Let the Clock Run Out on the NSA
If nothing happens, the NSA metadata collection program will die at midnight on Monday.

Regarding the feverish effort either to reauthorize, "reform," or abolish the National Security Agency's (NSA) collection of our phone and email data, two things need to be said: First, thank you, Edward Snowden. Second, isn't it great to see the ruling elite panicking?
Of course, the discussion about NSA collection of our "metadata" wouldn't be happening had Snowden not told us about this spying. Recall that before Snowden's revelations, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper lied before a Senate committee about mass surveillance of Americans. Later he explained, "I responded in what I thought was the most truthful, or least untruthful, manner by saying 'no.'" These are the kind of people we're dealing with.
Keep that lie in mind whenever an official assures us that the government respects our privacy and other liberties. As they say in the law, falsus in unum falsus in omnibus—false in one thing, false in all things.

They're panicking in Washington because the section of the USA PATRIOT Act (215) that is used to justify collection of phone data expires midnight Monday [June 1]. True, a federal appeals court has ruled that warrentless bulk data collection exceeds the authority granted by Section 215, but that simply does not matter to some people. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell wants to reauthorize that section and thereby (in his view) preserve NSA spying. Fortunately, enough senators, led by Sens. Rand Paul and Ron Wyden, have stopped him.
The House passed the USA FREEDOM Act (how about outlawing obnoxious acronyms as bill titles?), which may have started out as a sincere effort to limit the NSA but was amended—that is, watered down—into a form that kept some original backers from voting for it. Republican Reps. Justin Amash and Thomas Massie, who oppose unbridled government surveillance, voted no. That bill would prohibit the NSA itself from holding the phone data, but the agency could obtain the data from the telecom companies with approval of the rubber-stamp FISA court.
The Senate, however, couldn't muster the votes to pass the House bill, which leaves us in our present favorable condition, namely: if nothing happens, the NSA program will die at midnight on Monday. Paul, Wyden, and their allies need only play stall-ball to prevail.
No doubt a last-ditch effort to save the spy program will take place Sunday night, when McConnell brings back the Senate. He is willing to extend Section 215 for just two days, but even this must not be allowed because it will give him more time to gather the votes for a permanent reauthorization of the odious provision. (It's odious even if it does not actually authorize bulk data collection, which its author, Rep. James Sensenbrenner, says it does not.)
President Obama wants the Senate to pass the House bill, saying it is vital to keeping Americans safe. But no terrorist has been identified through the collection of bulk data. This is also the position of pro-civil-liberties senators who are in a position to know. (Also see this.) Meanwhile, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a surveillance hawk, has her own bill, which she offers as a compromise, but which can only do mischief with our privacy. The differences between her bill and other possible contenders are over how long the transition should be from government to telecom data collection and storage. That is hardly worth going to the barricades over. And even if the telecoms held the data, how could we know the NSA wouldn't be able to get it whenever it wants, with gag orders to keep the telecoms quiet. Will Clapper assure us otherwise?
If this all sounds confusing, that's because it is. Civil-liberties organizations are divided over the House so-called reform package. The grab-bag bill may offer limits on government spying, but any such provisions are likely offset by other clauses that expand and entrench broad surveillance across a range of media. Who can say how it all nets out?
Power thrives in complexity because most people won't pay attention.
The process is fraught with danger, and I suspect, knowing how Washington works, the Senate will pass the House bill as a compromise. Let's hope Rand Paul et al. will run out the clock.
This piece originally appeared at Richman's "Free Association" blog.
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Yes. The NSA will stop spying on us if they lose their legal fig leaf.
Right.
Because Uncle Sam has never done anything illegal. No sir.
You're right. Best to give up.
Never give up. That's what they depend on--our indifference and failure to fight for our rights.
I'm indifferent to giving up.
That is why you will win, Paul. Nothing can defeat apathy, which is like the entropy of emotional states.
Never give up! Never surrender!
For what its worth this has been the first honest-to-god good news to come out of DC for those of us who want to end the Surveillance State since the "War on Terror" began.
Killing 215 would be a huge first step toward beginning the dismantling of the NSA's stranglehold on the lawmaking process, not to mention a hell of a coup for Rands campaign.
First, thank you, Edward Snowden.
Sarcasm. Yeah, that's real helpful.
Do you come with the car?
How dare you.
To the last, I grapple with thee, 215; From Hell's heart, I stab at thee, 215; For hate's sake, I spit my last breath at thee, 215.
Never give up, never surrender!
....the Fourth Amendment, out of danger?
Um, no. Spock, you fucked up and got irradiated for nothing. It's okay, we're all going down with you.
Yeah dude. We just kicked to max impulse and are outracing the expanding shockwave because we can reach 99% of the speed of light in a minute.
So I don't know why you went in there, we had plenty of time to fix this.
That's right, did you hit your head on something Spock?
It's twelve o'clock twice a day!
Ferk. Richmond is for terminating the data collection.
I must now stake out my new position fore square behind the eavesdropping.
It seems you're first in line, so you have that going for you, Harvard.
Off topic, but I enjoyed this summary paragraph too much to wait until the PM links.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/the.....month.html
To recap the whole situation: In 2011 and 2012 Hillary Clinton, as Secretary of State, used an off-books email account to discuss national policy with a private citizen who might have been violating the law by participating in the conversation, who had a related business interest (though not a "financial interest"?) in the subject of his advice that he may or may not have disclosed to the government, and who was simultaneously employed in a questionable "full-time" capacity at significant expense to a nonprofit that has been accused of acting as the bag man for a Clintonian influence-peddling operation.
Felonies are funny, aren't they?
who had a related business interest (though not a "financial interest"?) ?
I had to read this paragraph twice to be able to peer through all the dithering.
Chris Kyle is to Adam Lanza as the NSA is to _______?
Hitler? It's Hitler, isn't it?
"Chris Kyle is to Adam Lanza as the NSA is to _______?"
I submit Miroslav Tich?.
Kyle killed for the State, sanctioned by the State
Lanza killed without State sanction, and for his own reasons
The NSA breaks the law and invades privacy for the State, sanctioned by the State
Miroslav Tich? invaded privacy without sanction, and for his own reasons
Let me guess -- if this section 215 expires, the NSA will get a new secret legal opinion saying it's OK to continue doing what they're doing using a tortured interpretation of a different section of some law, and then not tell anyone outside the NSA that it's still business as usual.
Or is that too cynical?
If nothing happens, the NSA's bulk collection of phone data will die at midnight on Monday.
No it won't... they'll just stop talking about it on Tuesday.
Let's give NSA an even break : Take all of TSA 's airport gophers and re-assign them as paralegals to make the case in longhand for each and every search warrant the agency requests .
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