America has almost 5 million citizens (spies) with confidential, secret or top secret security clearance.

Article first appeared in Privacy SOS.org
The Office of the Director of National Intelligence that 4,917,751 US citizens now have either confidential, secret or top secret security clearance. That’s more than times the population of Boston.
But the 4,917,751 figure dates from October 2012. Given how this number is steadily growing (it was 4,863,552 in October 2011), those with some form of security clearance probably top 5 million.
They belong to a growing class of ‘haves’ – as in ‘those who have security clearance.’
That’s about one out of every 30 people who qualify to apply for a growing number of ‘national security’ jobs. And if they keep their heads down and are not tempted to become the kind of ‘whistleblower’ singled out by the Obama Administration for harsh punishment, they should have secure economic futures.
Why one out of 30? Who are the contenders for positions in this tight-lipped elite?
The US population is now 313 million. If you subtract seniors (nearly 45 million), non citizens who don’t qualify for security clearance (40 million), and citizens who are disqualified by virtue of felony convictions (6 million or more) the number of those who can hope to obtain clearance has sunk to about 222 million.
Go into a room of 30 adult Americans who look like they have lived impeccably law-abiding lives (or can simulate the part) and guess which one has security clearance.
Government employees with security clearance outnumber contractors about four to one, and ‘top secret’ clearance accounts for about one-third of the total.
These are society’s "haves" in more ways than one. It is difficult to imagine the economic ‘have nots’ taking a stab at completing Standard Form 86—SF86 (Questionnaire for National Security Positions).
So we inhabit a nation that is not just polarized ideologically and economically, but also in terms of who has access to information. That includes access to all kinds of private information about ordinary people in this country and around the world.
If information is power, it seems safe to assume they have more of it than people who are outside the secretive circle.
Back in August 2002 Sixth Circuit Court judge Damon Keith warned about the government’s secret proceedings that "Democracies die behind closed doors."
http://privacysos.org/node/1034