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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. Set in motion shortly after the terrorist attacks of 911, the USA Patriot Act sought to equalize the playing field with regard to the very real potential for duplicate assault against Americans on their own soil. The extent to which the Act serves to intercept terrorist activity, protect national freedom & illustrate the country's continued strength as a superpower is both grand and far-reaching; that it was designed to apply a comprehensive safeguard from both a national and international perspective speaks to the Act's tremendous scope. However, as many good points as can be attributed to the Act, there are just as many questionable ones – arbitrary monitoring, surveillance and compromised personal privacy and liberties - that continue to fuel debate. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCUSAPatAct.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
assault against Americans on their own soil. The extent to which the Act serves to intercept terrorist activity, protect national freedom & illustrate the countrys continued strength as a
superpower is both grand and far-reaching; that it was designed to apply a comprehensive safeguard from both a national and international perspective speaks to the Acts tremendous scope. However,
as many good points as can be attributed to the Act, there are just as many questionable ones - arbitrary monitoring, surveillance and compromised personal privacy and liberties - that
continue to fuel debate. One of the most significant components of USA Patriot Act is the aspect of monitoring and surveillance. The
issue of computers, government and individual privacy has come to be one of the most pressing ethical concerns of the entire technological revolution, which has only escalated to extreme proportions
with the Acts implementation in 2001. While wide agreement supports the overall approach toward monitoring and surveillance as an integral element of protecting against terrorism, some believe the Act
calls for a greater extent of these two components than is actually necessary. According to Jerry Berman, executive director for the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT), the problem
is that "its very sweeping and it can apply not just to suspected terrorists but people and organizations that may be engaged in lawful actions" (Olsen, 2001).
Permission to "tap phones and track Internet usage in the hunt for terrorists" (Olsen, 2001) was granted by President Bush amidst much controversy pertaining to privacy
issues. In his quest to protect America and the rest of the world from the handful of extremists who seek to destroy the tenets of freedom and democracy, Bush
...