You Know It's Pretty Much Game Over. . .

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
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Washington DC
when they don't even bother to lie to you anymore.

Proposal to restrict NSA phone-tracking program defeated

By Ed O’Keefe

A controversial proposal to restrict how the National Security Agency collects Americans’ telephone records failed to advance in the House by a narrow margin Wednesday, a victory for the Obama administration, which has spent weeks defending the program.

Lawmakers voted 217 to 205 to defeat the proposal from an unlikely coalition of liberal and conservative members. Those lawmakers had joined forces in response to revelations by Edward Snowden, a former NSA contractor, that the agency has collected the phone records of millions of Americans — a practice that critics say goes beyond the kind of collection that has been authorized by Congress.

The plan, sponsored by Reps. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) and John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.), would have restricted the collection of the records, known as metadata, only when there was a connection to relevant ongoing investigations. It also would have required that secret opinions from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court be made available to lawmakers and that the court publish summaries of each opinion for public review.

Conyers said the proposal “would curtail the ongoing dragnet collection and storage of the personal records of innocent Americans.”
There was little indication that a similar measure would have momentum in the Senate, and the Obama administration made clear that it would veto any such proposal. But the ability of Amash and Conyers to bring the measure to the House floor as an amendment to a Defense Department appropriations bill — and their ability to get more than 200 votes in their favor — was a testament to lawmakers’ growing concerns about the NSA’s bulk collection of data.

U.S. officials have defended the collection and emphasized that intelligence analysts are not reviewing the contents of the calls or listening to Americans’ conversations. The data include the phone numbers called by Americans and the length of the calls.
Before the vote, James R. Clapper Jr., the director of national intelligence, issued a statement saying that supporting the proposal “risks dismantling an important intelligence tool.”

His comments came after Gen. Keith Alexander, the director of the NSA and head of U.S. Cyber Command, spent four hours Tuesday on Capitol Hill speaking with lawmakers. The White House had also called the amendment an attempt to “hastily dismantle” counterterrorism tools and “not the product of an informed, open or deliberative process.”

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), a key supporter of NSA surveillance programs, also rejected the proposal Wednesday, saying that Amash was trying “to take advantage at any rate of people’s anger” over a series of other controversies in Washington.

“What they’re talking about doing is turning off a program that after 9/11 we realized we missed — we the intelligence community — missed a huge clue,” Rogers said.

Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio), who as head of the House rarely votes on legislation, voted against the amendment.

Proposal to restrict NSA phone-tracking program defeated - The Washington Post
 

Palindrome

Nominee Member
May 14, 2013
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Be enraged here. There is plenty going on that Canadian media don't report and Canadians don't notice - including, very probably, the same methods of data collection. People just don't care what happens to their fellow citizens - let alone non-citizens and foreigners - as long as they believe they're safe. I stopped caring five years ago.