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Fifth Column
GMU Faculty Decries Patriot Act
2005-04-14
George Mason University's faculty senate passed a resolution yesterday critical of the broad investigative powers granted to law enforcement agencies after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, saying they could have a chilling effect on academic freedom.
"Damn, Bob! It's cold in here!"
"It's the Patriot Act, Herb. It has that chilling effect!"
In a statement that mirrors those supported by scholars at institutions including Stanford University and the University of California at Berkeley, the professors said the wide latitude government agencies have in secretly reading e-mail or reviewing a person's library selections could mute debate and research at all institutions of higher education. "The preservation of civil rights and liberties is essential to the well-being of a democratic society and an academic environment," the resolution reads. The governmental powers, particularly those set out in the USA Patriot Act, "threaten fundamental rights and liberties."
"Bad Guyz have civil rights and liberties, too, y'know. And nobody's ever flown an airliner into a university..."
In the 2 1/2-page resolution, the faculty senate, joined by the local chapter of the American Association of University Professors, calls on university administrators to inform students if authorities seek their school records and to make sure students know that authorities can secretly view their library records, bookstore purchases and electronic communication. The resolution, which the professors asked to be forwarded to President Bush, Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzalez and other federal and state officials, comes as Congress is considering whether to renew the Patriot Act fully. The act was passed overwhelmingly after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon but has been criticized by liberal and conservative groups. Several of the act's provisions are set to expire at the end of the year.
The further in the past the WTC becomes, the louder becomes the bitching and moaning...
James T. Bennett, faculty senate chairman and an economics professor, said all but one of more than 30 members who attended the meeting voted for the resolution. "The Patriot Act runs against the grain of the typical academic," Bennett said. "The whole idea of the academy is to look at all different points of view. This is the kind of thing that takes place in a dictatorship."
"We need to hear the Islamic point of view, even if it's delivered by an airliner full of screaming people. Not that we'd see it here, of course."
Clifton D. Sutton, a statistics professor, cast the sole vote against the resolution. He said the possibility of government intrusion is a small price to pay if it means that more people will be safe from terrorist attacks. "I think it's just something we have to live with," Sutton said. "I think most of us don't have anything to hide, and I'm comfortable the FBI and other agencies will do the right thing."
"I'm not sure what part of 'wartime measure' these beauzeaux don't understand..."
In addition to criticizing the powers for library searches, the resolution speaks out against the government's authority to search medical and financial records "with little if any judicial oversight." It also is critical of the authority to deny enemy combatants access to the courts. David L. Kuebrich, an associate professor of English who is secretary of the faculty senate, said he thinks the danger in the Patriot Act "is that we will curtail speech or research that would be quite critical of foreign policy at a time when we really need a broad review and to be open to dissenting voices."
"Except for those fascist Nazi conservative bastards who should be thrown in prison for spouting their anti-progressive hate and not parroting what their tenured faculty tell them."
Posted by:Anonymoose

#2  This is about privacy and not liberty and they are most definitely not the same thing. Any society must limit privacy for the blinding obvious reason that increasing privacy decreases the effectiveness of law enforcement. An absolute right to privacy would make most law enforcement close to impossible.

Long before 9/11 I used to rail against this moonbat thinking that the government is evil and they will persecute me for my beliefs therefore I have to keep them secret. Its the worst kind of conspiracist nonsense.
Posted by: phil_b   2005-04-14 7:59:27 PM  

#1  Oh know he is wrong. There is a huge amount of subversion and acts of criminal conspiracy being carried by University Staff. I just don't want to get caught.
Posted by: Noam Chomsky   2005-04-14 7:33:30 PM  

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