I posted previously on the McCain-Feingold law, which some sources around the net have been painting as the greatest threat to our personal freedoms since, well, at least 9/11's aftermath (PATRIOT, etc.). If the allegations are true, it is.
However, so far I haven't been able to get any definitive proof that it DOES say what some people are alleging. Yes, it limits things like campaign contributions, and in a sense that does abridge our freedom to act in some cases, but it's not really much different in that area than many other laws already in existence.
I'm still looking for someone who can point me to the specific paragraphs in this law which are so dangerous.
However, so far I haven't been able to get any definitive proof that it DOES say what some people are alleging. Yes, it limits things like campaign contributions, and in a sense that does abridge our freedom to act in some cases, but it's not really much different in that area than many other laws already in existence.
I'm still looking for someone who can point me to the specific paragraphs in this law which are so dangerous.
no subject
Date: 2006-10-17 01:42 am (UTC)It's not what the law says in black and white. It's how the law gets interpreted, especially by the Department of Justice.
Yes, I just said it's more important how the law is interpreted by the prosecution than by the judge. That's because we're becoming a nation where "guilty until proven innocent" is the default assumption of most Americans. Or, at least, most who even bother to vote.
no subject
Date: 2006-10-17 05:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-10-18 01:14 am (UTC)Still...
Date: 2006-10-17 02:14 pm (UTC)So there has to be some part of the law that clearly offers the opportunity to interpret it in some particularly nasty way.
Re: Still...
Date: 2006-10-18 01:30 am (UTC)For a real-life example: the PATRIOT Act has been interpreted to mean that an individual who takes $20 for bus fare out at an ATM, every second or third week, can be prosecuted for money laundering; a bag of plastic BBs is 5,000 rounds of ammunition that must be accounted for; and that asking for legal advice on this matter is grounds for labeling one an enemy combatant. Try finding the justification for even one of those in that law, because my keyword-search-fu isn't up to the task, and I missed it the time I was pissed enough to spend a week scanning all 800 or so pages online with a Mark I eyeball.