From COINTELPRO to the Patriot Act: The long battle for justice and civil liberties

abed hammoud, abu ghraib, administration, african american, american, american friends service committee, american indian movement, americans, arab american political action committee, arab americans, attorney general john ashcroft, baltimore, baltimore black panther party, baltimore city council, baltimore programs, barbara lee, black, black panther party, brandon mayfield, bush, c. several, camp le, central committee, church committee, cointelpro, cold war, communist party, condoleezza rice, congressional black caucus, conway, councilman kwame abayomi, counter intelligence program, dominique stevenson, fred hampton, free conway, free marshall, general william boykin, geneva conventions, george bush, geronimo pratt, guantanamo bay, j. edgar hoover, jailed black panther, jose padilla, judge adjutant general, last june, legal, leonard peltier, middle east, mukit hossain, mumia abu jamal, muslim, muslim american political action committee, muslim americans, national lawyers guild, national security agency, new york, new york times oct, o. the, operation hoodwink, osama siblani, palmer raids, patriot, patriot act, political, president bush, progressive caucus, richard moore diruba, richard nixon, s. congress, s. supreme court, said conway, senate church committee, since senator kerry, social justice, through conway, tim wheeler, too much, vice president dick cheney, vietnam war, warren hart, weekly world, white house