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posted by cmn32480 on Thursday April 23 2015, @03:46PM   Printer-friendly
from the who's-the-good-guy dept.

Newsmax reports that according to according to KRC Research about 64 percent of Americans familiar with Snowden hold a negative opinion of him. However 56 percent of Americans between the ages of 18 and 34 have a positive opinion of Snowden which contrasts sharply with older age cohorts. Among those aged 35-44, some 34 percent have positive attitudes toward him. For the 45-54 age cohort, the figure is 28 percent, and it drops to 26 percent among Americans over age 55, U.S. News reported. Americans overall say by plurality that Snowden has done “more to hurt” U.S. national security (43 percent) than help it (20 percent). A similar breakdown was seen with views on whether Snowden helped or hurt efforts to combat terrorism, though the numbers flip on whether his actions will lead to greater privacy protections. “The broad support for Edward Snowden among Millennials around the world should be a message to democratic countries that change is coming,” says Anthony D. Romero, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union. “They are a generation of digital natives who don’t want government agencies tracking them online or collecting data about their phone calls.” Opinions of millennials are particularly significant in light of January 2015 findings by the U.S. Census Bureau that they are projected to surpass the baby-boom generation as the United States’ largest living generation this year.

 
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  • (Score: 1) by gishzida on Friday April 24 2015, @09:38AM

    by gishzida (2870) on Friday April 24 2015, @09:38AM (#174585) Journal

    Anderson was small change. Almost any CPA that sits on "mahogany row" in any firm is "dirty" or knows someone down the row that is. I used to work for a CPA corporation / partnership during the late 90's. "Pump and Dump" or "shake and bake" -- no method was too low to make money... I even worked briefly for a genuine scam artist who had an "internet start-up"... which consisted of a bunch of people who knew how to peel money away from the unwary. Banks and Credit Unions are not much better. I worked IT for a CU... The only difference is one of scale.

    It's been said that if you ever work at a fast food restaurant you'll never want to eat fast food again... the same can be said of the financial industry.

    Money spells corruption.

    It also spells power.

    The Koch Brothers want Scott Walker to be the next president. Can you guess why? Anyone backed by that much money should be on your list of people never to vote for... if you do, you can bet you just slit your own throat.