I was furious (as were many of you) when I initially read that the NSA had taken phone call metadata from millions of Verizon customers. At the same time, I was thrilled to see the news make media headlines; as a libertarian, I'm typically disappointed by what the establishment reports. But this time, many individuals from all sides of the political spectrum were slightly outraged.<p>Unfortunately, the passion died down much quicker than I expected. A few journalists disagreed with Snowden's cause and called him a traitor, and news was quickly back to normal again. It seems as though the general public has forgotten about the NSA. Warrantless wiretap doesn't even concern most of my friends.<p>Hacker News consistently pushes NSA headlines to the front page, but my other news sources don't. Has everyone else seen a similar drop in passion against the NSA among their friends and family?
Many are still upset, they just have a sense of futility about it and go back about their daily business with a "well, there's nothing I can do about it" attitude.
People <i>just don't care</i> - Facebook's changing privacy policies but continued popularity proves that. Taking someone's communications metadata doesn't appear to have any affect on their lives at all.<p>There's some vague tut-tutting, but most people know it was going on for years.<p>I live in Cheltenham, so I know many people who work for GCHQ, but they don't talk about it at all. I have no idea if they were aware of the scale and depth of intercepts.
I was upset to hear that the spying was actually taking place, and was not just a tinfoil-hat-based conspiracy.<p>One of my close friends has never used facebook, and grudgingly uses gmail for business but not personal email. He now feels justified in his choices. Another close friend has been calling me paranoid for years, and he's disinterested with the whole NSA mess except for partisan mudslinging.
Either indifferently, or else they blame it entirely on liberal corruption.<p>You can't really blame the public for putting it past them, as for the vast majority of people this is just another scandal playing out on television, not a sudden shock that impinges on the cycle of their lives.
I am still upset over the whole situation, more so now that the US has formally charged Snowden with espionage.<p>I have not personally talked to any of my friends about this but judging from my Facebook/Twitter stream, about 2-3 friends are actively posting about the NSA activities.
My spouse, most of the people I know, they dont care enough. Most of them 'have nothing to hide'... Some even show disregard I started working on a privacy tool. 'Bad people might use that.' It's somewhat depressing. I feel lucky to have a few friends who are more aware though. And hn of course.
You're trying to control forces outside of your control.
The result of this are your emotions that are destructive to your health.
From your post, in order listed:<p>furious, disappointed, outraged, unfortunately, died, disagreed, forgotten, drop in passion.<p>You keep feeling this way - you're going to kill your health.