Atlantic.com: “This Week’s Senate Scandal: Scorn for the 4th Amendment”

Atlantic.com: This Week’s Senate Scandal: Scorn for the 4th Amendment by Conor Friedersdor:

I haven’t passed the bar, but I know a little bit about the 4th Amendment. Have you read it lately? “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated,” it states in plain English, “and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”

That’s all of it.

The landline in your house? The government needs a warrant to tap it. The letters in your mailbox? The government needs a warrant to read ’em. It’s like the Framers said: probable cause is required.

Yet a text or an email, even one sent from your bed, is treated differently — it’s afforded much less protection from government snoops, even though we’re increasingly going all digital in our communication.

Why?

Senator Rand Paul raised that question Thursday on the Senate floor. “We became lazy and haphazard in our vigilance,” he told his colleagues during a debate about government surveillance. ….

Salon.com: Senate FISA vote inspiring display of bipartisan commitment to ignoring Fourth Amendment | Fiscal calamity? Who cares! Congress shows that they can still band together and vote for horrible things, by Alex Pareene:

Congressional dysfunction and extremism may yet plunge the nation into an entirely avoidable recession, but at least Americans will likely be able to sleep at night secure in the knowledge that our lawmakers at least sprang into action, at the last possible minute, to preserve the government’s right to constantly spy on everyone without telling anyone about it.

In all likelihood, the Senate will vote today to reauthorize the FISA Amendments Act for a few years, just before it was scheduled to expire. The House reauthorized it all the way back in September, but the world’s most deliberative body likes to take its time (plus Ron Wyden placed a hold on the bill until Senate leaders agreed to at least have a debate on proposed amendments to the Amendments).

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