Freely accessible data crosses national boundaries and jurisdictions very easily. The U.S. would be powerless to enforce this proposed intellectual property right in countries that don't have agree to it.
No, I'm not worried about a boogeyman. I am worried about my country being at a disadvantage in a war. Cause, you know, they happen.
You can be an advocate for strong national defense (in both conventional weaponry, and intelligence and information systems weaponry) while also demanding very rigorous oversight of those weapons and the depts and individuals that use them. And the rigor and rigidity of the oversight should be proportional to the power wielded.
Sadly, the CIA (and NSA) have expanded the power of their "weapons" without anywhere near a proportional increase in oversight and scrutiny, as demonstrated by their brushing off of the attempted scrutiny by the Senate Intelligence Committee. More noise should be made by us, so that our congress critters actually push through the intelligence community's threats and manipulations, and establish oversight that can actually be effective in preventing abuses of power.
Real Users never know what they want, but they always know when your program doesn't deliver it.