The Army Is Making Me Choose Between My Faith and My Country

All my life, I've dreamed of serving my country.

By By Iknoor Singh

Placeholder image

THE SHADOW OF A DOUBT Circles Liberty’s Torch

Today, on Veterans Day, on the 11th day of the 11th month, an aircraft began circling the Statue of Liberty trailing a banner that read “THE SHADOW OF A DOUBT.”

By By David Birkin

Placeholder image

British Spying Is Our Problem, Too

The chilling effect of surveillance may be spreading across the Atlantic.

By By Alex Sinha, Aryeh Neier Fellow, Human Rights Watch & ACLU

Placeholder image

The U.N. Puts America on the Hot Seat for Torture

The eyes of the international community will be focused on the United States this week. Government representatives will appear before the U.N. Committee against Torture to defend U.S. compliance with the anti-torture treaty the United States ratified 20 years ago.

By By Jamil Dakwar, Director, ACLU Human Rights Program

Placeholder image

If America Is Going to Reveal the Truth About Torture, Obama Must End Gitmo’s Cover-Up Court

This piece originally appeared at The Guardian.

By By Anthony D. Romero, Executive Director, ACLU

Placeholder image

Uncle Sam's Databases of Suspicion

This piece originally ran at TomDispatch.com.

By By Hina Shamsi, Director, ACLU National Security Project & Matthew Harwood, Media Strategist, ACLU

Placeholder image

The Fight to Take Back Our Genes Moves to Canada

The fight against gene patents has migrated north.

By By Sandra S. Park, Staff Attorney, ACLU Women's Rights Project

Placeholder image

Keep it Simple With Net Neutrality

Chairman Tom Wheeler at the Federal Communications Commission is moving in the right direction toward true net neutrality. He deserves some plaudits for abandoning the deeply flawed proposal put forward last May, which would have allowed broadband providers to create fast lanes on the internet for those who can pay (and traffic jams for the rest of us).

By By Gabe Rottman, Legislative Counsel, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

Placeholder image

Yep, Uncle Sam Still Wants to Log Your Calls

Today, in a hushed courtroom in Washington, D.C., not far from the now-empty halls of Congress, a federal appeals court heard arguments in Klayman v. Obama, a challenge to the NSA's bulk collection of telephone metadata first revealed by Edward Snowden. If you have ever made a phone call, or received a phone call, this case has implications for your personal privacy and you should pay close attention to what happens next.

By By Rachel Nusbaum, Media Strategist, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

Placeholder image