Sign in or 

| Version | User | Scope of changes |
|---|---|---|
| Jan 20 2009, 3:16 PM EST | JonPincus | |
| Jan 20 2009, 11:35 AM EST | JonPincus | 54 words added, 98 words deleted |
We are a proud group of Obama supporters who believe in his call for hope and a new kind of politics. We ask President Obama and the new Congress to reject the politics of fear on national security, and work to get FISA right.
Congratulations, President Obama. Please Get FISA Right.
Get FISA right is delighted to announce that our new video/cable TV ad, Congratulations, President Obama. Please get FISA right, premiers January 20, Inauguration Day, in Washington DC, on MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, and the Comedy Channel. See the media release and blog post for more!
| During the past 8 years, the Bush administration listened to Americans' phone calls and read their emails without a warrant. On July 9, 2008, the Senate passed a bill to amend FISA, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, to further expand the government's warrantless wiretapping powers. The Senate also mocked the rule of law and gave telecom companies immunity for any illegal actions they may have taken without having to appear in court. We lost that round. But it's not over: both the ACLU and EFF filed suit, and we're gearing up for another battle in 2009. Get FISA Right will continue to work with other groups fighting for our civil liberties on the web and on the streets. If you want to help shape our direction, please join the discussions about what next. Please also join us on my.barackobama.com, Facebook, MySpace, our Google discussion group, and our blog ... here are the latest posts: |
We must defend the Constitution; whereas we must move forward, we cannot allow the Bush-administration precedents to stand. Nixon’s misconduct led to the passage of FISA; current attempts to short-circuit the Constitution must be followed up similarly.
During the Democratic primary for President of the United States, the activist base rallied behind the Constitution and the efforts of Senators Chris Dodd and Russell Feingold to deny immunity for telecommunications companies that helped the Bush Administration spy on American citizens without a court order.
Senator Obama pledged to "support a filibuster" of ANY bill that contained retroactive immunity. Now that he has won our votes in the primary, he has decided to vote in favor of retroactive immunity for the telecoms.
That's the impetus for the creation of this MyBo group. In a Rolling Stone interview Obama says, "The [internet] gives young people the opportunity to hold me accountable when I'm not following through on promises that I've made."
He has my vote, he has my voice, and he'll have my contribution ... but please, Senator Obama, stay true to the words you first spoke when courting my vote in a Democratic primary -- a vote I gave to you.