October 26, 2015
Sovereign Valley Farm, Chile
If you haven’t already,
now’s the time to get out your party hats to celebrate the 14th
anniversary of the USA PATRIOT Act.
You know about the law, I’m sure;
passed barely six weeks after the 9/11 attacks, the USA PATRIOT Act is one of
the most sweeping, liberty-destroying pieces of legislation in American
history.
Remember the rule of thumb: the more
high-sounding the name of a law, the more disastrous its effects. And the USA
PATRIOT Act absolutely conformed.
It stands for Uniting and Strengthening
America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Interdict and Obstruct
Terrorism.
And this name is truly disingenuous when
you think about it.
Seriously, how was America to become
more ‘united’ by allowing warrantless searches, vastly expanding
the powers of secret courts, and completely doing away with entire sections of
the Constitution?? That’s just absurd.
The name itself is a cruel joke on
liberty.
At 132 pages, the USA PATRIOT Act was a
pretty beefy piece of legislation. But what most people fail to realize is that
the law is entirely incomprehensible.
Instead of simply stating in black &
white what the new dark powers of government would be, the USA PATRIOT Act
makes obscure modifications to other laws.
Here’s an example of what
I’m talking about, pulled from page 20 of the text of the
legislation:
Section 3123(d)(2) of title 18, United States Code, is amended (A) by inserting “or other facility” after “the line”; and (B) by striking “, or who has been ordered by the court” and inserting “or applied, or who is obligated by the order”
Is that supposed to mean anything to
anyone? The language is completely mystifying.
Well, as it turns out, this precise
section is part of what authorizes the government to monitor your phone and
Internet communications.
This is, of course, one of the primary
criticisms of the law: it was rushed through Congress before anyone had a
chance to read or understand it, at a time when everyone was scared and willing
to give the government any power it wanted.
The end result was a de facto Police
State in the Land of the Free.
Faceless government agencies now spy on
every form of communication, local police turned into federally funded
paramilitary forces, and the Fourth Amendment became an endangered
species.
Earlier this year, several key
provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act were set to expire. It was an opportunity to
take back some of the freedom that had been lost.
Yet Mr. Hope and Change himself, Barack
Obama, signed multiple bills into law to extend, and even expand, the USA
PATRIOT Act’s powers.
It’s amazing when you think about
it: a nation that was founded on the principles of personal liberty, which
fought the Nazis and built the most powerful economy in the world, is so
fragile and afraid of men in caves that it cannot imagine its existence without
Orwellian surveillance programs.
George W. Bush used to famously say that
terrorists hated America for its freedoms.
So he and Barack Obama conveniently
solved that problem by eliminating America’s freedoms.
This is life now in America 2.0;
it’s not the America we once knew, and it’s time to adjust
accordingly.
I invite you to listen in to
today’s podcast as we discuss some of the most striking differences
between now and America’s golden days.
You won’t believe what once used
to be possible in the Land of the Free.
http://www.sovereignman.com/podcast/celebrating-14-years-since-we-kissed-our-freedoms-goodbye-18130/
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