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 13.6k Congressional District 4 voters.
27% Yes |
73% No |
22% Yes |
56% No |
5% Yes, basic data collection is necessary to track suspected terrorists |
15% 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 13.6k Congressional District 4 voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 13.6k Congressional District 4 voters.
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Unique answers from Congressional District 4 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
@8P9SVNY4yrs4Y
Yes because it is useful for many different issues and doesn't really have a downside
@8F3MHJ94yrs4Y
No, this is an unconstitutional invasion of privacy, not to mention the potential racism and sexism that could result from this.
@8DKPLXY4yrs4Y
@B24VFLL3mos3MO
Only if there is active proof that the person they want to get information from are going to do something bad. Not just that they are a person of color so immediately they're suspicious.
@9XGWPQJ4mos4MO
yes but they should not know what the people on the phone say unless requested from one of the callers
@9XF7TXL4mos4MO
Could be government overreach. Yes on international. Need rationale for domestic phone data capture other than basic info.
@9VBSTLV5mos5MO
yes but also no it just depends like in case of a threat or something in call they would hear about it
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