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Patriot games: Protecting Civil Liberties. (Citings).


WE'VE ALL HEARD the alarming news for civil liberties contained in the massive USA PATRIOT Act USA PATRIOT Act [Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorists], 2001, U.S.  rushed into law in November. (It's an acronym, believe it or not: Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct ob·struct
v.
To block or close a body passage so as to hinder or interrupt a flow.



ob·structive adj.
 Terrorism.)

Among those tools are the ability to conduct physical searches without property owners being present or alerted ("sneak-and-peak"), increased power for government officials to designate organizations as "terrorists" and to deport de·port  
tr.v. de·port·ed, de·port·ing, de·ports
1. To expel from a country. See Synonyms at banish.

2. To behave or conduct (oneself) in a given manner; comport.
 non-citizens who belong to them, and enhanced law-enforcement abilities to conduct phone and Internet taps with lower levels of judicial oversight Judicial oversight describes an aspect of the separation of powers prescribed by the Constitution of the United States, specifically the process whereby independent courts may review and restrain actions of the administrative and legislative branches. .

But it wasn't all bad news. In the heady, frightened rush immediately after September II, even worse ideas were floating around that thankfully didn't make it into law--or at least haven't yet.

Among them, says the Free Congress Foundation's J. Bradley Jansen, who helped organize a left-right coalition to defend civil liberties after 9/II, were the following: expansions of civil forfeiture that would have allowed the government to take property and money it could not directly link to any alleged crime; plans to share information gleaned from searches of U.S. citizens' e-mail by foreign intelligence services, even when the searches would have been illegal under U.S. law; and presidential authority to unilaterally extend foreign aid and credit anywhere as long as it was for "anti-terrorist activity."

Jansen notes that Sen. Judd Gregg Judd Alan Gregg (born February 14 1947) is a former Governor of New Hampshire and current United States Senator serving as ranking member of the Senate Budget Committee. He is a member of the Republican Party, and was a businessman and attorney in Nashua before entering politics.  (R-N R-N Raion (Russian, district; used in postal addresses) .H.) "even wanted to bring back the Clipper Chip," an anti-encryption standard that would have let the feds read any e-mail and snoop on other scrambled communications. That idea too fell by the wayside.
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Title Annotation:civil liberties after the September 11 terrorist attacks on the United States
Author:Doherty, Brian
Publication:Reason
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2002
Words:264
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