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        <div id="header"><h1 class="orange">Orange Alert<br />
          for Civil Liberties</h1>
          <h2 class="dark"> Beware of the &quot;Domestic Security Enhancement 
          Act&quot; </h2></div>
        <div id="byline">			    <!--#include virtual="/inserts/gizmos.htm" --> 
<p>&nbsp;</p><div class="clearboth"></div> 
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       <p>Even after the draconian measures of the <span ><a href="http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=107_cong_bills&docid=f:h3162enr.txt" target="_blank">&quot;Patriot 
          Act</a>,&quot; </span>George W. Bush and company apparently think Americans 
          are too free and that we cannot be trusted to know what further infringements 
          on our freedom are being planned.<img src="images/constitutional_rights_threatened.gif" alt="Constitutional Rights Threatened" width="202" height="186" hspace="10" vspace="12" border="1" align="right" /></p>      
      <p> The Justice Department's plans for a &quot;Domestic Security Enhancement 
        Act of 2003&quot; were revealed only through a Department insider leaking 
        the document to the watchdog group Center for Public Integrity. Dick Cheney 
        and House Speaker Dennis Hastert are the only recognizable elected or 
        quasi-elected officials <a href="http://www.publicintegrity.org/dtaweb/downloads/Story_01_020703_Doc_2.pdf" target="_blank" >documented</a> 
        as having obtained the document, which is marked &quot;Confidential: Not 
        for Distribution Draft Jan. 9, 2003.&quot; </p>
      <p>You can read our summary below or <a href="patriot_act_ii_oped.html" >our 
        latest op-ed</a>, published February 11. (Tamb<span style="font-size: 12.0pt">ién</span> 
        en español: <a href="/civil_rights/bush_contra_libertades_civiles.html">&quot;<span >Alerta 
        Naranja&quot; para las libertades civiles</span>) </a>The full draft legislation 
        may be downloaded at the bottom of this page.</p>
      <p><span class="h2dark"><strong>Consequences of the proposals in the draft 
        DSEA</strong></span><strong><br />
        </strong> <span>If introduced and passed as drafted, the 
        Act would:</span></p>
      <p><strong>Revoke portions of the Freedom of Information Act. </strong>(See 
        Section 201, pp. 13-14 of pdf)<strong> </strong>Your right to obtain 
        information about a friend or family member detained by the government 
        in connection with any activity deemed &quot;terrorist&quot; would be 
        revoked. This is incredible in lieu of the fact that the Freedom of Information 
        Act already allows for the government to withhold such information if 
        its disclosure could hamper investigation of other suspects or events 
        (exemptions 7a, 7c, 7f, in 5 U.S.C. 552b7).</p>
      <p> The Act also would prevent you from having reasonable access to information 
        about threats to your health and community, such as levels of toxic emissions 
        (Section 202). The Act refers to such information as &quot;a roadmap 
        for terrorists.&quot; The result: you'll have to trust the Bush Environmental 
        Protection Agency to disclose any corporate activities that pose a threat 
        to you and your family.</p>
      <p><strong>Allow the Bush Administration to revoke your residency or U.S. 
        citizenship</strong>. Perhaps the most alarming proposal (Section 501) 
        would give the Justice Dept. power to revoke a person's permanent resident 
        alien status or even U.S. citizenship for participating in, or &quot;providing 
        material support to ... a terrorist organization.&quot;</p>
      <p>Since the 2001 &quot;Patriot Act&quot;<span > <a href="http://archive.aclu.org/congress/l102301h.html" target="_blank">redefined 
        &quot;terrorist activity</a></span><a href="http://archive.aclu.org/congress/l102301h.html" target="_blank">&quot;</a> 
        so broadly that minor vandalism could qualify, donating to a nonprofit 
        organization that, unknown to you, is on Ashcroft's disfavored list could 
        end your life as an American citizen and resident. Alarmist? Consider 
        that members of the Bush Administration have publicly accused journalists 
        who criticize them of being &quot;terrorists&quot; (e.g. Defense Policy 
        Board Chairman Richard Perle <a href="../articles_2003/bush_critics_equal_terrorists.html">on 
        <span >CNN, March 9, 2003</span></a>).</p>
      <p><strong>Invalidate state legal consent decrees</strong> (Section 312) 
        that seek to curb police spying on U.S. citizens, regardless of any tangible 
        evidence of criminal activity. This effectively re-authorizes the CIA 
        and FBI to engage in domestic terrorism against activist groups ( <em>a 
        la</em> COINTELPRO); practices that were made illegal after the well-documented 
        abuses of the 1960s.</p>
      <p> If you think we overstate by using the term <em>domestic terrorism </em>to
         describe the FBI and CIA activities, please inform yourself about this
         critical history. The Church Committee report (officially the Final
        Report  of the Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with
        Respect  to Intelligence Activities of the United States Senate, 94th
        Congress,  2nd Session, 1976) is a good starting point. </p>
      <p><strong>Allow the government to force U.S. citizens to allow invasive 
        collection of DNA samples</strong> (Sections 301-306) if the Administration 
        consider someone a &quot;suspected terrorist.&quot;</p>
      <p> The Act also would authorize the Justice Department to conduct secret 
        searches of the home of any suspected terrorist for 15 days after any 
        &quot;national emergency,&quot; rather than after a formal declaration 
        of war, as in current law. Wiretaps of U.S. citizens for longer periods 
        and with less court oversight are another proposal. There are many more 
        serious concerns than we cite here. The two most thorough analyses of 
        the proposal we've seen thus far are available from <a href="http://www.asne.org/index.cfm?id=4348" target="_blank" >American 
        Society of Newspaper Editors</a> and <a href="http://www.aclu.org/SafeandFree/SafeandFree.cfm?ID=11835&c=206" target="_blank" >the 
        ACLU</a>.</p>
      <p>When confronted with the leaked legislation draft, Justice Department 
        spokesperson Barbara Comstock claimed that the document represented merely 
        &quot;staff discussions.&quot; You can read the draft legislation yourself 
        and decide if such claims by Bush Administration officials are credible. 
        It is available <a href="http://www.publicintegrity.org/dtaweb/downloads/Story_01_020703_Doc_1.pdf" target="_blank" >in 
        pdf format</a> (<span>120pp, requires the free <a href="http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html" target="_blank" >Acrobat 
        Reader</a></span>); or <a href="http://www.dailyrotten.com/source-docs/patriot2draft.html" target="_blank" >in 
        html </a>(better for dial-up connections--unafilliated site).</p>
      <p>You also can read the <a href="http://www.publicintegrity.org/dtaweb/downloads/Story_01_020703_Doc_3.pdf" target="_blank" >response 
        from the DOJ</a> to reports on the DSEA.</p>
      <p> We urge you to at least scan the &quot;Security Enhancement Act,&quot; 
        especially if you think we exaggerate the threats to our freedom. Even 
        a casual read should quickly dispel that idea. Then please join us in 
        working to preserve our Constitutional rights.</p>
      <div class="pullquotebox"><p><em>&quot;A time comes when silence is 
                  betrayal. Even when pressed by the demands of inner truth, men 
                  do not easily assume the task of opposing their government's 
                  policy, especially in time of war...</em></p>
                <p><em> We are called to speak for the weak, for the voiceless, 
                  for the victims of our nation, for those it calls &quot;enemy,&quot; 
                  for no document from human hands can make these humans any less 
                  our brother.&quot;<br />
                  -- </em><strong>excerpted from <em>A Time to Break the Silence</em>, 
                  Martin Luther King's speech in New York City, April 4, 1967</strong></p>
      </div>
      <div align="center"><br />
        <span class="h2darkcenter">Action Suggestions</span> </div>
      <p>Join at least 51 communities that have passed resolutions supporting 
        due process and civil liberties to make statement against government repression. 
        Dozens more communities have initiated related efforts. Here's one example, 
        passed in December by <a href="oakland_patriot_act_resolution.html" >Oakland, 
        CA</a>. See <a href="http://BORDC.org" target="_blank" >BORDC.org</a> 
        for a guide to organizing such campaigns.</p>
      <p>You can call, fax, or write or visit your U.S. Representative and Senators 
        to voice your opinion on the measures noted in the draft &quot;Domestic 
        Security Enhancement Act of 2003,&quot; but be aware that no member of 
        Congress except House Speaker Dennis Hastert had been sent this draft 
        as of February 7. You can reach any congressional representatives<strong> 
        toll-free</strong> at 1-800-839-5276 or (202) 224-3121 (Capital Switchboard), 
        or <a href="http://congress.org/congressorg/dbq/officials/" target="_blank" >look 
        up their other contact information</a>.</p>
      <p>Only through raising public dialogue can we hope to thwart this massive 
        expansion of government and corporate power at the expense of civil liberties. 
        Your letters to the editor, calls to talk radio (especially conservative 
        shows), and discussion with family and friends all are meaningful and 
        necessary actions. We are happy to offer help with any letter-writing, 
        and our summary provides excellent material to excerpt for adapting to 
        your own voice (but please don't use it verbatim--editors are wary of 
        form letters).</p>
      <p>You also can work to pass a local resolution in support of civil liberties 
        and opposing the &quot;Security Act&quot; or other attacks on freedom, 
        as 32 U.S. towns and cities have already done. See our <a href="index.html">Civil 
        Rights index page</a> for more. Stay informed on this critical issue by 
        subscribing to our monthly e-mail update (see below).</p>
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