By 6 votes, the Senate just forced through a violation of your constitutional rights. Now all eyes turn to the House. They will put it to a vote TOMORROW.
Call your representative, because this is your last chance. Tell them "#StopTheNDAA."
By 6 votes, the Senate just forced through a violation of your constitutional rights. Now all eyes turn to the House. They will put it to a vote TOMORROW.
Call your representative, because this is your last chance. Tell them "#StopTheNDAA."
"Trust us", the FBI keeps saying.
Yet, they spy on your private messages without a warrant.
#Fight4Privacy & stop Section 702.
While Tuta is not impacted, this is such a bad law that everyone must take action now! 💪
➡️https://act.eff.org/action/tell-congress-they-must-defeat-hpsci-s-horrific-surveillance-bill
Share to help us #StopTheNDAA
The House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) has introduced the FISA Reform and Reauthorization Act of 2023–an absolutely awful bill that ignores years of abuse and unconstitutional surveillance in order to renew a mass surveillance law with no real changes, reforms, or new oversight. Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act is set to expire on December 31, 2023, and there is currently a race to see what bill will renew Big Brother’s favorite surveillance law. Any reauthorizations must come with significant reforms in order to protect the privacy of people’s communications. To that end, the choice is clear - we urge all Members to vote NO on the Intelligence Committee’s bill, H.R.6611, the FISA Reform and Reauthorization Act of 2023.
“Trust us,” the FBI director keeps saying.
We don’t.
FBI has abused FISA 702 uncountable times through warrantless “backdoor” searches of Americans’ calls, texts, & emails.
The NDAA would reauthorize FISA 702 until 2025—with no reforms.
We call on legislators: Stop one of the worst surveillance bills in US history!
The vote is tomorrow.
Please share to help us #StopTheNDAA!
#PATRIOTAct #getawarrant #FixFISA
Read our open letter: https://tuta.com/blog/702-open-letter-against-surveillance