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Good evening. It's Monday, December 11h.
Tonight: The United States exploited the fears that emerged after the 9/11 attacks in multiple ways while the wars it started and the torture camps that are installed around the world have largely come to an end – some 20 years later – many of the most repressive and authoritarian domestic powers seized in the name of that terrorist attack endured to this very day. One obvious example is the Patriot Act, enacted in the days and weeks after that attack and which was promised to be temporary, yet every four years since, Congress has reauthorized and renewed the Patriot Act and now does so with virtually no debate, ensuring that what was once acknowledged – even after the 9/11 attack – to be a radical expansion of state power has now simply become a normalized part of our political woodwork.
The same is true of the power grab that the U.S. claimed – at first in secret, and then in the open – of the right to spy on the international communications of American citizens without even having so much as to get a warrant first: one of the core constitutional protections of the Fourth Amendment. This is a power that the Bush-Cheney administration originally claimed in secret in early 2002. Once the New York Times won a Pulitzer for revealing the existence of that illegal spying program, in 2005, the U.S. Congress, under the leadership of Nancy Pelosi, acted to codify and legalize the Bush-Cheney warrantless domestic spying power by enacting Section 7O2 of the FISA Amendments Act of 2008.
The terms of that law required that it be renewed every five years, precisely because allowing our government to spy on our communications with no warrants was originally controversial. And yet, since it was renewed in 2013, the Obama administration demanded renewal with no reforms and got it on a bipartisan vote; in 2018, Democrats like Nancy Pelosi and Adam Schiff joined with numerous congressional Republicans to give the Donald Trump administration the same vast domestic spying powers. In other words, even while Adam Schiff and Nancy Pelosi were accusing Donald Trump of being a fascist and a new Hitler, they acted to ensure that the same Trump administration enjoyed these virtually unlimited spying powers on American citizens. These powers are vested in the U.S. Security State – the CIA, the FBI, the NSA – and that's the reason both establishment wings of each party support them.
Now, we're five years later, 2023, and the law is again up for renewal. This time, however, there is a serious bipartisan coalition enraged by how many times the FBI has been caught abusing these spying powers which has consolidated in an attempt to impose meaningful reforms on these powers as a condition for their renewal.
Last week, we had on our program Rep. Thomas Massie, the Republican of Kentucky, to warn that pro-spying members of both political parties are attempting to work with the Biden White House not only to ensure quick approval of this spying power with no reform but also to expand those spying powers even further while an anti-spying coalition of Democrats and Republicans works on the Judiciary Committee to try to reform it. Senator Mike Lee, the Republican senator from Utah, is now vocally warning about that attempt to expand the spying powers and he'll be with us in just a few minutes tonight to discuss the prospects for stopping this bill and the reason it's so dangerous.
Then, we have extensively covered on this show, since October 7, the glaring abandonment of principle that many conservatives, especially those who have long posed and branded as free speech champions as they attempt in the wake of the attack on Israel to usher in a wide range of censorship measures and classic cancel culture in the United States, all in the name of shielding Israel from criticism. Many conservatives have been consistent about this and announced all this, but many on the pro-Israel right, who cheer all of this, don't even deny that it's a radical contradiction of their stated views and current actions. They admit: “Yes, we've always said we're against censorship and now we're demanding it, we're advocating it.” The reason, they claim, is that they are simply finally using the left's censorship tactics against them, finally forcing American liberals to live under the cancellation and censorship frameworks they have imposed on everyone else. That's the excuse. While that sentiment may be understandable, there's a major problem with the claim, namely censorship against Israel critics acknowledge state in academia, media and the corporate world is not new. It's been going on for many, many years in the United States. And we'll show you the very long history of how aggressive and extreme this censorship in the United States has been in the name of protecting Israel and silencing its most vocal critics. Silencing and punishing Israel's American critics is not some new tactic now being used as tit for tat against left-wing censorship, as I kept hearing. It is long been one of the most pervasive forms of censorship in the United States, which many on the right, including those who have vocally championed free speech and presented themselves as free speech warriors, a kind of censorship they've long ignored, if not outright cheered.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.