If you haven't added your name yet to the petition on its way to Congress, please do so now:
On September 29, 2004, American booksellers, librarians, writers, and publishers will present members of Congress with petitions signed by readers across the United States that call for the restoration of library and bookstore privacy protections stripped by Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT ACT. Author Salman Rushdie (President of PEN American Center), former U.S. Congresswoman Patricia Schroeder (President of the Association of American Publishers), Mitchell Kaplan (President of the American Booksellers Association), and Carla Hayden (past President of the American Library Association) will deliver the petitions to Representative Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and a bipartisan group of Representatives and Senators who have been leading the effort to amend Section 215 to protect reader privacy.If you have not already signed on the Reader Privacy campaign petition, please visit http://www.readerprivacy.com to add your name to the list of names that we will be presenting to Congress on September 29!
More than 170,000 readers have already signed the reader privacy petition, and their support has already made a difference: On July 8, 210 members of the House of Representatives voted for the Freedom to Read Amendment, a bill that would have banned the Justice Department from using the secret warrants available under section 215 to search bookstore and library records. The Amendment would have passed if House leaders had not held the vote open until they could persuade a handful of members to switch their votes. Although we lost the battle, the vote clearly showed that support for amending section 215 is growing.
Please take the time to add your name to the Reader Privacy petition today, and urge everyone you know who cares about the freedom to visit http://www.readerprivacy.com to sign on, too. This is the chance to make your voices heard!
(Thanks to David Ulow for the forward.)
Holliday Greeting from Albania
Posted by: Bujar Kocani | December 20, 2004 at 05:03 AM