Patriot Act Amendments Would Allegedly Limit Mass Spying

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
May 3, 2015

big-brother-is-watching

For a number of reasons, I find it hard to believe that our Jew-run government would be willing to give up the power to monitor the goyim very closely.

eweek:

The Judiciary Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives has overwhelmingly passed a bill that would make substantial modifications to the Patriot Act, including revisions to intelligence agencies’ bulk collections of data that have angered many people at home and abroad.

The bill, now called the USA Freedom Act, would allow challenges to national security letters and it makes significant changes to the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Court, including declassification of its decisions on private data requests and collection.

The legislation would also makes some changes to how the government tracks people as they move in and out of the United States. Basically, when a suspected terrorist enters the United States, intelligence agencies can continue tracking that person for up to 72 hours while the government seeks a warrant.

The bill also allows companies under orders to collect personal data for the government to challenge gag orders, and it allows them to discuss national security letters (orders by the FBI to turn over information without a warrant) with certain third parties, primarily their legal counsel, if they want to challenge the orders. Companies will also be allowed a bit more leeway to disclose how they respond to national security letters.

The bill has very strong bipartisan backing in the House and it is expected to pass there around mid-May. The new bill is strongly backed by Rep. James Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.), author of the Patriot Act.

“At the heart of this legislation is the reform of Section 215 [of the Patriot Act] to prohibit bulk collection of any business records. Bulk collection is also prohibited under the FISA Pen Register/Trap and Trace Device authority and National Security Letter authorities,” wrote Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.), chairman of the Judiciary Committee, in his statement describing the legislation.

“In place of the current bulk telephone metadata program, the USA Freedom Act creates a narrower, targeted program that allows the Intelligence Community to collect non-content call detail records held by the telephone companies, but only with the prior approval of the FISA Court,” Goodlatte wrote. He noted that the law also creates a panel of experts to advise the FISA on civil liberties, privacy, communications technology and other related matters.

I don’t doubt that they will pass this law and claim it is now restricted, but they will just keep doing it anyway illegally, as they were before, or include some loophole that allows them to bypass everything else in the bill.

Bernie Sanders is saying he would stop it, but it doesn’t matter because Bernie Sanders has no possibility of winning the Presidency.

Bernie is a pinko lol
Bernie is a pinko lol

Plus Bernie is a sneaking Jew who I wouldn’t trust to do my laundry, let alone shut down a massive Jewish spy program.

National Journal:

Bernie Sanders is running for president for many reasons, and you’re going to hear about a lot of them on the campaign trail.

Income inequality. Campaign finance reform. Universal health care and climate change.

But quietly—at least relative to his wonk-laden sermons on economic populism—Sanders has for years also been one of the Senate’s fiercest critics of the National Security Agency’s secretive surveillance operations. And, unlike Hillary Clinton, he’s been remarkably clear about where he stands.

The Vermont independent, who officially announced his White House bid on Thursday, is widely viewed by Beltway types as more of a debate-stage prop to bounce liberal ideas off Clinton on her march toward an inevitable Democratic primary victory. Polling has routinely placed Sanders in the single digits among Democratic voters. But while progressives are hopeful he can serve as an Elizabeth Warren surrogate and challenge Clinton on Wall Street reform, Sanders’ candidacy also offers an opportunity to force Clinton to talk more concretely about domestic surveillance—something he has not minced words about since the Edward Snowden disclosures began in 2013.

Speaking of Jew Bernie, I wouldn’t be surprised if he ends up on the VP ticket. That is pretty clearly what he is going for, and I don’t really see a lot of other high-profile options, save I guess John Kerry – another Jew.