Visions of Drones Swarming U.S. Skies Hit Bipartisan Nerve
By SCOTT SHANE and MICHAEL D. SHEAR
WASHINGTON — The debate goes to the heart of a deeply rooted American
suspicion about the government, the military and the surveillance state:
the specter of drones streaking through the skies above American cities
and towns, controlled by faceless bureaucrats and equipped to spy or
kill.
That Big Brother imagery — conjured up by Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky during a more than 12-hour filibuster
this week — has animated a surprisingly diverse swath of political
interests that includes mainstream civil liberties groups, Republican
and Democratic lawmakers, conservative research groups, liberal
activists and right-wing conspiracy theorists.
They agree on little else. But Mr. Paul’s soliloquy has tapped into a
common anxiety on the left and the right about the dangers of unchecked
government. And it has exposed fears about ultra-advanced technologies
that are fueled by the increasingly fine line between science fiction
and real life.
Drones have become the subject of urgent policy debates in Washington as lawmakers from both parties wrangle with President Obama over their use to prosecute the fight against terrorism from the skies above countries like Pakistan and Yemen.
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