Jan 162011
 

I had no idea that the Patriot Act is up for renewal this month.  The media has not given us the slightest peep of warning.  Is this a conspiracy of silence?  I don’t know the answer,  but it’s too important an issue to let pass without at least raising a stink.  It represents the biggest Republican assault on Americans’ rights in history.  It also represents Obama’s greatest failure as President, given that he campaigned on ending this outrage and has since embraced the policy.

16patriotactDid you hear that the PATRIOT Act is up for re-authorization? No? Well, perhaps the US intelligence services can still keep a secret.

President George W. Bush signed the PATRIOT Act into law on October 26, 2001. Nearly a decade later, some of its the most noxious provisions have burrowed their way deep into our legal system.

A year ago, President Obama signed a bill extending three provisions of the original Patriot Act. Last week Congressman Mike Rogers (R-Michigan), Chair of the House Intelligence Committee, introduced another extension of those provisions, triggering what’s sure to be a bipartisan effort to continue to deny Americans their civil liberties.

The bill starts with so-called "roving wiretaps" that allow the government to spy on a nebulous array of individuals and devices, without specifying any of them ahead of time. The FBI could, with a single search warrant, raid every house or office that an individual suspect has visited over an entire year — every single place, whether or not the residents themselves are suspects.

Then there’s the eerily-named "lone wolf" provision, which lets the government apply the full power of the special courts created to deal with foreign spies against anyone who the government alleges is "preparing to attack." You don’t even have to commit a crime to get these super-powered courts targeting you — the Justice Department says that just visiting a flagged website would be enough!

But worst of all is the infamous "Section 215". This incredible provision allows the government to take whatever they want — your phone records, medical records, email history, whatever — without having to show you’re suspected of a crime, or even relevant to an investigation! But it gets worse — not only can the government just search through your personal records whenever they feel like it, but everyone involved is under a gag order to never let you know that you’re being spied on — and to ensure that you can never challenge the order in court. The government could be looking through your emails right now and you’ll never even know.

The ACLU has a quick-and-dirty overview of some of the problems with these provisions over here. [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Huffington Post>

The reasons I oppose the extension are so obvious, I need not even list them.  If you love freedom, you already know.  Please join me in protest.  Tell your Senators and Rep!  Say NO to the unpatriotic PATRIOT Act!

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  13 Responses to “Patriot Act: Washington’s Best Kept Secret?”

  1. DUMP THIS UNCONSTITUTIONAL ACT ONCE AND FOR ALL!!!

  2. But even the ACLU fights only for the fund of it and Not To WIN; even against the anti-Constitutional ex post facto Congressional exonerations of the telecoms involved or for the criminal prosecutions of the BushCo. perpetrators (much less outright repeal of this Despicable ACT)!

  3. I wonder why the Tea Party is so quiet on this? I suppose they’d say, “Hands off our warrantless government surveillance!”.

  4. I abhor the Patriot Act – especially the portions of spying on Americans without their knowledge – that part really pissed me off. Let the whole thing expire and then gradually add the pieces that we need. The FISA court is there for a reason and they have 72 hours to spy without a warrant – that’s more than sufficient to cast reasonable doubt if law enforcement is doing their job. 😡

  5. I totally agree with you.

  6. I certainly would like to see the new house bring this to the floor and the abiding constitutional section that authorizes it. Yes I agree it be time to kill this unwarranted intrusion into the privacy of Americans.

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