Tag Archives: civil liberties

Call Congress to Stop Big Brother Surveillance TODAY

This is an Action Alert from the Bill of Rights Defense Committee:

Today please join the Bill of Rights Defense Committee and tens of thousands of allies throughout the U.S. in an overwhelming grassroots response to NSA warrantless surveillance and data mining of our telephone records. The BORDC, the ACLU, People For the American Way, and other organizations (see below) have declared this week “National Call-in to Congress Week” and are asking people to call their members of Congress on a specific day. Let’s keep those phones ringing in the Congressional halls all week long!

What to do:
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Switch to Working Assets

I have had my cell phone service with Working Assets for a few years now. The primary reason for changing my service to WA is because of the company’s phiolophies on social justice causes. Each month you can “round up” your payment on your bill. The extra cents you contribute will go to that month’s causes.

WA openly supports peace, social justice, human rights, and civil liberties. WA is the only telephone company participating in the ACLU’s lawsuit against the National Security Agency. WA opposes the sale of domestic calling records to the NSA by AT&T, BellSouth and Verizon.

Terrorism vs. Human Needs – Priorities

The latest news in the “War on Terrorism” is the NSA Phone Records Confiscation. The reason being given for this invasion of privacy is that it is necessary to combat the war on terrorism. Sadly, many Americans feel that it is o.k. for this violation of rights to occur in the name of “protecting” U.S. citizens from terrorist attacks.

Even more sad is that there are more people who die each year from lack of health care than from terroists attacks. Approximtately three times more people in the United States die each year as a result of not being able to obtain the necessary health care than died in the single terrorist attack on the World Trade Center in New York on Septebmer 11, 2001.

The Citizens Healthcare Report, a government initiated working group to study and report on health care in America, acknowledges that Health care services are not available to everyone, and millions of Americans can’t afford to pay for health care services even when they are available, and these problems are getting worse.

So are we more at risk of dying from disease and malnutirition…….or from terrorist attacks?
The answer is obvious.

While the regime that is currently at the helm of running the United States focuses most of our money and efforts on combating terrorism and degrading our civil liberties, more and more people are suffering and dying as a result of not being able to access much needed services to sustain a quality of life. Basic human needs are a right outlined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, to which the U.S. is a signatory.

Watch who you call……

The latest news on the issue of phone records being turned over. Of course the Bushites are claiming that this is all within the realms of what they are allowed to do.

The good news is that Qwest, the western U.S. phone service provider, has not complied:
Qwest praised for rejecting NSA’s request

Here is this claim in an article on ABC News:
Surveillance Is Broadly Acceptable to Public

More News

  • NSA Has Massive Database of Americans’ Phone Calls – Common Dreams – has a Q&A link to The NSA record collection program
    “It’s the largest database ever assembled in the world,” said one person, who, like others who agreed to talk about the NSA’s activities, declined to be identified by name or affiliation. The agency’s goal is “to create a database of every call ever made” within the nation’s borders, this person added.

  • Furor over phone records: Newspaper says 3 firms gave call lists to NSA – Deseret News
  • U.S. use of phone records assailed: Outrage rises in Congress over program – Detroit Free Press
    Nation Split on NSA Records Collection – Washington Post

  • NSA has your phone records; ‘trust us’ isn’t good enough – USA Today
  • More news Here
  • Entertainer David Lippman Victim of Domestic Spying

    David Lippman, a musician/actor that tours with his “Shrub” act, has been a victim of U.S. Domestic Spying (see his account below that I received via email). Dave performed here in Salt Lake a few years ago. As the Singing CIA Agent, Dave entertains audiences all over the country with songs like “I Hate Walmart”, Enemy of the Week, Hamburger Hill,Oh Say Can You See?, and The Current Group of Scoundrels.
    Dave keeps fans updated with his Shrublog and Shooting from the Lipp.

    Dave talked about his experience as being a target of U.S. Domestic Syping on yesterday’s Democracy Now!.

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    Friends, I will discuss this legal action today on Democracy Now!, but in the meantime here is the ACLU press release.

    FILES SHOW FBI TARGETED FREELANCE JOURNALIST COVERING FTAA MEETINGS IN MIAMI The American Civil Liberties Union Sues the City of Miami Over FTAA Civil Rights Violations FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Thursday, May 4, 2006

    CONTACTS:
    Rosalind Matos, South Florida Staff Counsel, 305-576-2337, ext. 20 Jeanne Baker, Cooperating Attorney for the ACLU, 305-443-1600 Brandon Hensler, Communications Director, 305-576-2337, ext. 16

    MIAMIThe American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Greater Miami Chapter, filed a lawsuit today on behalf of freelance journalist David Lippman. Documents obtained by the ACLU indicate that Lippman was under Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) surveillance for being a “kown protestor w/history” as he traveled from his home in North Carolina to Miami to cover the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) protests.

    On November 19, 2003, Lippman’s vehicle was searched, seized and damaged by officers from several law enforcement agencies, without probable cause. FBI agents recruited the local officers to break into his vehicle and then, after damaging the vehicle and disturbing the personal possessions he kept within it, to haul away the vehicle and his possessions.
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    Brace Yourselves: Patriot Act is Renewed

    I have posted some pieces here on the Patriot Act Extension Proposal and the debate over its renewal.

    It’s official.

    Yesterday the U.S. House narrowly voted to renew the Patriot Act in a “cliffhanger vote”.

    The vote was 280-138, just two more than needed under special rules that required a two-thirds majority. The close vote caught senior Republican aides in both chambers by surprise.
    Nonetheless, the vote marked a political victory for Bush and will allow congressional Republicans facing midterm elections this year to continue touting a tough-on-terror stance. Bush’s approval ratings have suffered in recent months after revelations that he had authorized secret, warrantless wiretapping of Americans.

    Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, had this to say: “I rise in strong opposition to this legislation because it offers only a superficial reform that will have little if any impact on safeguarding our civil liberties.”

    Provisions of the renewed act:
    The package renews 16 expiring provisions of the original Patriot Act, including one that allows federal officials to obtain “tangible items” like business records, including those from libraries and bookstores, for foreign intelligence and international terrorism investigations.
    Other provisions would clarify that foreign intelligence or counterintelligence officers should share information obtained as part of a criminal investigation with counterparts in domestic law enforcement agencies.
    Forced by Feingold’s filibuster, Congress and the White House have agreed to new curbs on the Patriot Act’s powers.
    These restrictions would:
    — Give recipients of court-approved subpoenas for information in terrorist investigations the right to challenge a requirement that they refrain from telling anyone.
    — Eliminate a requirement that an individual provide the FBI with the name of a lawyer consulted about a National Security Letter, which is a demand for records issued by investigators.
    — Clarify that most libraries are not subject to demands in those letters for information about suspected terrorists.
    The legislation also takes aim at the distribution and use of methamphetamine by limiting the supply of a key ingredient found in everyday cold and allergy medicines.
    Yet another provision is designed to strengthen port security by imposing strict punishments on crew members who impede or mislead law enforcement officers trying to board their ships.

    More on the Patriot Act::New Provision Would Felonize Protestors

    New Patriot Act Provision Creates Tighter Barrier to Officials at Public Events

    By Kelley Beaucar Vlahos
    Fox News, January 31, 2006
    http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,183147,00.html

    WASHINGTON — A new provision tucked into the Patriot Act bill now before Congress would allow
    authorities to haul demonstrators at any “special event of national significance” away to jail on
    felony charges if they are caught breaching a security perimeter.

    Sen. Arlen Specter , R-Pa., chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, sponsored the
    measure, which would extend the authority of the Secret Service to allow agents to arrest people
    who willingly or knowingly enter a restricted area at an event, even if the president or other official normally protected by the Secret Service
    isn’t in attendance at the time.

    The measure has civil libertarians protesting what they say is yet another power grab for the executive branch and one more loss for free speech.

    “It’s definitely problematic and chilling,” said Lisa Graves, senior counsel for legislative strategy at the American Civil Liberties Union , which has written letters to the chairmen and
    ranking members of the House and Senate Judiciary Committees, pointing out that the provision wasn’t subject to hearings or open debate.

    Some conservatives say they too are troubled by the measure.
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