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Analyzing The Patriot Act Essay

Patriot Act The following will be an in-depth look at the Patriot Act.

History of the Patriot Act

This Act was developed after the terrorism tragedy on September 11 in New York, and became a law on 10/26/2001. It was a contentious law, since it made huge alterations on how the law enforcement should look into its communications. The Patriot Act was passed amid much disapproval, making it contentious to date (History of the Patriot Act -- Patriot Act). The enthusiasts of this Act believed that it allowed the law enforcement to prevent future terrorism. The critics, on the other hand, describe the law as ambiguous and intrusive. They also say that it is doubtful, considering the scope of the legislation, that it was directly based on the attack. It was apparently meant to finally give the law enforcement a chance to be more aggressive, using the terrorism tragedy as a loophole.

Controversial Provisions

The House pushed for an extension of 3 provisions of the spy legislation of the Act, which were about to expire. It was expected to be passed by a vote of 275-144. They were bound to expire at the end of the month. The House ignored making changes or even debating on them, and instead lobbed the third failure...

The provision named "roving wiretap" gives the FBI the mandate to get wiretaps from the FISA (Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act), a secret intelligence court, having neither goal nor knowledge of the communication method they needed to employ. The second legislation, "lone wolf" licenses aimless electronic supervision by the FISA court. They did not even need to show the culprit's involvement with terrorism or any foreign authority (Kravets, 2011). The government denied appealing the measure, while the Obama government claimed that it had the desire to maintain the power to appeal it. The third provision, "business records" gives the FISA court permission to access any record, whether library, medical or banking with no government declaration of a connection between the information under pursuit with a spying or terror investigation.
Libraries offer room for exercising academic freedom -- an open and welcome exchange of information and facts where people can freely inquire, and privately look for information. Privacy is important when exercising one's freedom of association, thoughts and speech. It is not allowed for other people to scrutinize or investigate one's interests…

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References

(n.d.). American Library Association. The U.S.A. PATRIOT Act -- Advocacy, Legislation & Issues. Retrieved June 18, 2016, from http://www.ala.org/advocacy/advleg/federallegislation/theusapatriotact

Kravets, D. (2011). WIRED. House Extends Key Patriot Act Provisions -- WIRED. Retrieved June 18, 2016, from http://www.wired.com/2011/02/patriot-act-extended/

(2013). Patriot Act -- Information on the U.S.A. Patriot Act. History of the Patriot Act -- Patriot Act. Retrieved June 18, 2016, from http://www.patriotact.com/history-of-the-patriot-act/
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