will have to try harder. The only thing approaching an argument you made was that we should treat them as god beings, but that was kind of blatantly a strawman (no one here, and pretty much no one anywhere I'd hope, actually does that).
In
other news, important websites are still shutting down in response to the NSAs actions. Groklaw has been turned off.