| ® || The Great Divide | 125 Americans, including members of Congress, about the proper role of the FISA court, including whether it should conduct its business in secret. If Snowden had released only these two documents that related to unwarranted domestic surveillance and other possible vio- lations of the law by the NSA, it would be difficult for any reasonable person not to see his actions as a potentially valuable public service. Indeed, additional safeguards were necessary in an age in which new technologies enabled mass surveillance of the public. As the three- judge panel of the Second U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals would later find, Congress had not intended Section 215 of the Patriot Act to be used to justify the bulk collection of American records. If he had limited his illegal downloading to the few documents about bulk col- lection, it would be more difficult to argue that he was not a whistle- blower in the spirit if not the letter of the law, and even a hero in the struggle to preserve our civil liberties. But in fact, Snowden took a great many other secret documents that did not bear on the civil liberties of Americans. He claimed he was acting on behalf of citizens in foreign countries by exposing the NSA‘s and the CIA’s spying © operations abroad, but that same claim could also be made by any re) espionage agent stealing U.S. secrets to benefit the people of another country. As a result, the Snowden case produced a great divide in the American appreciation of him. On one hand, he has been almost universally lauded and lionized by what might be seen as the main- stream media, by numerous academics, and even, as we have seen, by members of Congress. The journalists who assisted him, Green- wald, Poitras, and Gellman, have been celebrated for the roles they played in bringing Snowden’s revelations to the public and received the 2014 Polk Award for national security reporting. The Post and The Guardian, the newspapers that initially published the p