A report in USA Today that the National Security Agency was building a 
database of Americans' phone records, with the help of three major U.S. 
telephone companies, reignited discussion around the country about the tricky 
balance between civil liberties and counterterrorism efforts. 
 
 
   Emblem of the National Security Agency. It was 
 reported on Thursday, May 11,2006, that the government is secretly 
 collecting record of ordinary Americans' phone calls in an effort to build 
 a database of every call made. [AP] | 
While it was too early to get a scientific read on the nation's thoughts on 
the program, interviews and a scan of closely watched Web logs appeared to 
indicate a split that mirrored opinions on the NSA wiretapping program disclosed 
late last year. 
Ask Marie Martin what she thinks of revelations that a federal agency is 
collecting the phone records of tens of millions of Americans, and her thoughts 
turn immediately to Baghdad. 
That is where her son, Army Staff Sgt. William Connor, fractured his back and 
injured a leg when he was knocked out of a truck by Iraqi insurgent fire. To 
Martin, the argument over domestic surveillance begins and ends there. 
"I think anything they can do to get rid of the terrorists needs to be done," 
Martin, a 76-year-old retired customer service worker living in Colorado 
Springs, Colo., said in a telephone interview Thursday. "I have nothing to 
hide." 
While some — like Martin — supported the records collection and trusted 
President Bush's assertion Thursday that Americans' privacy was being 
"fiercely" protected, others expressed grave worries about a secretive and 
unchecked administration. 
"What concerns me most is I don't know what else they've got," said Bob 
Demmers, 50, a letter carrier in Grand Forks, N.D. "Every month we're finding 
out one more thing that they've been collecting on people. We don't know what's 
coming up next." 
Demmers said he was concerned the nation had been slipping away from the 
Constitution since the Sept. 11 terror attacks, and said he wondered whether the 
government was listening in on his own phone calls. 
Without explicitly confirming the USA Today report, Bush, in a brief 
statement from the White House, sought to assure the nation that "we're not 
mining or trolling through the personal lives of millions of innocent 
Americans." 
The newspaper report said the NSA was not listening to 
the content of the calls it was tracking, but was analyzing call patterns in 
hopes of detecting terrorist activity.