Sunday, January 20

"Thought Crime" Bill Dies Silently

Note: I have posted a retraction of this post and encourage readers to ignore this posting as it turns out to have been not true.


From Hope Marston at the Bill of Rights Defense Committee:

Have you heard the news? The Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act is dead. And I think grassroots opposition killed it.

According to an obscure paragraph in CQ Politics on December 14, the Senate version of the bill "died a quiet death" in early December. What's amazing to me (or really, shouldn't be a surprise, I guess) is how well hidden this is. I could find no mention on Thomas, or anywhere else on the web (please help me if I've missed something). Thanks to our friends at the ACLU for alerting us to this obscure paragraph!

The wildfire of grassroots opposition to this "thought crime" bill, which apparently stopped it cold, is receiving no credit. And because this lone CQ article is the singular reference to the death of the bill, articles churning up opposition to HR 1955 and S 1959 continue to populate the Internet. In a case of odd timing, the Committee on Homeland Security issued a "Fact Sheet" declaring each point of opposition to the bill to be myth. The "Fact Sheet" was released (according to Atlantic Free Press) on December 17, though the bill had expired in the Senate earlier in December.

Here's the CQ Politics article. You'll have to dig deep to find the reference to Violent Radicalization, or use "Find" and search on "radical" to find it more easily.


For more information on the bill that is currently resting in peace, see BORDC's legislation page.


More news from this week, including a new film documenting U.S. sanctioned torture, Jose Padilla's $1 lawsuit against torture-enabler John Yoo, renewed opposition to REAL ID, CIA videotapes, Guantanamo, warrantless wiretapping, and White House destruction of evidence (email backups) is available from the BORDC website and news page.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Can you point us to where this bill is purported to have died? Are we sure this is not disinformation so it can be passed in the middle of the night on a voice vote as seems to be all the rage these days?

Anonymous said...

Ever heard of disinformation? When congress is in session, no bill is ever truly dead. That is, Be sure your cow and wife are locked up when the legislature is in session.
If Lieberman and Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME)were to announce "publicly" that the bill will not be acted upon before the Nov. elections, then it would be dead.

But stealth killing a bill means it could be revived again and moved by stealth as well. Rule 1: never trust your government. 2 Money rules. Follow the money.

Gark said...

BACKCHANNEL CHATTER

Radical: Legislation to create a “National Commission on the Prevention of Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism” (HR 1955) died a quiet death in the Senate last week. Much maligned here as a $22 million boondoggle, the idea to create yet another government entity to study an overblown threat already addressed by the $44 billion-a-year U.S. intelligence community, not to mention countless think tanks and authors, was the brainchild of Rep. Jane Harman , D-Calif. A few years ago local police and the FBI broke up a prison-based plot to bomb synagogues in the name of jihad in her district. Sen. Susan Collins , R-Maine, introduced a companion measure, but it was doomed by a lack of specificity on who the commission’s targets were, among other problems.