So you prefer to believe your politicians, give up freedoms and support anyone who's scaring you about terrorism? This is indeed naive. Terrorism may not be as much recognized than before 9/11, but this is the price for wealth and foreign policies. No extraordinary News at all - at least to everywhere outside the US.
Oh, crap, Oliver.
The US still has more freedom than Germany has ever had - and the country isn't free of terrorist threats, either.
Freedom:
1. Germany requires all citizens to be registered and to have an ID card. Failure to to so results in a fine - possibly jail time if you vehemently refuse to register. Doesn't bother criminals, of course, just the average person who objects to being tracked by his government. Since I'm a foreign national (American) living in Germany, it doesn't bother me that I have to register. I'd watch them ferriners too.
2. All children must attend religion classes in grade school. Not comparative religion, but religion as taught by a representative of the the local predominant religion. Some places you get a choice - protestant, catholic, other. I have no objection to studying religion as it is the driving force behind a lot of history and politics. I object to teaching a religion to children in a publically funded school - as is done here. I've yet to find a way to get my kids out of having to attend without causing an enormous fracas.
3. Everyone who owns a TV or radio in Germany pays a special tax to support the state run radio and TV stations, and the politcians are trying to expand that to include anyone who owns a computer as well. The gov. operated stations are now available as streaming audio and video on the net, so if you own a computer you could watch their programming. I don't watch news on the gov. stations much. In addition to figuring out the station's agenda (as I have to do with private stations like CNN and NTV,) I also have to guess how much is subtly influenced by politics behind the scenes between the stations and the gov.
4. Germany is far closer to a police state than the US. If a local national (German) wants to work for the US gov in Germany, they get a background check done by the local Einwohnermeldeamt (citizens registration office.) It takes a couple of weeks, mostly because bureaucrats move slowly in anything. When it does come back, it is a complete report of anything you've done anywhere in the country that got you in trouble with the police. All of the information is centrally stored and coordinated, making it easy to provide a complete report. What is stored besides your police record? I don't know, and neither do you.
5. Rasterfahndung. You ought to know that one. Take all the info out of the citizen and police databases and whatever else is available, and find people who fit a particular profile for a particular crime and pick them up for questioning. No particular suspicion of that person, just a matching profile. It gets used to try to find terrorists, both home grown ones like the RAF and foreign ones. It hasn't caught a single one that I've heard of, but the mechanism still exists.
6. Monitoring cameras in public places. They've been somewhat helpful in a couple of cases in the last year. More effective would have been for the criminals to have been still in jail, serving sentences for the crimes they were earlier convicted of instead of released for "resocializing." I'd rather the little boy still be alive and a repeat offender child molester stay in jail rather than let the bastard out and catch him on video kidnapping an innocent child. Or the would be suicide bombers whose bombs (fortunately) didn't go off. Since the bombs didn't go off, no one got hurt. The cameras let the police arrest the guys afterwards, but wouldn't have done any good if the terrorists had been competent.
Loss of Freedom in Germany due to fear of terrorists:
1. Politicians pushing for more cameras. The installed ones haven't actually stopped a crime, and the crimes they've solved would have been solved by other means just as well - the boy I mentioned before was kidnapped in a public bus, with a bus load of people as witnesses.
2. Politicians pushing for electronic ID cards that can be read remotely. Said cards to include electronic photos and fingerprint data, as well as the remotely readable ID info.
There have been several attempted suicide bombings in Germany since 9/11. Some were caught by old fashioned police work, and others (like the train bombs) were stopped by their own incompetence.
That turned into a great rambling mess, but it cheeses me off for Oliver to bitch about the US and ignore the things closer to (his) home - most especially since he has no first hand experience of the US.