[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

The Female Fantasy Exposed: Why Women Love Toxic Love Stories

United States will NOT comply with the ICC arrest warrant for Prime Minister Netanyahu:

Mississippi’s GDP Beats France: A Shocking Look at Economic Policy Failures (Per Capita)

White House Refuses to Recognize US Responsibility for Escalation of Conflict in Ukraine

MAKE EDUCATION GREAT AGAIN!!

They will burn it with a "Peresvet" or shoot it down with a "hypersound"

NY Times: Could Trumps Return Pose a Threat to Climate and Weather Data?

Apples new AI-powered Siri?

Pepe Escobar: The BRICS Spirit Is Alive And Well In South Africa

Trump Can Stop WW III By Helping Kamala Make History

About that ICBM Russia just launched on Dnipro

These Are America's Safest Cities

Trump's Opportunity To Reset US-Iran Relations

Trump Nominates Pam Bondi For Attorney General After Gaetz Withdraws From Consideration

Judea Snarls: Donald Trump seeks to divide the State of Israel and Create a Palestinian State

Gaetz Withdraws From Consideration For Attorney General

TROUBLE OFF AIR MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow ‘takes $5m pay cut’

CNN’s Jake Tapper STORMS OFF as JD Vance ANNIHILATES Him Over Trump’s ‘Enemy Within’ Remarks!

🚨BREAKING: Hundreds of January 6th Political Prisoners Set FREE, DC Judges PANIC! Trump Pardon Soon

Tulsi Gabbard vs. Democrats and the Media!!

Gaetz Withdraws From Consideration For Attorney General

Putin Threatening Kiev Electricity

Netanyahu seeking a ban on formation of state committee of inquiry into Oct. 7

Dear DOGE: Milton Friedman Wanted to Cut Most of It

Chairman of Arab Americans for Trump claims to have received 100% promise of Palestinian State from President-elect

NASA makes surprising discovery at the end of our universe: 'It shouldn't exist'

TRUMP Begins Fight vs BIG TECH CENSORSHIP CARTEL

Why The U.S. Is Freaking Out Over China’s New Peru Port

Wire thefts leave Hacienda Heights residents without phone, internet service

Yale's Beyonce Course Highlights The Decline Of Higher Education (Tuition $67,250)


Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: The Sun Must Go Down on the Patriot Act
Source: American Civil Liberties Union
URL Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/antho ... the-patriot-act_b_7118240.html
Published: Apr 23, 2015
Author: Anthony D. Romero
Post Date: 2015-04-23 11:34:29 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 33

Not long after the Patriot Act was passed in 2001, I had dinner with the late Senator Paul Wellstone in Washington, who was a stalwart defender of civil liberties throughout his career. I asked him how he could have possibly voted for a law that so vastly expanded the government's spying powers. He told me that he was facing a tough election, but as soon as it was over he'd invite my organization, the American Civil Liberties Union, to testify before Congress about the Patriot Act's flaws and the threats it presented to privacy and civil liberties. "We'll work together to get this repealed," he promised. Unfortunately, that day never came, as the senator tragically died in a plane crash in October of 2002.

Almost 13 years later, the most egregious part of the Patriot Act, Section 215 -- which underlies the National Security Agency's call-records program -- is scheduled to expire on June 1. Some legislators want Congress to reauthorize it in its current form -- Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has just introduced a bill that would do exactly that, extending it for another five years. Others want to make relatively minor changes. Congress shouldn't do either of these things. Unless Congress can coalesce around far-reaching reform, it should simply let the provision expire.

Congress hurriedly enacted the Patriot Act just weeks after the September 2001 attacks. Few legislators read the 321 pages of proposed legislation; many simply concluded that the political climate necessitated that they vote for the bill, even if they didn't understand it.

Predictably, the Patriot Act has been at the root of many of the most serious abuses of government spying powers. It was the Patriot Act the FBI relied on to vastly expand its use of "national security letters," which the FBI now issues thousands of times every year to obtain information about innocent Americans who have no connection to terrorism. It was the Patriot Act the government relied on to conduct clandestine searches in investigations having nothing to do with terrorism. It was the Patriot Act the government invoked to permit the FBI to disregard the Fourth Amendment's usual requirements -- criminal probable cause, a particularized warrant -- in ordinary law enforcement investigations. And it's the Patriot Act the government is now using to justify the NSA's call-records program.

The NSA uses Section 215 of the Patriot Act to collect information -- who called whom, when, and for how long -- about most phone calls made or received on U.S. telephone networks. The surveillance is staggering in its scope and many, including the legislator who wrote the Patriot Act, believe the surveillance is unlawful. The surveillance is also, apparently, ineffective. Both a review group appointed by the president as well as the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board concluded, after analysis of classified files, that there was no evidence at all that the NSA's massive surveillance program had ever played a pivotal role in any investigation.

Allowing Section 215 to sunset is a crucial first step if we want to ensure that this unlawful and ineffective surveillance finally ends.

The current sunset debate is our first opportunity as a society to grapple with the mass-surveillance programs revealed by Edward Snowden, and we can't afford to let this opportunity pass us by. The whole point of including sunset provisions in the original Patriot Act was to force Congress -- and the country -- to reconsider the government's surveillance powers once more was known about their implications for civil liberties. Now we understand at least some of these implications -- and they're chilling. If we don't allow Section 215 to sunset, we risk making permanent a "new normal" of government surveillance and extending surveillance programs that haven't yet been -- and may never be -- disclosed to the public.

The Patriot Act's upcoming expiration date gives us a new opportunity to make good on Senator Wellstone's promise. Letting the provisions sunset would protect Americans' privacy without compromising security. It would also be a first step towards the kind of systemic reform we desperately need -- reform that would end the government's dragnet surveillance practices, foreclose warrantless surveillance of Americans' communications, require a degree of transparency about programs that haven't yet been disclosed, and subject those as-yet-undisclosed programs to judicial review.

Equally important, letting the provisions sunset would send a broader message that, after more than a decade in which national security could be invoked to justify the unconstrained expansion of virtually any government power, Americans are committed to restoring common-sense limits on the government's national security powers and requiring that our intelligence agencies operate without disregard for privacy and civil liberties.

_______________

Anthony D. Romero is the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  



[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]