America’s most powerful protest groups are joining forces to warn
elected officials that they will be held accountable for their actions.
The campaign is called Our Polls and its being launched with help from
both Anonymous and the Occupy movement.
The AnonOps Communications website
revealed details early Monday this week regarding the hacktivist
collective’s latest campaign. Along with the nation-wide Occupy Wall
Street movement, Anonymous says they are going after the politicians in
America that supported legislation that both entities have largely
advocated against.
“Elected officials serve one purpose — to represent their constituents, the people who voted them into office,” reads a statement posted to the website.
“Last year, many of our elected officials let us down by giving in to
deep-pocketed lobbyists and passing laws meant to boost corporate
profits at the expense of individual liberty.”
The
legislation in question include the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2012, the Stop Online Piracy Act and the Protect IP Act.
In an act of retaliation aimed at those that supported these bills, the
groups have released a roster of politicians that have not only
expressed favor for the laws, but that are also up for reelection this
year.
“You are one person. You have one vote. Use that vote on
November 6 to hold your elected official accountable for supporting
bills such as NDAA, SOPA and PIPA,” reads their statement.
Although
both SOPA and PIPA have been halted in Congress, the NDAA was
successfully signed into law by US President Barack Obama on December
31, 2011, granting the commander-in-chief the power to authorize the
military detainment of American citizens without ever bringing charges
against them.
“Our Senators and Representatives showed how
little they cared about personal freedoms when they voted overwhelmingly
to pass the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA),” reads Monday’s statement, which also calls the act “a prominent threat to the inalienable due process rights of every US citizen as laid out in the Constitution.”
“It
allows the military to engage in civilian law enforcement, and to
suspend due process, habeas corpus or other constitutional guarantees
when desired. Our congressmen passed one of the greatest threats to
civil liberties in the history of the United States.”
Similar
legislation in the vein of the failed SOPA and PIPA acts have also been
drafted since their defeat, which critics fear could cause the US
government to implement a veil of censorship over the World Wide Web.
Although activists with both Anonymous and Occupy have openly opposed
such laws in the past, the latest campaign will at last bring both
bodies together to protest any other damning legislation.
According
to a statement released Monday, both groups aim to make sure that any
lawmaker chosen by the American people will walks away Election Day a
loser if they support any such acts.
“We are calling on
voters, activists and keyboard warriors under all banners to unite as a
single force to unseat the elected representatives who threaten our
essential freedoms and who were so quick to minimize our individual
constitutional rights for a quick corporate profit,” they write.
Although
both Anonymous and OWS are described as leaderless movement with no
formal organization, the AnonOps Communication website and its related
Twitter accounts have served as an unofficial conduit of sorts in terms
of relaying information pertaining to the hacktivist collective. The
site has previously announced, confirmed and commented on hacks and
other campaigns credited to Anonymous.
During last week’s installment of Anonymous’ #FuckFBIFriday campaign, the group tackled the website of GEO Group, Inc.,
a multi-national private prison management firm operated out of
Florida. In a statement that accompanied that hack, operatives aligned
with the Anon collective announced another plan put together in
cooperation with the Occupy movement. In that instance, both groups
intend to join forces on Tuesday this week to march in cities across
America to demand an end to the suppression of the OWS movement.
Hacktivists with Anonymous have also previously condemned law
enforcement agencies across America for violently responding to the
occupier's peaceful demonstrations which began last September in New
York.
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