ipl-logo

NSA And Its Effects On 9/11 Essay

715 Words3 Pages

NSA And Its Effects on 9/11

September 11th 2001. This was the day that changed the lives of thousands of U.S citizens. The terrorist attacks that occured on this day ended up killing 2,996 people. Two hijacked planes crashed into the empire state buildings in New York City, followed by a planned attack on the headquarters of the United States Department of Defense in Virginia. The NSA (National Security Agency) is a National agency that is responsible for global monitoring, as well as the collection and processing of information. Through phone and web-browsing surveillance, the NSA has made the U.S safer and created less potential for future attacks.
NSA has used phones and how the world communicates to improve the actions they take to protect …show more content…

According to ACLU, “Recent disclosures also show that an unknown number of purely domestic communications are monitored, that the rules that supposedly protect Americans' privacy are weak and riddled with exceptions, and that virtually every email that goes into or out of the United States is scanned for suspicious keywords.” Through this action, citizens are being more prepared to insure that similar acts that occurred on 9/11 never have to happen again. The FISA Amendments Act of 2008 (FAA) gave NSA almost unchecked power to monitor americans. U.S citizens need to be educated on what is going on when they are using their phones but they also need to learn about why it needs to be done. According to HR14, once Thinthread, which is a technology that protected civil liberties in alignment with the Constitution, and was relatively inexpensive to implement had gained permission to such the NSA database they found critical information that gave evidence of the hijackers actions before 9/11. If they continue to pass laws that let the government track activities on phones they can make sure that the U.S. aren't put in that same position of finding out information once it’s too

Open Document