Expressing your concerns to your Members of Congress. Also, voting for representatives who will support your personal perspectives in the first place, so that the government won't actually do things that upset you so. That's critical, really, because a lot of what's going on here is ridiculous: Americans vote for people who will clearly drive things in one direction, and then they whine and moan when the folks they elected administer society consistent with that. While there's a lot of lying going on, in Washington, when it comes to economic issues, taxes, spending, etc., politicians generally do not lie about what kind of governance they're going to support, otherwise. (Politicians who profess to be pro-choice tend to vote pro-choice. Politicians who profess to be for Law and Order tend to vote Law and Order. Politicians who profess to be forward-looking tend to vote for advances and progress.) The agency, its policies, etc., all are consistent with the general direction provided to it by We The People through our elected representatives. Yet now the critics are engaging in over-the-top chest-beating, and really only because either they didn't get their way (they didn't get the kind of people elected who would have agreed with their personal preferences) or they're actually two-faced, supporting one thing when voting and supporting another thing when push-comes-to-shove.