Before the Night Lights Fall Voices on the Boundary between Surveillance and Freedom, Fall 2024
In the fall, when debate over the Espionage Prevention Act is on the rise, a quiet tension was brewing at the rally, a sense of crisis that the law would "lead to a society of dark surveillance. Osamu Aoki traced the history of Japan's postwar intelligence agencies, pointing out the possibility that the blade of information held by the state could turn toward civil liberties, and introduced Masaharu Goto's warning that "intelligence agencies are a double-edged sword. LaSalle Ishii expressed concern about a future in which news gathering, research, and even civic movements would be considered "potentially dangerous acts" if the law is enacted in an ambiguous manner. He emphasized that in this age of fading memories of security laws, the loss of freedom will not come suddenly, but as a quiet erosion that goes unnoticed. This discussion is also connected to the Specified Secret Protection Law and active cyber defense, and to the current situation in which Japan's secrecy protect
ion system is internationally recognized as a danger of increased surveillance and concentration of power. As with the Chilling Effect in Europe and whistleblower penalties in the U.S., the question of how to strike a balance between freedom and security is a challenge that faces Japan as well. The quiet chirping of warnings reiterates the fact that without the will to protect freedom, societies will collapse without a sound.
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