The President of the Commission that examines espionage prolettertheirs USA K. Mike Rogers during a debate about America's National Security Agency (NSA) last Tuesday, he made a statement that perfectly explains the biased and convenient logic of the respective governments in the face of the legal violations they carry out in the name of "freedom" and "good" for society as a whole.
The Democratic senator asked his professor American University College of Law, K. Stephen Vladeck for his concerns about the NSA surveillance programs.
Rogers raised his question in this way:
Perhaps the fact that we had no complaints about privacy violations here and 10 years clearly shows that something was done right.
If we try to translate this statement in simple words, using a non-political reason we would read:
There can be no violation of privacy if no one knows that his private life is being violated.