
In stores March 10: pre-order your copy today!
The political media establishment is enraptured by John McCain. Mainline media sparklies, as well as the blatherers on the Fox channel, routinely buff up his image as a straight-talking, maverick foe of Washington's special interests. "The press loves McCain. We're his base," gushes MSNBC's Chris Matthews. But if the senator really is the feared reformer of business-as-usual government, why does his presidential campaign look like the back alley of K Street?
Sign up for email alerts, from breaking news to weekly commentary:
| www.flickr.com |
All Flickr photos of Jim Hightower
To add your photos, upload them Flickr and tag them with jimhightower!

America is at an historic divide between rulers and rulees and the rulees are restless. Hightower...
[More info]

"I make a lot of money these days speaking to corporations, so I'd really prefer not to admit how...
[More info]

It's time to make politics fun again! With uncommon insight, political fearlessness and laugh-out...
[More info]
Have a gander at the whole store here...
Home | Contact | MDC | RSS | Privacy Policy | Copyright Saddle-Burr Productions, Jim Hightower, All Rights Reserved 1996-2006
REWRITING SOME PATRIOT ACT STUPIDITY
Posted by Jim Hightower
Empirical evidence notwithstanding, stupidity is not a requirement for membership in the U.S. Congress. Also, stupid acts by Congress do not have to be forever.
Witness the infamous, freedom-busting, Orwellian piece of legislative stupidity known as the Patriot Act. Passed by a panicked Congress right after 9/11, and reauthorized by a cowed Congress in 2006, this thing empowers the FBI to make wholesale, secrete invasions of the American people’s privacy – grossly violating one of our country’s core values.
As we’ve learned from investigative reports by the bureau’s own inspector general, concerns about intrusive and abusive actions by a bulked up FBI were not theoretical. This national police agency has been found guilty of “widespread and serious misuse” of the Patriot Act’s most invasive provisions. For example, the act opened up our private records to government agents, enabling them to write their own authorizations for poking into our personal business without having to show any reasonable cause for spying on us. Hundreds of cases of the FBI sweeping up information it has no authority to collect have now been documented.
Did no one foresee the stupidity of granting such broad unchecked power? Yes. Sen. Russ Feingold did, and he cast the one, courageous vote against the Patriot Act in 2001. Now Feingold is back with S. 2088, a bill to rein in the FBI and restore the people’s Constitutional rights. As he puts it, we’ve learned the hard way that “trust us” doesn’t cut it when it comes to preventing government snoops from abusing their power.
Congress has the responsibility to put appropriate restraints on government authorities, and that’s what Feingold’s “National Security Reform Act” does. To help put some real patriotism in the misnamed and misguided Patriot Act, contact Feingold’s office 202-224-5323.
“Powering Down the Patriot Act,” www.motherjones.com, April 29, 2008.
“S. 2088 – National Security Reform Act of 2007,” www.bordc.org.