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Wednesday, September 24, 2003
 

civil liberties heroes of the day: Dennis Kucinich and Ron Paul.
September 24, 2003

House lawmakers seek to curtail anti-terrorism law

By Drew Clark, National Journal's Technology Daily

Several high-profile surveillance provisions in the anti-terrorism law known as the USA PATRIOT Act would be modified under a bill that Democratic presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich of Ohio and Texas Republican Ron Paul pledged to introduce on Wednesday.

The bill would limit the Justice Department's power to use "sneak and peek" search warrants that let police delay their notification of suspects about the warrants. Justice's power to obtain business and library records under a foreign intelligence law also would be curtailed.

Those two powers have emerged as among the most controversial elements of the statute that Congress passed in October 2001. The House already has barred Justice from using its funds to implement "sneak and peak" searches, and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has sued to halt the use of the business-records section of the law.

The bill also would limit the government's current ability to indefinitely detain non-citizens and curtail other policies of the Bush administration. Those include the ability for the FBI to monitor attorney-client conversations, enter houses of worship without cause and withhold information that otherwise must be disclosed under the Freedom of Information Act.

Kucinich promoted his bill at a press conference with the ACLU.

"We now know that the PATRIOT Act and other measures went too far, too fast," said Gregory Nojeim, chief legislative counsel of the ACLU's Washington office. "Members from both sides of the aisle are calling for corrections to be made, and this bill stays true to Benjamin Franklin's call for a balance between security and liberty."

The new bill comes amid greater focus on the PATRIOT Act's surveillance provisions, including a high-profile speaking tour by Attorney General John Ashcroft. On Sept. 10, President Bush asked Congress to extend surveillance authority further.

In an attempt to counter fears that law enforcement officials excessively peruse business and library records, Ashcroft said he has declassified the fact that provisions in one section of the act have never been used.

"We have not been able to counter the troubling amount of public distortion and misinformation in connection with Section 215," Ashcroft said in a memo to FBI Director Robert Mueller. "Consequently, I have determined that it is in the public interest and the best interest of law enforcement to declassify this information."

Privacy advocates said Ashcroft and other Justice officials are largely to blame for any misinformation because they have withheld data and failed to engage in public debate.

"It's still not clear that we have the full picture," Jim Dempsey, executive director of the Center for Democracy and Technology, said in an analysis of the section. "It seems very strange that [Justice] has never once used Section 215 to compel disclosure of travel records or car-rentals records or records of the purchase of bomb-making material or anything else."

Dempsey also picked apart an Ashcroft statement that the section applies only to foreigners, requires judicial approval and must be relevant to existing counter-terrorism investigations. All three statements are untrue, he said.

I salute the progressive Kucinich and the libertarian Paul, true patriots working together to restore the values that America stands for.

[Al-Muhajabah's Islamic Blogs]

You know the Feds are pushing their luck when diametrically opposed politicans try to reign them in. This reminds me of the letter sent to Ashcroft in early 2001 objecting to the "drug war," which was signed by both the ACLU (an unofficial branch of the Democratic Party) and the NRA (an unofficial branch of the Republican Party).

Unfortunately, I don't think it will do any good. Politicians and civil rights groups are important, but when it comes to using and maintaining government power, the only people who matter are the bureaucrats--and they're answerable to no one. The "Patriot" Act increased the power of the Feds, and they will keep that power. Even if the act were repealed, they will go right on exercising that power.
11:14:17 PM    comment ()


Arnie's Libertarian Lunge.

Just in time for tonight's debate, Arnold Schwarzenegger lays out his economic program and philosophy in today's Wall Street Journal (registration required). The lede:

I have often said that the two people who have most profoundly impacted my thinking on economics are Milton Friedman and Adam Smith. At Christmas I sometimes annoy some of my more liberal Hollywood friends by sending them a gift of Mr. Friedman's classic economic primer, "Free to Choose." What I learned from Messrs. Friedman and Smith is a lesson that every political leader should never forget: that when the heavy fist of government becomes too overbearing and intrusive, it stifles the unlimited wealth creation process of a free people operating under a free enterprise system.
For news of Schwarzenegger's actually substantive proposals, click here. (WSJ link via Robert Garcia Tagorda, whose unique theories about Arnold's unorthodox campaign tactics will be put to the test tonight.)

[Hit & Run]

I'd sooner believe that Schwarzenegger is really an android assassin from the future than a libertarian.
9:41:14 PM    comment ()


CIA created fake mullahs.

The CIA paid Mullahs and created fake Islamic religious leaders to preach a moderate message and counter anti-American sentiment in the Arab world after the September 11 attacks, a new book says.

In "The CIA at War", Ronald Kessler, an investigative reporter and author of several books about the CIA and the FBI, also detailed espionage activity in Iraq that supported the March invasion that toppled President Saddam Hussein. (link)

Doesn't seem to have worked. Might try changing our Middle East policies instead.

[Al-Muhajabah's Islamic Blogs]

That sounds like the Feds' supposedly cancelled propaganda campaign popping up again.
9:14:41 PM    comment ()


Equal Time, Sorta.

Here's the Libertarians for McClintock Web site.

[Hit & Run]

I notice they don't mention his anti-gay and anti-immigrant positions. I haven't decided yet who I'll vote for, but I very much doubt it will be McClintock.
7:08:09 PM    comment ()


For Sale: Iraq [Baghdad Burning]

Some comments on reconstruction contracts, Brown and Root, and the puppet government's announcement that foreign ownership of companies would be allowed (leaving unsaid that only foreign companies would be given contracts). Arthur Silber also wrote about this subject on Friday.
12:28:51 PM    comment ()


After briefly reaching almost $66/share, Symantec's stock price seems to be headed down again. I still can't see what made it jump up so high, but I did manage to unload all the options I could while it was over $65.
11:59:26 AM    comment ()

Mike Lockwood tells the story of his last day at Apple working on the Dylan project. And there's a list of Apple history stories told by Apple insiders. A gold mine of now-it-can-be-tolds. [Scripting News]

Dylan was a new language project--I think it was related in some way to Lisp.
11:51:05 AM    comment ()


Liberty in the Balance, Part III.

In the shadow of the Ambassador Bridge, 24-year-old Sohail Rahim is waiting for a yellow Checker cab that will ferry him into Canada, where he hopes to start a new life.
Again.

Two years after he fled persecution in Pakistan and carved out a life of freedom in Dallas, he is fleeing the United States and the fear of the FBI coming for him. (link)

As counter-terrorism policy, this has failed, since there have been no terrorism suspects charged out of all the people who have been questioned, registered, or detained. As immigration policy, this is discriminatory, singling out certain immigrants because of their nationality, while leaving others of different nationality with the same violations alone. Something has got to change.

[Al-Muhajabah's Islamic Blogs]

This kind of thing isn't really about terrorism or immigration, at least not directly. Politicians always respond to major events like 9/11 by rushing to "do something," even though the things they do never would have had any effect, and in fact almost always make things worse for everyone. The "Patriot" Act and the creation of the Terrorist Safety Administration and the American KGB are other examples of this sort of thing.

Also, his kind of persecution of immigrants will probably make conservative immigrant-haters happy, and considering the close presidential election Bush may be looking for more votes next year.
10:11:47 AM    comment ()



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