The USA PATRIOT Act (commonly known as the Patriot Act) is an Act of the U.S. Congress that was signed into law by President George W. Bush on October 26, 2001. The title of the act is a ten letter backronym (USA PATRIOT) that stands for Uniting (and) Strengthening America (by) Providing Appropriate Tools Required (to) Intercept (and) Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001.
The act, a response to the terrorist attacks of September 11th, dramatically reduced restrictions in law enforcement agencies' gathering of intelligence within the United States; expanded the Secretary of the Treasury’s authority to regulate financial transactions, particularly those involving foreign individuals and entities; and broadened the discretion of law enforcement and immigration authorities in detaining and deporting immigrants suspected of terrorism-related acts. The act also expanded the definition of terrorism to include domestic terrorism, thus enlarging the number of activities to which the USA PATRIOT Act’s expanded law enforcement powers can be applied.
Randal Howard "Rand" Paul (born January 7, 1963) is the juniorUnited States Senator for Kentucky. He is a member of the Republican Party. A member of the Tea Party movement, he describes himself as a "constitutional conservative" and a libertarian. He is the son of Republican Congressman and 2012 Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul of Texas and had never previously held political office. Paul first received national attention in 2008 when making political speeches on behalf of his father. Rand Paul is the first United States Senator in history to serve alongside a parent in the United States House of Representatives.
In 2010, Paul ran as the Republican candidate for the United States Senate seat being vacated by retiring Senator Jim Bunning of Kentucky and defeated Kentucky Attorney GeneralJack Conway. As a supporter of the Tea Party movement, Paul has been vocal in advocating for term limits, a balanced budget amendment, and the Read the Bills Act, in addition to the widespread reduction of federal spending and taxation. He has gained prominence for his independent positions on many political issues, often clashing with both Republicans and Democrats.
Rushdie was appointed Commandeur dans Ordre des Arts et des Lettres of France in January 1999. In June 2007, Queen Elizabeth II dubbed him Knight Bachelor for his services to literature. In 2008, The Times ranked him thirteenth on its list of the fifty greatest British writers since 1945.
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
Designed to counter terrorist activities, the Patriot Act has been hotly contested since it was first signed into law in 2001. But why is the Patriot Act so controversial?
Learn More:
President Obama's Remarks about privacy
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/06/07/statement-president
N.S.A. Collection of Bulk Call Data Is Ruled Illegal
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/08/us/nsa-phone-records-collection-ruled-illegal-by-appeals-court.html
"A federal appeals court in New York ruled on Thursday that the once-secret National Security Agency program that is systematically collecting Am
6:51
The USA PATRIOT Act of 2001
The USA PATRIOT Act of 2001
The USA PATRIOT Act of 2001
This video is about the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001, the process of how it became a law, and the controversy surrounding the act.
6:40
Patriot Act Presentation
Patriot Act Presentation
Patriot Act Presentation
A montage of opinions on the Patriot Act.
4:04
Patriot Act Being Used Against a 16 Year Old Boy & its Own Citizens !
Patriot Act Being Used Against a 16 Year Old Boy & its Own Citizens !
Patriot Act Being Used Against a 16 Year Old Boy & its Own Citizens !
Patriot Act being used against its own citizens ! Granville County, NC -- On March 5 at about 10:00 PM, ten heavily armed FBI agents, accompanied by three lo...
1:13
Sen. Rand Paul Blocks Extension of the USA PATRIOT Act
Sen. Rand Paul Blocks Extension of the USA PATRIOT Act
Sen. Rand Paul Blocks Extension of the USA PATRIOT Act
36:20
FBI's Patriot Act Abuse of National Security Letters and illegal NSA spying
FBI's Patriot Act Abuse of National Security Letters and illegal NSA spying
FBI's Patriot Act Abuse of National Security Letters and illegal NSA spying
A short documentary about the FBI's abuse of the National Security Letter provisions in the USA PATRIOT Act and of the NSA Spying on Americans scandal with s...
2:54
Real Talk: The Patriot Act
Real Talk: The Patriot Act
Real Talk: The Patriot Act
Julie Borowski explains why the Patriot Act is a threat to Americans' civil liberties and security, and why citizens must tell their representatives to allow the expiration of Section 215 of the act.
40:25
Why Is the USA PATRIOT Act Unconstitutional and Controversial? Salman Rushdie (2004)
Why Is the USA PATRIOT Act Unconstitutional and Controversial? Salman Rushdie (2004)
Why Is the USA PATRIOT Act Unconstitutional and Controversial? Salman Rushdie (2004)
The USA PATRIOT Act has generated a great deal of controversy since its enactment.
Opponents of the Act have been quite vocal in asserting that it was passed opportunistically after the September 11 attacks, believing that there would have been little debate. They view the Act as one that was hurried through the Senate with little change before it was passed. (Senators Patrick Leahy and Russell Feingold proposed amendments to modify the final revision.)
The sheer magnitude of the Act itself was noted by Michael Moore in his controversial film Fahrenheit 9/11. In one of the scenes of the movie, he records Congressman Jim McDermott alleging t
8:50
Rand Paul Causes A Vicious Senate Cat Fight Over Patriot Act
Rand Paul Causes A Vicious Senate Cat Fight Over Patriot Act
Rand Paul Causes A Vicious Senate Cat Fight Over Patriot Act
"The Senate advanced legislation 77-17 to reform the National Security Agency on Sunday, but parts of the Patriot Act will nonetheless lapse for a few days amid opposition from Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.).
The legislation, called the USA Freedom Act, will not reach President Obama’s desk until after the three measures expire at midnight, meaning that the provisions will expire until the bill is passed by the Senate and signed by Obama later this week.
“The Patriot Act will expire tonight,” Paul declared triumphantly from the Senate floor during a rare Sunday evening vote. “It will only be temporary. They will ultimately get their way.”
Obama has
2:28
A "USA PATRIOT Act" Story
A "USA PATRIOT Act" Story
A "USA PATRIOT Act" Story
MAS Media Foundation of the Inland Empire chapter produced this short yet entertaining comedy film on the Patriot Act. A regular Muslim goes about his daily ...
8:11
USA Patriot Act
USA Patriot Act
USA Patriot Act
Easy to understand breakdown of the USA Patriot Act by a true patriot and esquire of this great nation. This no nonsense, straight up opportunity was utilize...
6:49
FISA Business Record Orders (Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act)
FISA Business Record Orders (Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act)
FISA Business Record Orders (Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act)
Topics: The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), Section 215, business record orders, the USA PATRIOT Act, 50 U.S.C. § 1861
Source: This video is archived from Surveillance Law, first offered by Stanford Law School on Coursera in Fall 2014.
Author: Jonathan Mayer, https://jonathanmayer.org
License: Creative Commons 4.0 Attribution, with materials from https://surveillancelaw.org/remix.txt
0:29
President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001
President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001
President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001
From: http://www.youtube.com/user/AssociatedPress October 26, 2010 President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001 FAIR USE NOTICE: This vi...
5:37
Senator Rand Paul trashes the Patriot Act
Senator Rand Paul trashes the Patriot Act
Senator Rand Paul trashes the Patriot Act
Senator Rand Paul takes to the floor of the U.S. Senate to explain his position on the extension of provisions in the USA Patriot Act before the chamber's pr...
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
Designed to counter terrorist activities, the Patriot Act has been hotly contested since it was first signed into law in 2001. But why is the Patriot Act so controversial?
Learn More:
President Obama's Remarks about privacy
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/06/07/statement-president
N.S.A. Collection of Bulk Call Data Is Ruled Illegal
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/08/us/nsa-phone-records-collection-ruled-illegal-by-appeals-court.html
"A federal appeals court in New York ruled on Thursday that the once-secret National Security Agency program that is systematically collecting Am
6:51
The USA PATRIOT Act of 2001
The USA PATRIOT Act of 2001
The USA PATRIOT Act of 2001
This video is about the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001, the process of how it became a law, and the controversy surrounding the act.
6:40
Patriot Act Presentation
Patriot Act Presentation
Patriot Act Presentation
A montage of opinions on the Patriot Act.
4:04
Patriot Act Being Used Against a 16 Year Old Boy & its Own Citizens !
Patriot Act Being Used Against a 16 Year Old Boy & its Own Citizens !
Patriot Act Being Used Against a 16 Year Old Boy & its Own Citizens !
Patriot Act being used against its own citizens ! Granville County, NC -- On March 5 at about 10:00 PM, ten heavily armed FBI agents, accompanied by three lo...
1:13
Sen. Rand Paul Blocks Extension of the USA PATRIOT Act
Sen. Rand Paul Blocks Extension of the USA PATRIOT Act
Sen. Rand Paul Blocks Extension of the USA PATRIOT Act
36:20
FBI's Patriot Act Abuse of National Security Letters and illegal NSA spying
FBI's Patriot Act Abuse of National Security Letters and illegal NSA spying
FBI's Patriot Act Abuse of National Security Letters and illegal NSA spying
A short documentary about the FBI's abuse of the National Security Letter provisions in the USA PATRIOT Act and of the NSA Spying on Americans scandal with s...
2:54
Real Talk: The Patriot Act
Real Talk: The Patriot Act
Real Talk: The Patriot Act
Julie Borowski explains why the Patriot Act is a threat to Americans' civil liberties and security, and why citizens must tell their representatives to allow the expiration of Section 215 of the act.
40:25
Why Is the USA PATRIOT Act Unconstitutional and Controversial? Salman Rushdie (2004)
Why Is the USA PATRIOT Act Unconstitutional and Controversial? Salman Rushdie (2004)
Why Is the USA PATRIOT Act Unconstitutional and Controversial? Salman Rushdie (2004)
The USA PATRIOT Act has generated a great deal of controversy since its enactment.
Opponents of the Act have been quite vocal in asserting that it was passed opportunistically after the September 11 attacks, believing that there would have been little debate. They view the Act as one that was hurried through the Senate with little change before it was passed. (Senators Patrick Leahy and Russell Feingold proposed amendments to modify the final revision.)
The sheer magnitude of the Act itself was noted by Michael Moore in his controversial film Fahrenheit 9/11. In one of the scenes of the movie, he records Congressman Jim McDermott alleging t
8:50
Rand Paul Causes A Vicious Senate Cat Fight Over Patriot Act
Rand Paul Causes A Vicious Senate Cat Fight Over Patriot Act
Rand Paul Causes A Vicious Senate Cat Fight Over Patriot Act
"The Senate advanced legislation 77-17 to reform the National Security Agency on Sunday, but parts of the Patriot Act will nonetheless lapse for a few days amid opposition from Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.).
The legislation, called the USA Freedom Act, will not reach President Obama’s desk until after the three measures expire at midnight, meaning that the provisions will expire until the bill is passed by the Senate and signed by Obama later this week.
“The Patriot Act will expire tonight,” Paul declared triumphantly from the Senate floor during a rare Sunday evening vote. “It will only be temporary. They will ultimately get their way.”
Obama has
2:28
A "USA PATRIOT Act" Story
A "USA PATRIOT Act" Story
A "USA PATRIOT Act" Story
MAS Media Foundation of the Inland Empire chapter produced this short yet entertaining comedy film on the Patriot Act. A regular Muslim goes about his daily ...
8:11
USA Patriot Act
USA Patriot Act
USA Patriot Act
Easy to understand breakdown of the USA Patriot Act by a true patriot and esquire of this great nation. This no nonsense, straight up opportunity was utilize...
6:49
FISA Business Record Orders (Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act)
FISA Business Record Orders (Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act)
FISA Business Record Orders (Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act)
Topics: The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), Section 215, business record orders, the USA PATRIOT Act, 50 U.S.C. § 1861
Source: This video is archived from Surveillance Law, first offered by Stanford Law School on Coursera in Fall 2014.
Author: Jonathan Mayer, https://jonathanmayer.org
License: Creative Commons 4.0 Attribution, with materials from https://surveillancelaw.org/remix.txt
0:29
President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001
President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001
President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001
From: http://www.youtube.com/user/AssociatedPress October 26, 2010 President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001 FAIR USE NOTICE: This vi...
5:37
Senator Rand Paul trashes the Patriot Act
Senator Rand Paul trashes the Patriot Act
Senator Rand Paul trashes the Patriot Act
Senator Rand Paul takes to the floor of the U.S. Senate to explain his position on the extension of provisions in the USA Patriot Act before the chamber's pr...
5:26
'USA Freedom Act' spies _MORE_ on Americans than 'USA Patriot Act' did
'USA Freedom Act' spies _MORE_ on Americans than 'USA Patriot Act' did
'USA Freedom Act' spies _MORE_ on Americans than 'USA Patriot Act' did
By: Judge Andrew Napolitano:
http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2015/06/04/nsa-spying-today-in-america-our-government-keeps-us-neither-free-nor-safe.html
"In their continuous efforts to create the impression that the government is doing something to keep Americans safe, politicians in Washington have misled and lied to the public. They have violated their oaths to uphold the Constitution. They have created a false sense of security. And they have dispatched and re-dispatched 60,000 federal agents to intercept the telephone calls, text messages and emails of all Americans all the time.
In the process, while publicly claiming they only acquire i
13:57
Will Congress Save PATRIOT Act...And Does It Matter?
Will Congress Save PATRIOT Act...And Does It Matter?
Will Congress Save PATRIOT Act...And Does It Matter?
Provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act are set to expire at midnight on May 31st. Will Congress act to save the surveillance...and will the NSA stop spying on us if they don't?
95:10
All About - USA PATRIOT Act (Extended)
All About - USA PATRIOT Act (Extended)
All About - USA PATRIOT Act (Extended)
What is USA PATRIOT Act?
A documentary report all about USA PATRIOT Act for the blind and visually impaired or for homework/assignment.
The USA PATRIOT Act is an Act of Congress that was signed into law by George W. Bush on October 26, 2001. Its title is a ten-letter backronym (USA PATRIOT) that stands for "Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001".
Intro/Outro music:
Discovery Hit/Chucky the Construction Worker - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC-BY-3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USA_PATRIOT_Act
Text to Speech
5:43
Hartmann: The USA - Patriot Act Ten Years Later - UnPatriotic & UnAmerican
Hartmann: The USA - Patriot Act Ten Years Later - UnPatriotic & UnAmerican
Hartmann: The USA - Patriot Act Ten Years Later - UnPatriotic & UnAmerican
Susan Herman, ACLU joins Thom Hartmann. Today is the tenth anniversary of President George W. Bush signing into law the PATRIOT Act. So...Happy Birthday to e...
5:43
Madsen: US Patriot Act is unconstitutional
Madsen: US Patriot Act is unconstitutional
Madsen: US Patriot Act is unconstitutional
The US Congress is moving to renew the USA PATRIOT Act, a controversial anti-terrorism law. The major provisions of the bill will expire soon, forcing the Co...
106:07
Debating the USA Patriot Act
Debating the USA Patriot Act
Debating the USA Patriot Act
Co-author of the USA Patriot Act, Viet Dinh, and Congressman Barney Frank, D-MA, debate the merits of the controversial 2001 law in a public discussion. This...
6:28
Patriot Act Equals Police State SO Freedom Act Equals Martial Law!?
Patriot Act Equals Police State SO Freedom Act Equals Martial Law!?
Patriot Act Equals Police State SO Freedom Act Equals Martial Law!?
With the passage of the USA FREEDOM Act, mainstream media outlets and even some “privacy advocates” are hailing the passage of the bill as a welcome step forward and a sign of defeat for the USA PATRIOT Act, the bill that was itself passed in the wake of the 9/11 attacks and widely representative of the United States’ rapid descent into outright police state tyranny.
Unfortunately, however, the passage of the FREEDOM Act is no victory for freedom. In fact, is an insultingly sound nail in freedom’s coffin.
The bill, which has been promoted and supported by many of the same members of Congress that supported the PATRIOT Act (notably, James Se
0:59
THE END OF AMERICA - The USA Patriot Act
THE END OF AMERICA - The USA Patriot Act
THE END OF AMERICA - The USA Patriot Act
A clip from the Director's Edition DVD of THE END OF AMERICA, outlining the consequences of the USA Patriot Act. Buy the film now from IndiePix Films at: htt...
3:44
ANONYMOUS-Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act Invades You All-2015
ANONYMOUS-Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act Invades You All-2015
ANONYMOUS-Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act Invades You All-2015
Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act
EFF sued the Department of Justice (DOJ) on the 10th anniversary of the signing of the USA PATRIOT Act in October 2011 for answers about “secret interpretations” of a controversial section of the law. In June 2013, a leaked FISA court order publicly revealed that “secret interpretation”: the government was using Section 215 of the Patriot Act to collect the phone records of virtually every person in the United States.
Prior to the revelations, several senators warned that the DOJ was using Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act to support what government attorneys called a “sensitive collection program,” targeting
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
Designed to counter terrorist activities, the Patriot Act has been hotly contested since it was first signed into law in 2001. But why is the Patriot Act so controversial?
Learn More:
President Obama's Remarks about privacy
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/06/07/statement-president
N.S.A. Collection of Bulk Call Data Is Ruled Illegal
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/08/us/nsa-phone-records-collection-ruled-illegal-by-appeals-court.html
"A federal appeals court in New York ruled on Thursday that the once-secret National Security Agency program that is systematically collecting Americans' phone records in bulk is illegal."
How the Patriot Act Works?
http://people.howstuffworks.com/patriot-act1.htm
"The Patriot Act is a U.S. law passed in the wake of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. "
The Patriot Act: Key Controversies
http://www.npr.org/news/specials/patriotact/patriotactdeal.html
"The Senate on Friday rejected attempts to reauthorize major provisions of the USA Patriot Act, in a major blow to the Bush administration."
Watch More:
How Did The NSA Become Big Brother?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSr_cuLLK7Y&list;=UUgRvm1yLFoaQKhmaTqXk9SA
Subscribe to TestTube Daily!
http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
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TestTube's new daily show is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
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Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
Designed to counter terrorist activities, the Patriot Act has been hotly contested since it was first signed into law in 2001. But why is the Patriot Act so controversial?
Learn More:
President Obama's Remarks about privacy
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/06/07/statement-president
N.S.A. Collection of Bulk Call Data Is Ruled Illegal
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/08/us/nsa-phone-records-collection-ruled-illegal-by-appeals-court.html
"A federal appeals court in New York ruled on Thursday that the once-secret National Security Agency program that is systematically collecting Americans' phone records in bulk is illegal."
How the Patriot Act Works?
http://people.howstuffworks.com/patriot-act1.htm
"The Patriot Act is a U.S. law passed in the wake of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. "
The Patriot Act: Key Controversies
http://www.npr.org/news/specials/patriotact/patriotactdeal.html
"The Senate on Friday rejected attempts to reauthorize major provisions of the USA Patriot Act, in a major blow to the Bush administration."
Watch More:
How Did The NSA Become Big Brother?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSr_cuLLK7Y&list;=UUgRvm1yLFoaQKhmaTqXk9SA
Subscribe to TestTube Daily!
http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
_________________________
TestTube's new daily show is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more TestTube: http://testtube.com/testtubedailyshow/
Subscribe now! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=testtubenetwork
TestTube on Twitter https://twitter.com/TestTube
Trace Dominguez on Twitter https://twitter.com/TraceDominguez
TestTube on Facebook https://facebook.com/testtubenetwork
TestTube on Google+ http://gplus.to/TestTube
Download the New TestTube iOS app! http://testu.be/1ndmmMq
Patriot Act being used against its own citizens ! Granville County, NC -- On March 5 at about 10:00 PM, ten heavily armed FBI agents, accompanied by three lo...
Patriot Act being used against its own citizens ! Granville County, NC -- On March 5 at about 10:00 PM, ten heavily armed FBI agents, accompanied by three lo...
A short documentary about the FBI's abuse of the National Security Letter provisions in the USA PATRIOT Act and of the NSA Spying on Americans scandal with s...
A short documentary about the FBI's abuse of the National Security Letter provisions in the USA PATRIOT Act and of the NSA Spying on Americans scandal with s...
Julie Borowski explains why the Patriot Act is a threat to Americans' civil liberties and security, and why citizens must tell their representatives to allow the expiration of Section 215 of the act.
Julie Borowski explains why the Patriot Act is a threat to Americans' civil liberties and security, and why citizens must tell their representatives to allow the expiration of Section 215 of the act.
published:08 Apr 2015
views:2205
Why Is the USA PATRIOT Act Unconstitutional and Controversial? Salman Rushdie (2004)
The USA PATRIOT Act has generated a great deal of controversy since its enactment.
Opponents of the Act have been quite vocal in asserting that it was passed opportunistically after the September 11 attacks, believing that there would have been little debate. They view the Act as one that was hurried through the Senate with little change before it was passed. (Senators Patrick Leahy and Russell Feingold proposed amendments to modify the final revision.)
The sheer magnitude of the Act itself was noted by Michael Moore in his controversial film Fahrenheit 9/11. In one of the scenes of the movie, he records Congressman Jim McDermott alleging that no Senator read the bill and John Conyers, Jr. as saying, "We don't read most of the bills. Do you really know what that would entail if we read every bill that we passed?" Congressman Conyers then answers his own rhetorical question, asserting that if they did it would "slow down the legislative process".[206] As a dramatic device, Moore then hired an ice-cream van and drove around Washington, D.C. with a loud speaker, reading out the Act to puzzled passers-by, which included a few Senators.
However, Moore was not the only commentator to notice that not many people had read the Act. When Dahlia Lithwick and Julia Turne for Slate asked, "How bad is PATRIOT, anyway?", they decided that it was "hard to tell" and stated:
The ACLU, in a new fact sheet challenging the DOJ Web site, wants you to believe that the act threatens our most basic civil liberties. Ashcroft and his roadies call the changes in law "modest and incremental." Since almost nobody has read the legislation, much of what we think we know about it comes third-hand and spun. Both advocates and opponents are guilty of fear-mongering and distortion in some instances.
One prime example of a controversy of the Patriot Act is shown in the case of Susan Lindauer.
Another is the recent court case United States v. Antoine Jones. A nightclub owner was linked to a drug trafficking stash house via a law enforcement GPS tracking device attached to his car. It was placed there without a warrant, which caused a serious conviction obstacle for federal prosecutors in court. Through the years the case rose all the way to the United States Supreme Court where the conviction was overturned in favor of the defendant. The court found that increased monitoring of suspects caused by such legislation like the Patriot Act directly put the suspects' Constitutional rights in jeopardy.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) has criticized the law as unconstitutional, especially when "the private communications of law-abiding American citizens might be intercepted incidentally",[209] while the Electronic Frontier Foundation held that the lower standard applied to wiretaps "gives the FBI a 'blank check' to violate the communications privacy of countless innocent Americans".[48] Others do not find the roving wiretap legislation to be as concerning. Professor David D. Cole of the Georgetown University Law Center, a critic of many of the provisions of the Act, found that though they come at a cost to privacy are a sensible measure[210] while Paul Rosenzweig, a Senior Legal Research Fellow in the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at the Heritage Foundation, argues that roving wiretaps are just a response to rapidly changing communication technology that is not necessarily fixed to a specific location or device.[211]
The Act also allows access to voicemail through a search warrant rather than through a title III wiretap order.[212] James Dempsey, of the CDT, believes that it unnecessarily overlooks the importance of notice under the Fourth Amendment and under a Title III wiretap,[213] and the EFF criticizes the provision's lack of notice. However, the EFF's criticism is more extensive—they believe that the amendment "is in possible violation of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution" because previously if the FBI listened to voicemail illegally, it could not use the messages in evidence against the defendant.[214] Others disagree with these assessments. Professor Orin Kerr, of the George Washington University school of law, believes that the ECPA "adopted a rather strange rule to regulate voicemail stored with service providers" because "under ECPA, if the government knew that there was one copy of an unopened private message in a person's bedroom and another copy on their remotely stored voicemail, it was illegal for the FBI to simply obtain the voicemail; the law actually compelled the police to invade the home and rifle through peoples' bedrooms so as not to disturb the more private voicemail." In Professor Kerr's opinion, this made little sense and the amendment that was made by the USA PATRIOT Act was reasonable and sensible.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriot_Act
The USA PATRIOT Act has generated a great deal of controversy since its enactment.
Opponents of the Act have been quite vocal in asserting that it was passed opportunistically after the September 11 attacks, believing that there would have been little debate. They view the Act as one that was hurried through the Senate with little change before it was passed. (Senators Patrick Leahy and Russell Feingold proposed amendments to modify the final revision.)
The sheer magnitude of the Act itself was noted by Michael Moore in his controversial film Fahrenheit 9/11. In one of the scenes of the movie, he records Congressman Jim McDermott alleging that no Senator read the bill and John Conyers, Jr. as saying, "We don't read most of the bills. Do you really know what that would entail if we read every bill that we passed?" Congressman Conyers then answers his own rhetorical question, asserting that if they did it would "slow down the legislative process".[206] As a dramatic device, Moore then hired an ice-cream van and drove around Washington, D.C. with a loud speaker, reading out the Act to puzzled passers-by, which included a few Senators.
However, Moore was not the only commentator to notice that not many people had read the Act. When Dahlia Lithwick and Julia Turne for Slate asked, "How bad is PATRIOT, anyway?", they decided that it was "hard to tell" and stated:
The ACLU, in a new fact sheet challenging the DOJ Web site, wants you to believe that the act threatens our most basic civil liberties. Ashcroft and his roadies call the changes in law "modest and incremental." Since almost nobody has read the legislation, much of what we think we know about it comes third-hand and spun. Both advocates and opponents are guilty of fear-mongering and distortion in some instances.
One prime example of a controversy of the Patriot Act is shown in the case of Susan Lindauer.
Another is the recent court case United States v. Antoine Jones. A nightclub owner was linked to a drug trafficking stash house via a law enforcement GPS tracking device attached to his car. It was placed there without a warrant, which caused a serious conviction obstacle for federal prosecutors in court. Through the years the case rose all the way to the United States Supreme Court where the conviction was overturned in favor of the defendant. The court found that increased monitoring of suspects caused by such legislation like the Patriot Act directly put the suspects' Constitutional rights in jeopardy.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) has criticized the law as unconstitutional, especially when "the private communications of law-abiding American citizens might be intercepted incidentally",[209] while the Electronic Frontier Foundation held that the lower standard applied to wiretaps "gives the FBI a 'blank check' to violate the communications privacy of countless innocent Americans".[48] Others do not find the roving wiretap legislation to be as concerning. Professor David D. Cole of the Georgetown University Law Center, a critic of many of the provisions of the Act, found that though they come at a cost to privacy are a sensible measure[210] while Paul Rosenzweig, a Senior Legal Research Fellow in the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at the Heritage Foundation, argues that roving wiretaps are just a response to rapidly changing communication technology that is not necessarily fixed to a specific location or device.[211]
The Act also allows access to voicemail through a search warrant rather than through a title III wiretap order.[212] James Dempsey, of the CDT, believes that it unnecessarily overlooks the importance of notice under the Fourth Amendment and under a Title III wiretap,[213] and the EFF criticizes the provision's lack of notice. However, the EFF's criticism is more extensive—they believe that the amendment "is in possible violation of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution" because previously if the FBI listened to voicemail illegally, it could not use the messages in evidence against the defendant.[214] Others disagree with these assessments. Professor Orin Kerr, of the George Washington University school of law, believes that the ECPA "adopted a rather strange rule to regulate voicemail stored with service providers" because "under ECPA, if the government knew that there was one copy of an unopened private message in a person's bedroom and another copy on their remotely stored voicemail, it was illegal for the FBI to simply obtain the voicemail; the law actually compelled the police to invade the home and rifle through peoples' bedrooms so as not to disturb the more private voicemail." In Professor Kerr's opinion, this made little sense and the amendment that was made by the USA PATRIOT Act was reasonable and sensible.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriot_Act
published:20 Apr 2015
views:15
Rand Paul Causes A Vicious Senate Cat Fight Over Patriot Act
"The Senate advanced legislation 77-17 to reform the National Security Agency on Sunday, but parts of the Patriot Act will nonetheless lapse for a few days amid opposition from Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.).
The legislation, called the USA Freedom Act, will not reach President Obama’s desk until after the three measures expire at midnight, meaning that the provisions will expire until the bill is passed by the Senate and signed by Obama later this week.
“The Patriot Act will expire tonight,” Paul declared triumphantly from the Senate floor during a rare Sunday evening vote. “It will only be temporary. They will ultimately get their way.”
Obama has supported the measure and had repeatedly urged lawmakers to support it in the days leading up to Sunday’s deadline."
Read more here:
http://thehill.com/policy/national-security/243575-patriot-act-expires-as-paul-blocks-final-vote-on-NSA-reform
Cenk Uygur (http://www.twitter.com/cenkuygur), host of The Young Turks, breaks it down.
Go to https://www.naturebox.com/tyt for a free trial and help us out while snacking out!
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Download the iOS version here: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/the-young-turks/id412793195?ls=1&mt;=8
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"The Senate advanced legislation 77-17 to reform the National Security Agency on Sunday, but parts of the Patriot Act will nonetheless lapse for a few days amid opposition from Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.).
The legislation, called the USA Freedom Act, will not reach President Obama’s desk until after the three measures expire at midnight, meaning that the provisions will expire until the bill is passed by the Senate and signed by Obama later this week.
“The Patriot Act will expire tonight,” Paul declared triumphantly from the Senate floor during a rare Sunday evening vote. “It will only be temporary. They will ultimately get their way.”
Obama has supported the measure and had repeatedly urged lawmakers to support it in the days leading up to Sunday’s deadline."
Read more here:
http://thehill.com/policy/national-security/243575-patriot-act-expires-as-paul-blocks-final-vote-on-NSA-reform
Cenk Uygur (http://www.twitter.com/cenkuygur), host of The Young Turks, breaks it down.
Go to https://www.naturebox.com/tyt for a free trial and help us out while snacking out!
Get The Young Turks Mobile App Today!
Download the iOS version here: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/the-young-turks/id412793195?ls=1&mt;=8
Download the Android version here: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.tyt
MAS Media Foundation of the Inland Empire chapter produced this short yet entertaining comedy film on the Patriot Act. A regular Muslim goes about his daily ...
MAS Media Foundation of the Inland Empire chapter produced this short yet entertaining comedy film on the Patriot Act. A regular Muslim goes about his daily ...
Easy to understand breakdown of the USA Patriot Act by a true patriot and esquire of this great nation. This no nonsense, straight up opportunity was utilize...
Easy to understand breakdown of the USA Patriot Act by a true patriot and esquire of this great nation. This no nonsense, straight up opportunity was utilize...
Topics: The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), Section 215, business record orders, the USA PATRIOT Act, 50 U.S.C. § 1861
Source: This video is archived from Surveillance Law, first offered by Stanford Law School on Coursera in Fall 2014.
Author: Jonathan Mayer, https://jonathanmayer.org
License: Creative Commons 4.0 Attribution, with materials from https://surveillancelaw.org/remix.txt
Topics: The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), Section 215, business record orders, the USA PATRIOT Act, 50 U.S.C. § 1861
Source: This video is archived from Surveillance Law, first offered by Stanford Law School on Coursera in Fall 2014.
Author: Jonathan Mayer, https://jonathanmayer.org
License: Creative Commons 4.0 Attribution, with materials from https://surveillancelaw.org/remix.txt
published:29 Nov 2014
views:0
President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001
From: http://www.youtube.com/user/AssociatedPress October 26, 2010 President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001 FAIR USE NOTICE: This vi...
From: http://www.youtube.com/user/AssociatedPress October 26, 2010 President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001 FAIR USE NOTICE: This vi...
Senator Rand Paul takes to the floor of the U.S. Senate to explain his position on the extension of provisions in the USA Patriot Act before the chamber's pr...
Senator Rand Paul takes to the floor of the U.S. Senate to explain his position on the extension of provisions in the USA Patriot Act before the chamber's pr...
By: Judge Andrew Napolitano:
http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2015/06/04/nsa-spying-today-in-america-our-government-keeps-us-neither-free-nor-safe.html
"In their continuous efforts to create the impression that the government is doing something to keep Americans safe, politicians in Washington have misled and lied to the public. They have violated their oaths to uphold the Constitution. They have created a false sense of security. And they have dispatched and re-dispatched 60,000 federal agents to intercept the telephone calls, text messages and emails of all Americans all the time.
In the process, while publicly claiming they only acquire identifying metadata -- the time, date, location, duration, telephone numbers and email addresses of communications -- they have in fact surreptitiously gained access to the content of these communications.
On June 1, one of the three claimed legal authorities for all this, Section 215 of the Patriot Act, expired, as Congress was unable to agree on either its reinstitution or the enactment of a substitute. At the time that Section 215 was about to expire, President Obama, Attorney General Lynch and FBI Director Comey warned that the NSA’s computers would go dark and the American public would be at the mercy of our enemies. Their warnings were nonsense.
The NSA is a military entity that utilizes the services of military computer experts and agents, employs civilians, and hires companies that provide thousands of outside contractors. After nearly 14 years of spying on us -- all authorized by a secret court whose judges cannot keep records of what they have ordered or discuss openly what they know -- the NSA now has computers and computer personnel physically located in the main switching offices of all telecom and Internet service providers in the United States. It has 24/7 access to the content of everyone’s telephone calls, emails and text messages.
The data amassed thereby is so vast that the government cannot sift through it quickly or effectively enough to stop such notorious events as the Boston Marathon bombings, the Ft. Hood massacre and the attempted massacre last month outside of Dallas. The Justice Department acknowledged this last month when it revealed that all this spying has not succeeded in stopping any terrorist plots and has not aided any federal prosecutions of terrorism.
It also has failed to protect our freedoms. The Constitution requires probable cause as a precondition for all search warrants. That is a level of evidence about the place to be searched or the person or thing to be seized sufficient to induce a judge to conclude that a crime probably has been committed. Without this probable cause requirement, nothing would stop the government from searching and seizing whatever it wants. Yet that is where we are today. The NSA’s unconstitutional standard of “government need” reinstitutes the general warrants -- search where you wish and seize what you find -- which the Fourth Amendment was written to prohibit.
Both the Patriot Act and the Freedom Act, the substitute law enacted by Congress, do away with the probable cause requirement. Both of those laws permit the FISA court to issue general warrants based on the government’s needs, rather than probable cause. It is the government-need standard, which is no standard at all, that has resulted in spying on all persons all the time.
When Section 215 of the Patriot Act expired, the NSA’s legal (yet unconstitutional) authority to spy did not. The propaganda that its computers were shut down is false. Section 702 of the FISA law and President Bush’s October 2001 executive order were and are still valid, and both have been interpreted to unleash the NSA.
Section 702 permits warrantless surveillance of Americans who speak with foreigners, and the NSA has gotten FISA warrants to intercept the calls of the folks to whom those Americans speak, to the sixth degree. That alone encompasses all persons in the United States. Bush’s executive order was given to all military intelligence agencies -- of which the NSA is but one. It instructed the military to intercept the calls and emails of whatever Americans it needs to listen in upon to enhance safety. That executive order still stands. This is why the hand wringing and false claims that the NSA computers went dark is untruthful. The computers violate our privacy and assault our liberty and fail to enhance our safety, but they are not dark.
Last week, one of the pro-spying politicians was clever, even cute, when he issued the one-liner: “You can’t enjoy civil liberties from a coffin.” His statement was a craven articulation of failure. The government’s job is to keep us free and safe. If it keeps us safe but not free, it has failed to do its job. Today it does neither. I suggest to him Patrick Henry on this: “Give me liberty or give me death.”
Which one-liner better embodies American values, history and traditions?"
By: Judge Andrew Napolitano:
http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2015/06/04/nsa-spying-today-in-america-our-government-keeps-us-neither-free-nor-safe.html
"In their continuous efforts to create the impression that the government is doing something to keep Americans safe, politicians in Washington have misled and lied to the public. They have violated their oaths to uphold the Constitution. They have created a false sense of security. And they have dispatched and re-dispatched 60,000 federal agents to intercept the telephone calls, text messages and emails of all Americans all the time.
In the process, while publicly claiming they only acquire identifying metadata -- the time, date, location, duration, telephone numbers and email addresses of communications -- they have in fact surreptitiously gained access to the content of these communications.
On June 1, one of the three claimed legal authorities for all this, Section 215 of the Patriot Act, expired, as Congress was unable to agree on either its reinstitution or the enactment of a substitute. At the time that Section 215 was about to expire, President Obama, Attorney General Lynch and FBI Director Comey warned that the NSA’s computers would go dark and the American public would be at the mercy of our enemies. Their warnings were nonsense.
The NSA is a military entity that utilizes the services of military computer experts and agents, employs civilians, and hires companies that provide thousands of outside contractors. After nearly 14 years of spying on us -- all authorized by a secret court whose judges cannot keep records of what they have ordered or discuss openly what they know -- the NSA now has computers and computer personnel physically located in the main switching offices of all telecom and Internet service providers in the United States. It has 24/7 access to the content of everyone’s telephone calls, emails and text messages.
The data amassed thereby is so vast that the government cannot sift through it quickly or effectively enough to stop such notorious events as the Boston Marathon bombings, the Ft. Hood massacre and the attempted massacre last month outside of Dallas. The Justice Department acknowledged this last month when it revealed that all this spying has not succeeded in stopping any terrorist plots and has not aided any federal prosecutions of terrorism.
It also has failed to protect our freedoms. The Constitution requires probable cause as a precondition for all search warrants. That is a level of evidence about the place to be searched or the person or thing to be seized sufficient to induce a judge to conclude that a crime probably has been committed. Without this probable cause requirement, nothing would stop the government from searching and seizing whatever it wants. Yet that is where we are today. The NSA’s unconstitutional standard of “government need” reinstitutes the general warrants -- search where you wish and seize what you find -- which the Fourth Amendment was written to prohibit.
Both the Patriot Act and the Freedom Act, the substitute law enacted by Congress, do away with the probable cause requirement. Both of those laws permit the FISA court to issue general warrants based on the government’s needs, rather than probable cause. It is the government-need standard, which is no standard at all, that has resulted in spying on all persons all the time.
When Section 215 of the Patriot Act expired, the NSA’s legal (yet unconstitutional) authority to spy did not. The propaganda that its computers were shut down is false. Section 702 of the FISA law and President Bush’s October 2001 executive order were and are still valid, and both have been interpreted to unleash the NSA.
Section 702 permits warrantless surveillance of Americans who speak with foreigners, and the NSA has gotten FISA warrants to intercept the calls of the folks to whom those Americans speak, to the sixth degree. That alone encompasses all persons in the United States. Bush’s executive order was given to all military intelligence agencies -- of which the NSA is but one. It instructed the military to intercept the calls and emails of whatever Americans it needs to listen in upon to enhance safety. That executive order still stands. This is why the hand wringing and false claims that the NSA computers went dark is untruthful. The computers violate our privacy and assault our liberty and fail to enhance our safety, but they are not dark.
Last week, one of the pro-spying politicians was clever, even cute, when he issued the one-liner: “You can’t enjoy civil liberties from a coffin.” His statement was a craven articulation of failure. The government’s job is to keep us free and safe. If it keeps us safe but not free, it has failed to do its job. Today it does neither. I suggest to him Patrick Henry on this: “Give me liberty or give me death.”
Which one-liner better embodies American values, history and traditions?"
published:04 Jun 2015
views:1
Will Congress Save PATRIOT Act...And Does It Matter?
Provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act are set to expire at midnight on May 31st. Will Congress act to save the surveillance...and will the NSA stop spying on us if they don't?
Provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act are set to expire at midnight on May 31st. Will Congress act to save the surveillance...and will the NSA stop spying on us if they don't?
What is USA PATRIOT Act?
A documentary report all about USA PATRIOT Act for the blind and visually impaired or for homework/assignment.
The USA PATRIOT Act is an Act of Congress that was signed into law by George W. Bush on October 26, 2001. Its title is a ten-letter backronym (USA PATRIOT) that stands for "Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001".
Intro/Outro music:
Discovery Hit/Chucky the Construction Worker - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC-BY-3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USA_PATRIOT_Act
Text to Speech powered by tts-api.com
Images are Public Domain or CC-BY-3.0:
Bush_signs_USA_PATRIOT_Improvement_and_Reauthorization_Act.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Patriot_Act
Bush_encourages_renewal_of_Patriot_Act_2005.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriot_Act,_Title_II
220px-Patriotactsigning.jpg from http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/USA_PATRIOT_Act
Bush_signs_Patriot_Act_2001.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_W._Bush's_first_term_as_President_of_the_United_States
150px-Uscongress.gif from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriot_Act,_Title_III
250px-Patriotactsigning.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Patriot_Act
220px-Feingold_Patriot_Act_Remarks.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russ_Feingold
250px-Alberto_Gonzales_-_Oath_of_office_(2005-02-14).jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Patriot_Act
200px-Patriotactsigning.jpg from http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/USA_PATRIOT_Act
220px-Us-map.png from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriot_Act,_Title_IV
What is USA PATRIOT Act?
A documentary report all about USA PATRIOT Act for the blind and visually impaired or for homework/assignment.
The USA PATRIOT Act is an Act of Congress that was signed into law by George W. Bush on October 26, 2001. Its title is a ten-letter backronym (USA PATRIOT) that stands for "Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001".
Intro/Outro music:
Discovery Hit/Chucky the Construction Worker - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC-BY-3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USA_PATRIOT_Act
Text to Speech powered by tts-api.com
Images are Public Domain or CC-BY-3.0:
Bush_signs_USA_PATRIOT_Improvement_and_Reauthorization_Act.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Patriot_Act
Bush_encourages_renewal_of_Patriot_Act_2005.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriot_Act,_Title_II
220px-Patriotactsigning.jpg from http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/USA_PATRIOT_Act
Bush_signs_Patriot_Act_2001.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_W._Bush's_first_term_as_President_of_the_United_States
150px-Uscongress.gif from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriot_Act,_Title_III
250px-Patriotactsigning.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Patriot_Act
220px-Feingold_Patriot_Act_Remarks.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russ_Feingold
250px-Alberto_Gonzales_-_Oath_of_office_(2005-02-14).jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Patriot_Act
200px-Patriotactsigning.jpg from http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/USA_PATRIOT_Act
220px-Us-map.png from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriot_Act,_Title_IV
published:10 Apr 2015
views:0
Hartmann: The USA - Patriot Act Ten Years Later - UnPatriotic & UnAmerican
Susan Herman, ACLU joins Thom Hartmann. Today is the tenth anniversary of President George W. Bush signing into law the PATRIOT Act. So...Happy Birthday to e...
Susan Herman, ACLU joins Thom Hartmann. Today is the tenth anniversary of President George W. Bush signing into law the PATRIOT Act. So...Happy Birthday to e...
The US Congress is moving to renew the USA PATRIOT Act, a controversial anti-terrorism law. The major provisions of the bill will expire soon, forcing the Co...
The US Congress is moving to renew the USA PATRIOT Act, a controversial anti-terrorism law. The major provisions of the bill will expire soon, forcing the Co...
Co-author of the USA Patriot Act, Viet Dinh, and Congressman Barney Frank, D-MA, debate the merits of the controversial 2001 law in a public discussion. This...
Co-author of the USA Patriot Act, Viet Dinh, and Congressman Barney Frank, D-MA, debate the merits of the controversial 2001 law in a public discussion. This...
With the passage of the USA FREEDOM Act, mainstream media outlets and even some “privacy advocates” are hailing the passage of the bill as a welcome step forward and a sign of defeat for the USA PATRIOT Act, the bill that was itself passed in the wake of the 9/11 attacks and widely representative of the United States’ rapid descent into outright police state tyranny.
Unfortunately, however, the passage of the FREEDOM Act is no victory for freedom. In fact, is an insultingly sound nail in freedom’s coffin.
The bill, which has been promoted and supported by many of the same members of Congress that supported the PATRIOT Act (notably, James Sensenbrenner) now comes on the heels of a 2nd US Circuit Court decision that bulk telecommunications data collection was not authorized by the PATRIOT Act, unconstitutional, and therefore an illegal act.
To be sure, the FREEDOM Act has been in the works for passage since 2013 when lawmakers began pushing it. At the time, the bill attempted to actually extend the PATRIOT Act provisions through the end of 2017 as well as maintain a number of violations of civil liberties and privacy concerns.
The new version of the FREEDOM Act is no better, except perhaps in the language being used to promote it.
When the 2nd Circuit Court ruled that the PATRIOT Act did not authorize the bulk collection of data nationwide and that doing so violates the Constitution, it essentially made the actions of the NSA and the rest of the US intelligence apparatus illegal. The FREEDOM Act does nothing to punish or prevent intelligence agencies who have been illegally wiretapping innocent Americans. In fact, it has simply legalized the process. According to Daniel McAdams of the Ron Paul Institute, the bill is able to legalize the storage and collection of bulk data by putting the responsibility upon the back of the major telecommunications companies who will be tasked with doing just that – storing and retaining all data – for future use by intelligence agencies. This data must be turned over to the agencies upon request. It is, essentially, the privatization of mass surveillance.
http://www.thedailysheeple.com/freedom-act-passes-effectively-kills-freedom_062015
With the passage of the USA FREEDOM Act, mainstream media outlets and even some “privacy advocates” are hailing the passage of the bill as a welcome step forward and a sign of defeat for the USA PATRIOT Act, the bill that was itself passed in the wake of the 9/11 attacks and widely representative of the United States’ rapid descent into outright police state tyranny.
Unfortunately, however, the passage of the FREEDOM Act is no victory for freedom. In fact, is an insultingly sound nail in freedom’s coffin.
The bill, which has been promoted and supported by many of the same members of Congress that supported the PATRIOT Act (notably, James Sensenbrenner) now comes on the heels of a 2nd US Circuit Court decision that bulk telecommunications data collection was not authorized by the PATRIOT Act, unconstitutional, and therefore an illegal act.
To be sure, the FREEDOM Act has been in the works for passage since 2013 when lawmakers began pushing it. At the time, the bill attempted to actually extend the PATRIOT Act provisions through the end of 2017 as well as maintain a number of violations of civil liberties and privacy concerns.
The new version of the FREEDOM Act is no better, except perhaps in the language being used to promote it.
When the 2nd Circuit Court ruled that the PATRIOT Act did not authorize the bulk collection of data nationwide and that doing so violates the Constitution, it essentially made the actions of the NSA and the rest of the US intelligence apparatus illegal. The FREEDOM Act does nothing to punish or prevent intelligence agencies who have been illegally wiretapping innocent Americans. In fact, it has simply legalized the process. According to Daniel McAdams of the Ron Paul Institute, the bill is able to legalize the storage and collection of bulk data by putting the responsibility upon the back of the major telecommunications companies who will be tasked with doing just that – storing and retaining all data – for future use by intelligence agencies. This data must be turned over to the agencies upon request. It is, essentially, the privatization of mass surveillance.
http://www.thedailysheeple.com/freedom-act-passes-effectively-kills-freedom_062015
A clip from the Director's Edition DVD of THE END OF AMERICA, outlining the consequences of the USA Patriot Act. Buy the film now from IndiePix Films at: htt...
A clip from the Director's Edition DVD of THE END OF AMERICA, outlining the consequences of the USA Patriot Act. Buy the film now from IndiePix Films at: htt...
Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act
EFF sued the Department of Justice (DOJ) on the 10th anniversary of the signing of the USA PATRIOT Act in October 2011 for answers about “secret interpretations” of a controversial section of the law. In June 2013, a leaked FISA court order publicly revealed that “secret interpretation”: the government was using Section 215 of the Patriot Act to collect the phone records of virtually every person in the United States.
Prior to the revelations, several senators warned that the DOJ was using Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act to support what government attorneys called a “sensitive collection program,” targeting large numbers of Americans. The language of Section 215 allows for secret court orders to collect “tangible things” that could be relevant to a government investigation – a far lower threshold and more expansive reach than a warrant based on probable cause. The list of possible “tangible things” the government can obtain is seemingly limitless, and could include everything from driver’s license records to Internet browsing patterns.
In response to a court order in our lawsuit, in September 2013, the government released hundreds of pages of previously secret FISA documents detailing the court’s interpretation of Section 215, including an opinion excoriating the NSA for misusing its mass surveillance database for years. In October 2013, the government released a second batch of documents related to Section 215, which showed, among other things, that the NSA had collected cell site location without notifying its oversight committees in Congress or the FISA court.
EFF’s lawsuit came after the DOJ failed to respond to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request on the interpretation and use of Section 215. The suit demanded records describing the types of “tangible things” that have been collected so far, the legal basis for the “sensitive collection program,” and information on the how many people have been affected by Section 215 orders.
The lawsuit remains ongoing.
https://www.eff.org/foia/section-215-usa-patriot-act
http://www.slate.com/blogs/weigel/2013/06/07/nsa_prism_scandal_what_patriot_act_section_215_does.html
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/apr/08/congress-must-end-mass-nsa-surveillance-with-next-patriot-act-vote
http://justsecurity.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Final-Report-1-23-14.pdf
Anonymous.
We DO Not Forgive,
We Do Not Forget,
Tyrants And Corrupter's
EXPECT US!
Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act
EFF sued the Department of Justice (DOJ) on the 10th anniversary of the signing of the USA PATRIOT Act in October 2011 for answers about “secret interpretations” of a controversial section of the law. In June 2013, a leaked FISA court order publicly revealed that “secret interpretation”: the government was using Section 215 of the Patriot Act to collect the phone records of virtually every person in the United States.
Prior to the revelations, several senators warned that the DOJ was using Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act to support what government attorneys called a “sensitive collection program,” targeting large numbers of Americans. The language of Section 215 allows for secret court orders to collect “tangible things” that could be relevant to a government investigation – a far lower threshold and more expansive reach than a warrant based on probable cause. The list of possible “tangible things” the government can obtain is seemingly limitless, and could include everything from driver’s license records to Internet browsing patterns.
In response to a court order in our lawsuit, in September 2013, the government released hundreds of pages of previously secret FISA documents detailing the court’s interpretation of Section 215, including an opinion excoriating the NSA for misusing its mass surveillance database for years. In October 2013, the government released a second batch of documents related to Section 215, which showed, among other things, that the NSA had collected cell site location without notifying its oversight committees in Congress or the FISA court.
EFF’s lawsuit came after the DOJ failed to respond to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request on the interpretation and use of Section 215. The suit demanded records describing the types of “tangible things” that have been collected so far, the legal basis for the “sensitive collection program,” and information on the how many people have been affected by Section 215 orders.
The lawsuit remains ongoing.
https://www.eff.org/foia/section-215-usa-patriot-act
http://www.slate.com/blogs/weigel/2013/06/07/nsa_prism_scandal_what_patriot_act_section_215_does.html
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/apr/08/congress-must-end-mass-nsa-surveillance-with-next-patriot-act-vote
http://justsecurity.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Final-Report-1-23-14.pdf
Anonymous.
We DO Not Forgive,
We Do Not Forget,
Tyrants And Corrupter's
EXPECT US!
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
Designed to counter terrorist activities, the Patri...
published:13 May 2015
What Is The Patriot Act?
What Is The Patriot Act?
published:13 May 2015
views:301
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
Designed to counter terrorist activities, the Patriot Act has been hotly contested since it was first signed into law in 2001. But why is the Patriot Act so controversial?
Learn More:
President Obama's Remarks about privacy
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/06/07/statement-president
N.S.A. Collection of Bulk Call Data Is Ruled Illegal
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/08/us/nsa-phone-records-collection-ruled-illegal-by-appeals-court.html
"A federal appeals court in New York ruled on Thursday that the once-secret National Security Agency program that is systematically collecting Americans' phone records in bulk is illegal."
How the Patriot Act Works?
http://people.howstuffworks.com/patriot-act1.htm
"The Patriot Act is a U.S. law passed in the wake of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. "
The Patriot Act: Key Controversies
http://www.npr.org/news/specials/patriotact/patriotactdeal.html
"The Senate on Friday rejected attempts to reauthorize major provisions of the USA Patriot Act, in a major blow to the Bush administration."
Watch More:
How Did The NSA Become Big Brother?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSr_cuLLK7Y&list;=UUgRvm1yLFoaQKhmaTqXk9SA
Subscribe to TestTube Daily!
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6:51
The USA PATRIOT Act of 2001
This video is about the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001, the process of how it became a law, and t...
published:03 Jun 2014
The USA PATRIOT Act of 2001
The USA PATRIOT Act of 2001
published:03 Jun 2014
views:73
This video is about the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001, the process of how it became a law, and the controversy surrounding the act.
Patriot Act being used against its own citizens ! Granville County, NC -- On March 5 at about 10:00 PM, ten heavily armed FBI agents, accompanied by three lo...
1:13
Sen. Rand Paul Blocks Extension of the USA PATRIOT Act
...
published:23 May 2015
Sen. Rand Paul Blocks Extension of the USA PATRIOT Act
Sen. Rand Paul Blocks Extension of the USA PATRIOT Act
published:23 May 2015
views:301
36:20
FBI's Patriot Act Abuse of National Security Letters and illegal NSA spying
A short documentary about the FBI's abuse of the National Security Letter provisions in th...
A short documentary about the FBI's abuse of the National Security Letter provisions in the USA PATRIOT Act and of the NSA Spying on Americans scandal with s...
2:54
Real Talk: The Patriot Act
Julie Borowski explains why the Patriot Act is a threat to Americans' civil liberties and ...
published:08 Apr 2015
Real Talk: The Patriot Act
Real Talk: The Patriot Act
published:08 Apr 2015
views:2205
Julie Borowski explains why the Patriot Act is a threat to Americans' civil liberties and security, and why citizens must tell their representatives to allow the expiration of Section 215 of the act.
40:25
Why Is the USA PATRIOT Act Unconstitutional and Controversial? Salman Rushdie (2004)
The USA PATRIOT Act has generated a great deal of controversy since its enactment.
Oppone...
published:20 Apr 2015
Why Is the USA PATRIOT Act Unconstitutional and Controversial? Salman Rushdie (2004)
Why Is the USA PATRIOT Act Unconstitutional and Controversial? Salman Rushdie (2004)
published:20 Apr 2015
views:15
The USA PATRIOT Act has generated a great deal of controversy since its enactment.
Opponents of the Act have been quite vocal in asserting that it was passed opportunistically after the September 11 attacks, believing that there would have been little debate. They view the Act as one that was hurried through the Senate with little change before it was passed. (Senators Patrick Leahy and Russell Feingold proposed amendments to modify the final revision.)
The sheer magnitude of the Act itself was noted by Michael Moore in his controversial film Fahrenheit 9/11. In one of the scenes of the movie, he records Congressman Jim McDermott alleging that no Senator read the bill and John Conyers, Jr. as saying, "We don't read most of the bills. Do you really know what that would entail if we read every bill that we passed?" Congressman Conyers then answers his own rhetorical question, asserting that if they did it would "slow down the legislative process".[206] As a dramatic device, Moore then hired an ice-cream van and drove around Washington, D.C. with a loud speaker, reading out the Act to puzzled passers-by, which included a few Senators.
However, Moore was not the only commentator to notice that not many people had read the Act. When Dahlia Lithwick and Julia Turne for Slate asked, "How bad is PATRIOT, anyway?", they decided that it was "hard to tell" and stated:
The ACLU, in a new fact sheet challenging the DOJ Web site, wants you to believe that the act threatens our most basic civil liberties. Ashcroft and his roadies call the changes in law "modest and incremental." Since almost nobody has read the legislation, much of what we think we know about it comes third-hand and spun. Both advocates and opponents are guilty of fear-mongering and distortion in some instances.
One prime example of a controversy of the Patriot Act is shown in the case of Susan Lindauer.
Another is the recent court case United States v. Antoine Jones. A nightclub owner was linked to a drug trafficking stash house via a law enforcement GPS tracking device attached to his car. It was placed there without a warrant, which caused a serious conviction obstacle for federal prosecutors in court. Through the years the case rose all the way to the United States Supreme Court where the conviction was overturned in favor of the defendant. The court found that increased monitoring of suspects caused by such legislation like the Patriot Act directly put the suspects' Constitutional rights in jeopardy.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) has criticized the law as unconstitutional, especially when "the private communications of law-abiding American citizens might be intercepted incidentally",[209] while the Electronic Frontier Foundation held that the lower standard applied to wiretaps "gives the FBI a 'blank check' to violate the communications privacy of countless innocent Americans".[48] Others do not find the roving wiretap legislation to be as concerning. Professor David D. Cole of the Georgetown University Law Center, a critic of many of the provisions of the Act, found that though they come at a cost to privacy are a sensible measure[210] while Paul Rosenzweig, a Senior Legal Research Fellow in the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at the Heritage Foundation, argues that roving wiretaps are just a response to rapidly changing communication technology that is not necessarily fixed to a specific location or device.[211]
The Act also allows access to voicemail through a search warrant rather than through a title III wiretap order.[212] James Dempsey, of the CDT, believes that it unnecessarily overlooks the importance of notice under the Fourth Amendment and under a Title III wiretap,[213] and the EFF criticizes the provision's lack of notice. However, the EFF's criticism is more extensive—they believe that the amendment "is in possible violation of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution" because previously if the FBI listened to voicemail illegally, it could not use the messages in evidence against the defendant.[214] Others disagree with these assessments. Professor Orin Kerr, of the George Washington University school of law, believes that the ECPA "adopted a rather strange rule to regulate voicemail stored with service providers" because "under ECPA, if the government knew that there was one copy of an unopened private message in a person's bedroom and another copy on their remotely stored voicemail, it was illegal for the FBI to simply obtain the voicemail; the law actually compelled the police to invade the home and rifle through peoples' bedrooms so as not to disturb the more private voicemail." In Professor Kerr's opinion, this made little sense and the amendment that was made by the USA PATRIOT Act was reasonable and sensible.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriot_Act
8:50
Rand Paul Causes A Vicious Senate Cat Fight Over Patriot Act
"The Senate advanced legislation 77-17 to reform the National Security Agency on Sunday, b...
published:02 Jun 2015
Rand Paul Causes A Vicious Senate Cat Fight Over Patriot Act
Rand Paul Causes A Vicious Senate Cat Fight Over Patriot Act
published:02 Jun 2015
views:95
"The Senate advanced legislation 77-17 to reform the National Security Agency on Sunday, but parts of the Patriot Act will nonetheless lapse for a few days amid opposition from Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.).
The legislation, called the USA Freedom Act, will not reach President Obama’s desk until after the three measures expire at midnight, meaning that the provisions will expire until the bill is passed by the Senate and signed by Obama later this week.
“The Patriot Act will expire tonight,” Paul declared triumphantly from the Senate floor during a rare Sunday evening vote. “It will only be temporary. They will ultimately get their way.”
Obama has supported the measure and had repeatedly urged lawmakers to support it in the days leading up to Sunday’s deadline."
Read more here:
http://thehill.com/policy/national-security/243575-patriot-act-expires-as-paul-blocks-final-vote-on-NSA-reform
Cenk Uygur (http://www.twitter.com/cenkuygur), host of The Young Turks, breaks it down.
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2:28
A "USA PATRIOT Act" Story
MAS Media Foundation of the Inland Empire chapter produced this short yet entertaining com...
MAS Media Foundation of the Inland Empire chapter produced this short yet entertaining comedy film on the Patriot Act. A regular Muslim goes about his daily ...
8:11
USA Patriot Act
Easy to understand breakdown of the USA Patriot Act by a true patriot and esquire of this ...
Easy to understand breakdown of the USA Patriot Act by a true patriot and esquire of this great nation. This no nonsense, straight up opportunity was utilize...
6:49
FISA Business Record Orders (Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act)
Topics: The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), Section 215, business record ord...
published:29 Nov 2014
FISA Business Record Orders (Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act)
FISA Business Record Orders (Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act)
published:29 Nov 2014
views:0
Topics: The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), Section 215, business record orders, the USA PATRIOT Act, 50 U.S.C. § 1861
Source: This video is archived from Surveillance Law, first offered by Stanford Law School on Coursera in Fall 2014.
Author: Jonathan Mayer, https://jonathanmayer.org
License: Creative Commons 4.0 Attribution, with materials from https://surveillancelaw.org/remix.txt
0:29
President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001
From: http://www.youtube.com/user/AssociatedPress October 26, 2010 President George W. Bus...
From: http://www.youtube.com/user/AssociatedPress October 26, 2010 President George W. Bush Signs USA Patriot Act - October 26, 2001 FAIR USE NOTICE: This vi...
5:37
Senator Rand Paul trashes the Patriot Act
Senator Rand Paul takes to the floor of the U.S. Senate to explain his position on the ext...
Senator Rand Paul takes to the floor of the U.S. Senate to explain his position on the extension of provisions in the USA Patriot Act before the chamber's pr...
A snake at an American zoo has given birth for the second time in two years despite not having had sex. The yellow-bellied water snake, a resident of Cape GirardeauConservationNature Center in Missouri, reproduced on her own in 2014 and again this summer, her keepers say ... Conservation Department herpetologist Jeff Briggler said parthenogenesis, where offspring develop from unfertilized eggs, is rare but can occur in some species ... -->....
TOVARNIK, Croatia (AP) -- Across southeast Europe, nations closed borders, blocked bridges, shut down trains and built new razor-wire fences Friday in a rush to block tens of thousands seeking safety in Western Europe from crossing their territories ... Croatia declared it was overwhelmed and began busing migrants in convoys back to Hungary and closing border crossings with Serbia ... But go on ... Most migrants don't want to stay in Croatia ... ....
Having endured hate mail and threats of death and imprisonment, forced to undergo counseling with Army psychologists and chaplains because I no longer wanted to kill or participate in acts of violence, discovering my mail was being opened or destroyed and finding out my vehicle had been vandalized, I know all too well what it means to be a Conscientious Objector (CO)....
NASA just released their new images of Pluto and they are stunning. The header image above features Pluto’s crescent and was captured on July 14th by New HorizonsRalph/MultispectralVisualImaging (MVIC) camera and downlinked on September 13. In it we see the incredible Plutonian landscape backlit by the Sun ... “But this image is also a scientific bonanza, revealing new details about Pluto’s atmosphere, mountains, glaciers and plains.”....
@attackerman ...Merrill didn’t even know if consulting an attorney about it would land him in a jail cell ... “It sort of forces you to become an island unto yourself ... The 2001PatriotAct lowered the standards for issuing NSLs substantially ... Accordingly, the PatriotAct transformed NSLs from a rarity into a routine tool ... Usually known as John Doe, he was part of an early post-PatriotActACLU suit challenging the limits of the gag order ... ....
Using the terror attacks as a pretext, the American leadership was able to stampede Congress into rubber stamping the USAPATRIOTAct (a grant of police state powers comparable to those granted Hitler under the Enabling Act passed after the Reichstag Fire) and two foreign wars, along with a blank check to initiate other wars at will (used to legitimize Obama’s interventions in Libya, Syria and Kurdistan, among others) ... 11)....
"Our allegation with this case is that the business and its principals purported itself to be an escort service while promoting criminal acts, namely illegal prostitution ... Not only that, because of numerous PatriotAct shields, the laws that govern who or what the Department of Homeland Security monitors and prosecutes are at best murky and evolving....
5.00 AM ET. Asma Khalid ... ET ... But, how did it happen?. It's a complicated story ... i ... MarioTama/Getty Images ... "Asian-Americans tend to have progressive positions on things like taxes, on things like preserving social safety net, supporting the Affordable CareAct," said Ramakrishnan ... "The most likely explanation there is the kind of exclusionary rhetoric after 9-11 with the PatriotAct and racial profiling of South Asians," said Ramakrishnan ... ....
dollar, as long as the Federal Reserveacts as a moderately good steward of the national currency ... The BSA was little used until it was amended by the Money LaunderingControlAct of 1986, an explicit component of the federal war on drugs and organized crime. Finally, in the wake of 9/11, the USAPATRIOTAct levied new rules on an expanded list of financial institutions, and also imposed stricter due-diligence and AML requirements....
A common, banal act that should never pose a problem for any citizen exercising his or her Right of passage and liberty of movement - or so I thought ... Greenwald explains the dangers in this type of political climate in How Would a PatriotAct? "Ultimately, people will get the government they deserve....
In this role, Harrison is responsible for overseeing the Bank's Bank SecrecyAct (BSA) compliance program, and monitors compliance with state and federal USAPatriotAct, anti-money laundering activities (AML), and Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) laws and regulations ... assist in overseeing the Bank's Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) compliance program....
In the moments just before Kim Suozzi died of cancer at age 23, it fell to her boyfriend, Josh Schisler, to follow through with the plan to freeze her brain. As her pulse monitor sounded its alarm and her breath grew ragged, he fumbled for his phone ... Any delay would jeopardise the chance to maybe, someday, resurrect her mind ... "I don't know ... There, in the northern autumn of 2007, they bonded over a dislike for the USAPatriotAct ... ....
from socializing health insurance to capping the size of banks to the PatriotAct to the Iraq War vote ... They have taken similar votes that Democratic base voters view as cynical, including in favor of the Iraq War resolution, the PatriotAct and the 2001 bankruptcy bill....
(Source. Roosevelt University). Is it possible to travel responsibly and ethically, but also to have a great time? The tension between these goals occasionally became obvious on my recent summer trip through southeast Asia... And some of these changes have been positive ... The proliferation of street cameras, federal and corporate data-mining and the PATRIOTAct have brought Foucault's seemingly fanciful vision closer to lived reality....
By Chris Hedges... He had spent his long career as a pariah within his country’s political establishment. But because he held fast to the socialist ideals that defined the old Labour Party, he has risen untarnished out of the ash heap of neoliberalism ... political system ... He would scrap Britain’s Prevention of TerrorismAct, which, like the PatriotAct in the United States, has been used to target and harass Muslims ... He opposes fracking....
Why blessing? Because just like the US PatriotAct which allowed a massive expansion of the US government... Certainly expect a version of Europe'a PatriotAct to emerge over the next year, when the old continent has its own "September 11" moment, one which will provide the unelected Brussels bureaucrats with even more authoritarian power....