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Most of those who see the programs as compromising privacy say the intrusions are unjustified. The percentage of Americans who put a higher priority on privacy protections than the investigation of terrorist threats has more than doubled in a decade and has hit the highest point in any Post-ABC News poll dating back to summer Some of the discomfort stems from doubts that the programs are making the United States safer.
Only 42 percent say the programs make the country safer. And 5 percent say they actually make the nation less safe. Details of the programs were revealed earlier this summer by a former government contract worker, Edward Snowden. The NSA has acknowledged that it collects the telephone records of millions of Americans β information on phone numbers they have dialed and the length of their calls β but has said it does not collect the contents of the conversations.
For the past month, Snowden has been holed up in the transit area of a Moscow airport. As he has awaited word on whether Russia might grant him asylum, sympathy for him has diminished. In the new poll, 53 percent say Snowden should be charged with a crime, up 10 percentage points in a month. In the poll, 56 percent say Obama should not cancel his trip if Russia were to grant asylum to Snowden. A majority of this group, 55 percent, say Obama should stay home. Among this group, 32 percent support for an Olympic boycott, but 66 percent remain opposed.
About four in 10 say the United States should impose economic sanctions, but a majority, 54 percent, say no such sanctions should result. When it comes to allowing infringements on personal privacy to investigate terrorist threats, Americans now divide 57 percent for unfettered investigations and 39 percent on the side of sacrosanct privacy.
Peak support for putting a higher priority on unfettered investigations, even if that infringes on personal privacy, came in June , when 79 percent held this view. Only three years ago, as many as 68 percent took this position. Politically, the biggest change on this question has been among self-identified independents. Independents now split about evenly between prioritizing investigating threats or protecting privacy, 50 to 45 percent.