#Reactionary surveillance will boost extremist groups After the Charlie Hebdo attacks in France, much of the world rallied around the magazine's right to free speech; even if they didn't necessarily agree with its content. In such a tragedy, it was a heartwarming response which united people of all background rather than divide. Unfortunately, that unification is now in danger thanks to proposed surveillance efforts. Radical groups are formed often and thrive under oppressive circumstances. Islam is a major, and mostly peaceful, world religion which has faced historic oppression from The french which ISIS is using to create fear. This causes a vicious cycle; as attacks happen, fear is created. Under fear, oppression is caused. As oppression grows, individuals find refuge in groups such as ISIS. Of course, abstaining from surveillance efforts will allow groups with harmful intent to operate and organise without interruption. However, nonprofit think tank New America published a report in January last year which found of the 227 Al qaeda-affiliated people or groups that have been charged for committing an act of terrorism in the US since 9/11 just 17 were credited to the NSA surveillance. Furthermore, only one of these cases ever led to an actual conviction. This places the effectiveness of surveillance measures in question. Regardless a sensible-not reactionary-discussion around efforts is needed at least which is transparent and does not oppress citizens to ensure we maintain the free speech we strive to protect. French President, Francois Hollande, said on Tuesday in Paris the government will present a draft law next month that makes Internet operators ccomplicesof hate-speech offenses if they host extremist messages. Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said he will travel to the U s. to seek help from the heads of Twitter, Microsoft, Google, and Facebook. This is not just leading to the oppression of every internet user but also makes little sense as potential terrorists will move away from public domains controlled by such large companies to darker areas of the web where they are monitored less-easily. Moving away from terrorism, surveillance is a controversial subject on a global scale thanks to whistleblowers such as Edward Snowden and his NSA revelations surrounding their far-reaching programs. The parliamentary assembly of the Council of europe has stated unequivocally in a report that it considers mass digital spying such as that enacted by the NSA to be a fundamental threat to human rights. Abstaining from surveillance efforts will allow groups with harmful intent to operate and organise without interruption. Despite this the commission is proposing further surveillance. The Guardian reports of a proposal which would require the personal data of all passengers flying in and out of Europe to be stored up to five years. It still has to be approved by the European parliament, but it is part of a trend from politicians who are calling for more surveillance, less oversight, less privacy, and fewer rights. Instead, we need to call for fair and transparent surveillance with due oversight and with respect for the rights and privacy of citizens. Terrorists can't be free to go unchallenged but governments can't be free to oppress its citizens either. It damages the values we all hold dear and divides us at a time we need to stand unite o
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