House of Reps. Passes Act To Limit TIA Powers 27
WigginX writes "As part of the 2004 Defense Appropriations Act, approved yesterday by the House of Representatives, no government agency may implement any part of Terrorism Information Awareness (formerly Total Information Awareness) without authorization from Congress. The Federation of American Scientists' Project on Government Secrecy has mirrored the text of the provision."
YEAAAHH! (Score:3, Insightful)
What more can we say? This is a good thing. Although, this still leaves the measures in the act usuable, just whoever wants to use them needs to apply a little extra grease to the gears now.
Re:YEAAAHH! (Score:2)
Re:YEAAAHH! (Score:2)
Good/bad/ugly? (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, Adm. Poindexter also was involved in the Iran-Contra affair, which was ALSO specifically forbidden by Congress. So I'd keep a close eye on things just the same, despite the legislation in place--which is an important step, don't get me wrong.
Re:Good/bad/ugly? (Score:1)
Oh wait, those were not wars, they were police actions, thats right. In all honesty, the senate did declare war on Iraq, but on
Re:Good/bad/ugly? (Score:1)
shouldn't congress be the lawmakers? (Score:4, Interesting)
* why is it called 9/11 (September 11th or the even more annoying "nine-eleven") instead of WTC, or 2001 hijackings, or something else. We don't call Pearl Harbor 12/7. Sorry for the rant, just becoming a pet peeve of mine.
Re:shouldn't congress be the lawmakers? (Score:2)
911 (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder if perhaps it was done intentionally to get us to remember the attacks at least once a year. People say "remeber Pearl Harbor" or "remember the Alamo", but when the event is named by it's date... well, at least it's easy to remember when it happened!
Re:shouldn't congress be the lawmakers? (Score:1)
WTC
Calling it "WTC" ignores the crash at the Pentagon as well as Flight 93.
or 2001 hijackings
Again, this misses the scope of the disaster. It was more then some hijackings. Suicide Bombings? Attacks? Disaster?
We say "D-Day", we say 4th of July to refer to other signifigant events. "September 11th" make sense in a similar way.
Good? Bad? Just neutral? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd also like to point out that the White House may well decide to authorize it anyway using an executive order, since this administration agrees with Gephardt on the issue of executive supremacy. Because the CIA, NSA, and FBI are executive agencies, the White House may be able to authorize the project anyway under a different name and tell Congres to go shove itself. Constitutionally shaky, yes, but very possible in today's civil liberties-impaired legal system.
That being said, I grant conditional respect to many House Republicans and Democrats alike for speaking out against the TIA. Even if this provision is merely a postponement of the inevitable, I am grateful for every moment of precious liberty.
Iran Contra Redux (Score:3, Insightful)
Does this really mean anything? (Score:5, Insightful)
While it's tempting to jump for joy, I'm not sure this is really anything meaningful. Remember that TIA ia a DARPA program, meaning that it's technology that is still very much in its infancy. TIA probably wouldn't be able to be rolled out for several years yet just because it hasn't been developed, yet alone tested, yet. True, whenever it finally IS ready for action they'll need to get congressional approval but who knows what the world will be like then? Hell, maybe this action will be repealed between now and then!
In short, I'm not sure this is much to celebrate. It seems like an attempt on the part of congress to reassure the public without actually putting any meaningful constraints on DARPA or the TIA program.
GMD
Does "implement" include "purchase"? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Does this really mean anything? (Score:3, Informative)
Well, it is doing just that. If we assume for a minute that Congress critters are trying to what's best for the nation, work with me here. Then if people are starting to panic about the TIA, when we all know they couldn't possibly do anything meaningful in the short term, Congress is doing us a favor by passing this bill to put those people who don't rea
Constitutional Ammendment (Score:2)
Re:Constitutional Ammendment (Score:2)
Re:Constitutional Ammendment (Score:1)
Apparently, it isn't so obvious anymore, is it?
Re:Constitutional Amendment (Score:2, Insightful)
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated"