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Radio Ad: FISA
(1/22/2008) Listen to our FISA radio ads aired around the country and view the online ad. |
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Radio Ad: Day of Action to Restore Law and Justice
(6/26/2007) On June 26, 2007, thousands of people came from all over the United States to join us in Washington, D.C. We called on Congress to restore habeas corpus, fix the Military Commissions Act, and restore our constitutional rights. We rallied outside the Capitol and delivered our urgent message in person to Members of Congress. |
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Print Ad: Day of Action: It's Your Country.
(6/26/2007) On June 26, 2007, activists from all 50 states gathered in a Capitol Hill rally to demand that Congress restore habeas corpus, fix the Military Commissions Act, end torture and rendition and restore our constitutional rights. Thousands gathered to hear leaders from the Senate, the House and groups including the ACLU, Amnesty International, the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights and the National Religious Campaign Against Torture. |
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Print Ad: We could have sworn... .
(2/6/2006) As part of its campaign, the ACLU ran a series of seven hard-hitting ads that put the White House on the defensive. Full-page advertisements, like the one to the right, appeared in The New York Times and half a dozen major daily newspapers, with the headline: "We could have sworn... .” |
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Print Ad: Mr. President, the America We Believe in Is Not Your America
(1/16/2006) As part of its campaign, the ACLU ran a series of seven hard-hitting ads that put the White House on the defensive. Full-page advertisements appeared in The New York Times and half a dozen major daily newspapers, with the headline: "Mr. President, the America We Believe in Is Not Your America” |
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Print Ad: Wiretapping Innocent Americans Is an Abuse of Government Power
(1/16/2006) The ACLU ran a full-page advertisement in the Washington Post criticizing the president for authorizing the National Security Agency to engage in illegal surveillance of Americans. The ad invokes Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the civil rights pioneer who was an innocent victim of illegal government wiretapping and draws the correlation between abuse of government power and illegal warrantless wiretapping authorized by President Bush. |
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Print Ad: Why Did We Bother Debating the Patriot Act?
(1/5/2006) As President George W. Bush continued to push for Patriot Act renewal, the ACLU ran a full-page advertisement in the New York Times criticizing the president for authorizing the National Security Agency to engage in illegal surveillance of Americans. |
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Print Ad: No President Is Above the Law
(12/22/2005) In a full-page advertisement in the New York Times , the ACLU intensified its call for a special counsel to be appointed to determine whether President George W. Bush violated federal wiretapping laws by authorizing illegal surveillance. |
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TV Ad: "Classroom"
(7/15/2003) Watch the first advertisement in the "classroom" series (RealOne Player required).
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TV Ad: "Constitution"
(10/16/2002) Watch the first national television advertisement highlighting Attorney General Ashcroft's attacks on civil liberties (RealOne Player required). |
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