The Patriot Act
By: Mike • Essay • 409 Words • February 25, 2010 • 709 Views
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The Patriot Act
Extremism in the defense of either security or liberty in not a virtue. On September 11th, 2001 events occurred on the east coast of the United States that shook the foundation of America and the freedom it stands for to its core. The terrorist attacks not only killed thousands of innocent people of many different nationalities and races, it also changed the way that Americans thought. The tragedies shocked and terrified the citizens of this great country, to a point that when Congress passed the Patriot Act citizens did not pay much attention. The Patriot Act and the Homeland Security Act have paved the way for the government to be involved in citizen’s lives more than at any point in American history. The power that the government gave to itself is immense and extremely intrusive to personal freedoms of average American citizens.
Much has been made of the Homeland Security Act which created its own Presidential Cabinet-level department, a “federal agency whose primary mission is to help prevent, protect against, and respond to acts of terrorism on United States soil.” (whitehouse.gov) The office of Homeland Security with the blanket of the US Patriot Act are able to disrupt the privileges of Americans “for the safety of America” with shockingly little supervision from any other branch of the government. When the Patriot Act and the Homeland Security act were passed, one month after September 11th, citizens were not aware