One big event is dominating the news this week, so let's focus on that.
The National Security Agency, in the interest of protecting the US, is actively tracking the cellphone records of American citizens -- chiefly through Verizon services. They aren't tracking just suspicious individuals, as was the original wire-tapping policy of the PATRIOT Act, but just about every American with a cellphone. It has apparently been doing this for over seven years, and it is perfectly legal. They search for call patterns that could indicate terrorist activity -- something of a preemptive strike, you might say, compared with searching phone records after someone is thought to be guilty of a crime.
Supposedly, this just concerns basic information. Numbers dialed, numbers answered, duration of calls, etc. They do not record the content of your conversations (at least according to them). This is considered a massively helpful tool in the fight against terror, according to the folks in charge.
New claims indicate that this tracking can only be used against "non-US persons."
Although, personally, I'd be suspicious of that last statement. The right to due process has entered something of a gray zone since the passing of National Defense Authorization Act of 2012, and that could be used as a loophole to turn their gaze inward -- especially after things like Boston.
Source 1 (LA Times)
Source 2 (BBC)
Source 3 (BBC, follow-up)
NSA Info (wiki)
Info on PRISM, the tracking program (wiki)
Thoughts, comments, rants about the end of American freedom? I think it is doubleplusungood.