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In reply to the discussion: Congressional Black Caucus to Support Spying Powers Used on BLM Activists [View all]usonian
(25,792 posts)11. Tell Congress to let this terrible law expire. -- Indivisible
https://indivisible.actionkit.com/mailings/view/125202
April 10, 2026
Next week, a little-known law that allows the government to sidestep the Constitution and spy on US citizens is set to expire.
Congress should let it die -- but we fear some Democrats could join most Republicans in reauthorizing this civil liberties disaster at a time the regime is greedily gobbling up mass surveillance data to punish its enemies and round up immigrants. And we know Stephen Miller is eager to use the creepiest of AI tools to massively expand the governments ability to spy on us.
The details get a bit wonky, but they really matter: Section 702 of the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) was designed, in 2008, to facilitate warrantless electronic surveillance of non-US citizens in other countries; in the meantime, though, courts have ruled that information gleaned incidentally about citizens' communications can also be searched, no warrant necessary. Despite being a clear civil liberties disaster, Congress has routinely reauthorized Section 702 with bipartisan support.
In practice, this has meant that what was intended as a foreign intelligence tool and counterterrorism measure has been aggressively repurposed into a program for spying on American citizens -- and a loophole lets the government get access to data which, even under FISA, requires a warrant. All they have to do is pay for it.
Tell your Members of Congress to vote NO on any legislation that reauthorizes Section 702 without significant reforms to protect us from the authoritarian Trump regime.
In the 18 years since the law was passed, the gathering and sale of private information by data brokers has exploded. If reauthorized as-is, Section 702 will not only let the regime continue buying data to target political opponents and immigrant communities, as well as potentially monitoring pregnancies -- it'll be turbo-charged by Miller and AI broligarchs to give the regime surveillance capabilities unprecedented in our history. The potential repercussions for our Constitutional freedoms are nightmarish.
Two years ago, this legislation sailed through Congress; now the regime is hoping the wonky details will help them slip mass, AI-driven surveillance through with a backroom deal. We can't let that happen.
Let your Members of Congress know that they have a choice to make: Will they greenlight warrantless mass surveillance of American citizens, or uphold the Constitution and reject Trump's authoritarian power grabs?
FISA's Section 702 threatens our foundational liberties. Congress needs to let it die.
In solidarity,
Indivisible Team
April 10, 2026
Next week, a little-known law that allows the government to sidestep the Constitution and spy on US citizens is set to expire.
Congress should let it die -- but we fear some Democrats could join most Republicans in reauthorizing this civil liberties disaster at a time the regime is greedily gobbling up mass surveillance data to punish its enemies and round up immigrants. And we know Stephen Miller is eager to use the creepiest of AI tools to massively expand the governments ability to spy on us.
The details get a bit wonky, but they really matter: Section 702 of the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) was designed, in 2008, to facilitate warrantless electronic surveillance of non-US citizens in other countries; in the meantime, though, courts have ruled that information gleaned incidentally about citizens' communications can also be searched, no warrant necessary. Despite being a clear civil liberties disaster, Congress has routinely reauthorized Section 702 with bipartisan support.
In practice, this has meant that what was intended as a foreign intelligence tool and counterterrorism measure has been aggressively repurposed into a program for spying on American citizens -- and a loophole lets the government get access to data which, even under FISA, requires a warrant. All they have to do is pay for it.
Tell your Members of Congress to vote NO on any legislation that reauthorizes Section 702 without significant reforms to protect us from the authoritarian Trump regime.
In the 18 years since the law was passed, the gathering and sale of private information by data brokers has exploded. If reauthorized as-is, Section 702 will not only let the regime continue buying data to target political opponents and immigrant communities, as well as potentially monitoring pregnancies -- it'll be turbo-charged by Miller and AI broligarchs to give the regime surveillance capabilities unprecedented in our history. The potential repercussions for our Constitutional freedoms are nightmarish.
Two years ago, this legislation sailed through Congress; now the regime is hoping the wonky details will help them slip mass, AI-driven surveillance through with a backroom deal. We can't let that happen.
Let your Members of Congress know that they have a choice to make: Will they greenlight warrantless mass surveillance of American citizens, or uphold the Constitution and reject Trump's authoritarian power grabs?
FISA's Section 702 threatens our foundational liberties. Congress needs to let it die.
In solidarity,
Indivisible Team
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Congressional Black Caucus to Support Spying Powers Used on BLM Activists [View all]
Celerity
Tuesday
OP
any yet, as I noted, bipartisan objections to backdoors and abuses not withstanding - FISA
stopdiggin
Tuesday
#13
Yeah. Strange. Congressional Black Caucus really has little to do with this issue.
stopdiggin
Tuesday
#5
and I continue to say, what possible motivation/justification in HIGHLIGHTING
stopdiggin
Tuesday
#14
Yes! Together with headlines reading "CBC playing coy - - Reportedly siding with Trump .. "
stopdiggin
12 hrs ago
#19
I disagree with your framing attempts, but I am going to leave it there and just agree to disagree.
Celerity
12 hrs ago
#20
respect your right to disagree. but, to my mind, continues to be an absolutely blatant case ...
stopdiggin
12 hrs ago
#21