Stop the extension of the Patriot ACT
I don't post most EFF news here, since the EFF has a news page and 2 blogs for that, but today I'm doing it twice because congress is voting tomorrow on renewal of the PATRIOT act. There was a lot of effort to reduce the bad stuff in the bill, efforts that seemed to be getting somewhere but were ignored.
Ok, do I have to tell you why this erosion of so many fundamental rights is a bad idea? At first, I thought the PATRIOT only came about because in the weeks after Sept 11, the country was acting in anger and shock. It did things it wouldn't do with time to be calm and reasoned about it. And the PATRIOT act has resulted in huge waves of new surveillance as we've been seing in the past few weeks.
So do what you can to stop it. Our Action Center will help you contact your representatives to give them the message. Plus you can read the bill and commentary on it on the EFF web site.
We've been saying these things for so long you may be getting tired of it. But every time we strip away rights, make society a little bit more scared -- each time we live in fear -- I think that's exactly what terrorists want. Like the name says, their goal is to sew fear and terror in hope of getting their way. Sure, people were angry when this law was first passed, but there is no excuse today. Take action yourself. Donation to organizations like the EFF and others if you don't have time to take all the action you think you should, but do have the money. It's as simple as that.
Comments
Danny O'Brien
Mon, 2005-11-21 16:04
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Congress rebelled against the new draft
In the end, it appears that so many senators and representatives were upset by the proposed PATRIOT draft that the vote had to be abandoned. A new attempt at compromise will be restarted after Thanksgiving.
What is unusual about this stalling is that it seems to have been driven exclusively by concerns about the civil liberty implications of the bill. Hopefully any new drafts introduced will be obliged to reflect the worries of politicians - and the voters who alerted them to the problems.
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