house votes to renew surveillance law

Don Quixote

cancer survivor
Contributor
once more our freedoms are undermined

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House on Wednesday overwhelmingly renewed a surveillance law that allows the government to monitor conversations of foreign spies and terrorist suspects abroad, while requiring approval from a secret court when Americans are targeted anywhere in the world.
Supporters emphasized that the bill is aimed at foreigners overseas, not Americans. The vote was 301-118 to extend the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act monitoring provisions for five years.
Opponents said the legislation does not adequately protect Americans from unintentional interception of their communications. Several opponents said they would support a three-year extension of the law, which expires at year's end, while more information is gathered about threats to Americans' civil liberties.
The may run into problems in the Senate where Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., has used a procedural tactic to prevent a vote. He is one of several senators who have unsuccessfully tried to learn how many Americans were caught up in the surveillance.
House supporters, however, assured Americans that their rights are protected.
"This is about foreigners on foreign soil. It's not a dragnet," said Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., chairman of the House Intelligence Committee.
He said Americans' rights "are alive and well here. This is one of those programs that has an inordinate amount of oversight to make sure we are not targeting Americans. In the odd case where an American is intercepted, there are very strict procedures on how to destroy that information and correct that problem. And it has not happened hardly, frequently, at all...."
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith, R-Texas, said the law would help stop terrorists "before they disable our defenses, carry out a plot against our country or kill innocent Americans."
Opponents argued they're not convinced that Americans would be protected.

http://news.yahoo.com/house-renews-surveillance-law-5-years-211844637.html
 
How does the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, monitoring foreigners overseas, and not Americans, undermine your freedoms ?

Enlighten us.
 
How does the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, monitoring foreigners overseas, and not Americans, undermine your freedoms ?

Enlighten us.

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/07/surveillance-spirit-law/

The head of the U.S. government’s vast spying apparatus has conceded that recent surveillance efforts on at least one occasion violated the Constitutional prohibitions on unlawful search and seizure.

The admission comes in a letter from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence declassifying statements that a top U.S. Senator wished to make public in order to call attention to the government’s 2008 expansion of its key surveillance law.
 
Back
Top