Daily Kos: While Millions Hotly Debate the Second Amendment, the Fourth Amendment is Dying a Quiet Death

Daily Kos: While Millions Hotly Debate the Second Amendment, the Fourth Amendment is Dying a Quiet Death by Richard Riis:

The Supreme Court on Tuesday turned back a challenge to a federal law that broadened the government’s power to monitor the emails and telephone conversations of American citizens without judicial approval or review. The 5-4 decision, divided along ideological lines, means courts may never be able to rule whether such surveillance violates the Constitution.

The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees citizens the right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure. When that right has been violated, we must be able to challenge the intrusion. Government search and seizure, including wiretaps, monitoring of emails and other forms of electronic surveillance, must never be beyond judicial review.

But now much of it is, thanks to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, originally passed in 1978 but heavily amended in 2008.

I write to my state legislators: Why is it that the Second Amendment is the only part of the Bill of Rights that any of you care about? You whittle away at every other right in other amendments: First, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, and Fourteenth. Stand up for something other than a gun.

Worse yet: They never reply. Probably because they are nonlawyers who can’t even name what these amendments protect.

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