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deurbano

(2,895 posts)
Tue Jul 23, 2013, 05:33 PM Jul 2013

"House forces vote on amendment that would limit NSA bulk surveillance"

http://m.guardiannews.com/world/2013/jul/23/house-amendment-nsa-bulk-surveillance

by Spencer Ackerman

Congressional opposition to the NSA's bulk surveillance on Americans swelled on Tuesday as the US House prepared to vote on restricting the collection of US phone records and a leading Senate critic blasted a "culture of misinformation" around government surveillance.

Republican congressman Justin Amash prevailed in securing a vote for his amendment to a crucial funding bill for the Department of Defense that "ends authority for the blanket collection of records under the Patriot Act." The vote could take place as early as Wednesday evening.

"The people have spoken through their representatives," Amash told the Guardian on Tuesday. "This is an opportunity to vote on something that will substantially limit the ability of the NSA to collect their phone records without suspicion."

It will be the first such vote held by Congress on restricting NSA surveillance after the revelations from ex-contractor Edward Snowden, published in the Guardian and the Washington Post, that detailed a fuller picture of the surveillance authorities than officials had publicly disclosed – something blasted in a fiery Tuesday speech by Senator Ron Wyden, a prominent Democratic critic of the surveillance programs.>>
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"House forces vote on amendment that would limit NSA bulk surveillance" (Original Post) deurbano Jul 2013 OP
Posturing. randome Jul 2013 #1
 

randome

(34,845 posts)
1. Posturing.
Tue Jul 23, 2013, 05:52 PM
Jul 2013

Anyone who delves into the issue realizes that 1. the metadata is no one's property, 2. keeping copies of other telecoms' copies is not the same as 'bulk surveillance' to most people and 3. without these copies, it would be impossible to search for contacts because they would need to serve a warrant to every single telecom in the country.
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