Odd Bedfellows for Liberty
Odd Bedfellows for Liberty

by Jim Hightower

How one Democrat, one Republican, and one American in exile fought back against bulk surveillance.

Let’s now praise a threesome of odd bedfellows: a Democratic ex-senator, an exiled American citizen, and a current Republican senator.

I don’t think they’ve ever met, yet their separate efforts over 14 years have now guided our ship of state away from some perilous authoritarian straits.

First came Russ Feingold of Wisconsin, a former Democratic senator who refused in October 2001 to sacrifice our fundamental liberties to the fears and rank political opportunism that followed the horrific 9/11 terrorist attacks.

The Bush-Cheney regime was using 9/11 as an excuse to hustle their liberty-busting “USA PATRIOT Act” into law. But Feingold dared to object, pointing out that it would impose a 1984-ish secret security state over our freedoms. He was the lone senator to vote against it.

Just as he warned, the act proved to be deeply unpatriotic. But Congress, the media, and We the People were kept in the dark about it -- until 2013, when a young security analyst named Edward Snowden blew the whistle. He revealed that cyber-snoops were collecting and storing all of our phone records.

The spy establishment retaliated by forcing Snowden into Russian exile. Yet their dirty deeds were now exposed, roiling the public and increasing congressional opposition to this wholesale invasion of our privacy.

Enter Rand Paul, a Republican senator and longtime libertarian opponent of PATRIOT Act madness. That law had to be renewed by June 1, and the establishment assumed no lawmaker would dare block it.

Paul did. He used 11th hour procedural moves to force a rewrite that ended some of its worst intrusions, including the government’s bulk collection of our phone calls.

Liberty depends on people like Feingold, Snowden, and Paul daring to put themselves on the line to steer America away from authoritarianism. That's what patriots do.

 

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Odd Bedfellows for Liberty