Congress and General Assembly enact legislation as a whole. When a bill is resolved, they must be approved by the House of Representatives and the Senate, and the president can reject it at any time. Congress also deals with public concerns, including matters that require investigation and matters that require recognition from the public. Congress consists of two parts. It is the Senate and the House. Everyone has different authority and responsibility.
When we talk about the new legislation enacted by Congress and the president, we are referring to public law. Public law, sometimes called regulation, is a policy that affects multiple people. All policies enacted by Congress and the president are public law except for dozens of years. They differ from private law in that private law requires specific actions or payments by individuals as required by specific individuals or laws. Many regulations, such as the National Security Act, the Patriot Act, the Homeland Security Act, the War Termination Solution Act, etc. affect the government's ability in the field of foreign policy. The National Security Act regulates the way the government shares and preserves information, and the Patriot Act (adopted immediately after 9/11) regulates the government to collect information about people under the name of protecting the state I will clarify what I will do.
President Bush signed the Homeland Security Act of 2002 and passed the Congress and established the Department of Homeland Security representing the largest restructuring of the US government in modern history. Congress claimed to pass the American Patriot Act and help to detect and prosecute terrorism and other crimes. Civil liberties criticized the law of patriotism, saying that it allows law enforcement agencies to infringe the privacy of citizens and eliminate judicial monitoring of law enforcement and domestic information gathering. The Bush administration also cited 9/11 as the reason the National Security Agency launched a secret strategy of "eavesdropping telephone and e-mail communications between the US and overseas people without an arrest warrant."
After the attack on the World Trade Center and the Department of Defense on September 11, 2001, Congress and the President have enacted laws to strengthen the information gathering community to fight domestic terrorism. The provision of this law aims to improve the ability of law enforcement agencies to search e-mails and telephone communications in ways other than medical, financial, library records, US Patriot Patents Act. By regulation, law enforcement agencies can acquire saved voicemail by obtaining basic search warrant instead of supervisory order. To obtain a basic search warrant, much lower evidence is needed. The most controversial clause in the bill includes allowing law enforcement agencies to use stealth and peak deposits. Secretly a peak arrest warrant is an arrest warrant where the law enforcement department can delay notification of the owner's arrest warrant release.