shirts, dark ties, dark suits sitting at desks and looking at boxes and lines on an organizational chart. this is the point that isis can inspire people over the internet or through social media and get them to engage in terrorist attacks without going through a formal organization chart. that does not make things better because they cannot find more of a connection, and makes it it worse. sandra: but it seems like, kennedy, this repeats itself. we find out in the wake of a terrorist attack that to the suspect or suspects were known to authorities, they were reported, they were under investigation at some point. but they slipped through the cracks. kennedy: it is frustrating to do something that we see in this country was san bernardino and orlando, something they see in the u.k. both countries are guilty of mass spying. and i would say because there are so many people that are targeted, you take the worst ones, who definitely deserve the kind of scrutiny t and perhaps imprisonment
to grant quicker approval in emergencies. still, critics say that even these changes would leave the government collecting massive amounts of data unnecessarily. we can t continue to refer to ourselves as a quote, unquote free country when the united states government is collecting information on virtually every telephone call made in america, getting into people s e-mails, focusing on the websites that certain people are visiting. reporter: sanders says he may be one of those people. he sent a letter to nsa director keith alexander asking, quote, one very simple question, has the nsa spied or is the nsa currently spying on members of congress or other american elected officials. the nsa s only answer so far, that members of congress have, quote, the same privacy protections as all americans. senator rand paul, another ardent critic of mass spying, now wants to take the nsa to