Sinha, G. Alex. "NSA surveillance since 9/11 and the human right to privacy." Loyola Law ReviewWinter 2013: 861+. Academic OneFile. Web.
30 Nov. 2015.
Summary: Alex Sinha is a Law Clerk for the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York. He used to be a research assistant for professor Smita Narula. Sinha has experience in the law and has been very open to sharing his thoughts on the NSA. Sinha’s is very against the NSA. His reason, the NSA is intruding on the rights of Americans to have privacy. He believes that the right to privacy is one of the most important rights that Americans can possess. “Article 17 of the ICCPR protects the human right to privacy.” Sinha is for getting the right to privacy back to the American people. “Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.” This would also intrude on amendment #9, which clearly states that Americans have the right to privacy. …show more content…
If it is not clearly stated in the constitution then it is unconstitutional. “Just as the NSA program's overwhelming size raises concerns that it is unlawful.” Sinha also looks at the growth of the NSA after 9/11 and it grew immensely.
Article #2:
Bamford, James. "Missed calls: is the NSA lying about its failure to prevent
9/11?" Foreign Policy213 (2015): 98+. Academic OneFile. Web. 30 Nov. 2015.