Bill of Rights Defense Committee
Founded:
November 2001

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September 17

Bill of Rights Defense Committee imported a note.

Sep 17th at 4:02pm
John Locke once remarked: “The end of law is not to abolish or restrain, but to preserve and enlarge freedom.” Today, 221 years to the day after the creation of the Constitution, it remains the prerogative of every American to be the final check on governmental power.
August 21

Bill of Rights Defense Committee imported a note.

Aug 21st at 8:51am
As the government, and the executive branch in particular, works to expand its powers to spy on and detain suspects in the so-called “war on terror,” many people believe that those who are wiretapped, investigated, and arrested aim to harm our country. This is often not the case.
August 20

Bill of Rights Defense Committee imported a note.

Aug 20th at 11:33am
That’s how one observer recalled Harold Ford’s message to a recent gathering of bloggers.
August 13

Bill of Rights Defense Committee imported a note.

Aug 13th at 6:44am
“The colonists must henceforth depend primarily on themselves for the defense of their liberties.”
- Samuel Adams
With each of today’s headlines this quotation seems to ring more true every day.
August 4

Bill of Rights Defense Committee imported a note.

Aug 4th at 12:29pm
On July 31, without consulting Congress, President Bush issued Executive Order (EO) 12333 that dramatically increases the power of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) in an attempt to improve coordination between the 16 disparate agencies of the U.S. intelligence community.

Safer or Less Safe--You Decide

2 posts by 2 people. Updated on July 23, 2008 at 5:16am
Displaying 5 of 11 wall posts.
David wrote at 4:35pm on August 18th, 2008
For those who are readers of DKos, we're starting a Civil Liberties Google group....
http://groups.google.com/group/dailykos-civil-liberties
David wrote at 9:08pm on August 16th, 2008
Anyone here from Ohio? Send me an email!
Larry wrote at 1:23pm on August 15th, 2008
Glenn Greenwald and Jane Hamsher discuss the results of the Moneybomb event, current Accountability Now activities, along with short and long term strategies for getting the Constitution and Civil Liberties back in order today on Salon Radio http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/radio/2008/08/15/hamsher/index.html
Nick wrote at 4:36pm on July 11th, 2008
This is the most constructive and potentially powerful issue. It is the 'tipping point' to demonstrate the two americas that John Edwards spoke to during his run. If we don't know how to make political capital from this, we might as well hang it up.

How to get more traction, more credibility, and more mo' (momentum)

1) More Mo' - Throw a party. Get artists involved. The cartoonists, the graphic folks, the web designers, the writers and the musicians. That would produce the framing, the positioning, and graphically (pun SO intended) limn the differences 'twixt the old way of Stalin and Samoza and the "Free Speech Express"

More Traction: Let's throw a party! Suggest we create "Listen UP! or "Free Speech Express" immediately. This could be a music and lifestyle get together similar to the XGames meets Lollapalooza, with participation from all the different stakeholders in free speech. Heck, let's make it for skateboarders and stakeholders.

due to stupid restrictions of the Patriot Act
Gölök wrote at 2:31pm on July 1st, 2008
"[To My Fellow-Citizens of the United States of America
I put the following work under your protection. It contains my opinion on religion.] You will do me justice to remember that I have always strenuously supported the right to his own opinion, however different that opinion may be to mine. He who denies another this right makes a slave of himself to his present opinion, because he precludes himself the right of changing it." -- Thomas Paine, The Age Of Reason.
http://en.wiquo.myegopedia.com/Thomas.Paine.TXT

Information

Website:
Company Overview:
The Bill of Rights Defense Committee (BORDC) is helping hundreds of communities across the country participate in an ongoing national debate about civil liberties and anti-terrorism legislation that threaten liberties, such as the USA PATRIOT Act, Homeland Security Act, and several federal executive orders.

Mission:
BORDC's mission is to promote, organize, and support a diverse, effective, national grassroots movement to restore and protect civil rights and liberties guaranteed by the Bill of Rights. Our purpose is to educate people about the significance of those rights in our lives; to encourage widespread civic participation; and to cultivate and share the organizing tools and strategies needed for people to convert their concern, outrage, and fear into debate and action to restore Bill of Rights protections.

Products:
Every person under U.S. jurisdiction or control is entitled to Bill of Rights protections. At all times and especially when federal, state, or local governments propose or enact laws or policies that threaten or deny those rights, the people organize, exercising those same rights in the service of protecting them. Most people understand that the country cannot be made safer by sacrificing some rights for all or part of its population. When the people know and exercise their rights, the liberties guaranteed by the Bill of Rights hold firm and remain self-sustaining.

BORDC is guided by the Bill of Rights, which were adopted to limit the power of the state over individuals and to preserve basic human and individual rights for every person under U.S. jurisdiction or control, even in times of war or other national crises, and regardless of who holds elected power. The standards of the Bill of Rights define the fundamental protections for every person in our society, namely:

* First Amendment rights of freedom of speech and religion, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, and freedom to dissent;
* Liberty from unwarranted government intrusion;
* Nondiscrimination and equal protection of the law;
* The expectation of privacy, and protection from unreasonable search and seizure;
* Due process of law and freedom from arbitrary imprisonment via habeas corpus;
* A speedy and public trial by an impartial jury; and
* Protection from cruel and unusual punishment.

BORDC spearheaded a municipal campaign to defend the Bill of Rights, which has resulted in 414 resolutions all across the country. These resolutions express the community's expectation that the principles in the Bill of Rights should determine governmental conduct, and many of them instruct local governments not to cooperate with unconstitutional federal programs and orders. You can view resolutions that have been passed in your state or others at http://www.bordc.org/list.php.

Fifty-three campus bodies, including student governments, faculty and university senates, librarian associations, and academic organizations, have passed resolutions opposing the troubling and dangerous provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act. To find out how to get your campus or your community involved, please visit http://www.bordc.org/involved/student/

You can also support the BORDC by giving financial donations. To find out how to do so please visit http://www.bordc.org/donate.php.