It’s not every day that a GOP presidential candidate talks about the drug war’s ‘disparate racial impact’ while trying to run the clock out on blanket surveillance
I don’t know whether Rand Paul’s ongoing Senate talkfest will succeed in running out the clock on the Patriot Act, or (as he is seeking) opening up a debate and amendment process, but I do know that—just like his 2013 exercise—these have been some of the most invigorating hours on C-SPAN in recent memory.
1) Warrants need to be “individualized,” because collective law enforcement is the root of much evil.
Paul’s root opposition to the Patriot Act is that it is being used as the legal justification for the collection of bulk data against unsuspecting U.S. citizens who no one believes have committed a crime. His opposition to the reforming USA Freedom Act is that it still allows the government to compel third-party companies like Verizon to cough up 100 percent of its customer metadata.
Either way, Paul has stressed all day, this is antithetical to both the Fourth Amendment and the American tradition of individual rights. Collective guilt is what underpinned the segregationist horrors of the Jim Crow south, and of the indefensible internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II. The people who really need the Bill of Rights, he has said, are not the prom queens and homecoming kings, but people who are in a disfavored minority, whether ideological, religious, or racial.
2) Internet/telephone/data companies should put up “unified resistance” to federal compulsion to turn over user data.
It’s not every day that you see a sitting U.S. senator calling for straight-up civil disobedience. But in an era where the Supreme Court has yet to definitively rule on the third-party doctrine governing what intermediaries have to do when requested by the government to cough up all user data, building up a bigger cultural expectation of privacy is crucial if our credit-card data and cloud storage is going to be proferred traditional 4th Amendment protection.
3) “We’re using the Patriot Act to put [drug offenders] in prison.”
One of the least remembered scandals in the Summer of Snowden is that the Drug Enforcement Agency has been collecting bulk metadata with all the same gusto as the National Security Agency, even though the DEA is supposed to enfore the law on U.S. citizens who are afforded protections from the Constitution. In fact, the DEA has been using the NSA’s data. Patriot Act mission creep might not be news to Reason readers, but that makes it no less indefensible.
4) “Government by cliff is a recipe for disaster.”
That’s a quote from Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), not Rand Paul, though the two have long agreed about this principle. The Patriot Act expires at the end of May. “It’s been three years since we’ve known this date is coming,” Paul said. Why in hell hasn’t there been a debate, with amendments, in the Senate? Why does Capitol Hill lurch from cliff to cliff, instead of actually do the job of governing? I suppose this bad habit of mind is good for certain opportunistic politicians with a sense of theater, but it’s just lousy for the country. The Republicans run the joint; the dysfunction is now squarely on them.
5) “It was done by executive decree, it can be undone by executive decree.”
Paul has continuously bemoaned President Barack Obama’s civil-liberties switcheroo when in office, a topic he talked with me about in a September 2013 (bottom of the post). As he rightly points out, most of the actions civil libertarians are complaining about are pure inventions and executions by the executive branch. If the president cares about this stuff as much as he occasionally pretends to be, he can actually stop collecting the metadata.
6) The government is “using records to gain entrance to people, and then tak[ing] their stuff without conviction.”
The connection between civil asset forfeiture and NSA surveillance might not be immediately obvious, but Paul has done a bravura job in making the link. A government that can take your money—even if you are never charged with a crime—because it doesn’t like the way you deposit it in your bank, is a government that should not be trusted with holding all your seemingly innocuous third-party information.
7) “The Constitution is an end to itself.”
That’s another one from Mike Lee (who, it should be stressed, is wholly in favor of the USA Freedom Act, which Paul opposes on grounds that it still allows for bulk collection of metadata). Too often people try to locate their defense of the founding document on utilitarian grounds; actually, it’s a noble blueprint all on its own.
8) We shoulda listened to William Binney.
William Binney was a crucial, pre-Snowden NSA whistleblower. Don’t know who he is, what he saw, how he was threatened, and why he’s worried about America’s “totalitarian” turn? Read this Nick Gillespie interview with the guy.
9) “The director of national intelligence…wasn’t telling the truth.”
Director of National Intelligence James Clapper famously lied to Congress under oath about the collection of bulk metadata on millions of Americans. All afternoon, Rand Paul has used the word “lied” to describe what Clapper did. It is bracing to watch government misbehavior called by its proper name.
10) “The presumption of innocence is an incredibly important doctrine that we shouldn’t so casually dismiss.”
The fact that this has to be said on the floor of the U.S. Senate is appalling. The fact that it is being said at least offers a little hope.
At one point when watching Citizen Four I ended up screaming (alone in my home like a lunatic) at the screen. A long string of commentators are saying that Edward Snowden should stand trial for his “crimes.” Not one person, NOT FUCKING ONE, even suggest Clapper should stand trial for perjuring himself before Congress, which is in fact a crime, and there is videotape evidence of this CRIME presented earlier in the film.
This whole fucking society is off the rails.
I wish I thought it would do any good.
I wish people wanted freedom from nannydom.
I wish I didn’t have to wish these things.
We love our prisons and myths.
So it goes…
Same thoughts as you Druid on “Citizen Four” and I spent the good part of yesterday afternoon watching Rand Paul’s filibuster unfold. While I watched I kept thinking to myself, where are the other Senators? Except for the handful that gave Rand a break through their questions, the general body of the Senate was MIA. And that my friends is a big part of what’s wrong with this country. When the Senate is in session, Senators should be compelled to put their asses in those seats and get on with the “people’s business.”
I supported the patriot act, as did so many in America. But then the reality set in. The first job in this war on terrorists who sneak into your country, then blow it up, is to secure the border. Bush, then Obama, flung our borders open. Both presidents, instead of focusing our efforts on the small number of jihadist here, and around the world, under the guise of political correctness, decided that ALL Amerikans were to be suspected. Everyone would be felt up in the airports. Meta data on ALL Americans. Both Bush and Obama basically removed the 4th amendment from the constitution. And what did we get for this patriot law, did it work?
Neither Bush nor Obama can point to one terrorist attack they stopped. Sure, they caught a bunch of idiots who got conned by govt agents into thinking they were buying actual bombs.
But then there was the panty bomber ( he is why the TSA feels up your 6yo daughter) who was turned in by his own Nigerian father and was put on all the no-fly and watch lists around the world. Except for our govt. They didn’t want to hurt someone’s feelings.
Then came the Boston bombers. We were told lots of times by Putin and Saudi Arabia that these guys are terrorists. Everyone but capt Crunch knew these guys were bad. But we didn’t want to hurt someones feelings.
Fort Hood shootings. Again, lots of people pointed him out as bad. Didn’t want to hurt his feelings.
Garland Texas. They were on everyones watch list. They drove a thousand miles to kill. What about all those license plate readers that are watching me come home from the liquor store. They must have passed dozens of road cameras on the 1000 mile ride. If there was a time for that program to work, it was then. Noooo way. I’m guessing we didn’t want to hurt their feelings.
End thought. I think both Bush and Obama think that the people who read this blog are the problem. Not the guys who are beheading Christian children in Iraq this day.
I say have Hillary erase the hard drives at the NSA. She knows how. The NSA couldn’t find their ass with both hands.
Rainman……
I was a huge supporter of Rand until his first interview after he announced his bid for President. He was ill prepared, he was attempting to walk back positions he was on record for holding, it was convoluted and ill thought out. I will not waste money or time on nonsense, right then I realized Rand cannot win. Rand needed to come out with well thought out positions, he will walk a path he doesn’t believe in and it’s obvious.
Sensetti says:
I was a huge supporter of Rand until his first interview after he announced his bid for President. He was ill prepared, he was attempting to walk back positions he was on record for holding, it was convoluted and ill thought out. I will not waste money or time on nonsense, right then I realized Rand cannot win. Rand needed to come out with well thought out positions, he will walk a path he doesn’t believe in and it’s obvious.
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Not that I care, or will vote, but which republican Neocon warmomger is your choice?
Rainman says End thought. I think both Bush and Obama think that the people who read this blog are the problem.
No, No, not at all Rainmaker. Bush? I voted for him three times, we are on a first name bases. Obama, well, that bastard understands that his only skill is sucking a dick, I’d get a ahold of those big ears and choke that motherfucker down. Don’t worry we’re good to go, motherfuckers can’t eat you.
Not sure Z, as I’ve stated Federal Elections are rigged. State Elections have local consequences. Hence top ten most fucked up States are Democrat save Billy’s Kentucky which, what two Senators hail from? Rand and Mitch.
I’m looking at Rubio related to the fact Mexican beer and Mexican pussy pay dividends. Rubio’s a Cuban which makes my last sentence absolutely irrelevant. Z I think I’ll vote for the Republican Shia candidate.
Sensetti says:
Not sure Z, as I’ve stated Federal Elections are rigged. State Elections have local consequences. Hence top ten most fucked up States are Democrat save Billy’s Kentucky which, what two Senators hail from? Rand and Mitch.
I’m looking at Rubio related to the fact Mexican beer and Mexican pussy pay dividends. Rubio’s a Cuban which makes my last sentence absolutely irrelevant. Z I think I’ll vote for the Republican Shia candidate.
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Rubio is Bill Kristol’s favorite, which means his is also Sheldon Adelson’s favorite. Fuck peace, Bomb Iran! Israel first!!