Following the PATRIOT Act debates via Twazzup

September 29, 2009

Screenshot of Twazzup getfisaright page

The folks at Twazzup have been kind enough to set up http://getfisaright.twazzup.com/, which makes it easy to use follow the action on PATRIOT Act debates via Twitter — even if you don’t have a Twitter account!

The page is pretty self-explanatory, with areas for the most popular tweets and most-retweeted links.  There’s also an area for “featured tweeters”.   The combination makes it easy to keep up with with what’s going on even when the action gets intense.  If you want to focus on a particular subject, you can use the search box or buttons near the top of the page.

The “featured tweeters” list, by the way, includes organizations like EFF, ACLU, Cato Institute, and BORDC as well as Get FISA Right members and key bloggers, journalists, and Twitterers like Julian Sanchez, Sarah Jaffe, Marcy Wheeler, Baratunde Thurston, and Tracy Viselli.  And Get FISA Right of course!*  If there are other groups and people you think should be there, please reply with their names or Twitter profiles.

If we’re successful at sparking something viral on Twitter or in the blogosphere, this’ll be the best place to watch what’s going on.  So check it out!

And thanks to Twazzup, for the quick turnaround … much appreciated!

jon

*  Speaking of which, please follow us on Twitter, and join us on Organizing for America, Facebook, MySpace, and Wetpaint.


Blogger call: Tuesday, noon Pacific/3 p.m. Eastern

September 28, 2009

With the SJC markup on Thursday, it’s a great time to give bloggers an update on the legislative situation — and the activism that’s happening.  We’ll have people from EFF, ACLU, Cato Institute, and CREDO Action there.  And of course we’ll take about Get FISA Right’s activism as well.

(Speaking of which: please Digg Tracy Viselli’s care2 post and join the PASS the JUSTICE Act Facebook group … thanks!)

Last summer, Get FISA Right took off when the “big blogs” of the progressive blogosphere got involved; hopefully they’re still interested!  We’re also reaching out to libertarian and conservative bloggers, and many others.   We’ll also have a chat room going in parallel with the call, so you can follow along even if you’re not able to dial in.

Please join us!

Dialin information and RSVP here.

jon

PS: If you can’t make it to the call, we’ll have an audio recording and detailed notes available.


Bring JUSTICE to the PATRIOT Act: 5 ways to help on Facebook (*UPDATED*)

September 27, 2009

The JUSTICE Act would reform the PATRIOT  by limiting the use of sneak-and-peak warrants and National Security Letters, and hold telecom companies accountable for past abuses.  Here’s how you can help on Facebook.

This week, we’re going to be to be doing activism on Facebook, Twitter, and the blogosphere to pressure Senate Judiciary Committee members to adopt the JUSTICE Act’s strong reforms during their markup session on Thursday.  For now, we’re laying the groundwork.  Please join us!

Here’s how:

  1. Join the PASS the JUSTICE Act group
  2. Invite your friends to the group!  The Invite friends to group link is on the right-hand-side fairly near the top.
  3. Let people know about this post by sharing it on your feed and on your friends’ walls!
  4. Share the CREDO Action petition to repeal telecom immunity and roll back PATRIOT Act abuses … and while you’re at it, take a moment and sign on!
  5. Thank Senator Dick Durbin for co-sponsoring the JUSTICE act by replying to this thread

Our next step will be to put pressure on some specific Senators … please let us know who you think we should target.  Stay tuned for more!

jon

PS: If you’re also on Twitter, please tweet this link — and check out our companion post, Five ways to help on Twitter


Bring JUSTICE to the PATRIOT Act: 5 ways to help on Twitter

September 27, 2009

The JUSTICE Act would reform the PATRIOT  by limiting the use of sneak-and-peak warrants and National Security Letters, and hold telecom companies accountable for past abuses.  If you’re on Twitter, here’s how you can help.

This week, we’re going to be to be doing activism on Twitter, Facebook, and the blogosphere to pressure Senate Judiciary Committee members to adopt the JUSTICE Act’s strong reforms during their markup session on Thursday.  We’ve got a blogger call Tuesday at 3 p.m. Eastern.  For now, we’re laying the groundwork.  Please join us!

Here’s how:

  1. Follow @justiceact, watch for updates, and retweet
  2. Thank Senators Russ Feingold and Tom Udall for sponsoring the JUSTICE Act using the act.ly petition at  http://act.ly/kn or by retweeting
  3. @RussFeingold and @SenatorTomUdall: thanks for introducing the JUSTICE Act http://act.ly/kn

  4. When you see articles and videos about the PATRIOT Act reauthorization, tweet them using the hashtag
  5. Follow the #patriotact hashtag, and retweet early and often
  6. Let people know about this post!
  7. Bring JUSTICE to the PATRIOT Act: 5 ways to help on Twitter (via @JusticeAct) http://is.gd/3ITyE

Our next step will be to put pressure on some specific Senators … please let us know who you think we should target.  Stay tuned for more!

jon

PS: If you’re also on Facebook, please share this link — and join the PASS the JUSTICE Act group!

About Get FISA Right

For those of you who don’t remember the “Senator Obama, Please Get FISA Right” MyBo group, it started by growing organically, and then a group of volunteers worked to help it go viral in 2008 — and bloggers were instrumental in that effort.

Once the MyBo group had a huge following, we used a wiki/collaborative process to create an open letter to Obama. Thanks to a huge amount of blog coverage, and ultimately spillover MSM coverage, Obama responded to the group.

Although we lost the legislative battle, and Obama’s response left much to be desired, the group certainly got Obama’s attention and successfully opened up a direct line of communication with him. Now, with PATRIOT ACT reform coming up, many of us are back.


Organizing meeting notes

September 26, 2009

Another great call — excellent ideas, accomplished all the goals, and got done 10 minutes early.  w00t!  Thanks to Harry, Mark, Joan, David, Manny, Ben, Alan, Gina, Shireen, and Lavern for the participation, and Marcy, Jim, Charlotte-Anne, and Harry (again) for the pre-meeting prep.

The full chat log is available here.  Here’s the meeting highlights:

Key decisions

  • we’ll use this weekend to gather forces on Twitter and Facebook, with campaigns asking people to join both groups, and continue our “thank you” act.ly petition and Facebook thread
  • ramp up Sunday night or Monday with an OFA post
  • blogger call Tuesday at 3 p.m.; use the time in between for prep

Action items

  • all: join Facebook group; follow @getfisaright; act.ly petition and Facebook thread
  • for initial blog posts: Jon to follow up with Marcy, somebody to follow up with Greenwald/Strange Bedfellows and McJoan.  for blogger outreach in general, ask them to send their blog posts to @getfisaright so we can add them to our retweeting schedule.
  • Mark to work on draft blog post for OFA, and then kick off broad outreach on mailing lists
  • Jon to set up blogger call for Tuesday
  • Gina to follow up with Chris Bowers about Specter/Sestak situation
  • Mark (and others) to follow up with NRA
  • *done!* Jon to send out notes

Thanks once again, all … have a great weekend, and please check back here Sunday for updates!

jon


Which Senators to target first for PATRIOT Act reform?

September 26, 2009

We’re going to kick off our social network activism campaign this weekend by targeting one to three Senate Judiciary Committee members.   Who to start with?

If you’d like to discuss why you voted one way or another, please use the comments!  For more on the social network activism campaign, see our latest organizing update.

jon


JUSTICE Bill organizing update

September 25, 2009

First order of business: tomorrow’s organizing call is at noon Pacific or 3 p.m. Eastern.  Dialin info and RSVP on Anyvite and Facebook.  Agenda coming soon.

A quick update:

  • We’re still planning on launching a Twitter/Facebook campaign over the weekend targeting a few Senators.  Marcy Wheeler and I propose Specter (the only SJC Dem other than Feingold on Twitter), Whitehouse, and Leahy.   By Monday and Tuesday, we can expand and refine our focus.
  • A couple candidates for slogans: “Bring JUSTICE to the PATRIOT Act!” (suggested by jsq, I believe), and “Support the JUSTICE Act”
  • Apparently our tweeting was noticed, and appreciated, by people in Russ Feingold’s office.  Yay us!
  • Nobody else is planning a social network-based campaign to support the JUSTICE Act, and a lot of people are hoping that we can spark something on Twitter and Facebook.
  • Once the bill’s reported out of committee, we’ll have a better idea of the timetable for when we should reengage with President Obama — probably with another open letter along with organizing on OFA.

We’re starting to see a lot of press; now’s a great time for a letter to the editor.  If somebody has the time to do a quick press roundup for the blog, that’d be swell — let me know if you need an account.

Please try to check back on the blog late Saturday or Sunday for updates — and we’ll update the email list as well.

We’re off to a good start, with about 345 people in the Facebook group, and 30-40 ready to help on Twitter … which doesn’t sound like a lot until you stop to think that there were less than 300 people in the MyBO group last summer when Mike Stark posed “Will Obama feel the sting of social networks?”.  We have pretty good records of the statistics from the early days, and you can really see the impact of posts from big progressive and technology blogs … so we just have to convince people there’s a story here.

Suggestions?  We’ll do some brainstorming on this in tomorrow’s meeting; for now, if you’ve got ideas, please leave them in the comments.

jon


Organizing phone call summary

September 24, 2009

Great meeting!  Thanks to all the participants, including Michelle from ACLU, Kevin from EFF, Chip from BORDC, Julian from Cato, Cyn from the Momocrats, Jared from EPIC, Korkie, Doug, longtime GFR’ers including Carlo, Manny, Ben, Harry, Joan, Jim, and John — and quite probably others as well; apologies to anybody I missed.  Also apologies for the problems with the chat room.  Grr.  I hate software.

The full chat log is here (with some light editing for readabiility, typo fixing, etc.) and we also have an audio recording.  Here are some of the key takeways:

Read the rest of this entry »


Reminder: organizing phone call tonight, 5 p.m. Pacific/8 Eastern

September 24, 2009

See http://bit.ly/gfrsept24 for details.

We’re likely to have over a dozen people there, so to make it easier for everybody to participate, there’s also a chat room: http://www.chatterous.com/getfisaright/

Rough goals and agenda below … if you’ve got any feedback, please leave it in comments!

jon


What’s the ask? Who are we asking?

September 24, 2009

We’ll be kicking off a social media activism campaign this weekend — on Twitter, Facebook, Organizing for America, and the blogosphere — to support the JUSTICE Act.  Just which politicians should we target?  What should our “ask” be?

The short-term focus is the Senate Judiciary Committee, where Leahy’s bill is getting marked up in the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday.  We’ve consistently gotten input at this point that the top priority at this point is to focus on the Democrats, asking them to amend Leahy’s bill to add the reforms from JUSTICE that are not currently in the Leahy bill.

Should we choose a short list of members, and if so who?  For example,  Kohl is a known wild card, Klobuchar and Kaufman have no record on these issues and we don’t know where they’ll go, Leahy and Cardin co-sponsored the more timid reform bill, Specter is facing a tough primary challenge …  How to prioritize? Or do we have the resources to go broad from the beginning?

While less vital, it would also be valuable to ask all Senate Demorcratss, Independents and even centrist Republicans to cosponsor the JUSTICE Act with Feingold, Durbin, et. al.  which will assist in getting support for JUSTICE-y amendments to Leahy.  Do we want to consider this as well?

And then there’s the question of what we’re asking for — at a high level, and the details.  One possible slogan is “Support the JUSTICE Act”.  Other thoughts?

As for the details, here are several specific provisions we want Senators to lift from the JUSTICE bill:

  • heightening the standard for and limiting the scope of NSLs,
  • reforming the John Doe roving wiretaps provision
  • allowing the “lone wolf” wiretapping provision to expire.
  • JUSTICE’s amendments to the FISA Amendments Act, especially the amendments 1) prohibiting bulk collection of international communications, 2) strengthening the requirements for government “minimization” of the communications it collects, and 3) repealing the telecom immunity provision.

How to frame this succinctly?

Suggestions welcome!  We’ll also be discussing this on tonight’s conference call — see http://get-fisa-right.wetpaint.com/page/September+24+Organizing+call for details.

jon