Author Topic: Letting Fear Win....  (Read 768 times)

Offline Manedew

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Letting Fear Win....
« on: June 20, 2003, 03:14:24 PM »
Damn Patriot Act...

Don't let fear destroy us.  Stop being cowards we don't need wuss laws like this!


http://www.latimes.com/news/local/coastline/columnists/la-cpt-muse20jun20,1,2054971.story
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CHASING DOWN THE MUSE
Which patriots exactly does the act protect?

       
Catharine Cooper

"My inclination to be relieved of having to think, particularly about unpleasant facts, helped to sway the balance. In this I did not differ from millions of others. Such mental slackness above all facilitated, established and finally assured the success of the National Socialist system."

— ALBERT SPEER

In every direction I turn, my civil rights are quietly being eroded behind volumes of rhetoric. The Patriot Act stands as the most glaring of such efforts, chipping away at my personal freedom and right of privacy. On its heels, CAPPS II further degrades the promises to citizens of the United States, made by the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

Many have questioned, after serious review, how Congress could have passed the Patriot Act. The act itself, "To deter and punish terrorist acts in the United States and around the world, to enhance law enforcement investigatory tools, and for other purposes," sounded logical in the heated emotional environment post Sept. 11. Passed on Oct. 25, 2001, as retaliatory energy swirled throughout the country, there was no congressional debate about any of its Sections or Titles. A brilliant and perfectly timed stroke, to implement a long-standing plan and far-reaching agenda, by those who would undermine our freedoms.

A review of the document further reveals why there was such silence. The document itself is 127 pages, and referential to prior United States Code filings. This is not a straightforward or simple read and it affects all of us. It is confusing and difficult, if not impossible, to comprehend.

Broad sweeping in its scope, the Act allows for the gathering of information from education facilities, credit facilities, financial institutions, allows for oral, wire and electronic taps, seizure of voice mail messages, without warrant, all within the framework of "suspected terrorist activities."

Basically, it allows for the gathering of the history of one's life. Section 626 further enhances their power, by " '(c) CONFIDENTIALITY — No consumer reporting agency, or officer, or employee, or agent of such consumer reporting agency, shall disclose to any person, or specify in any consumer report, that a government agency has sought or obtained access to information under subsection (a)." In other words, the government can slip into your private records without a trace. Talk about Big Brother watching you.

I'm all for shutting down terrorists, but I'm 100% against the government snooping in my e-mail and my bank account. I pay my taxes and other than that it's none of their business — unless they decide that I might be a suspect. And as noted in my last column, anyone of us can be arrested and held uncharged, under the guise of suspected terrorist activity.

Not quite satisfied with the broad scope they've already slipped through the radar screen, the administration now proposes to implement CAPPS II - Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System. This newest piece of surveillance architecture will collate into one behemoth database the following: financial records and transactions, arrest and conviction records, FBI records, DMV records, criminal convictions, civil suits, bankruptcy and divorce, property records, voter rolls, educational records, purchase records, subscription lists, telephone listings, private organizational directories, and insurance coverage.

A quick analysis of your information will provide a profile. Based on your risk assessment you will be tagged green for safe passage, yellow for further interrogation, or red banned from the flight. This decision will be made by a ticket taker viewing your personal files without your consent, and on information assumed to be free of errors. Profiling at its best.

Freedom of privacy has been lost in the search for the airline attacker who, with even a modicum of intelligence, will know how to elude the system before it is operational. The losers are you and I, millions of innocent citizens, who continue to be sold out by our representatives in the name of a fear they cannot contain. The strength of this mighty nation has been the freedoms that we extol to the rest of the world. Why are we letting them slip away? Why is our government so afraid of us that they would eliminate the foundations upon which our nation was founded?


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•  CATHARINE COOPER is a member of the City Open Space Committee. She can be reached at ccooper@cooperdesign.net or (949) 497 5081.
« Last Edit: June 21, 2003, 07:26:02 PM by Manedew »

Offline Nifty

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Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #1 on: June 20, 2003, 03:22:54 PM »
what does the article say?  I'm not registering on their site just to read it.  :p
proud member of the 332nd Flying Mongrels, noses in the wind since 1997.

Offline Syzygyone

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Mandedew
« Reply #2 on: June 20, 2003, 03:27:44 PM »
That article is an absolutely grotesque mischaracterization of CAPPSII. Period.

Go do some research on your own, read the privacy notices, read the law, study up on the people involved. You'll see that, once again, the LA Times is printing garbage on it's opinion pages.

:D

Offline miko2d

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Re: Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #3 on: June 20, 2003, 03:56:38 PM »
Manedew: Damn Patriot Act...
Don't let fear destroy us.  Stop being cowards we don't need wuss laws like this!


[Devils Advocate]
 Stop being cowards, we don't need wussy attachments to personal rights and liberties. Don't let fear of Patriot Act keep you from embracing Big Brother socialist police state.
[/Devils Advocate]

 miko

Offline midnight Target

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Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #4 on: June 20, 2003, 04:11:08 PM »
If I'm not mistaken, the expanded search abilities granted under the Patriot act are only in effect if a person or group is "suspected of terrorist activities."

So it all boils down to.... how much should we trust our government to do what is right instead of what is politically prudent regarding our personal liberties?  

As much as I love my country, my answer is "not much".

Offline Furious

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Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #5 on: June 20, 2003, 04:18:02 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by midnight Target
If I'm not mistaken, the expanded search abilities granted under the Patriot act are only in effect if a person or group is "suspected of terrorist activities."

So it all boils down to.... how much should we trust our government to do what is right instead of what is politically prudent regarding our personal liberties?  

As much as I love my country, my answer is "not much".

You are another crappy American.  

Embrace your government daddy.  Ashcroft only spanks bad people.

Offline rshubert

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Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #6 on: June 20, 2003, 04:28:05 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Furious
You are another crappy American.  

Embrace your government daddy.  Ashcroft only spanks bad people.


Ooohh...respectfully disagree, furious.  I think a healthy distrust of authority is a wonderful thing.  So did the founding fathers.

I just realized that your post was probably a troll...ya got me.

shubie

Offline AKIron

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Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #7 on: June 20, 2003, 07:00:22 PM »
We don't need no steenking government. Guns for all and let the fastest draw prevail. ;)
Here we put salt on Margaritas, not sidewalks.

Offline john9001

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Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #8 on: June 20, 2003, 07:47:59 PM »
terriorests are in no way threat to amerika, it's just redicukles

( big brother caught one trying to blow up the Brooklyn bridge)

Offline Leslie

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Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #9 on: June 21, 2003, 04:11:42 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by midnight Target
If I'm not mistaken, the expanded search abilities granted under the Patriot act are only in effect if a person or group is "suspected of terrorist activities."

So it all boils down to.... how much should we trust our government to do what is right instead of what is politically prudent regarding our personal liberties?  

As much as I love my country, my answer is "not much".



Ok then MT, I'm all ears and waiting to hear your suggestions of what is right.  Don't just complain, offer some feedback.  How should we handle the situation?  We don't need this act, what do you think we should do?  






Les

Offline straffo

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Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #10 on: June 21, 2003, 05:28:41 AM »
Great !!
 I count 9 suspects in this thread :D

Offline miko2d

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Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #11 on: June 21, 2003, 08:39:33 AM »
midnight Target: If I'm not mistaken, the expanded search abilities granted under the Patriot act are only in effect if a person or group is "suspected of terrorist activities."


 Sure, just like in "regulate interstate commerce" in the US Constitution regulate once ment "make regular, remove obstacles", interstate ment "between states" and commerce ment "exchange of goods, trade".

 Now regulate means "totally control", "ban", "tell what to do", interstate means every last detail of life inside and the states and ommerce means "all activity, production, personal life, customes, morals and personal preferences."

 miko

Offline Hortlund

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Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #12 on: June 21, 2003, 10:38:29 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by rshubert
I think a healthy distrust of authority is a wonderful thing.  So did the founding fathers.
 


There is nothing healthy about the distrust of authority presented by several users of this BB. Combine that with an abnormal and intense desire to be armed and what have you...the US perhaps...?

Say after me now

"There is nothing healthy with armed people suffering from Paranoid schizophrenia"

Offline midnight Target

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Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #13 on: June 21, 2003, 10:57:28 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Leslie
Ok then MT, I'm all ears and waiting to hear your suggestions of what is right.  Don't just complain, offer some feedback.  How should we handle the situation?  We don't need this act, what do you think we should do?  

Les


IMHO nothing in the Patriot act would have been necessary to thwart the 9-11 attacks. In fact, enforcing existing imigration laws and better communication between authorities probably could have done the job.

So why do we need it Les? I'm all ears.

Offline Leslie

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Letting Fear Win....
« Reply #14 on: June 21, 2003, 07:20:04 PM »
Time will tell, as far as the effectiveness of the Patriot Act.  I agree it would not be needed now, if immigration laws had been strictly enforced.  It is my understanding, this act facilitates communication between the various law enforcement and security/intelligence agencies.  It also makes their job easier to accomplish when dealing with foreign terrorist entities.

There are provisions in the act specifically dealing with the civil liberties of American citizens, and to ensure these civil liberties are not unconstitutionally abused.

I place my faith that the integrity, wisdom and level-headness of Congress will continue to prevail.




Les