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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!Well, Alex, there's one obvious solution to the rampant dysfunction you so colorfully describe in that hilarious recap of your recent journey from India back to the United States. And I can sum it up in one word: Israel.Over the past week or so, much ink has been spilled over the pros and cons of airport security techniques as diverse as body scanners (child porn?), passenger profiling (racist or just plain smart?) and the prohibition on bathroom breaks during the last hour of the flight (cruel and unusual punishment?). Surprisingly, what people aren't talking so much about are the methods ...
Britain has long been famous for its surveillance state. There are security cameras everywhere you go. The country has the largest DNA database in the world. And a national identity card program is well underway. But new revelations that British police have been spying on domestic protesters have infuriated citizens all along the political spectrum. ...
"It could have been worse" is not a Thanksgiving sentiment normally associated with Norman Rockwell or grandma in her gingham dress. But this has been a tough year and it comes at the end of a troubling decade that could easily be described as the Anxious Aughts. So today as we look out at our turkey-trimmed and stuffing-stuffed holiday tables, it seems appropriate to offer a toast or prayer in honor of all the fashionable fears and dramatic dreads that blessedly have never come to pass. ...
A Senate bill that put civil libertarians on edge earlier this year is still in the works: CNET obtained a copy of the current revision of S.773, a measure that would give the president authority to disconnect the private Internet networks during a "cybersecurity emergency." The original bill, introduced by Sens. Jay Rockefeller (D-W. Va.) and Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) in April, called for an Office of the National Cybersecurity Advisor that would have vast powers over Internet traffic. In other words, Internet oversight would move from the Department of Homeland Security to the White House. ...
The House and Senate are both set to consider legislation that would restrict the use of a tool granted to the FBI under the USA PATRIOT Act. The tool, known as a national security letter, is an administrative subpoena that allows the Bureau to demand certain information from persons being investigated for suspected ties to terrorism activities without the oversight of a federal judge. The FBI has admitted that use of the letters regularly brings in more information than the government is legally allowed to collect and maintain and has promised to tighten its procedures for record ...
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