Under a provision of the Patriot Act the NSA is allowed to collect phone metadata — the numbers, time stamps, and duration of a call, but not its actual content. Opponents include civil liberties advocates and Senator Rand Paul who argue that the collection is unconstitutional since it is done without a warrant. Supporters of the collection argue that the collection is necessary to track suspected terrorists.
Statistics are shown for this demographic
Response rates from 30.7k Nevada voters.
29% Yes |
71% No |
24% Yes |
56% No |
5% Yes, basic data collection is necessary to track suspected terrorists |
14% No, only with a warrant showing probable cause of criminal activity |
2% No, and abolish the NSA |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 30.7k Nevada voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 30.7k Nevada voters.
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Unique answers from Nevada voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@8SRZSQK4yrs4Y
No, only with a warrant showing probable cause of criminal activity and abolish the NSA fbi Cia ntf open area 51
@B2KJ2JX7 days7D
yes, if someone is being tried for a serious crime, such as murder, then a conflicting time of a phone call could help prove innocence
@9F7BKPN1yr1Y
if only there known to be a criminal etc.
@9DYZ8MH1yr1Y
It doesn't matter to me but I bet it would to criminals.
@9DTRQXY1yr1Y
Yes, but the access should be limited by warrents.
@9DS8HNF1yr1Y
If someone is on a watchlist such as they are suspected threat to America then the NSA should have full right to any metadata. But, if the accused as truly done nothing wrong or been suspected of anything without evidence or probable cause and not racism then they should not be used for metadata.
@9DRGWJN1yr1Y
Yes, but only access the data when there is questionable involvement of knowledge of a crime.
@9DGW3LY1yr1Y
They should only be able to do this if absolutely necessary
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