Untitled Document
While you were, ah, distracted, Congress was quietly renewing every
major provision of the Patriot Act.
Most of the provisions of the USA Patriot Act, including access to
library records, were supposed to "sunset" this month, five years
after the law's passing. Instead, both the House and the Senate have already
voted to renew the entire act, with only minor revisions. While they're at it,
they'd like to add some decidedly unpatriotic amendments to expand the death
penalty.
These new
amendments would let prosecutors shop around for another jury if the one
they have is deadlocked on the death penalty; triple the number of terrorism-related
crimes eligible for the death penalty; and authorize the death penalty for a
person who gives money to an organization whose members kill someone, even if
the contributor did not know that the organization or its members were planning
to kill.
The Patriot Act was enacted during what President Bush called "a state
of emergency." It wasn't even read by most of the members who voted for
it. But the whole point of the sunset clause was to allow Congresspeople to
actually read the bill and debate it in calmer times. Now, the Act is effectively
being made permanent
with little or no debate or discussion.
Still, the House and the Senate are still in negotiations over the final wording
of the bill and so it hasn't been made final yet. The Bill of Rights Defense
Commitee is asking people to make one last push to keep it from getting renewed.
They list possible
actions you can get involved in and ways to educate your communities about
threats to civil liberties.