Currently in the house, a US bill allowing military arrests of more or less whoever, without trials, is making its way to law. Here's some links:
The billSenate Passes Bill Allowing Indefinite Detention of AmericansSenate Votes To Let Military Detain Americans Indefinitely, White House Threatens Veto I'm looking for better sources- those ones are admittedly poor. I welcome those with better knowledge of the bill to provide more information.
Frankly, when you look at this with SOPA and PROTECT-IP and various other measures, the mere fact that these bills are unlikely to make it to the president is not reassuring. Just what is wrong with these senators that makes them hate the American public so?
Is the average voter so poorly educated that they elect clinically insane representative as a matter of course? Is there a dark ritual done to every freshman senator where they rip out his soul and feed it to Nixon's dog?
I think the seat of the problem is the current Janocracy*. The Democratic party and the Republican party are indeed different. They appeal to different groups and it is true that most likely if solely democrats were in power, the United States would be better off.
However, both sides work together to insure that certain conveniences of the modern political system remain. There has been little action to eliminate the power of the filibuster, for instance. No action by either side to make a meaningful cut in the power of lobbyists. No action taken to bring justice to banks that blatantly broke the law in 2008 and the decades before. Until CNN made a great deal of noise about it, they both made use of insider trading!
The simple fact of the matter is, you can't fix the system by doing the same thing you've been doing. People need to start voting for independents and third parties. One vote for a democrat or a republican says nothing, but one vote for an independent puts fear in the hearts of both of them.
But back to the bill, there's a chance that Obama will veto it if it makes it to his desk. This would be a surprising fluke since he has shown remarkably little backbone about using the veto power before.
*Rulership of Janus, the two-faced god
UPDATE:
The amendment to the bill that would have granted this power has been rejected 30-60. So it's only 1/3 of the senate that wants a police state. The man who proposed the amendment, Mark Udall is a democrat from Colorado.UPDATE 2:
I have bad reading things.