For those Americans who are worried about their privacy...

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CPeanutG

Active SatelliteGuys Member
Original poster
May 11, 2007
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For those Americans who are worried about their privacy and even those that aren't all that worried...

http://www.eff.org/showdown

At least let your Senators know where you stand on this issue.

"For more than five years, AT&T and other telephone companies broke the law and violated their customers' privacy rights by sending billions of private domestic internet and telephone communications and records to the National Security Agency.

Now, after months of pressure from the Bush Administration, the full Senate is poised to grant retroactive immunity to these companies, which would effectively ensure that the full extent of their complicity will never be known.

The critical make-or-break vote is being held Monday-- contact your Senator immediately and urge them to oppose telecom immunity!

Senate lawmakers must support Senator Chris Dodd and other heroes in allowing a full debate to proceed on Monday, and they must vote to strip telecom immunity from the bill.

The Senate should not let the telecoms off the hook. Granting immunity sets a dangerous precedent, sending the message that lawbreaking is acceptable and that the rights of Americans can be freely infringed by private companies in defiance of the law. And though the debate about the proper process of collecting foreign intelligence is complex, the issue of telecom immunity is not. The facts are simple enough: the telecoms broke the law, so the Senate should let Americans have their day in court."
 
The existence of the income tax and the ability of the hundreds of thousands of IRS employees to take a gander at our financial data is the biggest invasion of privacy that has ever been perpetrated against the American people.

But this is bad too.
 
And you think that we can do anything to stop this? We're still paying income tax decades after it was ment to stop paying for war efforts.
 
In today's world - privacy is almost a thing of the past, unless you move to a remote country, and live out in the country :)
 
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