On May 13, the
U.S. House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly, 338 to 88, to adopt H.R. 2048, the so-called “USA Freedom Act,” that promises, in section
501, to include a “Prohibition on bulk collection” by the National Security
Agency (NSA).
Ahead of the
vote, the White House — a strong supporter of the agency’s mass surveillance
program it has said is vital to security — issued
a statement in favor of the legislation, promising that it would “enhance privacy and better safeguard our civil liberties,
while keeping our nation safe.”
There is only
one problem. In truly Orwellian fashion, the bill does exactly the opposite,
Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) warned in a
Facebook post to his constituents.
“H.R. 2048
actually expands the statutory basis for the large-scale collection of most
data,” Amash wrote in opposition to the bill hours before the vote.
Amash
explained, “H.R. 2048 does this by authorizing the government to order the
production of records based upon a “specific selection term” (i.e., like a
search term used in a search engine)… A ‘specific selection term’ may be a
specific person (including a corporation, such as Western Union), account,
address, or personal device, but it also may be “any other specific
identifier,” and the bill expressly contemplates using geographic regions or
communication service providers (such as Verizon) to define the records sought,
so long as it’s not the only identifier used as part of the specific selection
term. In other words, the bill doesn’t let the government require Verizon to
turn over all its records without limitation, but nothing appears to prevent
the government from requiring Verizon to turn over all its records for all its
customers in the state of New York.” “Only a politician or bureaucrat wouldn’t
call that ‘bulk,’” Amash added.
But it gets
worse, as the legislation, if it becomes law, may undermine pending lawsuits
against the agency, Amash warns, “H.R. 2048 gives our intelligence agencies,
for the first time, statutory authority to collect Americans’ data in bulk. In
light of the Second Circuit’s opinion that the NSA has been collecting our
information in bulk without statutory authority for all this time, it would be
a devastating misstep for Congress to pass a bill that codifies that bulk
collection and likely ensures no future court will ever again be positioned to
rule against the government for over-collecting on statutory grounds.”
Meaning, the
only remaining recourse would be to sue on constitutional grounds, leaving it
to chance how courts might rule on the basis of the Fourth Amendment’s
protections against warrantless surveillance.
Congress would
be better off doing nothing, since that would increase the odds of the
warrantless surveillance being overturned in federal court. Instead, now
members are giving their imprimatur to the program.
“The U.S. House
is missing an historic opportunity to rein in the NSA mass surveillance
program,” Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning said, instead
urging Congress to “return to real reform that protects Americans from
government surveillance in violation of the Fourth Amendment.”
Rep.
Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), who voted against the bill, had this to say: “The Constitution is clear: Before the government can get
information on an American citizen they need a warrant. Several Members sought
to amend the USA Freedom Act to ensure these protections. The amendment was
rejected by the Rules Committee, even though last year the exact same language
passed on the House floor with 293 votes. The USA Freedom Act fails to adequately
protect Americans’ Fourth Amendment rights, which is why I opposed it.”
The legislation
now heads to the U.S. Senate, and in the meantime, almost everyone in the House
will pretend they voted to end the program. But don’t be fooled.
All they did
was provide political cover and a legal basis to Big Brother to download and
store your phone records. That’s not called ending the program; it’s called
authorizing it.
Robert Romano
is the senior editor of Americans for Limited Government.
Source:http://netrightdaily.com/2015/05/house-authorizes-nsa-mass-surveillance-program/
Comments
Comments
So, Obama is importing terrorists to the US
as fast as he can, but Congress “can’t stop it”. So, we need mass surveillance of the American
citizens ? Not my problem. Congress
needs to learn to do its job and close down immigration.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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