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Viet Dinh Defends The Patriot Act

Grrr writes "Wired News has posted an interview with Viet Dinh, who worked on the PATRIOT Act for the Justice Department. In the past he said, "Security without liberty - it's not an America I would want to live in." And also, in this interview, "I think right now at this time and this place the greatest threat to American liberty comes from al-Qaida and their sympathizers rather than from the men and women of law enforcement and national security who seek to defend America and her people against that threat." Several of his replies are (predictably / necessarily / discouragingly) less than direct."

817 comments

  1. This is an OUTRAGE by Amsterdam+Vallon · · Score: 0, Insightful

    The Patriot Act is the worst thing I've seen in 40+ years of living in the USA.

    It DESTROYS our privacy rights.

    --

    Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate. Ex-O'Reilly/MIT employee, now a full-time Google employee.
    1. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by tealover · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How so?

      I usually see posts like yours. Rarely do I see reasoned posts which elaborate.

      In the interest of fair debate and converstation, list your reasons and if possible, point to the particular pieces of legislation.

      --
      -- You see, there would be these conclusions that you could jump to
    2. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read his posting history. He always comments early and puts out a line that will attract mod points. Notice he is a subscriber, the new kind of First Post.

      Just ignore the troll. Really. He's not going to list jack shit for you he just wants to soak up mod points.

    3. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vallon, you aren't 40. You're in your early twenties at best.

      Now stop trolling.

    4. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AMEN...it tramples the Constitution in so many ways it is laughable

    5. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget to Vote Nader in 2004!!!!!!

    6. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by Winkhorst · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Considering the moderating history of characters like you, I doubt very much if this guy is just trolling for karma points. He is, as distinguished from folks like you, actually expressing a political opinion about a specific piece of legislation, the so-called Patriot Act, which you obviously haven't read or you wouldn't be calling for specifics. That you're not bright enough to see the writing on the wall just puts you in the category of a lot of Germans before World War II. It doesn't make you objective and it doesn't make you enlightened. It just makes you look stupid, which isn't surprising because you obviously are. Some folks take freedom seriously. Others have the Constitution printed on toilet paper and think it's funny to wipe their butts on it. Guess which category you fall into? You want to give away your rights, go right ahead. You try to give away MY rights and you will answer for it. You think the Republicans will be in power forever? Don't take any long odds on little George staying out of jail for subversion of the electoral process. Stealing elections is a federal crime.

      --
      "Is this Winkhorst a nova criminal?" "No just a technical sergeant wanted for interrogation."
    7. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking of trolls...

    8. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by El · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Read the constitution. There is no explicit constitutional right to privacy. The "Right to Privacy" is based on an interpretation, privacy regarded as an "implied" right, i.e. useful for persuing liberty and hapiness. But the interpretation could just as go the other way. I personally beleive in "reciprocal privacy", i.e. everything the government is allowed to know about me, I should be allowed to know about everybody on the government payroll -- especially Ashcroft.

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    9. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by kmurray · · Score: 1

      Dinh: There are a number of provisions within the USA Patriot Act that have a tremendous effect on our war against terror. However, they are tools that can be used in general criminal investigations as well. At no time do I think that anybody intentionally sought to elide the difference between the two.

      How about the fact that it is called the "Patriot Act"? Who thought it was for use against US citizens? It was sold as a way to combat terrorism, that is why it was given such a "Patriotic" name.

    10. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Don't take any long odds on little George staying out of jail for subversion of the electoral process.

      I don't believe he'll get caught. He probably did what Nixon should've done...burn the tapes.

      --
      What?
    11. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by estes_grover · · Score: 2

      It was sold as a way to combat terrorism, that is why it was given such a "Patriotic" name.

      Or maybe it was called the USA PATRIOT Act so that anyone who speaks out against it can be called un-patriotic.

    12. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am guessing that you are a fan of Bush, Ashcroft, and the pat. act?

    13. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      You Are Being Flamed Because

      [ ] You posted a Religious Thread
      [ ] You posted a accusation with no proof
      [ ] You posted a thread containing 1337 talk
      [ ] You posted a me > u thread
      [ ] you posted a worthless offensive thread
      [ ] You continued a long, stupid thread
      [ ] You committed crimes against pork biproducts
      [ ] You posted a "YOU ALL SUCK" message
      [ ] You haven't read the FAQ
      [ ] You don't know which forum to post in
      [ ] You just plain suck
      [X] You posted false information
      [X] You posted something totally uninteresting
      [ ] You doubleposted
      [ ] YOU POSTED A MESSAGE ALL WRITTEN IN CAPS
      [ ] You posted racist crap
      [X] I don't like your tone of voice
      [ ] You are not civilized enough to post in these forums
      [ ] Yuo mispeled evry sengle wurd.
      [ ] Your parents are related
      [ ] You and your wife are related
      [ ] You dated my sister
      [ ] You dated my brother
      [ ] You made love to my dog

      In Punishment, You Must:

      [ ] Give up your AOL Internet account
      [ ] STFU & GTFO
      [X] Jump into a bathtub while holding your monitor
      [ ] Actually post something relevant
      [ ] Read the f****** FAQ
      [X] Call Bush and inform him he sucks
      [ ] Go to your room with no supper
      [ ] Apologize to everybody on this forum
      [ ] Go stand in the middle of a Highway
      [ ] Recite the Greek alphabet backwards
      [X] Take a bath in bleach
      [ ] Drink out of a spitoon
      [ ] Eat my ass
      [ ] Grind a rail on your sack
      [ ] All of the above

      In Closing, I'd Like to Say:

      [ ] 1 R 1337
      [ ] Pwned
      [ ] GG no re
      [ ] Blow me
      [X] Get a life
      [ ] Me > u
      [X] Never post again
      [ ] I pity your dog
      [ ] Go to hell
      [ ] Your IQ must be 7
      [ ] Take your s*** somewhere else
      [ ] STFU & GTFO
      [ ] Learn to post or f*** off
      [X] Go jump into some industrial equipment
      [ ] STFU botter
      [ ] All of the above

    14. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by Ticklemonster · · Score: 1

      Please tell me, without resorting to calling me a german, which of the rights granted to you by the constitution have you lost? You haven't actually lost any at all. No matter what happens, you are protected. How many thousands of innocent people did our government incarcerate? Less than 900? Do you know first hand why these people were incarcerated? Care to get back to us when you do? Ah, that's right, you will be able to, won't you? And why, might I ask will you be able to? Because you LIVE IN FREAKING AMERICA, STUPID. opps, I'm sorry, I get carried away.

      --
      Karma: Bad is the liberal way of saying this guy won't drink the kool aid here on slash dot. I wear my Karma with pride
    15. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by M.+Baranczak · · Score: 1

      You think the Republicans will be in power forever?

      Do you think the replacements will be any better? Kerry and Edwards both voted for the invasion of Iraq, and for the Patriot act. A lot of what Bush is doing now is just an extension of Clinton's policies.

    16. Re:This is an OUTRAGE by PitaBred · · Score: 1
      You think the Republicans will be in power forever?

      Because the Democrats are better, right? Face it, the whole political system in the US is a fiasco right now. The Dems and the Republicans are just different sides of the same kickback/political favor/corruption tarnished coin.
  2. I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    How would something that you claim is so horrible get voted into law then?

    I highly doubt the DESTROY part where you say we lose our rights. This thing had to be voted for by hundreds of senate/congress men.

    1. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How would something that you claim is so horrible get voted into law then?

      Same way hitler managed to convince his people that 'jews' were the enemy.

      Its called scare tatics.

      I highly doubt the DESTROY part where you say we lose our rights. This thing had to be voted for by hundreds of senate/congress men.

      Well, you can doubt all you want. Doesn't change the fact that america has made a mistake by following those who have already failed in history. And no, millions, like yourself, were duped into this law by sensless fear.

      Untill america gets a clue, things wont improve.

    2. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Please stop comparing relatively minor problems to the Holocaust. It only desensitizes people to the Holocaust. If you really think what you're going through is anything like Nazi Germany, then you need a SERIOUS reality check, pronto.

    3. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      It's pointless to compare the US with Nazi Germany because everyone knows that Nazi Germany had kickass uniforms (they were like totally boss) and the US ones are just plain ugly.

    4. Re:I doubt it by mangu · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Please stop comparing relatively minor problems to the Holocaust.


      But that's how it starts. As a relatively minor problem. Holocaust magnitude tragedies are only the consequence. I quote from my own website "quotes" page:


      Hermann Goering

      "Why of course the people don't want war. Why should some poor slob on a farm want to risk his life in a war when the best he can get out of it is to come back to his farm in one piece? Naturally the common people don't want war neither in Russia, nor in England, nor for that matter in Germany. That is understood. But, after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country."


      (at Nurnberg trials)

    5. Re:I doubt it by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yeah, for all their faults, you have to admit the Germans always had a talent for aethetics. Sometimes they do something goofy, but for the most part their aesthetic creations are excellent. By contrast, American aesthetics are usually crap; just look at American cars for the last 50 years.

    6. Re:I doubt it by Pieroxy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, obviously some part of it has already been rules unconstitutional. That's a start. If it shows anything, that is:
      1. The legal process is finally getting it right
      2. It is about time!! More than 2 years after it was made into law
      3. There was obviously something wrong in it. Who would doubt there's more.

      Read it for yourself, so next time, you'll know what you're talking about.

    7. Re:I doubt it by ScrewMaster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How the parent poster can refer to he Patriot Act as a relatively minor problem is beyond me. But history has shown that you (and Goering) are correct. In a nutshell, what you're talking about is incrementalism.

      Few societies willingly accept totalitarianism in one gulp, which means that citizens must be weaned onto it in small steps. Make no mistake: the Patriot Act (and many others like it) is a first step. In spite of the many rationalizations used to justify its continued existence, laws such as that really have no place in civilized society, much less the United States of America. Just don't get too complacent: I'm sure many Germans prior to the rise of the Third Reich felt that it "couldn't happen here" but they were wrong. Hey, I've seen Sliders ... I know what can happen.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    8. Re:I doubt it by mangu · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yes, just remember one simple fact: Hitler was elected. And his whole plan for government was clearly stated, both in his book "Mein Kampf" and in the Nazi Party program. Read William Shirer's "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich" for further details.

    9. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't we suggest to the military that they start wearing Wehrmacht uniforms. The MP could be the SS or something.

    10. Re:I doubt it by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      In World War II the Germans produced beautifully engineered planes. Their planes were of unsurpassed quality.

      They were also far more expensive to build than the American planes, which were cheaply built with modern mass-production techniques. The German planes were much more expensive to build and maintain, and easily outnumbered.

      As a further point, it's really a mistake to sit here in America and compare 'American Cars' to the small number of expensive non-mainstream German cars that happen to get imported to the US. Your sample is badly skewed. You need to include some Trabants in your sample set, for one thing.

      --
      ---
    11. Re:I doubt it by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      Oh no! You mean the system actually WORKS? You mean the unconstitutional bits are being struck down?

      Pay no attention to the above. Continue to contribute frantic amounts of money to civil liberties groups. Make sure you vote for the donkeys, etc.

      --
      ---
    12. Re:I doubt it by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      You are right, I forgot to conclude my post.

      I was actually trying to say that kicking out ONE piece of the Patriot Act after 2 years is a proof that the system barely works, as there is still plenty of crap to kick out in there. At this rate, it'll take 50 years.

    13. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Have you read the Project for the New American Century, and other papers published by the ideologues driving your country's policy, or have you only listened to slogans on the "tele-screen"?

    14. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trabants where build in the "zone", so they don't count.

    15. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah PNAC calls for Skull and Bones to take over the Congress in 2010 and all sorts of nefarious bogeymen.

    16. Re:I doubt it by fenix+down · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The Holocaust is not unique nor extrodinary. The same thing would not be impossible, or even that unlikely if a charismatic, young, power-obsessed fanatic tried to take over a public building to protest the degredation of "traditional values" here, even today. Look at the blind following Roy Moore got for dumping some cheap corporate art in a lobby somewhere, and he's ugly, a mediocre speaker at best, and the police never even shot any of his followers or put him in jail.

      Look, just fuse together Roy Moore, Che Guevera, Kevin Mitnick, L. Ron Hubbard, the guys from Queer Eye, Martin Sheen, and Fred Phelps, send them back to the Great Depression, and have them run for president on the platform of "Kill the Lawyers, Take Their Money". What do you think's going to happen?

      That's the strength of fascism, it's not political, it's social and artistic. It's a near-foolproof method of gaining power in a free society, and it just so happens that it appeals to, and works best for, vapid power-fetishists who often happen to be prone to bouts of genocidal mania once they get to the top. The most stunning thing about the Holocaust is that they managed to pull it off before the whole mangled system collapsed in on itself.

    17. Re:I doubt it by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't go that far. Plus, 40's-era clothes would look a little odd in modern times. A better idea would be to hire Germans to design our current uniforms. American car companies would do well to do the same, since American designers obviously have no concept of what an attractive automobile should look like, as evidenced by this

      What do modern German military uniforms look like, anyway?

    18. Re:I doubt it by Terminal+Saint · · Score: 1

      Obviously you haven't seen the new Marine camo yet... Can you say "Waffen SS"?

      --
      It's sad when choosing an installation directory on your own qualifies you as an "advanced user."
    19. Re:I doubt it by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Non-mainstream? Are Volkswagens non-mainstream in Germany? Are there any uglier than this or this? I sure haven't seen any.

    20. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do modern German military uniforms look like, anyway?

      Pretty much like the old ones, minus the swastikas and with new shoulder straps.

      See here and here

    21. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, this is how Nazi Germany started out. Basically, a leader who pointed out a small group of people as attacking them in a financial way. Then they were able to lock them up secretly. Later, when people started to complain, they passed laws that gave the feds the right to look for terrorist jews. So now they could go door to door and simple search whoever and whatever they felt like.

      I would say that we are pretty far down this slippery path.

    22. Re:I doubt it by Speed+Racer · · Score: 2, Informative

      just remember one simple fact: Hitler was elected.

      That is categorically untrue. Read Steve Kangas' discussion of this common misconception at http://www.huppi.com/kangaroo/L-hitlerdemo.htm

      --
      Free Mac Mini. Yes, I'm
    23. Re:I doubt it by k8er · · Score: 1

      Myth: Democracy elected Hitler to power. Fact: Hitler used backroom deals, not votes, to come to power.

      I see. But we don't have to worry about that in America, because we voters elect our President.

    24. Re:I doubt it by mangu · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Read Steve Kangas' discussion of this common misconception


      I did. In the end, one fact stands out: Hitler was elected. He didn't have the support of the majority of the people, but he was elected, nevertheless. He was elected according to the law of his country, just like GWB in 2000. The law was flawed, there were several circumstances, etc, but, according to the letter of the law, Hitler was democratically elected chancellor of Germany in 1934.

    25. Re:I doubt it by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      What you have to add is that the holocaust was a secret mission and (cynical) a gigantic waste of ressources needed for warfare. Perhaps that was the reason why the allied forces never dropped a bomb on ausschwitz train station.

    26. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hitler wrote the standard handbook on propoganda called, "Mein Kampf", in there he outlined every trick they used and continue to use on you. It wasn't all just jew killing you dumbass. First a couple million people had to be duped and he reveals how he did it in his manifesto. Of course the act of going to the library and reading it will now be reported to Tom Ridge who will likely come over and kick the living shit out of your stupid terrorist ass. History will be repeated as soon as we forget it.

    27. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I too disagree with comparing Bush to Hitler. For one thing, Hitler was actually elected by the citizens.

    28. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or because they didn't know about it.

    29. Re:I doubt it by kribor · · Score: 1

      OK, Hitler killed 6 million Jews during the Holocaust. What about the 600 million Africans that Americans killed during slavery?

      --
      "You can never win or lose if you don't run the race"
    30. Re:I doubt it by dup_account · · Score: 1

      Cheap does not mean ugly moron. Even some of the most expensive "American" cars out right now are ugly as dog poop.

    31. Re:I doubt it by tundog · · Score: 2, Funny

      Don't fret, Bush will just have the unconstituional parts amended to the constituion.

      --
      All your base are belong to us!
    32. Re:I doubt it by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      And some of the more expensive European-designed cars are ugly as sin, i.e. the traditional Saab design line.

      But I won't call you 'moron.'

      --
      ---
    33. Re:I doubt it by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 1
      Please stop comparing relatively minor problems to the Holocaust.

      This is a pet peeve of mine. Somebody makes a valid analogy for one point of comparison and then someone else, who doesn't understand the rules of logical reasoning, interprets it as meaning that all points are similar.

      Nobody said that American society has become the same, or even remotely similar to Nazi Germany. Nobody said anything about the Holocaust. What was said was the way that Hitler convinced the Germans that Jews were the enemy is analagous to the way Bush convinced Congress (and the American people) that the PATRIOT Act was a good thing. And that way was "tactics".

      While I find the description ("tactics") to be very vague, the analogy is valid. Hitler used "tactics" to convince the German people. Bush used "tactics" to convince the American people. Hell, you could say the same thing about a salesman selling you insurance. Analogies only compare specific points and nothing more.

      I would have made the analogy a little more specific though. The "tactic" in both cases was playing on fears. First, you make someone very afraid and then convince them that your "product" will make them safer. It's an old tactic, and it tends to work. The problem is that people get really pissed off when they realize you've actually screwed them over.

    34. Re:I doubt it by cass1010 · · Score: 1

      I should have saved some mod points for your post. It makes an excellent point. It illustrates the problem with invoking Nazi Germany as a reference to anything. Comparissons to Hitler and his ilk can be done in rational ways but even if they are worded perfectly someone else can take that comparisson and and twist it until the author comes off as hate filled nut. Using the Nazi's in any political discussion should always be avoided if possible.

  3. Shhhh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Quit agitating about the PA or the DMCA or anything - just smile and nod! Take a lesson from our Communist Brothers, you only get a quick trip to the Gulag (American Homeland Version) or a nice IRS audit.

    1. Re:Shhhh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words, "Roll over and take like a man" :-)

    2. Re:Shhhh! by Billly+Gates · · Score: 4, Funny

      In Communist Russia the government spies on YOU!

      Oh shit, what a minute.

  4. Viet Dinh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    communist?

  5. ... Cat got your tongue? (something important seem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Viet... Kerry... Bush?

    Cat got your tongue? (something important seems to be missing from your comment ... like the body or the subject!)

    Not the crap grammar in the 'bullshit slashcode'.

  6. His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    but everyone around the office calls him Charlie.

    1. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous+Coed · · Score: 1

      Charles owns the night.

    2. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by bckrispi · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Thanks. The Sprite I was drinking shot out my nose when I read that :)

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    3. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by mandalayx · · Score: 0, Troll

      His name is Viet Dinh (Score:4, Funny)
      by Anonymous Coward on 17:40 Tuesday 24 February 2004 (#8380986)
      but everyone around the office calls him Charlie.


      I was waiting for the first racist message to come out of this thread. However, was shocked to find it first under comments (I browse at +4).

    4. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by SiO2 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I'm still laughing. My kingdom for a moderator point! Okay, it's really a modest domicile or hovel, but that's about what a moderator point is worth. Why do I find myself so compelled, even obligated, to use them? Moderator points on slashdot: the first taste is free.

      SiO2

    5. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, there we have it. Your comment is the first racist message.

      The grandparent is just humor. There was no derogatory content.

    6. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by toxic666 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That post is ignorant at best, but more likely just racist. Sometimes, people who fled totalitarian countries are the most ardent supporters of American freedoms. I can't read into the heart and mind of Viet Dinh, but your post is contemptible.

      I was at a course outside DC and one of the students in the class was originally from South Viet Nam. His dad got the family out on a rickety boat, but didn't get himself out before the Communists put a quick bullet in his head. After learning English in an old Army barracks refuge camp, he got an education and became an American citizen. The guy is quite successful and pure capitalist.

      But he was without a car at the class and begged me to take him for a tour of downtown DC at night so he could see out monuments to liberty and freedom. Hey, DC traffic is the pits, but how can you deny someone with his story the opportunity to see the monuments to the dream many in the world never get to realize -- freedom.

    7. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by nomadic · · Score: 2, Troll

      And he may be several generations in this country. People used to Americanize their names when they came to this country, though I thought that those days were fortunately gone. Slashdot has shown otherwise, which is sad.

    8. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by ObviousGuy · · Score: 1

      Something wrong with riding the Metro? You can step out of any Metro station and onto the steps of just about any monument, government building, or museum.

      --
      I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
    9. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by the_mad_poster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh brother. It's a joke. Anybody without a strong, direct connection to the Vietnam War really has no grounds to be offended. Half the people here are probably either a) two young to get it or b) too ignorant of history to get it.

      If you really are one of those people that's offended, that's fine. But rather than waste everyone else's time, just smile, shut up, and have a coke. You can't live your life running around pointing and shrieking like a schoolgirl all the time.

      Great... now I probably offended some psycho feminist chick with the schoolgirl crack. And I probably offended a lesbian with the feminist crack. Oh shit.. now I really done did it...

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    10. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1

      The Metro doesn't reach everywhere, many of the cabbies are ruthless rip-off artists ("scenic tour" - not), and there are many areas that you don't want to walk around at night.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    11. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we call our slope here in the office.

      "secret asian man" he loves it.

    12. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by ergo98 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yes, one humorous post about an old stereotype has shown otherwise, hasn't it. The world has gone to hell in a handbasket, and all anglo-saxons are racist buggers.

      The sad thing is that every hyper-PC facist attempts to portray every "discretion" as proof of an overriding, all-encompassing plot. Get over it.

    13. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by nomadic · · Score: 1

      There were several posts, and several more approving of it.

      And spare me the tired old whining about "political correctness". "What, I can't make racist jokes? That's sooo unfaiiiir, waah"

    14. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by 1u3hr · · Score: 2, Informative
      he may be several generations in this country.

      RTFA. He came at the age of 7. (How many Vietnamese Americans were there before the 1970s?)

    15. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by ergo98 · · Score: 1

      Interesting. Especially telling that you proclaimed that it's good that new arrivals no longer "Americanize" their names -- presuming there was this American race that you speak of, it's fascinating that its names are second rate and unworthy.

    16. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Clockwurk · · Score: 1

      I wrote the original post as a joke. I don't have anything against asians (regardless of country). I just thought the joke would be humorous so I threw it out there.

    17. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's funny is that this whole thread is about protecting freedoms... one of which is freedom of speech... offensive or not. There is no right against being offended. What's the point of making a big deal of it?

    18. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Riktov · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That post is ignorant at best, but more likely just racist.

      Offensive, possibly. But racist, no. Racist would be that joke applied to a someone of Korean descent, as Koreans have little to do with the Viet Cong but happen to be ethnically related (very broadly) to Vietnamese. Would it be racist to make a "Heil Hitler" joke about a German? And if so, how about a Swede? I realize it's a lost cause, but I just wish the word "racism" were used more accurately rather than as a blanket term for "based on stereotypes".

      And to characterize the joke as "ignorant" is also an absurd misuse of the term. I can't imagine that anyone who knows the signifance of the term "Charlie" in relation to Vietnam (and thus understands the joke) would confuse a 35-year-old first-generation immigrant Vietnamese American with a communist guerilla.

      It was a silly, offensive joke based on cultural stereotypes. Just leave it at that. And just for the record, I'm a bit of an aficionado of Vietnamese culture, I'm part Asian, and I thought it was funny. (Though I would never repeat it in front of a Vietnamese person.)

      Sometimes, people who fled totalitarian countries are the most ardent supporters of American freedoms. I can't read into the heart and mind of Viet Dinh, but your post is contemptible.

      Unfortunately, such people aren't immune to engaging in the same mindset they sought to flee: Little Saigon, 1999 And the Cuban refuguee community in Florida isn't much better behaved, in my opinion.

    19. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by toxic666 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Yes, it would be racist to make a Hitler joke to a German-American. I am part German, and my great-great-grandfather got chased out of Germany because he was a Prussian Army officer who tried to overthrow Bismark. Seems he had a problem with an expansionist Germany in the years before the 1870 Franco-Prussian War. Too bad he and his "conspirators" failed. Might have been a little less genocide in the 20th century had they suceeded. But they became Americans, and I'm glad they did.

      Yes, it would be both ignorant and racist to make a Hitler joke about a Swede. The Swedes have been non-aligned for a long time.

      No, my German relatives were not even "broadly" related to Swedes. They were, umm, Germans.

      And if you would not repeat the comment or make a Charlie joke to someone of Vietnamese descent, doesn't that speak about the offensive nature of the comment? Doesn't the AC posting speak for the hatefulness of the post?

      The original comment was posted by an AC. Obviously, this is someone who does not want to be held accountable.

    20. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by jasonditz · · Score: 1

      Sometimes, people who fled totalitarian countries are the most ardent supporters of American freedoms.

      And sometimes they write draconian laws that dramatically increase the power of the government to oppress the common citizen.

    21. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Riktov · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Your definition of "race" must be different from mine. I don't consider German or American or German-American or Swedish or Vietnamese to be races. Racism would be making a Viet Cong joke about someone solely because he has black hair, thin eyes, a flat nose, and whatever physical attributes associated with people from East Asia. The connection between a Vietnamese and communist guerillas, or between a German and Hitler is historical, not ethnic. That's the point I'm trying to make. And the reason I'm doing so is that "racism" has become the politically-correct catch-all blanket condemnatory term for any sort of discrimination, and used inaccurately.

      Yes, it would be both ignorant and racist to make a Hitler joke about a Swede. The Swedes have been non-aligned for a long time.

      It would be ignorant certainly, because a Swede has no unique connection, ethnically or historically, with Hitler. For it to be racist, the teller would have to draw a link from blond hair and blue eyes, to Germany, to Hitler. That's beyond ignorant, it's simply stupid. And Sweden's policitical history is totally irrelevant to anything at ll.

      I stated clearly in my previous post that the joke can indeed be characterized as offensive, in its use of stereotypes about Vietnamese. That's why I wouldn't tell it to a Vietnamese. As for "hatefulness", that's another glib assertion. I thought the joke was funny, yet I know I am not hateful towards Vietnamese.

    22. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Riktov · · Score: 1

      Yes, it would be racist to make a Hitler joke to a German-American. I am part German, and my great-great-grandfather got chased out of Germany because he was a Prussian Army officer who tried to overthrow Bismark.

      Yeah? Well, my great-grandfather (only one "great") immigrated to the U.S. from Germany, so I guess that makes me more German than you! :)

    23. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, but only the black ones.

    24. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by cubic6 · · Score: 1

      I'd appreciate it if you didn't insult my race by labeling us all as "racist buggers".

      --
      Karma: Contrapositive
    25. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yeah, well my grandfather (no greats) was killed in a Nazi concentration camp...so don't talk.

      It was terrible...he fell out of a guard tower...broke his neck.

    26. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by 357_Magnum · · Score: 1

      So you wouldn't tell it to a Vietnamese person, but it's ok if it's written in a public forum that Vietnamese people can read just fine? I'm Vietnamese and I know when I read that I wasn't amused because for just the same reasons that we don't use other racial terms, they're offensive. I'm not a person who normally cares about being politically correct, but using derogatory comments is something that is used to put a group down, which is not correct in any way.

      --
      Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori.
    27. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Yokaze · · Score: 1

      A comment is not racist because it is based on the basis of the supposed race of the person, but on the fact that the statement implies that a person of that nation shares a certain common distinctive (obviously bad) trait with National Liberation Front, pureley because of his descent. That is, at least according to M-W, a definition for race, which makes the statement racist.

      Don't get me wrong, I don't think that you are a racist, but the comment can be seen so. Especially, just reading it in a public forum, without knowing you personally and seeing your face and hearing how you say it. A lot of information important for judging off-coloured remarks is lost.

      Finally, I found the joke funny, because I took it as a joke about his co-workers and the stereotypical view of most people.

      --
      "Between strong and weak, between rich and poor [...], it is freedom which oppresses and the law which sets free"
    28. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I understood the joke, and I didn't think it was offensive, I thought it was funny. How come you don't have a fourth category for people like us?! One of us had to mod that up +3 funny.

    29. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by ellem · · Score: 0, Troll

      Hey I'm a psycho lesbian and I am, am, in-credibly horny and want to go to an All Girls Catholic High School Dance and make sweet, sweet, angry love to all the thick thighed American girls.

      --
      This .sig is fake but accurate.
    30. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've got some good jokes about dumb Americans which make me laugh. Thing is I wouldn't say them in front of Americans though. btw I'm not racist, I just think its funny making jokes about Americans.

      You get my drift?

    31. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      I've got several vietnemese friends who are Americanizing their names because most people find them too difficult to pronounce.

      Not that I don't give it effort. I've got the pronounciation of Doan and Hoang down, but my throat just doesn't want to make the sounds required for "Dao" and "Giang" Or, rather, my ear isn't trained to tell the difference between the way they pronounce their names and the way I do.

    32. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by smallpaul · · Score: 1
      The joke is offensive because it implies that the most interesting or important thing about Vietnamese people is that they were involved in a war in the 1970s and that somehow they should all be stigmatized by it. Personally, I wouldn't have been as bothered if the joke had some actual context. Like if the article had been about cryptography and he had mentioned Alice, Bob and Charlie. That would be clever.

      But to just see a Vietnamese name and yell "Charlie". That's just dumb and it implies that no matter what context a Vietnamese person appears in the first thought across an American's mind will be something relating to the war. This individual is expressing ideas of relevance. Let's treat him as an individual.

    33. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      First: The term race has always been vaguely defined. Given that Vietnamese people have distinctive facial features, I don't see anything wrong with calling them a race. Hitler thought that the Poles were a separate race.

      Second: the racist is typically ignorant of the harm they do. They lack empathy which is an understanding (knowledge!) of the other person's point of view.

      Third: according to your definition there are almost no racist jokes at all. Making fun of black people for eating fried chicken is cultural, not racist, right? Same for jokes about cheap Jews.

    34. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no, but you sound like a darn bitch to me

    35. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by daltec · · Score: 1

      I agree - I believe that what most westerners think of when they say "Vietnamese" is the Kinh ethnic group, which comprises some 85% of the population of modern Viet Nam. They certainly are a distinct racial group, by every way most people would define the term. The Hmong, for example, also live within the political entity known as Viet Nam and thus are considered "Vietnamese" (at least by the VN government, haha), but they are not Kinh. They are not what most people think of when they say "Vietnamese." As far as racial vs. cultural jokes, who can say? I mean, if I taunt, say, a black person from Kenya, by saying "fried chicken" and "watermelon," then would I be a racist? I would tend to think that I would be. Because while it would probably be true that the Kenyan would have no clue what I was talking about, in *my* mind I would be equating a cultural stereotype with all black people - which is the very definition of racist, isn't it?

      --
      We have to eat happy eggs from happy chickens.
    36. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by daltec · · Score: 1

      I don't think that was the implication at all. And I certainly don't think the jokester was suggesting that all Vietnamese should be stigmatized by the war. But to the American mind, the Vietnam war *is*, by far and away, the most interesting or important thing about Vietnam. Granted, we do not know if the jokester is even American or not, but given the general composition of Slashdot's audience, we can assume he is, right? Therefore, it seems to me to be especially, uhh, prickly to rag on an American for making a war-related joke about Vietnam. For example, I once dated a Vietnamese girl who had a cousin named Charlie (I swear I am not making this up). He lived in Cocoa Beach and was a surfer. (you all know what is coming) She told me about him, and I said "well that is strange, because I had always heard that Charlie don't surf," which was so funny to me that I almost pissed my pants. I *still* chuckle about it in fact. It went right over *her* head, btw - so you tell me, was my joke racist? Offensive? To *you* maybe, but not to me and not to her, even after I explained it!!!

      --
      We have to eat happy eggs from happy chickens.
    37. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by the_mad_poster · · Score: 1

      The joke is offensive because it implies that the most interesting or important thing about Vietnamese people is that they were involved in a war in the 1970s and that somehow they should all be stigmatized by it.

      I'm wholly convinced that shreiking yutzes who take offense at lame jokes go looking to be offended, and this suggestion that the joke "implies" anything just reinforces my opinion on the matter. I didn't get that implication at all. I thought back to a Vietnam era nickname, applied it to the context of nationality (oh no... we can't crack jokes about nationality, uh uh. In fact, from now on, I think I'll feel stigmatized at the constant cracks about white folks on some stations and shows since we all have to be "sensitive" to everyone but them and can't take anything with a little bit of poise and stride), and found it to be a mildly amusing joke. The thought that this was somehow a slur against him - much less an entire nation - never crossed my mind. In fact, maybe you ought to reconsider what you actually took offense at. Which is worse, that I got a chuckle and forgot about it, or that you had racist thoughts leap into your head?

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    38. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Calling somebody "charlie" is racist? I wonder what my father would think!

      Are "Tommy" and "Jerry" off limits too?

      You live in a weird weird world.

    39. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, those "freedom fighters" in Viet Nam who collaborated with the U.S. invasion and genocide in their country. Go back and read the Pentagon Papers, the "Gulf of Tonkin" invention, the history of French Colonialism (read about the respression of the Vietnamese by the French on their rubber planations, including the execution of Vietnamese patriots), the support of French colonialism in Viet Nam by the US (bankrolled by the U.S. after WWII), operation Phoenix (30,000 murdered by the CIA), the systematic murder of Vietnamese peasants who resisted the occupation of their country; read about Curtis Lemay's directed bombing of the North, the illegal bombing of Cambodia and Laos which killed hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese. We want the murderous, fascist traitors who collaborated with the American invasion of their country to be in charge of our civil liberties, yessir!

    40. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by John+Courtland · · Score: 1

      Let's hear 'em, I'm sure they're real gems.

      --
      Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
    41. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      There is a huge gulf between your joke and his. Everything about that guy's life DEMANDED that your brain pattern match with a movie you saw. In this case the guy stumbled upon a Vietnamese person and made a joke just because he is Vietnamese. That's like a five year old who laughs when somebody says "abreast" -- "huh, huh, you said abreast!" It also indicates something about their thinking pattern. Obviously the five year old isn't paying attention to what you were saying when you happened to mention "abreast". Similarly, the troll had no interest in what Viet Deng had to say. His name was Vietnamese and therefore the most interesting thing about him is that he can be made fun of.

    42. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      I'm wholly convinced that shreiking yutzes who take offense at lame jokes go looking to be offended, and this suggestion that the joke "implies" anything just reinforces my opinion on the matter. I didn't get that implication at all. I thought back to a Vietnam era nickname, applied it to the context of nationality (oh no... we can't crack jokes about nationality, uh uh. In fact, from now on, I think I'll feel stigmatized at the constant cracks about white folks on some stations and shows since we all have to be "sensitive" to everyone but them and can't take anything with a little bit of poise and stride), and found it to be a mildly amusing joke. The thought that this was somehow a slur against him - much less an entire nation - never crossed my mind.

      I didn't say it was a slur. I said it is evidence of an unfortunate thought process in the Troller's mind. He sees a Vietnamese name and his first thought is to make a Charlie joke. What does this say about the Troller's opinion about PATRIOT? That it isn't important to him. What does it say about his opinions about Viet Dinh's opinions. That they aren't important to him either. What's important is that Viet Dinh is a Vietnamese name so there must be an opportunity to make a joke.

      I wouldn't have minded if the joke had some kind of reasonable context. If the situation had somehow lent itself to comparison to the Vietnamese war (maybe it does) then fine. But making fun of the ethnicity of a guy's name just shows you aren't treating that guy as an individual but as a faceless member of a set.

      In fact, maybe you ought to reconsider what you actually took offense at. Which is worse, that I got a chuckle and forgot about it, or that you had racist thoughts leap into your head?

      I didn't have racist thoughts leap into my head. I agree with you that the Troll didn't imply that there is something WRONG with Vietnamese people. He just demonstrated that he can't differentiate them and treat them as individuals.

    43. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by M.+Baranczak · · Score: 2, Funny

      Sometimes, people who fled totalitarian countries are the most ardent supporters of American freedoms.

      Yeah, like Henry Kissinger.

    44. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by the_mad_poster · · Score: 1

      No, he didn't. That's the point I'm getting at. He cracked a joke. All those things MIGHT be true, but it MIGHT be true that he's a green-skinned alien from the other side of the Universe and 4.5 billion years in the past. It doesn't mean it's LIKELY.

      What he said does not in any way, shape, or form provide any evidence to support any dehumanizing or segregating thoughts in the poster's mind. You have no idea whether or not "charlie" is the first thing that jumped into his head and, even if it was, you have no idea why. Maybe he was wathing Platoon or something. Based on the evidence, that's just as plausible a reason as assuming that he's somehow racist. The point is, the only way you could be offended by that comment is if you either come into it assuming the worst, or if you take it as anything more than it really is. There is no implication. None. At all. Anything you derive from that comment as anything more than a joke is just assumption on your part because you have no further context and no knowledge of the poster's intent.

      This constant insistence on being overly sensitive to avoid hurting people's precious feelings is utter nonsense and it's extremely dangerous. There is a huge difference between being malicious and just having fun. Consistently calling someone a nigger, particularly in a negative context as an insult, is malicious. Using it once as a joke in a manner that does not even necessarily single out a discernible individual is not. It's all about context. Why do so many people laugh at a black man talking about crackers in a comedy club, but hiss through their teeth if a white man says nigger? The context is the same, shouldn't they either be insulted or amused?

      It's all about context. Yes, undoubtedly there will be misunderstandings when somebody makes a lousy joke and it comes out sounding like a slur, but get over it. That's never going to go away because interpretation is part of human nature as is miscommunication. There's no use in trying to eliminate it completely. It would be better to educate people so it happens less frequently and make sure they learn from their mistakes.

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    45. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by comedian23 · · Score: 1

      >People used to Americanize their names when they came to this country, though I thought that those days were fortunately gone.

      These days are by no means gone, and it has nothing to do with racism BTW. I has to do with Americans not being able to pronounce some names. The people coming here are doing us a favor, by making it easier for us to spell and pronounce their names. Likewise if you moved to China you would be wise to pick a "Chinese name" to use their since a string of our characters together means nothing to them.

      -Comedian

    46. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The guy is quite successful and pure capitalist."

      I have to point this out: So were Nazis and other Fascists (until defeated by an alliance of communist states and democracies). Capitalism is neither necessary nor sufficient to guarantee a government that guarantees civil rights, personal liberty, democracy, or freedom. Nor, for that, is a capitalist economic system a prerequisite.

    47. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by EverDense · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I'm not seeing any flames following it, the fuckwit Moderator was wrong.

      --
      http://jesus.everdense.com/
    48. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by daltec · · Score: 1

      Well, yeah, since you put it that way, what you say does make more sense. I was not thinking it through all the way, I guess. Thanks for taking the time to explain it to me in a "calm and rational manner," haha - a real breath of fresh air, thanks a lot. BTW, if you have not read any biographical information on Viet Dinh, it is pretty interesting. Thanks again! :-)

      --
      We have to eat happy eggs from happy chickens.
    49. Re:His name is Viet Dinh by ergo98 · · Score: 1

      Uh...thanks for pointing out the intentional hypocrisy -- maybe there was a monkey reading for whom that wasn't clear. Whoops, sorry goes out to all the monkeys out there.

  7. Read the Patriot Act by ObviousGuy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The 'experts' who cry that the sky is falling every time the wind blows a leaf to the ground have done a great disservice to the American society and security by magnifying privacy issues beyond reason. The Patriot Act is not perfect, indeed, but the privacy concerns that are always brought up by privacy watchdog groups are usually already handled effectively in the code itself.

    If your watchdog barks at every breeze that rustles the trees, you aren't getting any good information from it. Maybe it's time to start looking for a new watchdog or to take security into your own hands.

    --
    I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
    1. Re:Read the Patriot Act by 7Ghent · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Secret arrests, supposed "terrorists" being held indefinitely without trial, widespead wiretap priviledges.. the list goes on. Is this what you call a "breeze rustling the trees?"

      The Patriot Act is already being abused to prosecute all manner of crimes that have nothing to do with its original intent. If there were any checks and balances in the act itself, this wouldn't be happening.

      Pull your head out of your ass and smell the Totalitarianism!

    2. Re:Read the Patriot Act by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      The Patriot Act is already being abused to prosecute all manner of crimes that have nothing to do with its original intent.

      Even that is old hat...The same thing has been done with RICO for years.

      --
      What?
    3. Re:Read the Patriot Act by MonkeyGone2Heaven · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If your watchdog barks at every breeze that rustles the trees, you aren't getting any good information from it. Maybe it's time to start looking for a new watchdog or to take security into your own hands.

      Your statement encapsulates precisely many people's arguments against the Patriot Act. Namely, I'd rather retain my liberty/privacy and take my security into my own hands than allow Big Brother Ashcroft, et al, do whatever he likes, Constitution be damned, in the name of ferreting out communists, oops, I mean terrorists in our midst.

    4. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      NO, McCarthy, the blacklists. etc. etc. The track record (aka HISTORY) is that this bullshit leads to more bullshit. And people are going to nip it in the bud this time, all these complaints have made sure that it hasn't gone any further. Just think if all these voices hadn't complained what types of laws they would be trying to pass right now.

      You are basically saying "You made us take all these vitamins, but we never got ill"....

    5. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Bendebecker · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "If your watchdog barks at every breeze that rustles the trees, you aren't getting any good information from it."

      Then again the one time they did ignore the boy who cried wolf was the one real time that the wolf actually came. The price of peace and freedom is eternal vigilance.

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
    6. Re:Read the Patriot Act by RLiegh · · Score: 1
      And people are going to nip it in the bud this time, all these complaints have made sure that it hasn't gone any further.

      you're basing that on what, exactly?
    7. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They should have gotten rid of the boy and replaced him with a better, more trustworthy, less reactive alert system.

    8. Re:Read the Patriot Act by iamwahoo2 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      The experts cry because they realize that nobody else will do it out of fear. Also they realize that as power is taken away from individuals, communities, states and given to the central authority of the federal government, that power will never return to the people.

      Do not kid yourself, the Patriot Act is permanent. Legislation like this which is originally intended to address a current problem (Al Quida) has a way of lingering around long after the problem is no longer around to justify its existince.

      The patriot act may look like a drop in the bucket, but do some research into how the founding fathers viewed strong centralized government versus what we actually have today and you can see how each of these minute changes has managed to turn this country upside down.

    9. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Endive4Ever · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps you can post a list of documented 'secret arrests' that you know about, that are being covered up in the mainstream media. Because there'd be all kinds of headlines if it was becoming a common practice.

      Oh, it has to be arrests based in the US. Cuban cites won't surprise anybody, except, ummm, maybe you and yours.

      --
      ---
    10. Re:Read the Patriot Act by elmegil · · Score: 1

      So they extend what they've been doing with RICO for years, and that's not a problem?

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    11. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1, Troll

      You're quoting from a fairy tale, now, you know.

      A stronger case would probably be warranted to reinforce your arguement.

      --
      ---
    12. Re:Read the Patriot Act by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Too many people are defending the indefensible. To some it's perfectly ok to stomp all over the rights of another, using drugs, terrorism, communisim, whatever, as the smoke screen for a power grab. I know that it's not ok, for any reason. As long as we live like animals where might makes right, there will be no convincing these people.

      All that we got here is American made. It's a little bit cheesy, but it's nicely displayed. - FZ

      --
      What?
    13. Re:Read the Patriot Act by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Evidently to the majority it's not a problem or they wouldn't continue to re-elect the perpetrators(or in this case perpetraitors) of these crimes. Any act that involves coercion is a crime.

      --
      What?
    14. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't want to be held as an enemy combatant, then do yourself a favor:

      *don't fly to the Sudan to attend terrorist training with an Osama Lieutenant

      *don't raise financial support for organization on the Feds list of organizations that support terrorism

      Is that too much of a restriction on your freedom? The Feds have a job to do. Let them do it, or is it going to take another 9-11? It only takes one of these bastards to take you (and a *whole bunch* of the rest of us) out, and rip this country a new one.

    15. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol, you definitely got your head up your ass,if you rely on mainstream media.
      do some research, and see whose bankrolling mainstream media.

    16. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No no, Cuba is a tropical paradise. Free health care, wonderful culture, great music... who cares if a few hundred people are "disappeared" every now and then?

      Besides, it is all the fault of the US for imposing those punishing sanctions.

    17. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Pull your head out of your ass and smell the Totalitarianism!
      Well, that wouldn't change much, since both smell like shit.
    18. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      were you ill before you started taking vitamins?? If you were ill, i dont think you be taking vitamins, you be looking for the cure.

    19. Re:Read the Patriot Act by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      It also lets hire bounty hunters.

    20. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      He's quoting a fairy tale that was written by a pair of brothers who were sticking it to the authorities at the time by disguising their political views as children's stories.

      A quick google didn't turn up anything, but if you compare their stories with the political climate at the time they were written, there's really something to tell.

    21. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Winkhorst · · Score: 1

      There was this ethics teacher at Central High School where I went many moons ago. Old Doc Samson, he of the miraculously overstuffed briefcase, would love to state the following: "The majority is always wrong," by which I suppose he meant that principles are not a matter of majority consent. They are a matter of personal reflection and commitment to what is right. That most Americans have never learned this lesson, have not even been afforded the opportunity to consider its consequences, is truly sad. That someone should cite the absence of serious opposition to a family dynasty whose current representative was once a partner of Osama bin Laden's brother is to justify the establishment of tyranny on the grounds of general mental weakness and intoxication with the modern equivalent of the Roman circuses. It is reprehensible. But worse than that, it is a product of the takeover of the media by the forces of neo-conservatism who never present anything but their prepackaged drivel to the all too gullible public. This is your freedom and democracy that we are supposedly exporting to the poor downtrodden Iraqis who at least have the gumption to stand up against a foreign invasion, no matter how high-minded in its original conception.

      --
      "Is this Winkhorst a nova criminal?" "No just a technical sergeant wanted for interrogation."
    22. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just it... we DIDN'T reelect the perpetrator in the last election and he's president anyway.

    23. Re:Read the Patriot Act by antiMStroll · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ironic that two decades ago the right wing flag wavers made a career of berating the Soviet Union for these same acts.

    24. Re:Read the Patriot Act by h00dLuM · · Score: 1

      just like income tax was supposed to be temporary to help the war effort
      this is "liberty tax"

    25. Re:Read the Patriot Act by wrf3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "The majority is always wrong," by which I suppose he meant that principles are not a matter of majority consent.

      Neither are they a matter of minority imposition.

      They are a matter of personal reflection and commitment to what is right.

      This is unsound for two reasons. First, it begs the definition of what is right. You've ruled out the majority; the minority is no better -- what do you have left? Second, it's no different than the ancient formula "everyone does that which is right in their own eyes". That way lies anarchy.

    26. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      So 'doing some research' means going to crank wingnut websites and reading conspiracy theory newsletters?

      Or did you mean 'research' as in visitng the library?

      Oh! The librarians are 'at one with The Man' too!

      --
      ---
    27. Re:Read the Patriot Act by mattjb0010 · · Score: 1

      The individuals being held indefinitely without trial were apprehended while trying to kill American soldiers "because Allah told them to."

      Yes, that's why some were released... How are we to know without a public, open trial what those still being held were doing? Or are human rights only for people we *assume* are not "trying to kill American soldiers"?

    28. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1, Troll

      Those fairly tales were gathered oral tradition, not 'written' by the Brothers Grimm. You've been letting modern 'political' literatary types color your world a bit much.

      --
      ---
    29. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Winkhorst · · Score: 1

      There is no "the minority" except the minority of one. Is it my imagination or is Slashdot the largest conglomeration of Sophists assembled in one place (at least virtually) in the history of the world?

      --
      "Is this Winkhorst a nova criminal?" "No just a technical sergeant wanted for interrogation."
    30. Re:Read the Patriot Act by terrymr · · Score: 1

      How exactly are secret arrests documented ? all we have is people who say their relatives have been taken and government officals that won't tell whether it happened or not.

    31. Re:Read the Patriot Act by NearlyHeadless · · Score: 2, Informative
      Secret arrests, supposed "terrorists" being held indefinitely without trial, widespead wiretap priviledges.. the list goes on. Is this what you call a "breeze rustling the trees?"

      The Patriot Act is already being abused to prosecute all manner of crimes that have nothing to do with its original intent. If there were any checks and balances in the act itself, this wouldn't be happening.

      You shouldn't blame every bad thing the administration has done on the Patriot Act. Although I think Dinh defends some terrible civil rights abuses--especially the treatment of Jose Padilla--those are not done under the auspices of the Patriot Act (nor does the interviewer claim they are, if you read carefully).

      If you want to see balanced criticism of the Patriot Act based on what it actually says, read this series in Slate.

      About the Patriot Act,

      Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) has said: "I have never had a single abuse of the Patriot Act reported [to] me. My staff e-mailed the ACLU and asked them for instances of actual abuses. They e-mailed back and they had none." Similarly, an investigation this month ((1/27/94)) by the Department of Justice's Inspector General - a Democrat appointed by President Clinton -- found exactly zero civil liberties abuses under the Patriot Act.
      From a Clifford May column
    32. Re:Read the Patriot Act by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      There's also this horrible movie with Steve McQueen called "Enemy of the People" which points out just how wrong the majority can be. I for one believe that "democracy" is nothing more than dictatorship by the majority(nothing new in that thought) whose only advantage over the dictatorship of one is its inefficiency. I was pointing out in my other post that we are doing nothing new here. Might makes right will rule the day for some time to come. Sad indeed.

      --
      What?
    33. Re:Read the Patriot Act by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The majority is always wrong because the majority is stupid. 99% of the population is stupid, not because they are all un-educated, but mostly because they have been "educated". They are never taught to think for themselves.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    34. Re:Read the Patriot Act by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      In soviet russia, secret arrest is documented!
      Naval base is city!
      Media coverups make headlines!

    35. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Them. Yeah.

    36. Re:Read the Patriot Act by saros · · Score: 3, Informative

      Um. No. Lots, possibly hundreds, of people were arrested/detained, many for more than a month, and the Justice Department refused to release their names. The exact number of people so detained isn't known, because the Justic Department refuses to report that too.

      One of the U.S. citizens being held indefinitely without trial is named Jose Padilla. He was arrested in Chicago at the airport, not on a foreign battlefield! The other one is named Yaser Hamdi, and he might have been trying to kill American soldiers, but we don't really know, since he wasn't captured by U.S. forces. He was handed over to them by an Afghan warlord working with the U.S. No U.S. soldiers saw him captured and they had to take the Afghan's word for what he was doing.

      I could find links to wiretap changes, but I'm feeling lazy. In any case you seem to have had a few misunderstandings of your own--ones that can easily be corrected with 5 minutes of Googling.

      --
      -- Where are we going, and why are we in this handbasket?
    37. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your point? Mass murder is an old hat, too. Does that mean we shouldn't get pissed off by it?

      Wether something is an old hat is NOT RELEVANT AT ALL. To the contrary, it means it's REALLY time do get active.

    38. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    39. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Ice_Balrog · · Score: 1
      Ironic that two decades ago the right wing flag wavers made a career of berating the Soviet Union for these same acts.
      What makes you think many of us don't berate the US government and Bush for the Patriot Act?

      Either way, killing millions of your own citizens is a hell of a lot worse than anything the Patriot Act allows the US governemnt to do. Yes, I know that things like what the USSR did usually start small like the Patriot Act. But that doesn't mean the Patriot Act is on the same level as those atrocities.
      --
      #include "sig.h"
    40. Re:Read the Patriot Act by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      The individuals being held indefinitely without trial were apprehended while trying to kill American soldiers "because Allah told them to."

      In wartime, attacking invading soldiers in itself is not a crime. The war in Afghanistan has been over more than a year. If these men are war criminals they should be charged as such. Civilised countries don't hold POWs indefinitely after a war is concluded. They should be released.

    41. Re:Read the Patriot Act by aled · · Score: 1

      I knew someone who was documenting this but I lost contact and can't find him :-)

      I know in Cuba they keep people deprived of their rights. They call the place Guantanamo...

      --

      "I think this line is mostly filler"
    42. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Question: who's afraid of terrorists? Not me. Not even a little bit. Where are all these terrorists at? As far as I'm concerned, Al Qeda is less dangerous than a biker gang. 9/11 was an anomoly, a crime and not the opening salvo to a war, a fluke that had more to do with lax (compared to Europe) airline security than anything else.

      America is the safest country on Earth. This war on terror is complete bullshit. WHERE IS THE TERROR? WHERE IS THE FUCKING WAR ALREADY? DO YOU KNOW WHAT A WAR IS? THIS IS NOT A WAR. THIS IS THE SAFEST COUNTRY ON EARTH. THIS IS SUCH BULLSHIT!!

    43. Re:Read the Patriot Act by cyril3 · · Score: 1
      Maybe he's thinking of something like the INS detentions referred to in pages likes these from a google on ins+secret+detentions. Maybe not under the Patriot Act but hey what the heck, a secret detention is a secret detention.

      Of course he can never win because if it's secret he can't list them and if he can list them it's not secret.

    44. Re:Read the Patriot Act by bursch-X · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I didn't know it was a war crime or illegal to "try to kill American soldiers" when you happen to be at war with the US, especially when being attacked by the US illegaly.

      --
      There are two rules for success:
      1. Never tell everything you know.
    45. Re:Read the Patriot Act by ttsalo · · Score: 1
      The individuals being held indefinitely without trial were apprehended while trying to kill American soldiers "because Allah told them to."

      A great deal of them are being held because Afghans heard that Americans were paying cash for arabs, so they went and rounded up some arabs and sold them to Americans. Hell, if everyone trying to kill American soldiers was sent to Cuba, even a hundred Guantanamos wouldn't be enough. Not to mention that it wouldn't make much sense.

      --
      If the road to hell is paved with good intentions, where does the road paved with evil intentions lead to?
    46. Re:Read the Patriot Act by kramer2718 · · Score: 1

      RTFA, it mentions one such case: that of Jose Padilla. It also links this article which discusses the Padilla case as well as several others.

    47. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He said "cites", not "cities"... there is a difference, you know.

    48. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right, it's time to get a new watchdog. Throw out the "Patriot" act. There's nothing patriotic or even American about it. It should have been named the KGB act.

    49. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Gr8Apes · · Score: 2, Funny

      Personally, I think the Patriot Act will either be rescinded, or thoroughly gutted within 12 months.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    50. Re:Read the Patriot Act by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      I used the wrong word. Perhaps "republished" is more proper. In any case, the relevance of the stories to the era in which they were republished is still striking.

    51. Re:Read the Patriot Act by John+Courtland · · Score: 1

      Or you can actually look at a good financial site and see who owns Fox News, CNN, etc. instead of playing the ostrich.

      --
      Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
    52. Re:Read the Patriot Act by strike2867 · · Score: 1

      America is the safest country on Earth

      Have you seen the murder rates. Spending one day in Chicago has 1 in a Mil chances of getting murdered. And I come here nearly every day. Do you know the chances of winning the lottery? Or how about getting struck by lightning?

      In retrospect I think thats what Bush should now be protecting us from, getting hit by lightning. Chances of getting hit by lightning are slightly more than getting killed by a terrorist.

      --

      Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    53. Re:Read the Patriot Act by xpyr · · Score: 1

      Secret arrests, supposed "terrorists" being held indefinitely without trial, widespead wiretap priviledges.. the list goes on. Is this what you call a "breeze rustling the trees?" No, its what I call the beginning of communism. Remember these types of things were done in the USSR all the time back when it was in power.

  8. FBI is DROWNING in information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Even before September 11th, the national intelligence agencies had a backlog of information (so for example, certain messages about 9/11 were only translated after the fact.) It's even worse now. They simply have too much data, and not enough people/computer power to interpret it.

    1. Re:FBI is DROWNING in information by Slashcrunch · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't this be a great task suited to the Seti framework?

      All patriotic Americans could use their spare CPU cycles to help the FBI process this information. Anyone who didn't could then be considered a Terrorist, no??

    2. Re:FBI is DROWNING in information by King_TJ · · Score: 1

      Then maybe they should *STOP COLLECTING SO MUCH*, and do what sensible people do when they're overloaded with information; prune out everything that's not necessary!

      It strikes me that the current FBI mentality is "always push for more abilities to collect/seize information, and more tools to gather it with", coupled with "having too much information just makes it easier to demand and get additional funding to make our organization larger and more powerful".

      National fingerprint identification databases containing prints of everyone who has a driver's license, computerized filtering of email traffic over the net, a constant push for wider "wiretapping" capabilities and rights, etc. etc. Yet the only things that really net them the true criminals never really change; good informants and good detective work.

      IMHO, law enforcement needs to stop requesting more and more money for gagetry, coupled with broader legal definitions of what isn't "invading privacy" or "trampling on one's individual rights". Instead, work more efficiently with what they've got, and let agents go who can't produce results within the existing framework.

  9. Re:you are unpatriotic by ssbljk · · Score: 1, Funny

    yeah, stop protecting me!

    --
    /ss
  10. already lost by maliabu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    isn't the objective of terrorism to terrorize people? the more "ACTs" we have the more obvious we're really really scared of terrorists.

    now not only people are terrorized by terrorists for physical dangers, they're also terrorized by their own government for privacy invasion.

    1. Re:already lost by momerath2003 · · Score: 0

      Or perhaps by implementing measures of security, it gives the citizens a sense of security.

      The alternative is, what, downplaying 9/11 and so forth, saying that it was just a glitch and it won't happen again without doing anything?

      Implementing security measures will make people feel safer because it will make people safer.

      And as a preemptive response to the typical dogmatic "those who sacrifice a little liberty for safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" statement: have you ever worn a seatbelt in your car?

      --
      I had but a simple dream, to destroy all humans.
    2. Re:already lost by blincoln · · Score: 0

      Implementing security measures will make people feel safer because it will make people safer.

      Did I suddenly tune into Fox News? There is more to logic than saying "A = A."

      And as a preemptive response to the typical dogmatic "those who sacrifice a little liberty for safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" statement: have you ever worn a seatbelt in your car?

      No, wait, even Fox News wouldn't stoop to using that kind of straw man argument. How does wearing a seatbelt restrict personal liberties? *Forcing* someone to wear a seatbelt might, but that is a not what you said.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    3. Re:already lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      • have you ever worn a seatbelt in your car?
      FUCK NO.
    4. Re:already lost by momerath2003 · · Score: 1

      If you actually paid attention to my post, you would realize that I said "will make people feel safer because it will make people safer." As in, the patriot act, while certainly open to abuse (what isn't?), will make the nation a safer place. Thus, it will make people feel safer.

      No, wait, even Fox News wouldn't stoop to using that kind of straw man argument. How does wearing a seatbelt restrict personal liberties? *Forcing* someone to wear a seatbelt might, but that is a not what you said.
      In several (if not most) states wearing a seatbelt is mandatory. By giving up a bit of movement in the car, your chance of dying in a collision is drastically reduced.

      That is the situation I was referring to.

      --
      I had but a simple dream, to destroy all humans.
    5. Re:already lost by harveyswik · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Yes, and I've also taken it off when I reached my destination. Not to mention that I don't recall it ever pressing me into the seat because it sensed that I *might* have crashed into something.

      What's your point?

    6. Re:already lost by Moofie · · Score: 1

      I'm trying to remember the last time my seatbelt infringed on my liberty.

      Oh wait, it never did.

      And, if we're going to quote, let's do it right.

      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."

      That's what Franklin said, and what you do not understand.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    7. Re:already lost by momerath2003 · · Score: 1

      Actually, I was quoting from that catchy FreeBSD song.

      --
      I had but a simple dream, to destroy all humans.
    8. Re:already lost by vicviper · · Score: 1
      I'm trying to remember the last time my seatbelt infringed on my liberty.

      It infringes on your liberty to smack the winshield unrestrained.

    9. Re:already lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      isn't the objective of terrorism to terrorize people?

      No, you've missed the point of Bush's wars completely.

    10. Re:already lost by Ckwop · · Score: 1

      Implementing security measures will make people feel safer because it will make people safer.

      That assumes you have people in power who can make informed decisions on security. In my opinion they dont. It's self evident from the "security" measures they've deployed.

      Simon.

    11. Re:already lost by Karn · · Score: 1

      I used to feel similarly, until I put things into perspective.

      I am far more likely to die in a car accident, or to be hit by a drunk driver, than to die by the hands of a terrorist.

      If our society can tolerate the tens of thousands of deaths that occur due to automobile accidents and drunk-driving accidents, why can't we tolerate a relative few terrorist-caused deaths that slip through the cracks, especially when it means maintaining our precious freedoms?

      I want lives to be saved too, but they can step up the effort on thwarting terrorism without taking away our civil liberties.

      --


      Why do I keep typing pythong?
    12. Re:already lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you mean that it makes the sheep feel safer? Anyone with an average IQ knows that the price we pay for the Patriot Act isn't worth the security it offers.

    13. Re:already lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how many terrorist attacks have we had since we implemented these new security measures?

    14. Re:already lost by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      I think the debate primarily is that the patriot act has not been proven to make the nation safer. I don't see how it would do so, and that's what is being addressed here. Please lay out how the patriot act has made/will make the nation safer.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    15. Re:already lost by electronerd · · Score: 1

      the USA PATRIOT Act makes me feel less safe. It makes me afraid of Big Brother. In case you haven't figured it out yet, Big Brother is a bad thing.

  11. You fail it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Haha, Amsterdamn. Beware of the patriots when trolling!

  12. The greatest threat to my liberty... by Mr.+Mikey · · Score: 5, Insightful
    isn't coming from Middle-Eastern terrorist groups. No, the greatest threat to my liberty comes from a government willing to take the freedom and liberty guaranteed me by the Constitution, and replace it with the illusion of security.


    Planes aren't being hijacked because we stop the dreaded nail clipper from coming on board.

    --
    wants to be the first monkey to touch the monolith
    1. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Planes aren't being hijacked because we stop the dreaded nail clipper from coming on board.

      Then again, why are planes being hijacked? There must be a reason why they're doing it, if they could achieve the same goal by handing out pamphlets I'm sure they'd rather do that than fly into yet another skyscraper.

    2. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by tealover · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The government isn't taking your liberty from you. Your fellow citizens are. They are responsible for voting your government into power.

      Republicans have control of the Executive, Legislative and if we examine the 2000 elections, the Judicial branches of the government.

      The Red states far outnumber the Blue states, so popular vote becomes a moot point in future elections as the electoral advantage is seded to the Republicans.

      You have to ask yourself. Is it really the government in the wrong here or is this an expression of the People's Will ?

      You might be scared to learn the answer.

      --
      -- You see, there would be these conclusions that you could jump to
    3. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Ben+Jackson · · Score: 1

      Dammit, here I am with mod points and that post is already at 5. We need '+1, goes to 11'

    4. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree,

      The bottom line is, even if the terrorists get WMD and deploy them --- lets say 3 nukes and a couple of industrial sabotages a nuclear power plant meltdown and an airborne killer virus --- even that would not be the end of America. America will survive, simple as that. However, America will NOT survive if it becomes a facist state.

      China, with 25 million men without potential wives, is MUCH more of a risk than some desert nomad religious fanatics raging against modernity.

    5. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Kelz · · Score: 0, Troll

      and replace it with the illusion of security

      And just how many people have died on american soil from terrorism since the patriot act was passed?

      Planes aren't being hijacked because we stop the dreaded nail clipper from coming on board.

      The point isn't to stop nail clippers, its to stop people like this guy. If that means I have to give up my nail clippers, I really dont see the problem.

    6. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      um. the problem would be that giving up your nail clippers doesn't help to stop that guy. hence it's as useless as being made to sing the sesame street song while boarding the plane. or are you okay with that too, for the same reason....

      A real skeptic checks ALL the drawers.

    7. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by NiceGeek · · Score: 1

      People like you don't get it. The terrorists don't have to attack anymore. Fear and our half-witted leaders are destroying this country for them. All they have to do is keep hiding and issue some scary statements from time to time.

    8. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by psykocrime · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      The Red states far outnumber the Blue states, so popular vote becomes a moot point in future elections as the electoral advantage is seded to the Republicans.

      Republicans, Democrats, same f'in difference. A vote for either major party is a wasted vote, because you're voting to maintain the status quo.

      You want to make a real difference, let's start voting for Libertarian candidates, Reform Party candidates, Constitution Party candidates, Greens, or somebody OTHER than the same corrupt, power-hungry fuckers we've been voting for for years.

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    9. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by seriv · · Score: 1

      I wasn't aware that the republicans ran with a campaign promise of taking away liberties. Regardless of how people vote in elections, politicians still have a responsibility to vote in such as way that is helpful to the people.

    10. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      China could easily solve this problem if they started practicing polyandry. Of course, a lot of men probably wouldn't like that idea, but it's better than no wife at all...

    11. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Qacker · · Score: 0, Redundant
      Republicans want to take away our Rights!

      So do the Liberals! Repubs dictate Morality while Liberals dictate economy! Libertaians do neither. Libertarians only want the govenment to protect people from unwanted agression from others.(rape,robbery,forgery ext)

      --
      Learn lisp today!
    12. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by elmegil · · Score: 4, Insightful
      And just how many people have died on american soil from terrorism since the patriot act was passed?

      The same as the number of elephants I've kept away with my elephant repellant.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    13. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Brainboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I vote for candidates based on their merit, not what party's ticket they run on. Just because someone who runs says they are a Libertarian doesn't mean they get my vote. Third party candidates can be just as full of shit as their counterparts in the larger parties.

      --
      Just a guy with an opinion
    14. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The same as the number of elephants I've kept away with my elephant repellant.

      How does it work and where can I get it?

    15. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by MsGeek · · Score: 5, Informative
      I did a speech about USA-PATRIOT for Speech 101 last semester. In doing the research for the speech, I found that some of the most damaging aspects of the act are built atop a law passed during the Carter Administration: the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. And during the Clinton Administration the Legislature and the Executive Branch was also quite busy coming up with anti-privacy regulations like the Clipper Chip and the DMCA.

      Basically, what I'm saying is that neither party has been particularly good on matters of personal liberties and the right to privacy. The Republicans are just a lot more blatant about their intentions than the Democrats. And the Republicans tend to go a little farther and push a little harder than the Democrats do.

      Just keeping this debate honest...

      --
      Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
    16. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You fucking wanker. You're doing the terrorists' job FOR THEM.

      Perhaps we should draw YOU up under the Patriot Act. After all, you are aiding the terrorists by furthering the fearmongering that our politicians enjoy so much in these times.

      People like you don't deserve the America that the founding fathers originally envisioned. And you CERTAINLY don't have the right to fuck it up for the rest of them.

      And yes, I vote, every chance I get, even for the most minor of offices. So I have a GOD DAMNED RIGHT to bitch, especially about YOU.

      Oh, and fuck you all.

    17. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by tealover · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think what I was trying to say, and probably failing miserably, was that "government" is bandied about as though it were an entity that exists on its own or has sprung up out of nothingness.

      It doesn't and it hasn't.

      But this is a good thing. It gives hope to those who refuse to wallow in an air of defeatism and understand that any current transgressions need only be temporary.

      Remember, the Patriot Act is nothing more than legislation. It can be repealed or written out of the books very easily. But it's going ot take a lot of minds changing before we muster enough Political Will to start that ball rolling. It's not impossible. It's probably just a matter of time.

      100 years prior to Suffrage most people thought it was ridiculous to give women the right to vote. As a people, we learned that liberty cannot exist when we disenfranchise half our population. I suspect a similar conciousness will develop and we'll look back at the Patriot Act as a curious by-product of this era.

      --
      -- You see, there would be these conclusions that you could jump to
    18. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Repubs dictate Morality while Liberals dictate economy!

      While agree with your sentiment and agree that people should vote Libertarian, you are repeating a myth.

      Myth: "Conservatives" are for economic freedom & want to dictate morality while "Liberals" are for personal freedom & want to dictate economy.

      The fact is, BOTH want to dictate morality & economy. It wasn't the liberals who gave us wage & price controls, the Clean Air Act and the largest increase in social programs in history. It wasn't the conservatives who told the TV networks to "Clean up your act or we'll clean it for you" and gave us political correctness. Liberals (including Kerry & Edwards) voted for the Patriot Act in the Senate by a 47-1 margin.

    19. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Dirtside · · Score: 5, Funny

      Why does it matter who we vote for? On no account should any person who wants to be president be allowed to have the job.

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    20. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by elmegil · · Score: 1

      Send $500 to the PO Box I'm about to email you (you THINK you're anonymous?) and I'll send you some.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    21. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by robson · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Republicans, Democrats, same f'in difference. A vote for either major party is a wasted vote, because you're voting to maintain the status quo.

      I can't see how you can look at Bush and Gore and say there's no difference. For starters, I'm pretty sure we wouldn't be in Iraq if Gore were President.

      I like the how Tom Tomorrow put it:
      Nader's critique is, essentially, that there is a cancer on the body politic--and he's right about that. The problem in the year 2004 is that the body politic is also suffering from multiple wounds and blunt force trauma, we're in the emergency room and it's a damn mess and there's blood everywhere and the doctors are working furiously but it's anybody's guess how things are gonna turn out. We are in triage, and we have to deal with the immediate problems, or the long-term ones won't matter anyway.
    22. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by h0mi · · Score: 1

      Don't be fooled into thinking "blue states" are necessarily more pro-liberty. Democrats attacked Republicans for opposing "anti-terror" bills in the 90s that were just as bad as the PATRIOT act.

    23. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yes, as a Republican, I just love seeing people suffer. Do you believe anything not shoved down your throat by the DNC?

      Yet more proof Democrats are just mud-slinging assholes who have no solution other than "Republicans bad. Democrats good." Asshole.

    24. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      They enjoy watching them suffer.

      From another loyal democrat: I don't think its enjoying other people's suffering, so much as being massivly self-centered. Any tax dollar that doens't go back to them personally is a waste. They don't seem to realize that because they live in society, they indirectly benefit from social spending regardless of whether or not they get direct benefits.

      The other problem is that business's have all the rights of individuals, yet the GOP doens't want them to be taxed, regulated, or liable for their actions.

    25. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by jBabel · · Score: 1

      You have to be pretty dumb to believe that.

      The reasons we have more and more restrictions on air travel, and liberty in general, all have at their root cause terrorism (mainly the middle-eastern sort, since you mention it).

      It's been that way since the 70's when the first skyjackings occurred, and the governments of the world started scanning passengers and baggages.

      If the government reacts with dumb measures like the one you mention, or more scary ones such as iris scans at the airport and biometrically-stamped passports like we're about to get here in Canada, it's because people are scared and expect the government to act this way.

      You'd be surprised at how these measures are popular. When biometric ids were announced here, I thought there'd be a revolution or something. Instead I saw polls where something like 80% of the population supported it.

      Is the government/bureaucracy (ab)using the terrorism scare to push its agenda? Absolutely.

      But what they are doing is more or less what the people want.

      And, even more sadly, a good part of it is really needed, i.e. the terrorists are forcing us into it.

      It's really sad that it has to be repeated but, you know, these guys are real. They really blew up the two tallest skyscrapers in NYC, parts of the Pentagon, downed 4 airliners, and killed almost 3000 people 3 years ago. They really burned a 100 people to death in Bali (almost none of which had anything to do with the U.S., btw) in 2002. They have committed a lot more outrages before or after that. These guys are not (just) GWB's strawmen.

      *They* are the greatest threat to your liberty, no matter how much you or I may loathe that Ashcroft prick.

    26. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by aled · · Score: 1

      China men just want to kidnap your blonde playmates??

      --

      "I think this line is mostly filler"
    27. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Kruid · · Score: 1
      " You have to ask yourself. Is it really the government in the wrong here or is this an expression of the People's Will ? "

      Yeah, scary/sad how so many people can welcome tyranny, or convince themselves it's not real.

      -k

      --
      Your mind moves quicker than a nun's first curry. - A. Rimmer
    28. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by zangdesign · · Score: 3, Informative

      Libertarian candidates, Reform Party candidates, Constitution Party candidates, Greens, or somebody OTHER than the same corrupt, power-hungry fuckers

      Provide one with a sensible, reasonable platform that doesn't try to upset the applecart all at once and alienate every damn person on the planet, and I'll consider it.

      I like the Libertarians as a general rule, except they can't ever agree on anything, except in the most general terms. The Libertarian convention is some of the best entertainment ever. Sorry, too fragmented to ever serve as anything but an example.

      The Reform Party - uh. no. never. Ross Perot? C'mon guys. Great ideas focused solely on govermental reform and nothing else.

      Greens - Nope. Not ever. Too far left.

      Constitution Party - Too much Bible thumping. "Return ... our law to it's Biblical foundation". Not only no, but hell no. It's the Taliban all over again.

      I'd feel like I was wasting my vote if I DID vote for any of those.

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    29. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And Conservatives voted for it 53-0, so don't give me that horse-shit.

    30. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by G-funk · · Score: 1

      *sigh*

      And I just spent my modpoints....

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    31. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a Republican. I do not enjoy watching people suffer. Thats why I donate over 10% of my income to charitable organisations every year.

      What I don't want to see is our government assume a role that it was never intended to play of constantly wiping the people's asses. I want people to take some freakin self responsibility for their future instead of pointing fingers at the rich white guy or evil corporation and waiting for the government to bail them out. You want healthcare? Well get workin, because healthcare isn't free. For the true hard luck cases, I will help them out when I see them, or I will donate to a charity that will. But leave the freakin government out of it.

    32. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by -tji · · Score: 1

      Come on, dude.. that myth was debunked after the last election.

      Sure, all the centrist crap they spout during the campaigns was very similar. But, once elected the radical Republicans closed the blinds on their presidency, took an extreme corporatist stance, and blurred the seperation of church and state. After 9/11, it just got more extreme.

    33. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1
      The government isn't taking your liberty from you. Your fellow citizens are. They are responsible for voting your government into power.

      Bzzzt. Did any of the candidates in 2000 say, "If you vote me, I promise to sign as many Orwellian bills as I can."? Didn't think so. Sure, you can blame parties after the fact, but the voting public has little influence on the future.

      I don't like the Republicans either, but then, Clinton passed the DMCA. My point is that it's not one party or the other; the whole system is flawed.

    34. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Laser+Lou · · Score: 1

      I can't see how you can look at Bush and Gore and say there's no difference. For starters, I'm pretty sure we wouldn't be in Iraq if Gore were President

      To add to that, I'm pretty sure we wouldn't even be in Afganistan if Gore were president. Al Queda would still be operating under the protection of the Taliban. Airline security still would have changed, but nothing else would have.

      --
      No data, no cry
    35. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Martigan80 · · Score: 1

      The government isn't taking your liberty from you. Your fellow citizens are. They are responsible for voting your government into power.

      Yes and no.
      True, the citizens should go out and vote, but the government should have the moral obligation not to even create such crap. It is easy to say "The people should vote." But how many times do the people get to vote on these issues? Sure we can vote for the people in office, but once they are you can't do crap.
      So you say write an email, well lets hope their spam filter doesn't cast it away. Snail-mail maybe? Nope everything will be voted for by the time some unpaid intern gets you letter to decide if it is worthy of viewing. Voting is the first step, but the people in government charged with protecting the people rights and acting for the will of the people should do their part as well.
      Any time a person can accept money to help influence a decision their integrity and the integrity of the system is compromised. Let these people earn only their paycheck and not the money from businesses and other rich sources.

      --
      This SIG pulled due to lack of funding. (This damn war is costing too much!)
    36. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by robson · · Score: 4, Interesting

      To add to that, I'm pretty sure we wouldn't even be in Afganistan if Gore were president. Al Queda would still be operating under the protection of the Taliban. Airline security still would have changed, but nothing else would have.

      Let's set the hyperbole aside for a minute. I'd be willing to bet that our response to 9/11 would have been identical if Gore'd been President.

      There might still have been something *like* the PATRIOT act, although it would probably be less extreme.

      The 9/11 Commission probably wouldn't have gotten much farther than it has under Bush -- all the same CYA interests would be involved.

      We wouldn't be in Iraq, and as a result, we might actually have a stronger presence in Afghanistan at this stage.

      Lacking the push to war in Iraq, we wouldn't have pissed the entire world off, and we'd likely be in a better position in the "War on Terror" because of this.

      But in 9/11 what-if terms, it's not even a very interesting question. The really interesting question is this -- what if John McCain had won the Republican nomination and the national election?

    37. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Laser+Lou · · Score: 1

      Let's set the hyperbole aside for a minute. I'd be willing to bet that our response to 9/11 would have been identical if Gore'd been President
      I don't think that its a hyperbole to say that the Taliban would still be in power in Afganistan if Gore were president. I'm sure that some limited military actions would have taken place against Al Queda (i.e. bombing), but I doubt he would have decided to overthrow the Taliban to reach Al Queda. That doesn't seem to fit the mind-set of the Democrats ...

      There might still have been something *like* the PATRIOT act, although it would probably be less extreme.
      Yes, I think that there would be something like the Patriot act, but I think it would have actually curtailed the freedom of average citizens and the general public, rather than terror suspects.

      We wouldn't be in Iraq, and as a result, we might actually have a stronger presence in Afghanistan at this stage.

      I absolutely cannot believe that there would be more soldiers on the ground in Afganistan today if Gore was president, even without the war in Iraq. His focus would have been limited to Al Queda.

      Lacking the push to war in Iraq, we wouldn't have pissed the entire world off, and we'd likely be in a better position in the "War on Terror" because of this.I can't deny that some countries (i.e. France and Germany) have had their feelings hurt but they're not seriously angry with America, no more that America is angry with them. They are pissed at George Bush, but who cares?

      Also, I doubt there would be a "War on Terror" if Al Gore was president. Would he have really included groups like Hamas and Hezbollah in this?

      --
      No data, no cry
    38. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by tehdaemon · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I think what I was trying to say, and probably failing miserably, was that "government" is bandied about as though it were an entity that exists on its own or has sprung up out of nothingness.

      It doesn't and it hasn't.

      Yes! Very good point. The government is composed of, and controled by people, (not necessarily the same people)

      The government isn't taking your liberty from you. Your fellow citizens are. They are responsible for voting your government into power.

      While your fellow citizens are responsible for voting them in, they are hardly the ones responsible and certianly not the real people in charge. It just doesn't smell right for that. I am not sure who to lay the blame on, and it is probably several people/groups of people. My best guess is the large corporations, and those who own and/or control them bear the brunt of the blame. They seem to fit the same niche that the old aristocracy of europe (or most places/times in history) did. If true, this will not change until we can reform corporate law to limit their power. And no, I am not generally in favor of regulation. I suspect that certain aspects of corpopate law give them this power, and those need to be repealed.

      Anyone know of a good place to start researching? Besides google of course.

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    39. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by ttsalo · · Score: 1
      To add to that, I'm pretty sure we wouldn't even be in Afganistan if Gore were president.

      Huh? Clinton (and Gore as his VP) started a war against Serbia and sent US planes to bomb (among others) civilian targets, without UN approval, and without US being under a threat of any kind. How do you figure Gore wouldn't have gone to Afghanistan after 9/11? And do you even know how little actual troops US had and has in Afghanistan? Hint: it wasn't western forces that rolled into Kabul after defeating Taliban.

      --
      If the road to hell is paved with good intentions, where does the road paved with evil intentions lead to?
    40. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      The greatest threat to your liberty is death -- because you certainly can't use any kind of liberty when you are dead.

      I just hope, the government is not going to declare the "war on Death" or work on the development of immortal citizens any soon.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    41. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by True+Grit · · Score: 1

      And me with no mod points. Reminds me of the sci-fi short story from way back about some mythical computer system running searches through databases to pick the "right" person for the job of President, and the "lucky" winner didn't get to say no....

      "Look, I'd be a lousy President, honest!"...

      "Please, I don't WANT this job!"...

    42. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by True+Grit · · Score: 3, Insightful
      1. That doesn't seem to fit the mind-set of the Democrats

      That's a troll if I ever saw one. Jeez, do I have to go back to FDR and his insistence on unconditional surrender of Germany and Japan? Heck, we don't even have to go back further than Clinton and his stance on Serbia and Haiti (remember the grief the conservatives gave him about his aggressive stance on the military coup in Haiti?). All that crap about Dems being "weak" in the face of threats is just that, crap.

      Clinton/Gore would have invaded Afghanistan to get to Al Qaida, no question. The might have even invaded Iraq too, the difference would have been though, that they wouldn't have so non-chalantly pissed off the entire world in doing so. Heck, Bush Jr.'s daddy would have been a little more patient and would have eventually gotten UN support, without stepping on everyone's toes or calling anyone "irrelevent". The problem isn't that Junior is a Republican or a conservative, the problem is that he's an idiot, IMO.
    43. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by True+Grit · · Score: 1

      1. My point is that it's not one party or the other; the whole system is flawed

      Actually, its working exactly as expected. What too many idealists (not meaning you) seem to forget is that all governments will try to enhance their own power if allowed to, it is the nature and inherient danger in any form of government. Democracies and Republics are no exception. The question is, is the public allowed to effectively dissent and are there any judicial/legislative/political checks to prevent the government's expansion of power? In the case of the Patriot Act, the other shoe simply hasn't dropped yet. First we have to wait for the government to push the law too far and clearly abuse it (or demonstrate that the law itself is abusive), and then we'll see either a legislative or judicial counter response to rein the government in. Assuming the system isn't flawed of course... :)
    44. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by ojQj · · Score: 1
      I wish I could mod you up.

      Living in Germany, I think I have a feel for how pissed our allies are. It goes well beyond Iraq -- there are rumors being spread by respectable sources that the Bush administration played a role in scutteling the European constitution by bribing the Poles.

      I hope we get a new president in the next election, otherwise the rest of the world will stop ascribing our behavior to one nut, and decide that America is full of egotistical pigs who've switched to handling Europe like they handle South America. Europe won't be nearly as easy to push around, and that perception will severely damage US economic and military interests.

    45. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by escallywag · · Score: 1
      Get real. The two parties that have representatives in Congress have power because of the PEOPLE who make up the party ranks. I like to believe that the Democratic party is made up of people who care about other people's suffering, while the Republicans...they care about the poor and hungry, too. They enjoy watching them suffer.

      The choice between Democrat and Republican equates to a choice between right-wing and extreme right-wing. Not much of a choice at all. The difference is mainly one of style, there have been no mayor differences between Democrat and Republican policies since WWII, the mayor trends continue regardless of who's in power

    46. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by GypC · · Score: 1

      Yeah, Harvard always gives out MBAs to idiots.

      Pot. Kettle. Black.

    47. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by GypC · · Score: 3, Informative

      Constitution Party - Too much Bible thumping. "Return ... our law to it's Biblical foundation". Not only no, but hell no. It's the Taliban all over again.

      You are too funny. Here are some quotes from the Constitutionalist Party platform.

      • The government should have no say in the decision to have or not have an abortion.
      • The CP opposes the use of search warrants to examine or seize materials belonging to third parties unless specifically specified on the warrant. The CP also opposes no-knock raids and the search of vehicles and passengers without probable cause.
      • The CP opposes legislation seeking to make it illegal to burn the American flag, as this is a form of political speech.
      • The CP does not find that obscenity (including pornography) that is made with the consent of those involved with its production violates the First Amendment in any way...
      • The Constitutionalist Party supports the right of individuals to participate in any religion they wish, or none at all, and to be free from legislation that supports the views of one religion over the others. This requires a separation of church and state, and any legislation that is proposed with the rationale that it is a proper law because a certain religion says so must be rejected in the defense of the other religions. America has never had a national religion, and thus should not pass any legislation that favors the tenets of any one religion as well. The government should also not aid any religion, nor attack any religion for their beliefs or peaceful activities.

      Yep, sounds just like the Taliban.

    48. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by dwhitman · · Score: 2, Funny
      Yeah, Harvard always gives out MBAs to idiots.

      So it would seem.

    49. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same as the number of elephants I've kept away with my elephant repellant.

      Are you implying that people aren't trying to commit terrorist acts against American targets? I guess those 19 highjackers where the only ones...

      Oh yeah, that bombing in 1993 was just a coincidence too.

      I'm sure there were some Australians were thinking the same thing until a couple humdred of their citizens were blown up by some idiots on a quest for a hoarde of virgins.

      I don't agree with the majority of the Patriot act either but ignoring a problem or appeasement of radicals never, ever resulted in an answer to a problem.

      Are you saying there is no threat of terrorism?

    50. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by ratamacue · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Let's be realistic. Yes, the "people" (the majority) choose who obtains power (in some cases, to some extent), but this does not change the fact that individuals are driven by self interest. Government is nothing but a collection of individuals. Therefore government is driven by self interest, regardless of how power was obtained. Similiarly, as a consumer in the market, you vote with your wallet. Provided no government interference and no foul play, a successful businesses is one that has been "voted" into success by the consumers. The "will of the majority" theory can be applied here too, but of course, the consumers have no direct control over what happens in the board meeting -- the owners make the rules, not the consumers. Would you blame the consumers for Enron's criminal behavior? Of course not -- the Enron executives should be responsible for their own actions, just like government should be responsible for its own actions. Realistically, the will of the majority ends at the election polls. You can argue that the majority was willing to elect a certain politician, but in no way does this prove that the majority supports what the politician does after obtaining power. Here's an honest question: If you still believe that government is truly a representation of the people's will, then is it possible for government to make mistakes? (Is it incorrect to hold government accountable for its actions?)

    51. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by True+Grit · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Harvard was his second attempt since Texas Law School turned him down, and as for academics, I like this quote the best:
      "I'd like to suggest to my liberal friends that they consider voting for Gov. G. Willikers Bush because obviously he believes in affirmative action. How else to explain the phenomenon of a C- average Yale student being admitted to Harvard graduate school? (Must be they had yet to fill their quota of young, preppy sons of wealthy, influential alumni.) Or could it be what was once said about his daddy is even more applicable to him? To wit, that he was born on third base and thinks he hit a triple..." Linda Badlucco, Carp Lake Mi.


      Finally, to quote a famous religious conservative, a preacher with a show on every Sunday here in the Bible-Belt, and a fan of the Bushes, "even stupid people can get a college degree". Now he was referring to all those idiotic scientists with their crazy nonsense about evolution, but if *all* of those people got degrees and are still stupid, then surely Harvard can make a "mistake" every once in awhile. Hey, if the theory works for him, then it has to work for me too. :)
    52. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by dave420-2 · · Score: 1

      Well, wasn't the Washington Sniper branded a terrorist in the courts? Doesn't he count?

    53. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by spagma · · Score: 1

      The government is taking away your liberties, not our fellow citizens. Yes the citizens voted these poeple into power, but there is never any to tell for sure how the representatives will cast their vote for most issues. They say what we want to hear to get elected, but then do what they want later. How often do campaign promises fall through the cracks, and then they use the same promises for the next campaign. I may vote for someone because I like this and this about him/her, but dont like that. The good outways the bad, and they are better than their comptetitor, but that does not mean that because I voted them into office, that I agree with everything that they say or do, nor will I as a citizen be to blame because they are in office. The system is flawed, thats the way it is, the way it has been, and probably the way it is going to be.

      --
      If it won't boot, Fsck it!
    54. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Is it really the government in the wrong here or is this an expression of the People's Will?


      If there were such a thing as "the People's Will," I would be inclined to say "both."
    55. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by 'nother+poster · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well, the problem here is the first post said Constitution Party and you said Constitutionalist Party.

      Constitution Party != Constitutionalist Party

      Do a little googling on the two.

    56. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by DamnRogue · · Score: 1
      This shouldn't be modded funny.

      We have a political system where we allow people to volunteer for positions that wield ENORMOUS influence and then are surprised when we end up with a bunch of power-hungry bellicose busybodies who love nothing so much as telling everyone else what to do. Duh...

    57. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I vote for candidates based on their merit


      So I take it you don't vote at all, then? :)
    58. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by 'nother+poster · · Score: 1

      Well, for a lot of people it seems that if the tyrant is not being tyranical towards them, or if they personaly benefit from the tyrany, "it's all good."

    59. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by jeanicinq · · Score: 1

      I think right now at this time and this place the greatest threat to American liberty comes from al-Qaida and their sympathizers rather than from the men and women of law enforcement and national security who seek to defend America and her people against that threat.

      ...isn't coming from Middle-Eastern terrorist groups.

      I have a video tape of an American law-enforcement agent that beat me up. I have not met or seen an al-Qaida agent. I was born and raised on the American contenent. I am concerned.

    60. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Patlag · · Score: 1

      Who vote for the patriot act? Who vote for the war in Irak (and his cost!)? Who vote for ... The only thing you vote for it's a man who will be in charge to rule the country, nothing else. In fact the "democraty" does not exist. The thing we call Democraty here is FAR away from the idea of Socrate and Platon. The system we have today is a dictature where you choose your dictator every 4 years. But after you vote, you have no power till 4 years. I wish in a far (or near?) futur, every citizen will have the power to vote on every big decision (war,tax,social program, diplomacy etc...) by Internet, phone etc... So yes we will elect a president, but he will have to respect people decision. In fact, the president will become the representative of the country and the people will make decision. yeah i know, in this case information (tv, radio etc...) will become the ultimate power, but that's another story!

    61. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Politburo · · Score: 2, Informative

      FISA has many of the same powers as the PATRIOT act, with one exception. FISA set up a secret court to hold hearings for warrants, etc., when national security is involved. The PATRIOT act, in many cases, does not require such judicial oversight.

    62. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could try learning how to read, asshole. Here is what I wrote. Since some of the words have more than one syllable, get someone to explain it to you.

      The fact is, BOTH want to dictate morality & economy.

      Where in my post did I say anything good about the "Conservatives"?

    63. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      pls type teh correct words instead of mayor pls tipe major thx

    64. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by GileadGreene · · Score: 1
      Right. Like there's any functional difference between the Republicans and the Democrats. The rhetoric is different, but the effects are the same.

      I won't disagree that the vote of the people the underlying problem though. Neither wing of the Republicrats would be in power if people didn't vote them in.

    65. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by elmegil · · Score: 1

      No, the Washington SniperS do not count, because they were thwarted by good old-fashioned police work, not wiretaps or any of a dozen other expanded police powers in the PATRIOT act.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    66. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by klang · · Score: 1

      ..Julian May's Galactic Milieu stories, I believe?

    67. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by ^Case^ · · Score: 1

      This is actually the way it was in ancient Greece. The people decided who was to be governor of the so called city-state. No one was allowed to run, the people just elected one from the crowd IIRC.

    68. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by comedian23 · · Score: 1

      >I'd feel like I was wasting my vote if I DID vote for any of those.

      I hear people echo this sentiment all the time however I disagree and I'll explain why. Let's take the Demos for instance. Every four years, unless they have an incumbent president, they need to come up with a batch of new candidates for president, such as we have now. They will pick a variety of people and whoever has the strongest support will run for president. All this sounds well and good but the problem really is that people will decide to follow them even if they don't agree with their policies too much, just because they think it is better than having a Repub in the while house.

      The Demos party's candidate may win and they may not but either way their reluctant supporters LOOSE. They candidate didn't represent them, and honestly doesn't give a crap about them at all. And the next time they put people up for election they will put up people with the same ideas as the last batch.

      As an example, many Conservatives are really pissed at Bush, but next election they will vote for him anyway just because they always vote Repub. That doesn't help anything b/c they next election cycle the Repubs will put up more people with platforms and positions similar to Bush(because he did well the last time).

      Our votes are the way we tell politicians and parties what we think and what we care about. THEY WILL NOT CHANGE unless they see their "numbers" erroding. If you give your vote to Bush or Kerry you are pretty much signing off on their stance on things, which is usually moderation. You may not see the changes in the short term(meaning you may loose the current election) but long term your party will have to adjust it's position to bring you and others back in.

      It is for that reason I am voting Libertarian. I have no illusions that Libertarians will win but if enough of us eat away at the two main parties support base eventually they will have to change their platforms to "bring us back into the fold". So vote for what you believe in, it is the only way democracy will work, and we will all be better off for it.

      -Comedian

    69. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by jafac · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And just how many people have died on american soil from terrorism since the patriot act was passed?

      Actually, since I count Iraq as "American Soil" (after all, we ARE in control there, aren't we? - in fact, Iraqis have LESS rights in Iraq under US military rule than Americans have here in the US) - we've had DAILY terrorist attacks, thousands dead. No clue on the Ricin. No clue on the Anthrax. No clue on the Ohio sniper. The Washington sniper was only caught by blind luck on our part and stupidity on his part. Had in no way, anything to do with the liberties removed by USA PATRIOT Act. Bin Laden roams free, and the guy who sold nuclear secrets to Libya, Iran, and North Korea was pardoned, and the US State Department says that's OK.

      Bush has been a miserable failure at security. He's even a failure at spin. Because he's not fooling all of the people. Only the gullible ones. Less and less every day.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    70. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by HiThere · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Centralized authority acts for the perceived benefit of centralized authority. It justifies it with anything that it thinks it can sell to people.

      One thing that centralized authority always wants is more power. So it will always try to act in ways that increase it's power, and decrease the powers of the potential opposition. (Note that word "potential".)

      This means that any govenment in power will act in ways that it beleives will increase the power of the government.

      You can call yourself anything, an anarchist even, but once you get power, you act so as to increase your power. (If you doubt this, go to an anarchist meeting, and watch the power struggles.) Actually anarchists tend to be worse than most groups, because since they don't believe in laws and regulations, they also don't believe in checks and balences. But authoritarians can adopt the same structure for the opposite reason. I.e., they believe that power is good, so the powerful should be unchecked.

      The upshot is, it's a design problem. The constitution did a pretty good job of addressing it, with the institution of checks and balences, but it's obviously drifted more and more into an authoritarianism since the very early 1900's. The main turning point was probably around the time of the Civil War. But it was inherent in the original constitution, possibly because it was a document of political compromise, and possibly because nobody ever designs things correctly the first time they do so. (And a powerful faction, Hamilton, et al., wanted an authoritarian government. They just didn't want a British authoritarian government.)

      The key lesson here is that systems should be designed without centralized points of control. It's more difficult to start with, but it saves one much trouble in the long term. It's less efficient to start with, but in the long term it's much more efficient.

      One compromise that FOSS has developed is to have a radically authoritarian system, which is easily forked. It seems to combine the efficiency of an authoritarian system during the early days with the liberty of an anarchy. (Forking something takes work, and you've got to convince people. But if the original project isn't treating people reasonably, that can be reasonably easy. And the work of running the project is the payment for the authority of running it.) How that could be generalized outside the FOSS context I'm not certain...but you might think about it.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    71. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by HiThere · · Score: 1

      The response would definitely have been less extreme. Gore was subtler, and less able to use emotional weapons. He wouldn't automatically have all the Republicans on his side, and the Democrats would also be divided.

      OTOH, Gore was just as authoritarian, and would equally have abused the opportunity to strengthen the central government at the cost of the liberties of the populace. But he would have been less blatant about what he was doing. His proposed security measures would probably be less aimed at looking fierce and more at working. And they would also be intended to be permanent. They would probably be less obviously intrusive. But Gore was pushing Carnivore, e.g., before Bush was elected. (I don't remember whether it had been named yet, but he was pushing it.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    72. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      Probably not what the gp is referring to, specifically, but yeah, I've always through the way the Milieu handled government was ideal. Of course, they have psychic powers and so can accurately determine whether a particular individual would not want the job... not quite applicable to our real life situation.

      Seriously, though: random assignment would probably work better than our current system.

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    73. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by GypC · · Score: 1

      DOH!

    74. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by red+floyd · · Score: 1

      In "Imperial Earth", Clarke makes the comment that the best candidate for office is one who is dragged into it kicking and screaming, or words to that effect.

      --
      The only reason we have the rights we have is that people just like us died to gain those rights. -- Cheerio Boy
    75. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Wow8agger · · Score: 1

      I read these platforms as well from this page:
      http://home.earthlink.net/~jmarkels/cp.html

      And I said, wow - that looks great, and wandered over to this page:
      http://www.constitutionparty.com

      Which is where I found this gem:
      "We, the members of the Constitution Party, gratefully acknowledge the blessing of the Lord God as Creator, Preserver and Ruler of the Universe and of this Nation. We solemnly declare that the foundation of our political position and moving principle of our political activity is our full submission and unshakable faith in our Savior and Redeemer, our Lord Jesus Christ. We hereby appeal to Him for mercy, aid, comfort, guidance and the protection of His Divine Providence as we work to restore and preserve this Nation as a government of the People, by the People, and for the People. The U.S. Constitution established a Republic under God, rather than a democracy. Our Republic is a nation governed by a Constitution that is rooted in Biblical law, administered by representatives who are Constitutionally elected by the citizens."

      Yuck.

    76. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1
      Well, wasn't the Washington Sniper branded a terrorist in the courts? Doesn't he count?
      s/courts/press/;
      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
    77. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Wow8agger · · Score: 1

      Whoop - just read that other post, and saw the difference between Constitutionalist and Constitution parties

    78. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're assuming the popular vote is not rigged.

    79. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by 4of12 · · Score: 1

      ...it's going ot take a lot of minds changing...probably just a matter of time

      Changing minds you would hope would be the result of careful rational independent thought on the part of the citizenry.

      But the reality is that minds are changed in abrupt knee-jerk realizations, fueled by emotion, and presented sensationally alongside advertisements.

      I see no reason to hope for any widespread public consciousness.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    80. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by rthille · · Score: 1

      Actually, it is the government. They are making the laws. The citizens (police, DAs, etc) are enforcing those laws. You can call them accessories, but they aren't leading the charge.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    81. Re:The greatest threat to my liberty... by alvint · · Score: 1

      you're missing the point; we know for a fact that the 9/11 attacks wouldn't have happened if gore had been president. therefore, no response would have been necessary.

      pardon me, but this requires a longish explaination/history lesson (i would also like to point out beforehand that i'm an israel supporter):

      if you had listened to al-queada statements since well before the attacks, you would know that their principle reason for the 9/11 attacks is because of the U.S. policy on israel and the palestinians (they always think the U.S. is evil, but this was the recent straw that broke the camel's back).

      these countries hate eachother, and the only way that they can be made to get along is by very strong coercion by the U.S. *on both sides*, which means at least giving the appearance to muslims of keeping israel in check as well as keeping the palestinians in check. the U.S. must look like it is applying pressure on both sides. president clinton did exactly that and (if you can remember back then) we were very close to a peace agreement, and palestinian attacks on israel were a small fraction of what they are today.

      israel, and pro-israel supporters in the U.S., resented the fact that they were so constrained in what they could do to retaliate to terrorist attacks, and israel especially resented basically having to seek permission/approval from the U.S. on how they could retaliate. as a result, some of the more-influential pro-isreali groups in the U.S. seriously disliked the clinton/gore administration and supported the bush run for president.

      when president bush came into office, one of his first policy changes was that the U.S. "would no longer be taking as active a role in the israeli-palestinian peace process". this was standard political payback for pro-israeli groups that supported him during the election. when i heard this statement, i remember thinking to myself, "oh, my God, this will cause nothing but problems." this was akin to someone picking up a time bomb, starting to diffuse it, but then deciding to drop it instead. needless to say, the bomb blew up. the muslim world saw this policy change as giving israel the green light to kick the crap out of the palistinians, and as history shows, the israelis seriously stepped up their retaliatory attacks.

      these problems, according to al-quaeda, is the U.S.'s fault for enabling israel to 'subjugate palestine'. hence, they had to come up with a way to hit the U.S. in a spectacular way. the 9/11 attacks were born.

      but don't believe me, look at any al-quaeda leadership interview and they say basically the same thing.

  13. Listen to your elders... by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Those who would give up essential liberty, to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." -- Ben Franklin

    1. Re:Listen to your elders... by Theolojin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Those who would give up essential liberty, to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." -- Ben Franklin

      "The fetters imposed on liberty at home have ever been forged out of the weapons provided for defence against real, pretended, or imaginary dangers from abroad." -- James Madison, 4th US president (1751-1836)

      --
      Life is short; think quickly.
    2. Re:Listen to your elders... by WombatControl · · Score: 1

      Except that goes against the very idea of government itself. The whole point of civil governance is that we give up certain liberties (like the right to kill people) in order to gain the safety of civil governance. The very Lockean concept of government is that we sacrifice our absolute liberty in the name of the protection of the state.

      Furthermore, the PATRIOT Act is not "temporary safety" it is a measure designed to protect us from a very real threat that has already killed well over 3,000 people in the last few years.

      Every time someone dredges out this quotation it is to make an argument without substance. That quotation is not some truism, and it usually ends up as a dodge from actually discussing the issues behind the PATRIOT Act.

    3. Re:Listen to your elders... by mindstrm · · Score: 2

      There is a difference between security and liberty.

      This is not about absolute liberty.. it is about certain things the US constitution says the government may NOT do.

      3000 people in the US in the last few years. Why do we keep quoting that like such a horrific number? It's not.

      Yes, the event itself was tragic, and could possibly have been prevented.. but far more people than that die from TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS every year, or smoking, or any one of a slew of other things that far, far less money could be spent on solving with far better results, and without eroding the constitution.

    4. Re:Listen to your elders... by Guuge · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Furthermore, the PATRIOT Act is not "temporary safety" it is a measure designed to protect us from a very real threat that has already killed well over 3,000 people in the last few years.

      Yes, well over 3000. The attack on 9/11 not only killed 3000 Americans, it fostered a reckless foreign policy that has killed hundreds more Americans, perhaps 10,000 Iraqi civilians, and who knows how many Iraqi and Afghani combatants. And these numbers continue to climb, despite passage of legislation like the PA. I guess we still have too many liberties, eh?

    5. Re:Listen to your elders... by KingJoshi · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "Those who would give up essential liberty, to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." -- Ben Franklin

      I'm so damn tired of this quote. What is essential liberty? Isn't that the crux of the matter? What you feel is essential may not be for another? Not only that, but that enough people fall into that category that they are the majority and help pass laws that you disagree with?

      I'm not talking about the wisdom of the PATRIOT Act (I oppose it as well), but to continually tout this quote is beyond just tiring. It's just parroting something which sometimes becomes a slogan but lost may be perspective or reasoning.

      And the part about not deserving liberty nor safety is just overboard in my opinion. Hell, I question the worth of most people and think they probably don't deserve to live since many are so selfish and willingly ignorant, but to say that disagreement on this one issue alone would warrant saying they don't deserve neither liberty nor safety is just ridiculous.

      The quote has wisdom in it and it's important to learn from it. But this rallying cry is over used and has long since lost its insightfulness and is now redundant. I could've modded you differently, but I think discussion (and actual discussion versus just one liners) is what more needed.

      --
      In times like these, it is helpful to remember that there have always been times like these. - Paul Harvey
    6. Re:Listen to your elders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      more than 3000 people die in auto crashes each year.

      apply you logic to that. and you will see how foolish yout logic is. dont enen say terrosim is a diffrent story. dont try to cop out on thinking.

    7. Re:Listen to your elders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah.. the age old kharma whoring quote by Ben Franklin posted to every YRO submission. Nice. :)

    8. Re:Listen to your elders... by WombatControl · · Score: 1

      3000 people in the US in the last few years. Why do we keep quoting that like such a horrific number? It's not.



      You tell that to the families who lost their loved ones because our intelligence services couldn't share information with local police.

      Also, remember that when the next attack takes out an entire city. Or if it's a biological attack, when it wipes out several percent of the entire country.
    9. Re:Listen to your elders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "I'm so damn tired of this quote. What is essential liberty?"

      It is liberty and it is essential NOT something you can whittle away at. It is whole or none.

    10. Re:Listen to your elders... by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      My guess is that this essential liberty can be sumed up as 'life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness*' Specifically I would argue that you can define essential liberty as those liberties that are necessary to maintain all others. In this sense, the violations of the second amendment are the most serious. Look up 'arms' sometime, from both then and now. The founders intended the people** to be armed for war

      .

      *The founders ment this to mean something like 'using your own property to create the sort of life that you think will give you the most happiness' or something like that. They viewed this as property rights.

      **In the constitution, when it says citizens, it means citizens. when it says people, it means people. The constitution is consistent on this point. The founders intended for all of the people in the nation to be armed, not just citizens.

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    11. Re:Listen to your elders... by HeghmoH · · Score: 1

      If I say, "I prefer sweet life over any kind of death," one should not start asking, "But what kind of life is sweet? Which parts are sweet, and which are non-sweet?" In this version of the sentence, all life is sweet. Likewise, my interpretation of ol' Ben's statement is that all liberty is essential, and people who think otherwise will rapidly discover their error.

      --
      Mod down posts with a "Free Mac Mini/iPod" sig, they're spam!
    12. Re:Listen to your elders... by True+Grit · · Score: 1
      1. because our intelligence services couldn't share information with local police.


      I hope you don't believe thats actually fixed now. Government agencies not cooperating with one another is absolutely old news. The Patriot Act doesn't fix that, in fact, how do you figure an Act that take away the rights of *citizens* somehow helping with inter-agency communitcation in the *government*?

      1. Also, remember that when the next attack takes out an entire city.


      Which is just about inevitable anyway, its just a matter of time. Israel's attempt at stopping suicide bombers pretty much proves you can't stop it, no matter what you do. One lunatic getting his hands on some old Soviet nuclear warhead and using it is going to happen, its not an 'if', but a 'when'. The question is: does becoming like the enemy, in order to fight the enemy, really the logical thing for a democracy to do? Are you not destroying the very thing you claim to be defending?
    13. Re:Listen to your elders... by KingJoshi · · Score: 1

      Your understanding of liberty and his statment is flawed. To walk down the street and bulldoze over anyone that gets in my way is part of liberty. It's freedom to do whatever the heck I want. Laws restrict liberty but are necessary. What liberties people think are essential is the crux of the matter. Some people in France may favor the ban of certain clothing thinking it's not essential and the restriction of liberty is for the benefit of society. Others may disagree and think the liberty to wear what you want in essential. I'm not trying to defend the ill-conceived Patriot Act, but saying I'm tired of the quote. People say it without realizing there's so much more to the issues at hand and misunderstand the worth of the quote.

      --
      In times like these, it is helpful to remember that there have always been times like these. - Paul Harvey
    14. Re:Listen to your elders... by amplt1337 · · Score: 1
      3000 people in the US in the last few years. Why do we keep quoting that like such a horrific number? It's not.

      You tell that to the families who lost their loved ones because our intelligence services couldn't share information with local police.
      To families that lost loved ones, 1 and 2 seem like much more horrific numbers than 3000.
      --
      Freedom isn't free; its price is the well-being of others.
  14. Ha! by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It took someone from a communist country to change the US into a totalitarian State.

    1. Re:Ha! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, for one, do not welcome these overlords.

    2. Re:Ha! by Pave+Low · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It took someone from a communist country to change the US into a totalitarian State.

      Can you name me any totalitarian country where your remark would have been tolerated?

      --
      SIG:Slashdot: indymedia for nerds.
    3. Re:Ha! by mandalayx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It took someone from a communist country to change the US into a totalitarian State.

      Hello? He FLED AWAY FROM a communist country.

      From the article:
      Dinh's mother escaped with him and five of his siblings to the United States.

    4. Re:Ha! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So therefore... he is still "from a communist country", his personal beliefs notwithstanding. You are just being redundant.

    5. Re:Ha! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So that simply means that he's desensitized to all but the strongest forms of oppression.

    6. Re:Ha! by elmegil · · Score: 1

      Just because the apparatus isn't yet up to speed doesn't mean we haven't tipped the top of the slippery slope.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    7. Re:Ha! by orthogonal · · Score: 1

      Hello? He FLED AWAY FROM a communist country.

      There's an old -- ironically enough -- Russian proverb, that goes like this:

      "Choose your enemies well, for you will become like them."

  15. It was part of the whole post-9/11 deal by Amsterdam+Vallon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Everyone was uber-patriotic and wanting to kill any Middle Eastern man who looked at them wrong.

    There was actually not much debate in Congress. The Patriot Act passed through very easily. The only problem was that it takes away our checks and balances system of government, which is part of what makes American such a great country.

    Don't trust me, though. Read what one website said: "The FBI can now access your most private medical records, your library records, and your student records... and can prevent anyone from telling you it was done.

    The Department of Justice is expected to introduce a sequel, dubbed PATRIOT II, that would further erode key freedoms and liberties of every America.

    --

    Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate. Ex-O'Reilly/MIT employee, now a full-time Google employee.
  16. Overlord's syndrome by presearch · · Score: 1

    Some people never can be satisfied 'less they push somebody else around.

  17. Hypocrisy by eraser.cpp · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "I do, however, recognize that the act has been mischaracterized and misunderstood and has engendered a lot of well-meaning and genuine fear, even if that fear is unfounded."
    Woah he is taking a stand against unfounded fear, isn't that what he is in the business of selling?

    1. Re:Hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Woah he is taking a stand against unfounded fear, isn't that what he is in the business of selling?

      Insert SCO joke here.

  18. MOD THIS DOWN, AC == KNOWN TROLL by bobobobo · · Score: 3, Funny

    Just look at any discussion. Anonymous Coward is a known troll and agitator! It's true. It's true!

    1. Re:MOD THIS DOWN, AC == KNOWN TROLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very good point. But I must agree with the Grandparent that he does seem a troll. How can he say he has lived in the USA for 40+ years, then in another post ask that titles be created so international people, like himself, can understand it better?

    2. Re:MOD THIS DOWN, AC == KNOWN TROLL by nnappe · · Score: 1

      He was stating that he 'thinks internationally', not that he was outside US.
      He was criticizing us-centrism. Let's face it, if I talked of Nunavut without saying its a canadian state, the most common post would be 'what the hell are you talking of?'
      But that does not mean he does not live in the US.

  19. Frightening person, this Dinh. by dominion · · Score: 4, Insightful

    He once said that he was drawn to study the government because he "had seen government that did not work," and he was drawn to the Republican Party because of his hatred for communism.

    Anybody who would be drawn to a political ideology purely based on what they oppose is, in my opinion, a dangerous person. Especially when mixed with the power, money and support that an organization like the Republican party has.

    1. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by GuyMannDude · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Anybody who would be drawn to a political ideology purely based on what they oppose is, in my opinion, a dangerous person.

      Well, I've got news for you: most people vote for whoever they hate the least. Think about it: how many politicans really generate genuine excitement? Very few. The main reason most people go to the polls and vote is because they are afraid of what might happen if "the other guy" gets elected. Hell, why do you think so many political ads are negative? Because they work! They instill fear in the public of the rival candidate.

      You and I may wish for a world where people vote for the candidate they like or join a political party based on affinity with their ideals. But if you factor out the people who put bumper stickers on their car and wave those stupid banners around at political rallies, I think you'll find that most people are drawn to a political party because it's the lesser of two evils.

      GMD

    2. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by Bendebecker · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "Fear leads to hate, hate leads to suffering."
      -Yoda

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
    3. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by CrystalChronicles · · Score: 1

      I would like to know how this 'patriot' act he helped write isn't communist in nature.

    4. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by bobbozzo · · Score: 1
      he was drawn to the Republican Party because of his hatred for communism.

      Wow... True insanity.
      Most (all?) "communist" governments retained control through facism and/or totalitarianism.

      Facism and totalitarianism are both (ultra) conservative philosophies.

      As is the patriot act.

      So maybe it should be:

      He was drawn to the Republican Party because of his love for facism.


      BTW, I went to high school with this guy. He didn't seem insane then, but he didn't talk that much and I didn't really know him.

      --
      Nothing to see here; Move along.
    5. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by john82 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Anybody who would be drawn to a political ideology purely based on what they oppose is, in my opinion, a dangerous person. Especially when mixed with the power, money and support that an organization like the Republican party has.

      Newsflash - The Democrats have the SAME faults as the Republicans. If you don't see that, you're deluding yourself. They're still politicians. It's one of the few things I can agree with Nader about. And your first proposition would classify most of Dean's followers as dangerous. The only message that I ever heard Dean deliver was "Hate Bush". No answers, just hate the other guy.

    6. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      Keep misapplying all those seven dollar words, dude.

      Maybe read a book on what fascism is, if you get the time. It's not what a bunch of hippies used it to mean back in the 60's.

      In fact, study a little political economy.

      --
      ---
    7. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by arazor · · Score: 1

      >Anybody who would be drawn to a political ideology purely based on what they oppose is, in my opinion, a dangerous person. Especially when mixed >with the power, money and support that an organization like the Republican party has.

      Would you say this includes Kerry supporters? I dont support Bush Or Kerry. I find it strange that in about every poll the main reason for supporting Kerry is that is not Bush.

      I think something is wrong when you support someone only because he is not the other guy.

    8. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by corbettw · · Score: 1

      Anybody who would be drawn to a political ideology purely based on what they oppose is, in my opinion, a dangerous person.

      So I guess you won't be voting for either Kerry or Edwards, then? 'Cause they're both campaigning purely on the premise that they are the opposite of Bush.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    9. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by gid-goo · · Score: 1

      Then you weren't ever listening. Doesn't really matter much now though.

    10. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by dominion · · Score: 1

      I'm not a democrat, and I'm not exactly sure why you assumed I was.

    11. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by dominion · · Score: 1

      And, that's dangerous, too. But on a different level. Who is more dangerous, the person who votes a certain way because they hate homosexuals?

      Or the person who tirelessly devotes themselves to a political party, as an activist, a theoretician, a strategist, etc. because they hate homosexuals?

    12. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, I take it you're in principled opposition to all the Democratic voices calling on Ralph Nader to sit out the race, because that would just split the "anti-Bush" vote, and the most important job of the left this year is to defeat Bush?

      After all, that is the main plank of the Democratic Party this year -- opposition to something else.

    13. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by dominion · · Score: 1

      Yes. I'm also opposed to the use of literalism and strawmen arguments.

      I'm not a Democrat, buddy.

    14. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by fbg111 · · Score: 1

      He once said that he was drawn to study the government because he "had seen government that did not work," and he was drawn to the Republican Party because of his hatred for communism.

      Anybody who would be drawn to a political ideology purely based on what they oppose is, in my opinion, a dangerous person. Especially when mixed with the power, money and support that an organization like the Republican party has.


      I beg to differ. During the Cold War, the Democratic Party (their elites and wannabe-elites at least) tended to sympathize with some or all of Communist idealogy and philosophy. For example, Dialectical Materialism was all the rage among the left back in its day, and who else but liberal professors have been glorifing Marxism on American college campuses. It's not shocking that anyone who hated Soviet Communism (as anyone in their right mind should, in hind sight at least), would side with the staunchly, consistently anti-Communist Republicans.

      --
      Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
    15. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Anybody who would be drawn to a political ideology purely based on what they oppose is, in my opinion, a dangerous person.

      So that means everyone who is voting Democrat simply because they hate Bush is a dangerous person?
      Especially when mixed with the power, money and support that an organization like the Republican party has.

      Oh you mean like the power money and support the Democratic party has?

      God why do people always try to pin all this shit on the Republican party when the Democratic party is just as bad if not worse.
    16. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's:
      "fear leads to hate, hate leads to anger, and anger ... leads to suffering" :-P

    17. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by tehdaemon · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't be surprised if people voted this way, (based on who they least hate, instead of on ideals,) because, for the most part, people in this nation have no ideals anymore.

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    18. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by mikelieman · · Score: 1

      "If allegiance to your Political Party is MORE important to you than your Nation, you MIGHT be involved in a Conspiracy to Commit Treason".

      The Parties ARE The Problem. Stop supporting the Corporations known as "Political Parties", and see where we get.

      --
      Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
    19. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by (trb001) · · Score: 1

      Well, I've got news for you: most people vote for whoever they hate the least.

      True, true, and absurd. I think the Democratic candidates on the ticket have based their campaigns around ousting Bush from the White House. I'll always vote for the person I like the most, and it's not the guy saying "Vote for me, I'm better than him", it's the guy with the good ideas that I think can get passed.

      --trb

    20. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dean has nothing to do with the fact that so many people hate Bush. My reduced privacy and liberties take care of that. That is why Dean or Nader will get my vote. I don't know which it will be yet.

    21. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Instant runoff voting for the Presidency is a requirement for democracy in the United States.

      There aren't a lot of other options.

    22. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by Asterisk · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's impossible under the current system for a president to be elected without recieving an actual majority of the votes.

    23. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by Politburo · · Score: 1

      What a joke. I doubt you heard a word Dean said that wasn't filtered by the press. Try watching C-SPAN instead of CNN.

    24. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And interestingly, Wired did not check their facts on Prof. Dinh. He actually began work on the Patriot act in February of 2001. His home page at DOJ has been slimmed down, but he was also one of the primary authors of Patriot II.

      But look at what is there, clerk for Larry Silberman, Whitewater investigation, Clinton Impeachment. This guy is about as right-wing and partisan as they come. And he is obviously becomming what he hates.

    25. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because Dinh joined the Republican party, and not the Democrat party. Maybe you shouldn't jump to conclusions in regards to the author's poliics.

    26. Re:Frightening person, this Dinh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      who else but liberal professors have been glorifing Marxism on American college campuses.

      If they're glorifying marxism, wouldn't that make them... Marxists? Isn't it possible that they aren't liberals at all?

  20. MOD PARENT +1 INFORMATIVE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I too live in the USA for 40+ years and it does destroy our right to privates.

    1. Re:MOD PARENT +1 INFORMATIVE by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      Now that's informative.

  21. The Author by PrionPryon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do we really expect one of the authors to be impartial and objective?

    Disinterested third parties are the analysts we should be interviewing.

  22. Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Government by PM4RK5 · · Score: 5, Informative

    NO, they are wrong. There is a distinct difference between liberties and safety! I don't see how people can be duped into believing that terrorist groups affect liberties!

    The only reason they affect liberties is because Congress passes things like the Patriot Act. Otherwise, all they affect is safety.

    Terrorists affect SAFETY, Congress affects LIBERTY. Get it straight, and we can all stop falling for this crap coming from Washington. If they said these terrorist groups were the greatest threat to our safety, then I'd buy it. But they are, however, NOT a threat to our liberty.

    The Patriot Act is the threat to our liberty, effectively nullifying the Bill of Rights when it comes to searches and siezures, and the right to a FAIR and SPEEDY trial.

    Government disheartens me. So do the people who buy crap like this from them and cannot draw the distinction for themselves. Just my (flaming) two cents.

    This isn't supposed to be flamebait, but mod it as such if you think it is.

  23. The Right Tools by Sparky77 · · Score: 0

    I firmly believe that liberty should not be traded off for some sense of security. I think the harder task is to determine our best tools we can have in order to protect our security, while at the same time ascertain the safeguards that will be necessary in order to protect against abuse of that tool and misuse of it at the expense of privacy or liberty.


    List of Tools To Get To Be Secure:
    1. A board with a nail in it
    2. SELinux

    --
    One bad monkey spoils the whole barrel.
  24. seldom does a government give up power by genevaroth · · Score: 0, Redundant

    "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little
    temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."

    Benjamin Franklin

  25. Stop trolling, you sick fuck. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I too live in the USA for 40+ years and it does destroy our right to privates.

    That's because you are the same person as the parent poster. The anonymous coward who says "mod up" EVERY SINGLE TIME VALLON POSTS SOMETHING.

  26. Re:THE PATRIOT ACT IS A GOOD LAW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lookie, a nazi troll fudding the water for left vs right and liberals an crap. Maby we will all get lucky and alquida will shove a granade up your ass.

  27. The problems with the Patriot Act.... by Prien715 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While the US has previously imprisoned people without access to council, these were in dire times, World War II, US Civil War, etc. While some could argue that these are equally troubling times, I find the argument problematic.

    In both of the above examples, the very existence of the country was at stake, in one of the two, half the US had broken off. The other, millions of people decided to declare war on the US (Germany, Italy, Japan, etc). Despite the tragedy that was 9-11, the entire attack was planned by dozens of people and executed by about 20.

    My second problem is the open-endedness. The suspensions of due process in the above cases were understood as temperary and were lifted as soon as the war was over. These days, presidents don't seem to declare war on things that can possibly be ended by a peace treat (drugs, poverty, terror, etc). Tell me, Mr Bush, is the war on terror going to be over before or after the war on drugs?

    The suspension of due process indefinitely is an abomination to liberty, which I could've sworn was what we were fighting for in the first place.

    --
    -- Political fascism requires a Fuhrer.
    1. Re:The problems with the Patriot Act.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Despite the tragedy that was 9-11, the entire attack was planned by dozens of people and executed by about 20."

      Whether or not THAT is true, we do know there are many more than "dozens" of terrorists.

      And are you calling for a premature end to the war on terror? Whether you like it or not, this IS a serious problem.

    2. Re:The problems with the Patriot Act.... by Lips · · Score: 1

      The war on poverty is no longer being fought, there was a ceasfire long ago.

      (to paraphrase Bill Hicks)

    3. Re:The problems with the Patriot Act.... by Loki_1929 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "These days, presidents don't seem to declare war on things that can possibly be ended by a peace treat (drugs, poverty, terror, etc). Tell me, Mr Bush, is the war on terror going to be over before or after the war on drugs?"

      Absolutely.

      "The suspension of due process indefinitely is an abomination to liberty, which I could've sworn was what we were fighting for in the first place."

      I would argue that suspension at all is an abomination to liberty.

      As for the rest of your comment, I must take issue with a number of things. First of all, you're definitely not a southerner, else you'd be calling it the War of Northern Aggression, which better illustrates the illegal nature of the war. There is nothing in the Consitution telling the Federal government that it had the power to stop secession of one or more states. Thus, as per the 9th and 10th amendments, the right to secede from the union remained with the states and those within those states. The North invaded, conquered, and ultimately burned to the ground a foreign nation because it was unable to survive, economically speaking, without it. But I digress.

      You use the 'Civil War' (not getting into a semantecs debate) as one example of a time when citizens were imprisoned without due process. Luckily, we've had a court ruling on the matter, entitled Ex Parte Milligan, in which the imprisonment of a citizen under martial law was reversed, and in which the Supreme Court held that the very declaration of martial law was, itself, unconstitutional. From the court's decision:

      ----------

      "Martial law cannot arise from a threatened invasion. The necessity must be actual and present; the invasion real, such as effectually closes the courts and deposes the civil administration."[Emph mine]

      "If, in foreign invasion or civil war, the courts are actually closed, and it is impossible to administer criminal justice according to law, then, on the theatre of active military operations, where war really prevails, there is a necessity to furnish a substitute for the civil authority, thus overthrown, to preserve the safety of the army and society; and as no power is left but the military, it is allowed to govern by martial rule until the laws can have their free course. As necessity creates the rule, so it limits its duration; for, if this government is continued after the courts are reinstated, it is a gross usurpation of power."

      And most importantly:

      "Martial rule can never exist where the courts are open, and in the proper and unobstructed exercise of their jurisdiction. It is also confined to the locality of actual war."

      My personal favorite part of the decision:

      "But, it is insisted that the safety of the country in time of war demands that this broad claim for martial law shall be sustained. If this were true, it could be well said that a country, preserved at the sacrifice of all the cardinal principles of liberty, is not worth the cost of preservation. Happily, it is not so."[Emph mine]

      ---------------

      Ergo, example 1 was shown to be illegal. Shall we look further at example 2?

      In World War 2, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, which called for all the 'japs' to be rounded up and put into internment camps. This already looks pretty bad, doesn't it? In Korematsu V. United States, the Supreme Court gave the 'thumbs up' to the internment camps, rolling over like trained puppies for the popular wartime President. However... Over time, people actually got their heads on straight and took a good look at what had happened. In 1976, President Ford issued Proclamation 4417 which terminated Executive Order 9066. It was called "An American Promise", and it promised that such an action would never again be taken, while acknowledging that it was wrong in the first place. In 1983, a Federal district court ruled the detention

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    4. Re:The problems with the Patriot Act.... by WiseWeasel · · Score: 1

      Not as serious as hunger and extreme poverty . . . How much good will could we have built for ourselves had we spent the hundreds of billions this war has cost us on solving some of the greatest humanitarian crises going on in the World? How many people would we have given a future to, and prevented from becoming "terrorists" in the first place? Which path is more effective at eliminating a problem such as insurgency in a very small fraction of the population. Do you honestly think invading Iraq has made us any safer from terrorists? Get a clue, man!

      --
      "I like systems, their application excepted", George Sand (French)
    5. Re:The problems with the Patriot Act.... by Prien715 · · Score: 1

      Very good post and thanks for the legal history.

      My post was not an attempt to justify (or unjustify) either instance of habeus corpus being suspended but rather an attempt to show the rationale used in these cases did not hold true in the modern context.

      Having said that, I generally agree with your post, except that in fact I do live (and have lived) in southern states throughout my life (with the possible exception of my current state, which would've fought on the side of the confederacy if it weren't for a rather large army presence at the beginning of the war).

      In the case of the Japanese-Americans, I think interment should've been voluntary and under much different circumstances. Most people were forced to give up their homes and possessions for little/no money. But when fighting a war, people become blind. I know people who fought in WW2 who hate all people of Japanese descent and that was even more true during the war. Ironically, most of the Japanese-Americans were very loyal to the US; the Japnanese-American division of the army who fought during WW2 (in Europe) was the most decorated unit of the entire war.

      When they were willing to fight and die for the same country with such vigor, it's sad that anyone could question such devotion.

      --
      -- Political fascism requires a Fuhrer.
    6. Re:The problems with the Patriot Act.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The suspension of due process indefinitely is an abomination to liberty, which I could've sworn was what we were fighting for in the first place." I would argue that suspension at all is an abomination to liberty. Your due process isnt being suspended dammit.

    7. Re:The problems with the Patriot Act.... by J053 · · Score: 1
      My second problem is the open-endedness. The suspensions of due process in the above cases were understood as temperary and were lifted as soon as the war was over. These days, presidents don't seem to declare war on things that can possibly be ended by a peace treat (drugs, poverty, terror, etc). Tell me, Mr Bush, is the war on terror going to be over before or after the war on drugs?

      This bothers me, too. Only today, George Tenet in testimony before Congress said that even if Osama and other Al-Quaida leaders or captured or killed, terrorist organizations can still threaten US citizens and interests (paraphrased, but close to what he said).

      In other words, we won't be able to relax our "vigilance" against terrorism until there are no more terrorists anywhere in the world who are opposed to US policies. In other words, never.

    8. Re:The problems with the Patriot Act.... by TJmoney · · Score: 1

      These days, presidents don't seem to declare war on things that can possibly be ended by a peace treat (drugs, poverty, terror, etc). Tell me, Mr Bush, is the war on terror going to be over before or after the war on drugs?
      The government has a lot more to gain by declaring war on things that can't be ended by a peace treaty, because they become part of the political dogma and in turn increase the government's controll. Once somthing has been considered bad for long enough, it is just by definition bad, and a reason no longer needs to be supplied. Marijuana really isn't any worse for you then alcahol, and even has posative effects, but it has been shown quite a few times recently that voters deny legalization by a landslide, just because "its bad." The cold war ended, and the government needed a new on-going war to pour money into, and came up with the war on drugs and the war on terrorism. Bush saw the war on terrorism as a great oppritunity to unify everyone who doesn't think for themself by creating fear, and any democratic canidate who doesn't agree will be labeled as un-patriotic or inviting more attacks. Same with the war on drugs, anyone who doesn't support it is seen by the public as having no morals, and won't be elected. So the democrats are forced to follow suit on these things, and the republicans gain an upper hand by saying "hey, that was our idea."

      In my opinion, the reality is that these wars just cause more damage. They create destructive drug cartels, and tell the terrorists that they succeeded in making us scared as hell, and are destroying the democratic basis of our country. People need to wake up and realize what is really happening, and think beyond the slick marketing of these wars by the government.

    9. Re:The problems with the Patriot Act.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      For some people it is. An american citizen can be labeled an enemy combatant and be refused access to counsel, and refused access to a fair trial by his peers. Constitutional rights have become constitutional privileges. Most people are still given them, but don't expect everyone to always get them in the current anti-constitutionalist judicial culture.

    10. Re:The problems with the Patriot Act.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      One little gripe about the civil war. It imposes unreasonable weakness on our country for states to be able to seceed at will. If there was an orderly means of doing so, then I would argue that it should perhaps be allowed, but states cannot simply be allowed to come and go from the union at will.

      For instance, what happens if a state drops out today, do they take their fraction of the national debt with them? In addition, what if it's North Dakota? Do they get all our nuclear weapons? If Kentucky seceeds do they get all our gold?

      The problem with succession is that it forces the union to be prepared to cope with the loss of a state at very little notice, and thus it is almost impossible to defend against real threats. It's hard to place research centers, army bases, etc... when it must be remembered that if you place too nice of a prize within a given state then it will just run off with it.

      That is the core of the problem, in my opinion.

      -Tyler
      tjw19@columbia.edu (posted anon, I forgot my pwd)

    11. Re:The problems with the Patriot Act.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Voluntary internment? Is there anybody who would voluntarily go into a concentration camp? I appreciate and agree with the general tone of this post but the voluntary internment comment is just asinine.

      FWIW, I know people who grew up in the American concentration camps. Interestingly, they don't hate all Americans of Caucasion descent. But living in a concentration camp is an experience that changes you even more than having your home and all your possessions taken from you. It's sad and infuriating that there are people who would do the same thing today to all Muslim Americans if given the opportunity.

      Also, to nitpick - the Japanese-American regiment in WW2, the 442nd, was more than the most heavily decorated unit of the war. They were the most heavily decorated unit of their size and length of service in the history of the United States military. A lot of the survivors will tell you that it's because the brass back at HQ threw them into situations that they would never risk white American lives for.

  28. I said it before... by NeoTheOne · · Score: 2, Insightful

    and I'll say it again. Gun laws dont keep guns out of the criminals hands.

  29. Novel idea here... by GoMMiX · · Score: 1, Insightful

    How about we get all the illegal aliens out of the country and lock down the borders.

    Then, make some less restrictive immigration requirements so people can come over here LEGALLY. (I know of many who wish to, but can't... a problem I attribute to all the illegal immigrants)

    Then, and only then, should we be worrying about allowing unconstitutional wire taps, searches, seizures, imprisonment, etc... Those things should only be thought of as a last resort.

    And it's not the last resort. It's just what the government wants - not what's best for the people.

    Well, in my opinion anyway.

    As for the threat of Al-Queida... Well, one simply wonders why Osama Bin-Laden was 'allowed' to escape anyway. US Occupation of Afghanistan should have swallowed the middle-east until we captured him. Instead, we went to Iraq for an easier - more exposed target.

    If Osama was cought/dead - we wouldn't even be hearing about this wonderfull work of constitution-warping legislation.

    1. Re:Novel idea here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, one simply wonders why Osama Bin-Laden was 'allowed' to escape anyway. US Occupation of Afghanistan should have swallowed the middle-east until we captured him. Instead, we went to Iraq for an easier - more exposed target.

      How do you know this? Prove it.

    2. Re:Novel idea here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Papers, please.... What? ID left at home? A likely story. Please turn around and put your hands against the wall...

    3. Re:Novel idea here... by El · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      How about if we send all those damn Europeans back to Europe where they came from, and return this country to it's rightful owners, who ran things just fine until those damn foreigners started showing up about 500 years ago? And while we're on the subject... if you lazy white people could just learn to pick you're own lettuce, there wouldn't be half as many illegal immigrants, would there?

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    4. Re:Novel idea here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Repeat after me:

      "Armed CITIZENS are NOT terrorists."

      Now all you people out there who do not own firearms, go out and buy one, train with it, become proficient.

      Me, I would feel safer if the feds required all taxpayers to carry concealed firearms. That would deter both crime and terrorists.

      JoeR

    5. Re:Novel idea here... by john82 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As for the threat of Al-Queida... Well, one simply wonders why Osama Bin-Laden was 'allowed' to escape anyway. US Occupation of Afghanistan should have swallowed the middle-east until we captured him. Instead, we went to Iraq for an easier - more exposed target.

      Have you considered the SIZE of the Middle East, let alone Afghanistan? That's a damn big area to "swallow". To say Bin-Laden was "allowed" to escape implies that he was ever captured to begin with.

    6. Re:Novel idea here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A-FUCKING-MEN.

      All kids should learn a gun when it's easy for them to absorb it. At the very least, I should be able to, as a parent, teach MY kids how to use a gun. Certain people would have that made 100% illegal, however, since we must not be able to trust anyone under 18, in any form.

    7. Re:Novel idea here... by madcow_ucsb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Armed CITIZENS are NOT terrorists."

      How quickly we forget the Oklahoma City bombing...

      It doesn't matter who you are or if you've got guns or nukes or what. It matters what you do with them.

    8. Re:Novel idea here... by gid-goo · · Score: 1

      Listen man, you're arguing with a 15 year old kid who's been getting his knowledge of the world from his dad and Ayn Rand. I know it's tempting but sometimes its better to just pass on by.

    9. Re:Novel idea here... by elmegil · · Score: 1
      If Osama was cought/dead - we wouldn't even be hearing about this wonderfull work of constitution-warping legislation.

      Huh? The Patriot Act was passed way before we went to war in Afghanistan. Or do you mean it would be being quietly ignored by "the experts"?

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    10. Re:Novel idea here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If Osama was cought/dead - we wouldn't even be hearing about this wonderfull work of constitution-warping legislation.

      Don't worry, osama's probably already been caught, and is now in a secret government cell somewhere. A week before the presidential election the news will be made public that bin laden was 'just' caught, with lots of video footage. Republican victory in the election ensues.

    11. Re:Novel idea here... by terrymr · · Score: 2, Funny

      There was a recent case where a local proscutor argued that taking a shooting class was proof of premeditation for murder. I wonder if he has the same views about traffic school :-)

    12. Re:Novel idea here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't trust myself not to get too mad. If I had easy access to a firearm at times, well... I'm glad I don't.

      I don't think you'd trust me with one, I don't trust you with one, and I'm not sure either of us should.

      In other words, nothing could make me feel less safe than knowing that everyone who got pissed off would have a gun. I fear that we'd be a little too eager to reach for them (think of the real "Wild West" and why they called it that).

      I don't care to live like that. I don't think it's the Utopia you seem to think it is. Seems mostly like a great way to get shot.

      God help us with the people who'd have one on hand while drunk... or on drugs... or...

    13. Re:Novel idea here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How quickly we forget the Boston Tea Party.

  30. You walk around with blinders on, then by Winkhorst · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You really don't have a clue, do you? You think the fact that a bunch of little piggies feeding at the corporate trough represent anyone but their own greedy little power hungry selves? You think because after being subjected to a bunch of hot-button advertisements, people actually vote for them, that they somehow represent the best interests of the population?

    --
    "Is this Winkhorst a nova criminal?" "No just a technical sergeant wanted for interrogation."
    1. Re:You walk around with blinders on, then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      You really don't have a clue, do you? You think the fact that a bunch of little piggies feeding at the corporate trough represent anyone but their own greedy little power hungry selves? You think because after being subjected to a bunch of hot-button advertisements, people actually vote for them, that they somehow represent the best interests of the population?

      Well, yeah; not everyone can be a liberal.

    2. Re:You walk around with blinders on, then by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      You think the fact that a bunch of little piggies feeding at the corporate trough represent anyone but their own greedy little power hungry selves?

      And you can't or won't even consider your opponents outside of parody. Get real, brother, and try to see beyond your stereotypes.

      --
      ---
    3. Re:You walk around with blinders on, then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hulk hogan, is that you? i'm your biggest little hulkamaniac!

  31. UBER-TROLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Professional software developer since 1984 | Linux consultant on the side

    Didn't you say you were a CS professor at "Slaughter University"?

    1. Re:UBER-TROLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and he was also an associate professor at Howard CC - that one didn't last long.

      Next week, it'll be "VB Programmer since 1928"

  32. Hammer and Nail by maliabu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    the old saying "if the only tool you have is a hammer, you will tend to see every problem as a nail". maybe that's why everybody's treated as terrorists now.

    1. Re:Hammer and Nail by ratamacue · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The saying applies to all of government, not just the "war on terrorism". Government is pure force -- everything government does or possibly could do is rooted in force. (Government holds the unique "right" to initiate force as a means to an end -- this is what defines government and seperates it from everyone else.)

      Government's "tool" is force, and indeed, force is the only tool they have. (If government had the tool of voluntary association, it wouldn't be government. It would be private enterprise.)

  33. Before we get into a flame war... by Piethon · · Score: 0

    I would just like to have ONE discussion here where there is no political flaming! Is it too much to ask that we stop fighting and have a nice, nonviolent conversation? But then again, I'm new here.

  34. Re:Name one civil liberty that has been violated by PrionPryon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This question is a bit slippery because it is difficult to name civil liberites at all. Even the ones that aren't being taken away. It might be a better measure to ask people how they feel about their freedom. Do people think twice about doing certain things that they might not have done before. Do they feel their privacy is being encroached upon. Are they more worried now about what the government can do to them.

    Civil liberty is a gut feeling, not a simple enumeration.

    Being locked up for no listed crime, with no represnetative, for being of a certain faith and descent, is what i would term a violated civil liberty.

  35. Good Intentions Today by rossz · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Good intentions today means nothing tomorrow. Any powers given to the government will eventually be abused. So I really don't care that the good men and women in law enforcement are trying to protect me from terrorists. I want my Constitution back, damn it!

    Just look at the history of law enforcement. They begged for the ability to seize the property of drug dealers, and were granted that power by short sighted politicians. Now that power is used to steal cars from people never even charged with a crime - in complete violation of the Constitution, but what's the shredding of that moldy old paper when stopping evil drug dealers?

    --
    -- Will program for bandwidth
    1. Re:Good Intentions Today by k8er · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'd like to add to that that not many Americans have been killed by foreign terrorists. The bulk of those were probably in 9-11. How many innocent people have been the victim of abuse of power by individuals in law enforcement? I'll bet it adds up to quite a lot more. I don't have a problem with law enforcement having power to stop bad people, but they should always be watched by and answerable to someone else to make sure that there are no individuals with this power doing the wrong thing. My biggest fear is that their power will grow to a point that they will be able to disappear folks. Not much you can do if you get disappeared.

    2. Re:Good Intentions Today by jsebrech · · Score: 1

      Well, theoretically the supreme court is supposed to do the watching. However, the inherent flaw is the way supreme court justices are appointed. This should be done by direct nationwide election to have any semblance of democracy. Secret suggestions to the president who then makes an arbitrary choice between them is not a good way to select justices.

  36. Well.. by Loki_1929 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Come on, folks, of course he's going to defend the PATRIOT ACT - he wrote the damn thing. Of course he's going to defend its enforcement - he helped enforce the damn thing. And of course he's going to be vague about the illegal/unconstitutional parts of the act, or of its enforcement - you think he wants to go to prison?

    I support Viet Dinh's use of his 5th Amendment rights in this article.

    What I don't support is the many parts of this act, and its enforcement, that are illegal, unconstitutional, immoral, and so far beyond the scope of Federal powers as to shock the imagination. I'm about ready to start looking into how we can find a strong libertarian presidential candidate who has a good chance of being elected. Along with a willing Congress, I'd like nothing more than to see the Federal government stripped down better than an unattended Corvette in south-central LA on a Friday night.

    I want to see the Federal government up on cinder blocks, with the states standing around checking out their new goodies. Things are getting out of hand. We're spending more than $400 Billion a year on our military, just so we can stretch it to the breaking point by playing parent to the world. We're spending... well, we don't know how much we're spending on the very intelligence agencies that watch our every move. Why don't we know how much we're spending? Sorry, that's classified. Well, what are you doing with my money? Sorry, that's classified. Why is it classified?! It's my money! Sorry, that's classified. Well what am I getting in return for my unknown investment? Safety. Could you be more specific? Sorry, that's classified.

    It's about time for a change. I wonder how much longer it will be before Americans can get together enough courage to dismantle the bulk of the Federal government. Are we ready for 10 - 20 years of readjustment, the end result of which is far more freedom and a return to the Constitutional Republic we once had? Or shall we sit on our collective asses for a bit longer while Uncle Sam's goons start doing random cavity searchs to see what we might be hiding?

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    1. Re:Well.. by psykocrime · · Score: 1

      I'm about ready to start looking into how we can find a strong libertarian presidential candidate who has a good chance of being elected.


      Gary Nolan is running, has some name recognition, and seems like a viable candidate to me.

      Michael Badnarik is another candidate with some potential.


      Along with a willing Congress, I'd like nothing more than to see the Federal government stripped down better than an unattended Corvette in south-central LA on a Friday night.


      Likewise.

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    2. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Join the Free State Project and move to New Hampshire. http://www.freestateproject.org

    3. Re:Well.. by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      I just don't think it's going to happen like that. There are two major parties in this country, the Republicans on the left, and the Democrats on the left. (No, it's not a typo, check the ACU's list of beliefs against this administration's actions)

      I think what we need to do is get a Libertarian with some electability on the ballot as either a Democrat or a Republican. The best case scenario would have Libertarians winning both parties' nominations. The trick is getting people on the ballot who aren't well known as having Libertarian tendancies - a 'sleeper' if you will. Normally, I'm very much against political trickery or any kind (you can imagine how warm and fuzzy the current political climate makes me feel), but in this case, I think the good far outweighs the bad. The other problem is that we're not going to be able to do much with Dems controlling the Congress, and not a whole lot more with moderate Republicans controlling the Congress. I think with some moderate Dems, conservative (true Conservatists, not these neo-con idiots) Republicans, and a handful of Libertarians with Ds or Rs next to their names, we could really hammer some changes through.

      In a perfect world, I'd say let's run a 3rd party candidate. In this world, I say we start filling Congress and the courts with 'undercover' folks who are willing to act like Ds or Rs until the time is right to start fixing things. I think the American people would go for a tax plan that eliminated taxes altogether within about 15 - 20 years. Most Americans have no idea that the (unconstitutional) income tax is a fairly new animal, enacted as some sort of temporary money train that turned into a maglev.

      Time to derail the bitch and send part of the cargo to our state governments.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    4. Re:Well.. by nomadic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think the American people would go for a tax plan that eliminated taxes altogether within about 15 - 20 years. Most Americans have no idea that the (unconstitutional) income tax is a fairly new animal, enacted as some sort of temporary money train that turned into a maglev.

      a) the income tax is not unconstitutional. In fact the Constitution explicitly grants the government the right to levy income tax. And even before that amendment it wasn't unconstitutional.
      b) the income tax is not "a new animal". There was income tax over a hundred years ago.
      c) most Americans wouldn't trade basic order for the anarchy of no federal government. They just wouldn't.

    5. Re:Well.. by psykocrime · · Score: 1

      I think what we need to do is get a Libertarian with some electability on the ballot as either a Democrat or a Republican. The best case scenario would have Libertarians winning both parties' nominations. The trick is getting people on the ballot who aren't well known as having Libertarian tendancies - a 'sleeper' if you will. Normally, I'm very much against political trickery or any kind (you can imagine how warm and fuzzy the current political climate makes me feel), but in this case, I think the good far outweighs the bad.

      You're not the only one who feels that way. I believe quite a few Libertarian candidates who run for office wind up doing just what you describe. That actually seems to be a constant point of debate within the party... run AS a Libertarian, or disguise yourself as a Demopublican to get elected...

      I for one, if I ever run for public office, will probably run as a Libertarian. In practice, a combination of both is probably best anyway. Actually, what would be nice, would be to get one of those "sleeper" types elected as a Republican or Democrat, and have him/her publicly renounce their party membership and "convert" to the Libertarian Party while in office... Talk about generating some publicity.

      I remember when Bob Smith (NH senator) quit the Republican Party and went Independent. That created quite a stir, eh? If we could get somebody that high profile to defect, it would REALLY give some credibility to the Libertarian Party.

      And actually... not quite as high profile on the national level, but fairly high profile in California... Judge Jim Gray did just quit the Republican Party and joined the Libertarian Party, and is apparently running for Senate in CA this coming election... If he could score a victory, or at least make it close, in that race, that would be a huge win for Libertarians.

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    6. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      400B of a 2.4T budget. Sounds like national security is getting less then 1/6th of the national budget.

    7. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I remember when Bob Smith (NH senator) quit the Republican Party and went Independent. That created quite a stir, eh?"

      Yes, that did create quite a stir. But you'll have to remind me which constituency Bob Smith currently represents.

    8. Re:Well.. by psykocrime · · Score: 1

      None at the moment. But he is running again, this time in Florida. Unfortunately, he re-joined the Republicans, last I heard.

      Still the point is, getting a major player to "defect" would credibility to a 3rd party. That didn't happen with Smith, because when he first announced his decision, he didn't go from the Republicans to another party, he went independent.

      Later he fiddled about with the American Taxpayers Party (now known as the Constitution Party) before going to to the Republicans.

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    9. Re:Well.. by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      2003 it is supposed to be over 530B. But stop comparing it to the national budget. In 2000 global military spending was under 800B (US spending that year was just under 300B). I see no justification for the US to be spending as much as everyone else combined*.

      (*assuming nobody else upped their spending, we are at about 51%. bad assumption I know but it is in the ballpark)

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    10. Re:Well.. by Asterisk · · Score: 1
      In fact the Constitution explicitly grants the government the right to levy income tax.
      Thanks to the 16th amendment, which is arguably diametrically opposed to the spirit of the first ten.
      the income tax is not "a new animal". There was income tax over a hundred years ago.
      The 16th amendment was passed in 1913 - 91 years ago. There were attempts during the late 19th century, post-Civil War, to enact income tax, all of which were struck down by the courts; the 13th amendment was passed largely to get around the courts.

      And lets not forget that even in 1913, the original income tax claimed a miniscule portion of the GDP; no one could have imagined then that the average taxpayer would have a third of his income confiscated. It wasn't until the 'New Deal' that the sort of large-scale weath redistibution projects we now take for granted were begun.
      most Americans wouldn't trade basic order for the anarchy of no federal government. They just wouldn't.
      No, but I think most would happily trade the despotism of an unrestrained government for a return to basic constitutional order.
    11. Re:Well.. by Mr.+Piddle · · Score: 1


      If the income tax were constitutional, then please explain the purpose of the sixteenth amendment. Also, the federal income tax has been around less than a century. Also, it has been demonstrated that the income tax exceeds the amount that citizens are willing to pay. Too much money goes to the federal government, who has too many programs and responsibilities that it stole from the states. The states should know better.

      --
      Vote in November. You won't regret it.
  37. BULLSHIT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Patriot Act is now being used for non terrorist cases.

    1. Re:BULLSHIT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's nuts. The following interview with guitarist Helios Creed last year seems to touch on a similar matter, to quote:
      Oh okay. I didn't know you got arrested. I didn't hear about that.
      Yeah, I got arrested about terroristic threatening, believe it or not.
      Really? You!!?!
      Yeah.
      For what!?
      A cop came into my house, and I was just sitting there with a bag of weed trying to mellow out. I was a little drunk, and I told him to get the fuck out of my house. It's my castle and you have no right coming in here. And it just turned into a skirmish. Next thing I know, they beat the crap out of me and took me to jail and arrested me for terroristic threatening.
      Terroristic?!!?
      Yeah! 'Cuz I threatened 'em to get out of my house or I'd throw my COUCH at 'em, of all things.
      How can you bring terrorism into something like that?
      Yeah. They can.
      Good lord! So what was the punishment?
      The punishment was 100 days in jail and five years probation. That means - I've been on two and a half years probation - that means if I walk across the street and get a jaywalking ticket, I could go to jail for five years. Or if I get a speeding ticket. Or if they caught me smoking a joint. Or anything happens. I'll go to jail for the full five years - not even the time that I've even done.
  38. Proving the parent's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lots of conjecture and hand waving in your post.

    Long on wind, short on facts.

    1. Re:Proving the parent's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee, that's just like its parent... only is was a lot more insightful.

    2. Re:Proving the parent's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't kid yourself.

    3. Re:Proving the parent's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  39. Using 9/11 as an excuse by BlueEar · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I guess I would trust Bush'es administration a tad more if they were not using the excuse of 9/11 to prosecute organizations such as Green Peace. A more or less complete story can be found in The Miami Herald. If they are capable of using such antiquated law as ''sailor-mongering,'' (intended to deal with people would board a ship and use liquor and prostitutes to lure away the crew) to prosecute organization that is trying to stop illegal logging, how can you trust them they won't use Patriot act in some insidious way?

    --
    A religious war is an adult version of a fight over who has the best imaginary friend
    1. Re:Using 9/11 as an excuse by fermion · · Score: 1

      Or if they didn't call any group that will not cow-tow to them terrorists.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    2. Re:Using 9/11 as an excuse by tealover · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I believe his Education Secretary just called the NEA (I think) a "terrorist organization". They are actually a national union of teachers.

      He allegedly said it in jest but it surely was in poor taste and it no doubt if a true reflection of the administration's view of the organization and indicative of their insensitivity to anyone that opposes them.

      --
      -- You see, there would be these conclusions that you could jump to
    3. Re:Using 9/11 as an excuse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the same way they prosecute gays in Texas and other states in the south - sodomy is still illegal in many of those places.

    4. Re:Using 9/11 as an excuse by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      One thing that people do forget is that many a law curtailing liberty and privacy to give law enforcement have come before congress, under many a presidential administration, and many times they were thrown back.

      The only reason PATRIOT passed this time is that Congress and yes, America, was cowed into it by fear.

      I honestly doubt that any other person or party would have done anything different, heck, PATRIOT was passed practically unanimously, meaning that both major parties and probably many of the independents / other parties signed on.

    5. Re:Using 9/11 as an excuse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the NEA has a socialist agenda, is militant about supressing religion, and has consistenly attacked capitalism and our moral values.

    6. Re:Using 9/11 as an excuse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like Al Queda!

      Except for the socialism part... and the suppressing religion part... and the "moral values" part...

      hrm...

      Are you sure this wasn't just a bit of polemic? "Everybody who disagrees with me is a filthy terrorist!"

    7. Re:Using 9/11 as an excuse by eaolson · · Score: 1
      It's the same way they prosecute gays in Texas and other states in the south - sodomy is still illegal in many of those places.

      Haven't been paying much attention to the Supreme Court lately, huh?

  40. Re:THE PATRIOT ACT IS A GOOD LAW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anne Coulter is my inspiration

  41. Patriot Hysteria by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    The war on terror has finally, as some critics always warned it would, whipped up a dangerous hysteria. It just so happens that the hysteria has taken hold among critics of the war on terror. They argue that the USA Patriot Act is a combination of the Alien and Sedition Acts and Kristallnacht, in a smear campaign that threatens to roll back policies that have made Americans safer after Sept. 11.

    The campaign includes over-the-top editorial writers (the Cleveland Plain Dealer calls the act "the seed stock of a police state"), raving civil libertarians (American Civil Liberties Union: "a disturbing power") and chest-beating presidential candidates (Howard Dean: erodes "the rights of average Americans"). According to Wisconsin's Democratic Sen. Russ Feingold, you should sell your stock in Amazon.com -- the Patriot Act has made Americans "afraid to read books."

    The challenge to critics should be this: Name one civil liberty that has been violated under the Patriot Act. They can't, which is why they instead rely on hyperbole in an increasingly successful effort to make the Patriot Act a dirty phrase.

    Many of the new powers under the act -- such as "the roving wiretap," which allows the government to continue monitoring a target who switches phones -- aren't really new. They give counterterrorism investigators the same powers investigators already have in mob cases. Opponents of the act must explain why Mohammad Atta should have greater freedom from surveillance than Tony Soprano.

    The fact is that federal authorities cannot do any of the nasty things under the Patriot Act that critics complain about -- electronic surveillance, record searches, etc. -- without a court order and a showing of probable cause. A federal judge has to sign off on any alleged "violation of civil liberties."

    Two particular provisions of the act rile critics. The Republican-controlled House -- demonstrating that uninformed hysteria is bipartisan -- recently voted to ban funding for Section 213 of the law. Under Section 213, law enforcement can delay notifying a target that his property has been searched. These delayed-notification searches require a court order, and they can be used only when immediate notification would jeopardize an investigation.

    Such searches already existed prior to the passage of the Patriot Act, and the Supreme Court has upheld their constitutionality. Federal counterterrorism investigators have asked for delayed searches roughly 50 times during the past two years, and the average delay in notification has been about a week -- hardly totalitarianism.

    Another target of critics is Section 215. It allows investigators to seize documents -- including, theoretically, library records -- from a third party if they bear on a terrorism investigation. The ACLU says that this means the FBI has the power to "spy on a person because they don't like the book she reads." But this is another power that already existed. Grand juries have always been able to subpoena records if they are relevant to a criminal investigation. The Patriot Act extends this power to counterterrorism investigators and requires a court order for it to be used.

    Critics want to eviscerate these sections of the act, and more. They should bundle their proposals together and call them "The Zacarias Moussaoui Protection Act," after "the 20th hijacker," whose computer wasn't searched prior to Sept. 11 due to civil-liberties concerns. We have already forgotten the importance of aggressive, pre-emptive law enforcement. The locus of forgetfulness is the Democratic presidential field, as Rep. Dick Gephardt, Sen. John Edwards and Sen. John Kerry all voted for the Patriot Act and now attack Attorney General John Ashcroft for having the temerity to use it.

    Out on the Democratic hustings, it's as if Sept. 11 never happened. Of course, no organization contributed so much to the lax law enforcement that made possible the murder of 3,000 Americans that day than the ACLU. Mohammed Atta and Co. should have remembered it in their prayers as they screamed toward their targets. If the ACLU gets its way on the Patriot Act, some future successful terrorists will want to remember it in their prayers as well.

    1. Re:Patriot Hysteria by Artifakt · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As you mention, the average delay in notification has been about a week. Now what's the longest delay in notification? Better yet, have there been any cases where that delay continued past the point of an arrest or dismissial of charges?
      As you mention, documents "theoretically" include library records. Has there been an actual case where library records were presented as the sole qualifying grounds for more court orders, particularly an arrest warrent? How about being just one of several items of evidence? (and were any of the other items worth more as evidence?)
      I don't know the answers to any of these questions offhand. You may, or you may feel the arguements you've already presented are enough for you to trust the current law. I do know who should have been asked these questions and a lot more.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
  42. The greatest threat by Molina+the+Bofh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I bet it'll be modded as flamebait, but it's my oppinion anyway, so I'll post it.

    I think right now at this time and this place the greatest threat to American liberty comes from Bush and their sympathizers rather than from Al-Qaida.

    This works this way: An unjustifiable attack to other countries (like Iraq) leads to more anger from its citizens and even other countries. Now we have not just one group of loons who hate the US (Al Qaida), but many.

    --

    -
    Roses are #FF0000, Violets are #0000FF, find / -name '*base*' |xargs chown -R us && mv zig greatjustice
    1. Re:The greatest threat by psykocrime · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, you're 100% correct. Less intervention in the affairs of foreign (sovereign) nations would do more to cut down on terrorism than creating patriot acts, and departments of homeland security / the new gestapo, etc.

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    2. Re:The greatest threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "All we are saying is give peace a chance..."

      Look, we TRIED appeasement with the terrorists. Billy C. tried it. It didn't work. Shut up.

    3. Re:The greatest threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Less _unilateral_ intervention in the affairs of foreign states... I'll admit i'm european and am therefor biased, but in this day and age unison in thought and action counts.

    4. Re:The greatest threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see the flaming liberal mods have struck again: that comment gets "troll" but the parent doesn't?

    5. Re:The greatest threat by donutello · · Score: 1

      I bet it'll be modded as flamebait, but it's my oppinion anyway, so I'll post it.

      Yeah, right. Which Slashdot have you been reading? Anything Anti-Bush always gets modded up here.

      I think right now at this time and this place the greatest threat to American liberty comes from Bush and their sympathizers rather than from Al-Qaida.

      Oh, wonderful. So now everyone who agrees with the President is threatening the liberty of Americans. Great argument you have going there!

      This works this way: An unjustifiable attack to other countries (like Iraq) leads to more anger from its citizens and even other countries. Now we have not just one group of loons who hate the US (Al Qaida), but many.

      I call bullshit. The attack was not on Iraq. It was on its leadership. The attack has not led to many groups of loons (sic) who hate the US. Follow the situation in Iraq. The attacks there are being led by Al Qaeda who, in their increasing desperation, have gradually begun to alienate their support base by attacking them (the victims of the attacks in Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Iraq are mostly Arabs and Muslims, not westerners).

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    6. Re:The greatest threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree, Comrad!

      Is Soviet Russion Al-Qaida detains YOU!

    7. Re:The greatest threat by demachina · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You are also 100% correct. The best way to fight terrorism would be to:

      - Seek a lasting and balanced peace between Israel and the Palastinians. This open wound has been there for so long we've almost become oblivious to the fact that it is at the root of the worst of the Arab animosity to the West. The Israeli's are engaged in acts against the Palastinians that would be called ethnic cleansing if they were happening in Yugoslavia. The U.S. has always backed Isreal at every turn, no matter how wrong they are or how brutally they treat the Palastinians. A key reason, the Friends of Isreal is one of the most poweful special interest lobbies in the U.S. A politician can't even suggest a balanced treatment of Isreal and the Palastinians without doing the equivalent of grabbing the third rail. Howard Dean said just that and he was crucified for it.
      - Stop supporting despotic Arab dictatorships like Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. The administration spends a lot of time wailing about what a despot Saddam was, crowing about democracy in Iraq and conveniently ignoring the regimes that we call friends that are nearly as brutal as Iraq in suppressing dissent. Iraq under the Baathists offered vastly greater freedom to women then you will find in Saudi Arabi or any other Islamic state. The administration made great propaganda with public executions and dismemberment by the Taliban and Saddam but they are also routine in Saudi Arabia.
      - Get American (Infidel) troops out of the Middle East. Arab culture simply can't cope with the decedence of American soldiers, liberated American women and an army that is overwhelmingly JudeoChristian in their midst. It just smacks of the Crusades. Its generally forgotten that Al Quaida's core issue was the fact there were American troops roaming all over Saudi Arabia, the Muslim holy land, for more than a decade between the two wars in Iraq. One of the few plusses of the Iraq invasion was it provided a mechanism for withdrawing American troops from Saudi Arabia.

      --
      @de_machina
    8. Re:The greatest threat by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      Then as a European you should know that, especially in the past decade or so, "unilateral" is only a dirty word when the French aren't signing on. I don't recall any hue and cry from most of Europe over NATO's unilateral actions in the former Yugoslavia, your own back yard. After all, Milosevic slaughtering Muslims in his own country is pretty internal.

      But hey, if you don't want US troops we still have deployed in the Balkans there any more, I'm sure many Americans would be more than happy than accomodate you.

    9. Re:The greatest threat by Guppy06 · · Score: 0

      Neutrals would attract the ire of terrorists because their neutrality is perceived as aid to their enemy and terrorists would prefer to attack soft targets in neutral countries to raise awareness of their own plight (yadda yadda). The logic of terrorism is to attack people far from the source of conflict, and the further the better. If you would rather attack soft civillian targets instead of hardened military ones, then you would rather attack unsuspecting neutrals than a wary enemy.

      Besides, by saying what you're saying you're taking an interesting stance on WWII. The Japanese justification for attacking the US was our interference hindering their war against China and others (such as cutting off our oil exports). Would it have been better if we were "neutral in word and in deed" with reguards to Japan's militaristic expansion, slaughtering civillians, etc. instead of trying to take a stance one way or the other?

    10. Re:The greatest threat by Molina+the+Bofh · · Score: 1
      I call bullshit. The attack was not on Iraq. It was on its leadership
      Yeah ? Tell this to the 10.000 Iraqis dead in their homeland. "Oh, sorry for killing you, kid, we just wanted to take your leader down."
      The attack has not led to many groups of loons (sic) who hate the US.
      ...yet. And this only because defense is in paranoid mode now. Wich, of course, means more money spent.
      --

      -
      Roses are #FF0000, Violets are #0000FF, find / -name '*base*' |xargs chown -R us && mv zig greatjustice
    11. Re:The greatest threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NATO's unilateral actions

      You do realize that NATO (the North Atlantic Treaty Organization) is itself a multinational body, and that therefore by definition it cannot undertake a unilateral action?

    12. Re:The greatest threat by drooling-dog · · Score: 1
      I think right now at this time and this place the greatest threat to American liberty comes from Bush and their sympathizers rather than from Al-Qaida.

      Apparently you haven't heard that the American Federation of Teachers is now a "terrorist organization", according to Bush's Secretary of Education. Since there are many more teachers than Al-Qaida members, I'd say that makes them the biggest threat...

    13. Re:The greatest threat by Guppy06 · · Score: 2, Informative
      1. NATO does not act for the UN as a whole and did not have a resolution by the UN Security Council dirctly supporting what they did in the Balkans. Russia, China, or both would have vetoed such a resolution.
      2. The US is not the only country involved in the fighting in Iraq, therefore by your own definition the acts of that coallition cannot be called unilateral.
    14. Re:The greatest threat by demachina · · Score: 3, Interesting

      A few things in his comments that are particularly worrisome:

      "It may well be that a number of citizens were not charged with terrorism-related crimes, but they need not be. Where the department has suspected people of terrorism it will prosecute those persons for other violations of law, rather than wait for a terrorist conspiracy to fully develop and risk the potential that that conspiracy will be missed and thereby sacrificing innocent American lives in the process. "

      This could be interpreted as all suspected terrorist are guilty of other crimes for which they can be convicted, but I imagine its more likely that it means, if the government can't make a terrorism conviction stick, they fabricate other offenses which are an easier frame to make. An example which immediately comes to mind is Capt. James Yee, the muslim chaplain at Guantanomo who was facing a death penalty espionage charge for collaborating with the enemy. The Army's case completely collapsed but rather than let him go with an apology he is instead up on charges for adultery and using army computers to look at porn which can be used to put him in a Federal pen for a decade:

      http://www.counterpunch.org/wright02022004.html

      "I do recognize that our Defense Department officials have an awesome responsibility to play in not only prosecuting the war in Afghanistan and Iraq but also continuing to protect the American homeland"

      I would really like to know what a DOJ official thinks "Defense Department officials" are doing to protect the Homeland that is apart from fighting foreign wars. The DOD's role in our nation's security is to prosecute foreign wars. It is the DOJ, National Gaurd and Homeland security's role to defend the homeland. The Posse Comitatus act of 1878 was put in place precisely to preclude the DOD from acting as a domestic enforcement agency because we wanted to discourage the military from seizing control of our homeland which is an all to common occurence in nation's where the military takes an active role in the homeland.

      http://www.dojgov.net/posse_comitatus_act.htm

      I'm cool with the DOD flying aircraft over the U.S. to secure the airspace but I don't ever want to see them practicing their trade on the ground unless we are really invaded.

      "We should all applaud each other for getting into the game and risking injury because of it, because at the end of the day we all win if we do engage."

      He's conveniently choosing to ignore the fact that his team has the vast resource of the DOJ, DOD, etc. on his side. Any ordinary citizens who jumped in to this game would risk grave, if not mortal, injury. He also doesn't seem to understand how games work. Unless there is a tie and no won wins, there is always a winner and a loser. The point spread is decidely in the favor of his team.

      You could hope that somehow we could just all go out and vote and fix this but that is more than a little naive. The majority in this country isn't going to think about or understands the implications of the Patriot Act in their lives. They are going to hear their President, with his bully pulpit, use every speech to summon waves of fear, invoke images of 9/11 and then offer premptive warfare and the patriot act as the solution for all our fears. If we do go out and vote in November we can choose between John Kerry who voted for and cheerled the Patriotic Act when he thought it was popular and George Bush who signed it.

      --
      @de_machina
    15. Re:The greatest threat by DanielJH · · Score: 1

      Now that we are in Iraq...what do we do about it? I'm guessing that you want us to get out of the contry and let the chips fall where they may. Do you remember why the average Iraq hates us? Do you know why they distrust us? Because we left them high and dry the first time around. Many of them died because we left. The hatred from us leaving this time will be twice as bad. We have no choice but to try and form a stable government and back away slowly. This is what we are doing.

      I don't even what to think about what will happen if we simply leave now.

    16. Re:The greatest threat by Temporal+Outcast · · Score: 1

      You forget

      - Get troops out of Afghanistan
      - Stop supporting Pakistan and bring stability in the Indo-pak region - for the life of me, I cannot understand why the US finds the need to be nice to Pakistan rather than India which is a democratic and upcoming economy.
      - Stop being so nice to China has openly admitted to selling weapons to Pakistan and the Arab nations.

      Just my 0.02.

      --

      Vote for a Man, Vote for Bush!
      Not a liberatarian flipflop hippie.
    17. Re:The greatest threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The attacks there are being led by Al Qaeda...

      You dumb fuck, you really beleived this? Jesus, where were you when the brains were being handed out? Did your mother smoke during pregnancy, or something?

    18. Re:The greatest threat by k_head · · Score: 1

      Yes we can all thank our lucky stars for the brave efforts of the ethiopians.

      --
      The best way to support the US war effort is to continue buying American products.
    19. Re:The greatest threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In reading the first set of charges laid against two inmates in Guantanamo today I was amused to see they are charged with war crimes:

      "attacking civilians, attacking civilian objects"

      I'm pretty sure attacking "civilian objects", isn't a war crime by any accepted international law. I think we are talking about attacking buildings here.

      Maybe you could make a case for "attacking civilians' as a war crime but the U.S. has targeted and successfully killed millions of civilians in every war since at least World War II. Its an unavoidable side effect, if not the whole point, of strategic bombing campaigns. The obvious example is the U.S. used weapons of mass destruction, two nuclear bombs, to level two Japanese cities full of civilians. The U.S. and Britain leveled every city in Germany including the firebombing of Dresden which rivaled a nuclear weapon in the devestation. If this is the standard for a war crime you are going to have to charge nearly every bomber pilot in the last 55 years.

      If these guys were part of 9/11 charge them with murder but using these lame war crimes charges makes these tribunals more of a farce than they already are.

      In the same charges one of the defendents is cited thus:
      "Mr. Bahlul is described as a Qaeda propagandist who made a recruiting video that celebrated the bombing of the American destroyer Cole in 2000 in the Yemeni port of Aden." This would tend to suggest he was actually involved in an attack on a military target or maybe he wasn't even involved in the attack but instead made a propaganda film about it after the fact.

      In another amusing twist, the appeals process in these tribunals is from a court of military officers, to the Secretary of Defense to the President. You may as well just take them out and shoot them because they aren't going to be found innocent on appeal with this stacked deck.

      If the detainees are convicted and sentanced, the DOD still reserves the right to detain them indefinitely, after they serve their sentance.

      To date neither defendant has met with their U.S. military appointed military lawyers. The DOD has so far been unwilling to grant security clearance to translators. You see anyone who can speak Arabic is inherently under suspicion as a terrorist and can't hold a security clearance which is probably one reason our intelligence about Arab countries is so dismal.

    20. Re:The greatest threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get your facts right! It wasn't the AFT that was called "terrorist"--it was the NEA. And Rod Paige has apologized.

      BTW, has John Kerry apologized for calling the Republicans "legislative terrorists" back in 1996?

    21. Re:The greatest threat by demachina · · Score: 1

      All religions have zealots that demand everyone convert to their twisted view of the world or die. If you want to cite this as an issue then you can just as easily reference the Spanish Inquisition, the Crusades (which Arabs still remember), or supposedly Christian missionaries who compelled indigenous people to convert or die.

      If you want to marginalize these extremists then deprive them of the inflammatory issues they use to spread and justify their cause. People listen to Islamic fundementalist who want to wipe out Infidels when they can point to the large body of evidence that suggests Jews and Christians are trying to wipe out or at least humiliate and subjugate Arabs, starting with the crusades and ending with the Palastinians, the current arab group being subjected to a new Diaspora that may ultimately lead to their extinction as a nation.

      If religion sects can stop fanning each others extremist flames maybe the moderates will regain control and these sects will remember that religions should be positive influences instead of being obsessed with and dedicated to murder in various forms. It is a source of constant dismay to see how many wars and how much killing has been done in the name of religion. Just as the Catholic church seems to have been destroyed from within by pedophiles, you have to suspect most religions are under the control of people who hold the teachings of their religion in utter contempt.

      --
      @de_machina
    22. Re:The greatest threat by Laser+Lou · · Score: 1

      I think that the fact that you were modded up so high reflects on the character of the Slashdot; a forum dominated by liberals. Every voice expressing a different opinion gets modded down. I'm nearly ready to quit reading it because of this.

      --
      No data, no cry
    23. Re:The greatest threat by rhuntley12 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'll have to disagree with some of your #1 point. Ethnic cleansing? What the hell? How many times has Israel just gone off and killed people? How many times have they said they want to push the Arabs to the sea and wipe them out? Oh wait... It would not be hard for Israel to completely wipe the floor with them. Building a wall to keep them out does a good job at the ethnic cleansing right? Makes them kill them easier? So by a Palestinian blowing himself up in a bus and Israel retaliating by blowing up a few cars of militants they are trying to cleanse the world of Palestinians? Okay, got you. Other then that part I agree with you. We should stop supporting governments, well stop paying them off in Egypts case and get our troops out.

    24. Re:The greatest threat by cyril3 · · Score: 1
      as easily reference the Spanish Inquisition, the Crusades (which Arabs still remember), or supposedly Christian missionaries who compelled indigenous people to convert or die.

      If I was a 16th century spanish jew, a 12th century palestinian or an Inca I would cite them. I am however a 21st century western white christian and its not the spanish inquisition, the crusaders or the conquistadores I have to worry about. Its a few extremist islamists.

      People listen to Islamic fundementalist who want to wipe out Infidels when they can point to the large body of evidence that suggests Jews and Christians are trying to wipe out or at least humiliate and subjugate Arabs and when the local governments are happy to encourage that belief because it takes peoples minds off the shitty existance they have imposed on them to support the elites lifestyles and idology.

      Just as the Catholic church seems to have been destroyed from within by pedophiles

      Badly damaged I agree but destroyed from within is probably incorrect. I think there will be catholics around for a while yet.

    25. Re:The greatest threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      None of you tree-huggers seem to understand terrorism isn't something the US can negotiate with or market to by 'changing its foreign policy to create less anger'. If, hypothetically, the US was to suddenly cut off all of its involvement in world politics, pull its troops back, and recall all its foreign nationals, the terrorists would still hate us -- the US, and just about any state that isn't ruled by a Muslim theocracy. There are some problems in this world that can only be solved with force applied over time.

    26. Re:The greatest threat by HeghmoH · · Score: 1

      I bet it'll be modded as flamebait, but it's my oppinion anyway, so I'll post it.

      As far as I can tell, with a very few exceptions, the entire population of slashdot holds exactly the same opinions you do. Now why would you think that you would get modded down, as flamebait no less, for an opinion held by 90% of the people (and therefore 90% of the mods) on this site? Unless you're trying to get sympathy mods.

      --
      Mod down posts with a "Free Mac Mini/iPod" sig, they're spam!
    27. Re:The greatest threat by Aceticon · · Score: 1

      I have to agree with your disagreement.
      At most one can say that Israel has pretty much trashed the Palestinian economy (Palestine has something like a 50% unemployement rate) and commited acts of terrorism against the Palestinians - "targeted assasinations" (done with Apache hellicopters and killing several passerbys), shootings teenagers throwing stones, razing whole neighbourhouds because they are "harboring terrorists" or to create security buffer zones around jewish colonats (make 10000 people homeless in their own land in order to "protect" 1500 "colonists")

      The Israeli government has however NOT tried (even) any sort of ethnic cleansing.

      I believe that the terrorist attacks by some Palestinian groups, using human-bombs, against innocent Israeli civilians are wrong.

      I also believe that the terrorist attacks by the Israeli government, using troops, tanks and Apache helicopters against innocent Palestinian civilians are also wrong

      In my view, a government that no mater what supports and defends one of thoses sides is at the very least deeply biased.

      In my view a government that sells or provides money to one of the sides to aquire the instruments they use in attacking the civilians in the other side is criminal.

      The US government has consistently given political support to the current Israeli government and provided rougly 3 billion dolars worth of military help to Israel per year. What are we (non-americans) expected to conlude from this?

      My only hope is that saner minds in both the Israeli and the Palestinian sides can actually take control of the whole situation and bring this situation to an end (i believe the vast majority of Palestinians and Israelis would rather have peace than blow each other's brains out)

      From the US Government i don't expect anything constructive - maybe a little posturing of displeasment with the Israeli government (the diplomatic equivalent of wiggling one's finger and saying "naughty boy") but not really the acts of a unbiased, neutral 3rd party.

    28. Re:The greatest threat by demachina · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If you look at the causualty count for the intafada in the last year you will find Isreal is killing Palastinians at a rate of about of 10-1 versus Jewish casualties. Some of the Palastinians are probably combatants but many of them are innocent chilrdren.

      http://www.btselem.org/English/Statistics/Total_ Ca sualties.asp

      Remember Isreal's decision to commit a targeted assassination of a guerilla leader by using an F-16 to bomb an apartment building full of innocent women and children.

      Ethnic cleansing doesn't necessarily mean whole sale massacre. In milder forms it means targeted killing, destruction of homes and compelling an ethnic group to migrate out of their homeland. Isreal has been doing all of these to the Palastinians since World War II.

      Isreal is in an akward position as it tries to maintain a democracy because Arabs constitute a large percentage of their population and the Arab growth rate is much higher than the Jewish growth rate so unless they force emmigration of Palastinians they would eventually lose control of their government which they won't allow. As a result they are obligated to force Palastinians out of Isreal popular and in to refugess camps or shrinking ghettos in the West Bank and Gaza. On top of that Isreal routinely seizes Palastinian land in the west bank to create Isreal settlements decide to extend Isreal's defenses and further marginalize the palastinians. The new security wall Isreal is building is cutting deeply in previously Palastinian land in the west bank. It is essentially a new and massive land grab and will be followed by forcing Palastinians out of Isreal's newly expanded borders.

      Its proven impossible to estimate the actual deaths of Kosovo Albanians in Serbia's ethnic cleansing campaign but it is in the range of a few hundred to 10,000 which is conceeded to be an extreme number created by NATO for propaganda purposes. It is certainly in the same range as Palastinian deaths in the Intafada, since 2000.

      --
      @de_machina
    29. Re:The greatest threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BTW, has John Kerry apologized for calling the Republicans "legislative terrorists" back in 1996?

      It boggles my mind. Why should he apology for saying the truth ?

    30. Re:The greatest threat by dave420-2 · · Score: 1
      No, intervention in foreign matters is essential for every single country in the world. It has to be done correctly, though. That's the kicker. "The road to hell is paved with good intentions", as they say. If the US got involved sensibly with other nations, there'd be no problem. It seems, however, that the US's idea of international politics and aid involves helicopters and cruise missiles. That's where everything goes wrong.

      Look at Europe - nothing but countries involved in other countries' dealings, but no-one's getting blown up there.

    31. Re:The greatest threat by dave420-2 · · Score: 1
      You missed out the $1bn+ in [military] aid the US gives Israel every year. Don't think the US is just at the sidelines offering support - it's in the thick of it, giving guns, tanks and bulldozers to the bad guys.

      The US should feel so guilty about all of that, yet it's seen as some sort of fantastic National monument.

      I know the Anti-Defamation League in the US does a lot of good work, but they seem to have a habit of condemning anything that puts judaism or israel in a negative light (kind of like how staunch "patriots" do the same with anything that does the same to America).

      When you have large groups of people blindly following an ideal, without using their own minds, trouble starts.

    32. Re:The greatest threat by Inebrius · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, if we had given the same support to the Arab nations surrounding Israel, or the Palestinians, the conflict would have been over with.

      The Israelis would have been relocated 100 miles to the West...

    33. Re:The greatest threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess that your mind will just have to remain boggled. To call legal acts of legislators "terrorism" is absurd and defamatory. Of course, I assume that you have your own definition of "terrorism" that you can apply to anyone with whom you disagree.

    34. Re:The greatest threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have to realize any numbers from Palestinians about their death tolls are usually greatly exagerated. Did you see the footage of the car being blown up when the Palestinians claimed it was in street full of children, when in actuality it was an empty street? Have you done humanitarian work in the Middle East and seen it for your own eyes compared to what is heard? There are always innocents killed the difference here is, and I believe it to be a big one, one side TARGETS and aims for women and children. I've been opinionated pretty bad on hearing about casualties of any conflict for the most part, especially third world countries. Hell, even in the US our casualties aren't reported exactly, unless you happen to be family.

      I agree that perhaps the wall should have been pulled back a bit, but I don't agree on Palestinian land, there was never a Palestine. I'm still a bit iffy on the wall, I think perhaps if it was pulled back a little it should be fine. I don't know how well it will work, but I hope it does help. I really don't understand why people get in such a fit over conquered land, especially when it was conquered when that country got attacked, how many countries didn't kill people to be in their land?

      Well, chances are this is going to be a garbled mess, my posts always get bunched togather, and I'm almost late for a midterm....

  43. Right...Al-Qaida...Suuuuuuuuuure.... by metrazol · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yeah, because, you know, Al Qaida has hundreds of representatives in every town and city in America. Al Qaida knows where I live. Al Qaida expects a check from me every April. Al Qaida builds my roads, and runs my schools, and comes to my house every day. Al Qaida can get primetime speechs broadcast at any time. Al Qaida has tanks. Al Qaida has a million men and women ready to storm any place on Earth with overwhelming firepower within hours of being given the order. Al Qaida has nuclear submarines. Al Qaida has over a thousand silos in middle America, brimming with thermonuclear might.

    In a head to head battle between the US and Al Qaida, I'm betting on Al Qaida.

    I'm also looking to buy a bridge, and maybe a beach front condo in Arizona.

    --
    "Life's funny sometimes." "And sometimes it isn't." --Cat's Cradle
    1. Re:Right...Al-Qaida...Suuuuuuuuuure.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Al-Qaida wants you and any other American dead (does the FBI?), has killed thousands of random Americans at a time (has the FBI?), and has made known that it intends to do the same over and over, or (it hopes) on an even larger scale (by pursuing weapons of mass destruction).

      And you're saying the Feds are more dangerous to America as a whole (or the average American like yourself) because they "build my roads, and run my schools, and... can get primetime speechs broadcast at any time,"!

      wtf? Are you serious?

      Sure, our nation has an army. But its intention isn't to kill you... its to protect us from them. If you don't want to be held as an enemy combatant, then do yourself a favor:

      *don't fly to the Sudan to attend terrorist training with an Osama Lieutenant

      *don't raise financial support for organization on the Feds list of organizations that support terrorism

      Is that too much of a restriction on your freedom?

    2. Re:Right...Al-Qaida...Suuuuuuuuuure.... by metrazol · · Score: 1

      Your two examples are fantastical. I think people who train with terrorists definitely should feel the long arm of American law enforcement stabbing them in the back.

      What I don't support is sneak and peek warrants, arrests where the Feds don't have to tell anyone who they've arrested, what for, or where they are being held. What I especially don't like is this assumption that Al Qaida was after "me." Those planes weren't targeted to kill (yes, they did do that, but bear with me.) The hijacked airliners killed just about 3,000 people, which puts them well below drunk driving, heart disease, and tripping, falling down some stairs and breaking your neck, on the mortality sheet. What the image of the World Trade Center collapsing did is scare the living daylights out of millions of Americans. Congress included. Honest to goodness fear. The dead? An unlucky few who were the victims of a few dozen extremists' last desperate act. If Al Qaida wanted to kill people, they'd have been better off, oh, I dunno, buying a McDonald's franchise or opening a drive through liquor store that didn't check ID. Mass casualties was not the goal. Terror was.

      The rest of us lived. We now have to make choices that will keep all of us safe. Safe from violence, yes, but safe from each other more so.

      --
      "Life's funny sometimes." "And sometimes it isn't." --Cat's Cradle
  44. Hey, dumbass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The Holocaust was nothing if not a near-infinite series of "relatively minor problems."

    Fuck Godwin. I reserve the right to learn from history, even if you don't. If you're not scared half out of your mind, you're not paying attention.

  45. "Flamebait" by Pave+Low · · Score: 0, Troll
    I love how on slashdot any differing opinions from the majority is usually targetted as "flamebait".

    Looks like the same people complaining about abuse of government power have no problem abusing moderation power to shut down viewpoint that don't match their own.

    Nice job.

    --
    SIG:Slashdot: indymedia for nerds.
    1. Re:"Flamebait" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee, I don't know... your sig itself qualifies as flamebait! Aren't you even a little bit concerned that our current president favors the first constitutional ammendment ever designed solely to deny equal rights to certain people? Do you think the government should tap my phone because I have Moslem friends and relatives? What part of the concept of "Equal Protection Under the Law" are you not quite clear on?

    2. Re:"Flamebait" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's not that your opinion is different, it's that you're plain and simply wrong.

      The Patriot act violates the Constitution, the Declaration of Independance, and common sense.

  46. Re:Name one civil liberty that has been violated by presearch · · Score: 1

    Yeah, tell me that when we bump into each other in the concentration camp city 10 years from now.
    Then again, with that mindset, you'll probably be one of the guards.

  47. Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about a perl script to randomly select some cases and delete the rest? This will make for a more manageable case load and of course create a job to code and maintain that script.

  48. Worth a look by mfchater · · Score: 1

    www.infowars.com This website is full of fact concerning the Patriot Act.

  49. Well, if you ask me... by Moofie · · Score: 5, Insightful
    There is no question that the last 28 months of peace in America, where not another life has been lost on American soil to terrorism, would have been much more difficult without the USA Patriot Act.

    I think that somebody who doesn't understand the distinction between correlation and causation has no business whatsoever rewriting the Constitution.
    --
    Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    1. Re:Well, if you ask me... by shione · · Score: 2

      so right you are.

      He is like saying "there are no elephants in my garden therefore the chilli covered peanuts on the lawn works"

    2. Re:Well, if you ask me... by Moofie · · Score: 2
      If indeed that is your fear or that is your perception then engage in the democratic process. Back up your argument, back up your belief with facts, marshal evidence in order to convince those who are engaged in the process of governance.

      Yeah, I think we should have a long, detailed discussion about whether we should keep around that pesky writ of habeas corpus, and the right to confront your accuser, and the right to examine the evidence against you. I think all those liberties aren't really essential, but should only be granted when it's convenient for law enforcement.

      Oh wait, when I put down my CRACK PIPE, that doesn't sound like nearly as good of an idea.

      I thought Ashcroft was bad, but this guy has dronk the Kool-Aid.
      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  50. Typical media script by Daniel+Quinlan · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The Slashdot story is perhaps interesting rhetoric and umm... advocacy, but when I read the story, the thing that jumped out at me is that the questions are generally vague and there are very few specific questions about the substance of the Act. It falls prey to the typical media script of "Some critics say [insult character of interview subject]" or "It has been written that [insert oversweeping charge]". Honestly, it seems like Viet Dinh's replies are very matter of fact and he answers most of the questions as best and as openly as can be expected given the questions. If he does not come out seeming like a fascist, it is either because the interviewer did a poor job, because he's not a fascist, or both. I'm sure that won't stop people from making their own conclusions based on little or no evidence, though. (Oh my god, he gave detailed answers!)

    I'd be very interested in someone asking Viet Dinh substantive questions about specific concerns raised in the Patriot Act, but I'm unable to draw much of any conclusion from reading this article, especially not the same alarmist conclusion that the story submitter has drawn.

    Another interpretation I could make, especially based on the story submitter's comments, is that the critics of the Patriot Act are equally incapable of discussing the ramifications of the Act as are its supporters. Unfortunately, it's the job of the critics to do a good job criticizing and they get far too hung up in rhetoric and name-calling to take most of them very seriously and given that the law is now on the books, I think they're going to need to change their tactics if they want to have any substantive effect.

    Oh crap, I seem to be falling prey to the standard media script of analyzing process rather than issues.

    1. Re:Typical media script by grozzie2 · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      but I'm unable to draw much of any conclusion from reading this article

      You missed the obvious conclusion, it's right there in the article
      -----------------
      In 2000, he also wrote a friend-of-the-court brief for the Supreme Court on behalf of Florida voters who favored George W. Bush's win in the contested presidential election.
      -----------------

      A political debt was owed....

  51. OK whats more dangerous Communism or Republicans? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm drawn to libertarianism because it opposes government so I'm a dangerous person?
    Well watch out motherfucker and that goes for whoever modded your bullshit comment "insightful".
    Seriously mod parent troll.

  52. everybody's al Qaeda by segment · · Score: 1

    Hasnt anyone noticed that anything bad that happens get s/^/al Qaeda/g attached to it. Sure they're some shitty losers, but heck I'm starting to think our own gov is just as much of a loser for a) using al Qaeda for every damn excuse to justify some shoddy law b) claiming al Qaeda any time something happens. Now there silly little slashdotters if you don't follow our terrorists color coded M&M system, go against RFID tags that watch you while you shit, create disharmony because your VoIP, PPP, DHCP, connections are monitored, hell your whole life is monitored... you just might be a terrorist.

    Get real. "There is no distinctly American criminal class except Congress." -- Mark Twain

  53. Todays Quote... by kiwioddBall · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - Benjamin Franklin

    1. Re:Todays Quote... by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      What ever happened to:

      "A Penny Saved is a Penny Earned."

      or

      "I in no way was involved in her becoming with child."

      or

      "She has syphilis? Oh no!"

      --
      ---
  54. How apropos to discuss the Patriot Act by craXORjack · · Score: 3, Funny

    President George Dubious Bush was on the tube tonight asking Congress to pass a constitutional amendment banning homosexual marriage. I guess he must figure that for every constitutional amendment he destroys the right thing to do is to put one back.

    --
    Liberals call everyone Nazis yet they are the closest thing to it.
    1. Re:How apropos to discuss the Patriot Act by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      Jesus Saves*! *Except if your homosexual, jewish, yiddish, black, asian,... ~X Random Quote: "He's the president. If he doesn't know what's good for you, who does?"

      --
      ~X~
    2. Re:How apropos to discuss the Patriot Act by eclectic4 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the one he would like to put back would literally add discrimination. He wins again...

      --

      "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." - Daniel Boorstin
    3. Re:How apropos to discuss the Patriot Act by Mr.+Piddle · · Score: 1


      I was willing, out of compassion for a weak man, to give GWB the benefit of the doubt. However, with his support of the marriage amendment, his true colors are not debatable. Not only is he a bigot, his bigotry is founded in religion making him totally unfit to be the President. It is truly essential that in November he is given only the option of clearing his stuff out of the White House. He doesn't even deserve a going-away party.

      --
      Vote in November. You won't regret it.
  55. Asking a Vietnam refugee... by HotNeedleOfInquiry · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    About civil liberties is like asking Jack Valenti about fair use.

    --
    "Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
    1. Re:Asking a Vietnam refugee... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Posting as an AC because I just moderated in this thread.

      Believe it or not, there are some of us who are here by choice, and not birth. And we treasure the amazing liberties that we have here, and not in our countries of birth. What a Vietnamese refugee knows about the hunger to live free of worry from his government and free of worry from the enemies of his government could speak volumes about the U.S., but you're to busy making bad analogies to listen.

    2. Re:Asking a Vietnam refugee... by HotNeedleOfInquiry · · Score: 2, Informative

      And you obviously missed the whole point of the outrage against the Patriot's act, and the sick irony of a Vietnam refugee having authored it. I don't know anything about your situation. Maybe you do understand the US culture and love of freedom, but to me, the Partriot act is as ironic as the old joke "we had to destroy the village in order to save it". Go home and read "A bright and Shining Lie" then lecture me about Vietnamese and their understanding of American liberty.

      --
      "Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
    3. Re:Asking a Vietnam refugee... by El+Cubano · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Asking a Vietnam refugee... About civil liberties is like asking Jack Valenti about fair use.

      Wrong. Asking a Vietnam refugee about civil liberties is more like asking DVD Jon about fair use. Jack Valenti knows nothing about fair use because he never lost the right; a Vietnamese refugee has losh his civil liberties.

      My parents fled from Castro's regime in Cuba (which came to power in when they were teenagers). Consequently, they have a deeper appreciation for liberty than any natural born American I have ever met. Why? Because they had liberty and it was taken. They don't want to get it taken again. I imagine that Vietnamese refugees are similarly inclined.

    4. Re:Asking a Vietnam refugee... by HotNeedleOfInquiry · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You're still not getting it, folks.

      Just cause you came from a repressive government doesn't make you an authority on the US values of liberty. You certainly may love liberty here in the US, but don't tell me that you're qualified to speak authoritatively on the subject.

      Our concept of liberty is a somewhat subtle and contradictary thing. It involves tolerance of low-level civil disobediance, basic distrust of all forms of government and law enforcement, and most of all, the understanding that the only true guarantee to liberty is in the Bill of Rights and it's fair interpretation by the courts.

      Congress doesn't give us freedom, Viet Dinh's law doesn't give us freedom. The FBI surely doesn't give us freedom. The only thing that gives Americans freedom is the Bill of Rights. Until you understand that, don't lecture me on freedom and American values.

      --
      "Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
    5. Re:Asking a Vietnam refugee... by Frater+219 · · Score: 1
      Our concept of liberty is a somewhat subtle and contradictary thing. It involves tolerance of low-level civil disobediance, basic distrust of all forms of government and law enforcement, and most of all, the understanding that the only true guarantee to liberty is in the Bill of Rights and it's fair interpretation by the courts.

      No.

      The only true guarantee of liberty is for people -- every one of us, or enough of us to outvote the sniveling scum who bend over for tyranny -- to stand up for it. If you don't vote, you cannot expect the courts to be any good, since elected officials appoint the judges. If you squirm your way out of jury duty, you give up your most potent right of review over the acts of law enforcement and other arms of the government, in exchange for temporary convenience.

      Freedom is no more a gift from judges and lawyers than it is a privilege handed out by kings. Freedom is ours by our nature, as long as we care to defend it.

      There are four boxes to be used in defense of freedom: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. No, make that: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Use in that order.

    6. Re:Asking a Vietnam refugee... by skywatcher42 · · Score: 1

      One thing to consider is that Castro's regime represented an increase in liberty for most Cubans. Prior to Castro, it was ruled by a brutal dictator (Batista), who was supported by the American government. While Castro may have restricted certain political freedoms, the fact is that most Cubans are far better off today than they would have been under Batista's rule. So the point is that while people may seem properly motivated (opposed to Castro, terrorists, etc), it is often the government and liverty they claim to love which has actually created those problems. Imagine a Vietnam where we had helped Ho-Chi Minh (excuse the spelling) instead of forcing him to go to the Chinese for independence from his white colonial rulers, or a Cuba where we had supported a democratic government instead of the more economically conveninent Batista.

    7. Re:Asking a Vietnam refugee... by djlowe · · Score: 1

      Acutally, you are wrong about this:

      The only thing that gives Americans freedom is the Bill of Rights

      The Bill of Rights merely enumerates a few inherent rights of humans that the Founders believed were so important that they should be pointed out to the world. It doesn't *give* us those rights, nor any rights at all for that matter, because they believed that we are all born with them.

      One of the reasons that this is such an important distinction to make is the ever-growing perception that government in general, and the US Federal government in particular, exists as the repository of our rights as citizens.

      This isn't true at all, you see, and directly opposes the Founders' vision of a minimal Federal government existing only for those purposes clearly stated in the Constitution.

      Regards,

      dj

    8. Re:Asking a Vietnam refugee... by HotNeedleOfInquiry · · Score: 1

      Excellent answer. It would get you an A+ in 6th grade Civics. Unfortunately, you show appalling ignorance of today's reality. I suggest you put away your Civics book and do some reading.

      --
      "Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
  56. You can't! Thats funny as Hell! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Civil liberties-try oh THE BILL OF RIGHTS
    you know the first ten amendments to the Constitution.That is a good start.
    I don't give a Rats Ass about peoples "feelings"

    1. Re:You can't! Thats funny as Hell! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Bill of Rights was a huge mistake, for this very reason, and several of our founders opposed it as such. The constitution was never supposed to grant rights, it was supposed to limit government. Everything not explicitely made the domain of the government was to be the domain of the states, or the people.

      And about the feelings bit, you are quite alone legally. Courts have recognized the importance of 'feeling' free forever. E.g., laws resulting in self-censorship are often considered to breach the first amendment.

    2. Re:You can't! Thats funny as Hell! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only Liberal fucktards think the Constitution "grants rights".
      I know what you are saying but in hindsight they should have tossed everything into the Bill of Rights including the cliched "kitchen sink".

  57. It's all about attitude by putaro · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From the article:

    If indeed that is your fear or that is your perception then engage in the democratic process. Back up your argument, back up your belief with facts, marshal evidence in order to convince those who are engaged in the process of governance.


    Vinh's attitude is that he is "governing" and that we have to come to him with information to change his mind. He does not view himself as a public servant obviously. It is his job to convince the citizens of the United States (not the "governed of the United States") that he needs the tools he has asked for. It is his job to convince the citizens that hsi approach is correct. We do not need to "convince" those who are currently tasked with governing the country. We need to vote their political masters out and get some people in with better attitudes.

  58. Repeat after me... by mrkurt · · Score: 5, Interesting

    YOU CANNOT PRESERVE FREEDOM BY DESTROYING IT

    I hate to seem like I am shouting, but I am shouting. What the Patriot Act does to the civil liberties of citizens is unconstitutional and wrong. There is no way that any part of that law should be renewed. It is essentially a declaration that the terrorists won. This is not what I want, and I don't think it is what the American people want to say to the rest of the world.

    --
    Always look on the briight side of life! (whistle, whistle)
    1. Re:Repeat after me... by Durin_Deathless · · Score: 2

      Want to go start a country somewhere? I hear Mars already has spare parts....maybe we could have Antarctica if we ask real nice?

      --
      You should use AdiumX on your Mac.
    2. Re:Repeat after me... by ratamacue · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      It is essentially a declaration that the terrorists won.

      Well, it is really a declaration that government has won. The PATRIOT act is everything they've dreamed of -- more power, more revenue, more control, more "responsibilities" -- those in power stand to profit now more than ever.

  59. DinhSounds like an Extremist by femto · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Take the following quotes from the introduction to Dinh's background:
    The youngest of seven children born in Vietnam, he was 7 years old when communists took over the country and imprisoned his father, a city councilman, for "reeducation."
    ...he was drawn to the Republican Party because of his hatred for communism.

    Couldn't these statements be turned into the following?

    The youngest of seven children born in Palestine, he was 7 years old when Isaelis took over the country and imprisoned his father, a city councilman, for "reeducation."
    ...he was drawn to Hamas because of his hatred for Americanism.

    Now he sounds more like a Palestinian suicide bomber.

    I *DO NOT* write this in opposition to Israelis or in support of Palestinians, or vice versa. That is merely the example I chose. Substitute the name of whatever nation and suicide bombers you want.

    My point is that this person cites the fact that, as a young child, he saw bad things done to has parents, and the resulting hatred, as major influences in his life. This hardly seems to be the person to make objective assessments then write an act such as PATRIOT. By my reading of the article, he is a fanatic and an extremist, the very disease he claims to be fighting.

    1. Re:DinhSounds like an Extremist by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      Actually, the sentence about 'drawn to the Republican Party' has it kind of reversed.

      He was driven away from the Democratic Party, and their 'Useful Idiot' denial, by his hatred, doubtless based on direct family experience, of Communism.

      If you want to see fanaticism, accuse somebody of being a 'communist' at a Democratic party function.

      --
      ---
    2. Re:DinhSounds like an Extremist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...he was drawn to Hamas because of his hatred for Americanism.

      Not to disagree with the gist of your post, but re what I quoted from you above, Hamas' enemy is Israel, not America or "Americanism." Hamas as an organization doesn't oppose America except insofar as America gives Israel material and political support to hurt Palestinians.

      Now back to your regularly scheduled topic...

    3. Re:DinhSounds like an Extremist by Guppy06 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      " ...he was drawn to Hamas because of his hatred for Americanism.

      Now he sounds more like a Palestinian suicide bomber. "


      Show me an outspoken member of the GOP that has blown himself up at a bus terminal and/or press releases where the Republican party has taken credit for such a bombing and I'll agree with your comparison between the two. Otherwise, you have +4 Fear Mongering.

    4. Re:DinhSounds like an Extremist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would you settle for a list of outspoken members of the GOP that SHOULD blow themselves up?

    5. Re:DinhSounds like an Extremist by femto · · Score: 1
      I'm not saying Dinh's actions compare to those of a suicide bomber. Just that they both come across to me as being motived by extremism.

      The fact that it was the Republican party Dinh joined is irrelevant. It is relevant that his motivation for joining a group (be it Democrat or Republica) was hate.

    6. Re:DinhSounds like an Extremist by k_head · · Score: 1

      There is no reason for the republicans to blow themselves up. They are in control. They can change the law to suit them and they can go after democrats and people who donate to democrats with the full power of the law.

      Finally although the republican party has not taken credit for it there is no doubt that the people who kill abortion doctors, blow up clinics, burn down black churches, crucify gays on fenceposts and drag blacks behind their pickup trucks are republicans.

      --
      The best way to support the US war effort is to continue buying American products.
    7. Re:DinhSounds like an Extremist by giantsquidmarks · · Score: 1

      The GOP doesn't need to blow themselves up. The citizens of the United States give the government hundreds of billions of dollars every year to buy the finest Military force in the world for the purpose of self-protection.

      The president of the United States is commander in chief of this military.

      The current GOP President (and his father before him) has shamelessly and pointlessly killed uncounted tens of thousands of Arabs, civilians included (oops), and taken credit for it at a public relations stunt on the deck of an aircraft carrier.

      Hamas doesn't have a multitrillion dollar military at it's disposal. All they can do to score a hit is blow themselves up.

      The Arabs will not be free until we consume all the oil under their feet. We don't just want it, we NEED IT. Our lust for oil is more powerful and destructive than the conquistadors quest for gold. Like a drug addict disrupts life in the household, our addiction to oil threatens the future of humanity.

      When all the oil is gone, the middle east will be as important to us as central Africa. In Africa, millions can be hacked to death with machetes and we don't send 1 Marine.

    8. Re:DinhSounds like an Extremist by cicho · · Score: 1

      If I want to see fanaticism, it's enough to see Democrats accused of being communists at a Republican party function.

      --
      "Only the small secrets need to be protected. The big ones are kept secret by public incredulity." - Marshall McLuhan
    9. Re:DinhSounds like an Extremist by Petronius · · Score: 1

      Most eloquent post. Made my day.

      --
      there's no place like ~
  60. Re:Name one civil liberty that has been violated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Being locked up for no listed crime, with no represnetative, for being of a certain faith and descent, is what i would term a violated civil liberty.

    Actually they can arbitrarily detain anyone who isn't a non-US citizen. Been there, done that, as have many other white atheists :)

  61. In America, you better stay anonymous now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    thanks Slashdot

    1. Re:In America, you better stay anonymous now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably a packet sniffer outside slashdot's data center... they don't need to raid and get the logs.

  62. Re:Name one civil liberty that has been violated by snartal · · Score: 0

    People are being heald without charge and without accesss to any council. That sounds like a very blatant violation to me.

  63. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by momerath2003 · · Score: 1

    Have you ever considered that the ability to live without fear for one's safety is (a) liberty?

    --
    I had but a simple dream, to destroy all humans.
  64. "Facts and examples" by abulafia · · Score: 4, Interesting
    WN: Some critics have called you the purveyor of the most sweeping curtailment of freedom since the McCarthy era. Is that an exaggeration?

    Dinh: I think it is very easy to employ sweeping rhetoric and personal denunciations. I think it is much harder to back it up with facts and concrete examples. [...]

    And it is much harder still to back up any sort of reasonable discussion up with facts and concrete examples when the people defending the act in question also have discretion over the facts and concrete examples that are released for public review.

    --
    I forget what 8 was for.
  65. Threat to liberty? by nihilogos · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think right now at this time and this place the greatest threat to American liberty comes from al-Qaida and their sympathizers

    A threat to American liberty? Sure they're a threat, but how on earth can a small, loosely knit band only really capable of random destruction threaten liberty? They may threaten building, airplanes, and (heaven forbid) a city, but the exact same destruction is wreaked on a larger scale around the world by natural disasters.

    You need a large army, militia or police force to threaten liberty.

    --
    :wq
    1. Re:Threat to liberty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not true, they have already conquered almost all of africa, europe and asia between N10 and N40, and about half of africa and asia between S20 and N10

    2. Re:Threat to liberty? by Benedick · · Score: 1
      You need a large army, militia or police force to threaten liberty.


      Wrong: you just need the right weapon. You see, part of the problem here is that our technology has brought us to the point that it's all too easy for a small group of people to kill a large group of people. I hate to use 9/11 as the example but it is cogent. At what other time in history could less than 100 people kill thousands? If they were armed with sword, muskets, or M1 rifles, not a chance. But armed with airplanes loaded with fuel, the results were terrible (in both senses of the word).

      Now take that a step further. What if they are armed with chemical, biological, or nuclear weapons? Then a small group can kill thousands or even, in a worst-case scenario, millions of people. It just takes the right weapon.

      The threat to liberty is real. Those weapons exist and are in the hands of some very unstable states and people. If they decide to hand one bomb over to a terrorist organization and the terrorists set it off in New York, it'd kill many people and crater the economy, taking the US and American liberties with it.

    3. Re:Threat to liberty? by dave420-2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You need an occupying force to threaten liberty.

    4. Re:Threat to liberty? by nihilogos · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The threat to liberty is real. Those weapons exist and are in the hands of some very unstable states and people. If they decide to hand one bomb over to a terrorist organization and the terrorists set it off in New York, it'd kill many people and crater the economy, taking the US and American liberties with it.

      The economy would recover, and the rest of the country would still have enough to eat. It would cause horrific devastation, but that is not enough to destroy liberty.

      London was continuously bombed for over a year at the beginning of world war 2, as was Hanoi in 1965-66. This did nothing to threaten the people of those nations, if anything it made them more defiant.

      --
      :wq
  66. Re:Name one civil liberty that has been violated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slippery or not, how easy would you feel if your neighbour would hold the opposite view on whatever you believe, from civil liberty to governmental control, musical preference to dental hygiene.

    How comfortable are you with what you don't agree with?

  67. Re:Name one civil liberty that has been violated by El · · Score: 1
    You can't, and the critics can't either.

    Perhaps because they are afraid of being thrown in jail if they do?

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  68. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    C'mon guys. Everyone who posts that tired old Ben Franklin quote every time there is a slashdot article on the Patriot Act gets modded up to +5 immediately but someone who posts a non-overused quote is ignored? Besides, Yoda was a much better lightsabre-swordsman (or swords-thing, I guess) than ol' Ben ever was.

  69. BZZZZZZT! WRONG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Constitution defines the MERE LIMITS of the government AND NOTHING MORE. See the 9th Amendment for what you are mis-interpreting as the "no explicit constitutional right to privacy". The 4th Amendment also negates your ignorance.

  70. MODS, please. Pay attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I mean, really. When you see a post like the parent, ask yourself: does this post *really* provide information that people don't already have? Is it really "Insightful", or is it simply a restatement of Slashdot policy?

    Then, when you've cast a bit of doubt, check poster's history. Note that he posts early, NEVER posts anything other than regurgitated obvious stuff, posts similar headlines EVERY time... Note that many people (including yours truly, I admit) have outed the guy for misrepresenting himself as such things as professor at a nonexistent school, professor at a community college,professional programmer, etc. Note that he posts at -1 most of the time, because he's a known troll and karmawhore.

    See, I wouldn't normally feel the necessity to out every karmawhore on Slashdot - but you MODs keep falling down on your duties.

    It's not "+1, Informative" if it's wrong; it's not "+1, Insightful" if it's obvious. If you can't tell, don't mod it either.

    Thanks.

    1. Re:MODS, please. Pay attention. by the+arbiter · · Score: 0

      This commitment to the truth is, undoubtably, why you're posting as AC. If you had the balls to post with a username, well, I might listen.

      But, since you don't, I just won't listen :)

      --
      Boycott everything - they're all trying to fuck you one way or another
    2. Re:MODS, please. Pay attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you had the balls to post with a username, well, I might listen.

      You listen with other people's balls?

    3. Re:MODS, please. Pay attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "This commitment to the truth is, undoubtably, why you're posting as AC. If you had the balls to post with a username, well, I might listen."

      I doubt it.

      A couple of things:

      1) Balls? What makes you think I have 'em or need 'em?

      2) I have not claimed a commitment to the truth. I've pointed out an obvious and serial karmawhore. You have swung, and missed. Would you like to attack my statements? Attack the truth or falsehood of what I've pointed out? Go ahead. However, you've simply attacked statements and positions I never made or took. [-1, Whoosh!]

      Come back when your mommy lets you have your A-game again.

    4. Re:MODS, please. Pay attention. by Disevidence · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So.... by having the name "the arbiter" all of a sudden your opinions are more valid.

      AC comments are some of the most informative, insightful posts here these days, mainly because they don't care about karma or any of that other bullshit, they just post whats on their minds. Some of its inflammatory, some of its wrong, some of its noise, but some of its correct, just like the AC parent of your post.

      So get off your high horse and start contributing to the discussion, instead of wasting time and accounts by posting drivel about people being AC or not.

      For my views, I agree with the AC. Respond to his arguments, and I'll address your counter-arguments.

      And yes yes, I saw the smiley. Doesn't make it any more valid.

      --
      Think nothing is impossible? Try slamming a revolving door.
  71. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by CrystalChronicles · · Score: 1

    Give me liberty or give me death - gta3

  72. Hey America: by stealth.c · · Score: 5, Insightful

    According to Viet Dinh toward the end of the article: USA PATRIOT and similar legislation will be necessary as long as we are "fighting terrorism." If you think he is correct, then you probably believe that the Iraq war had everything to do with Terrorism, and you are probably the caliber of person to whom I would like to sell this bridge I own in New York.

    These people MUST realize that the "War on Terrorism" is a necessarily perpetual one. Is Viet therefore proposing that we give up our civil liberties indefinitely? Whether he knows it or not, that's what he seems to be proposing.

    As long as Americans are willing to believe that politics is over their heads and that they shouldn't worry about what goes on in Washington, the way is wide open for some dynastic madman to install himself in the White House without even being elected, and start waging unprovoked wars in countries most Americans can't recognize on continents most Americans can't name.

    As THE most powerful nation on Earth that claims to be, (of/by/for) the people, its citizens have a great responsibility to keep their civil servants accountable. If you ask me, most are allowing themselves to be distracted from that responsibility.

    1. Re:Hey America: by Apathetic1 · · Score: 1
      As long as Americans are willing to believe that politics is over their heads and that they shouldn't worry about what goes on in Washington, the way is wide open for some dynastic madman to install himself in the White House without even being elected, and start waging unprovoked wars in countries most Americans can't recognize on continents most Americans can't name.

      Wait... Didn't that happen already?

      --

      My username does not make me Apathetic. It's irony, get it?

    2. Re:Hey America: by TnkMkr · · Score: 1

      But how can Americans not get distracted... politics is SOOOOOOO boring when compared to:
      ediable panties,
      sneakers that light up,
      happy meals,
      the last season of Friends,
      Will and Grace,
      The Gay marrage debate,
      Jacko' and the children,
      Martha Stewart and her investments,
      SUV's,
      NASCAR... Yeeehaaaaa

      How could you possibly expect the average American citizen to waste valuable TV time to update themselves on the actions of our civil servents. After all it's not like they can do any real harm.

      Civic duty... not just the maintenance schedule for a Honda.

    3. Re:Hey America: by replicant108 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      These people MUST realize that the "War on Terrorism" is a necessarily perpetual one.

      Strangely enough, CIA director George Tenet made that exact point only yesterday:

      "CIA chief predicts war with no end
      By David Rennie in Washington
      (Filed: 25/02/2004)

      America's assault on al-Qa'eda has scattered its terrorist expertise across the globe, meaning that the United States will be menaced by Islamic extremism "for the foreseeable future", the CIA director, George Tenet, said yesterday.

      He offered the Senate intelligence committee a bleak vision of a war on terrorism without end, in which even the destruction of al-Qa'eda would not make America safe.
      "

      CIA chief predicts war with no end

    4. Re:Hey America: by electronerd · · Score: 1

      No, I think a dictator would have to be elected. Perhaps via loopholes and corruption, but elected nonetheless. Unfortunately, what the common man doesn't realize is that you can un-elect (by electing someone else in four years) a president, but not a dictator.

  73. Fascism is Socialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    And Communism is Totalitarianism.
    I'd say those are more "left" than conservative.

    1. Re:Fascism is Socialism by bobbozzo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Marxism and Socialism are left or liberal.

      Totalitarianism and Fascism are extreme right.

      BTW, there has NEVER been a Marxist country.

      --
      Nothing to see here; Move along.
    2. Re:Fascism IS Socialism by bobbozzo · · Score: 1

      Lenin was the first to "implement Marxism".

      Yet, this does not mean that was what Marx had in mind; in fact there is no indication Marx believed in national goverment at all.

      Lenin was most likely a murderer and possibly insane.

      It is also extremely questionable whether he really believed in Marxism or was just riding the revolution to gain power.

      Mussolini's fascism was ANTI-communism. (see here)

      Stalin was NEVER a Marxist.

      Mao: totalitarian.

      Just because they claimed to be Marxists never made it true.

      Castro's Cuba is probably the most Marxist of them all, but still he runs an strongly Authoritarian gov't.

      --
      Nothing to see here; Move along.
    3. Re:Fascism is Socialism by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 1

      Using a left/right descript is one-dimensional, and adding lables as "liberal" doesn't help one bit.

      For one thing, I'm 99.7% certain that most liberal parties in Europe would be upset being labled Socialists ...

      The two-dimensional division shown on http://www.politicalcompass.org/ gives you a better idea of the political spectrum, in my humble opinion anyway :-)

      --
      We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
  74. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heh. You are right on. Not that it matters, whole thing is going in the shitter anyway. Nice to know a few still have their heads screwed in right, though. Maybe you should join us in the Free State

    http://www.freestateproject.org

  75. What do you have against the Democrats? by toupsie · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Anybody who would be drawn to a political ideology purely based on what they oppose is, in my opinion, a dangerous person.

    Frankly, this appears to be the entire Democratic Platform for 2004. I have heard nothing but "Hate Bush" from Democratic Party since 2000.

    pot.kettle.black.

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    1. Re:What do you have against the Democrats? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Frankly, this appears to be the entire Democratic Platform for 2004. I have heard nothing but "Hate Bush" from Democratic Party since 2000.

      Hey, when you've got a winning message with broad appeal there's no sense in complicating things by adding in a bunch of other crap. You think most Americans are pleased by the fact that every single nation on earth hates us now?

    2. Re:What do you have against the Democrats? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most Americans (rightly) don't care. With the exception of perhaps Japan and China, the rest of the world doesn't matter. And on issues of the war in Iraq, Japan supported us, and China wasn't going to get involved.

      Europeans are the new niggers. You count for mere fractions of an American, perhaps not a full 5/9ths but you get the picture.

    3. Re:What do you have against the Democrats? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Majority primary voters put economic worries as top concern. And majority polls like Bush as a person, but hate his policies. And beside, it's ok for Repubs to "Hate Clinton?"

    4. Re:What do you have against the Democrats? by toupsie · · Score: 1
      You think most Americans are pleased by the fact that every single nation on earth hates us now?

      Then why the hell are all their citizens trying to sneak into our country illegally? Think about it. Your vacuous parroting of socialist mantras will get you nothing more than scorn from me.

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    5. Re:What do you have against the Democrats? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Well, the Democrats haven't proven themselves any more trustworthy, but they do tend to want people to like them. That's a big plus in my book.

      The trouble is, they pass all these repressive laws, which they do, and they may not abuse them, but they don't stay in power forever, and their successors do abuse them. And then when they get back in power, they don't stop the abuse, but build on it.

      The best thing we could do would be to wipe out all laws and court decisons passed since 1890 or a bit earlier. And try to avoid the mistakes the second time around. And one particular court decision made even a bit earlier. The one that decided that corporations were people. That one's got to go.

      Another possibility would be to wipe out all laws and court decisions since just before the Dred Scott decision, with the added note that all states are now free states.

      A lot of mistakes have been made during that period. Most due to the confusion between corporations and people.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    6. Re:What do you have against the Democrats? by red+floyd · · Score: 1

      A pox on both their houses.

      From 1992 through 2000 (and actually, beyond), the GOP has been the "Hate Clinton" party.

      --
      The only reason we have the rights we have is that people just like us died to gain those rights. -- Cheerio Boy
    7. Re:What do you have against the Democrats? by toupsie · · Score: 1
      Well, the Democrats haven't proven themselves any more trustworthy, but they do tend to want people to like them. That's a big plus in my book.

      So Republicans have been winning elections because they are trying to make people hate them? I am lost on your logic here.

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    8. Re:What do you have against the Democrats? by toupsie · · Score: 1
      From 1992 through 2000 (and actually, beyond), the GOP has been the "Hate Clinton" party.

      Hate Clinton? Clinton was the best thing that ever happened to the GOP. Because of Clinton, the Republicans now control the US House, the US Sentate, the Executive Branch, a majority of all governorships and the majority of state legislatures. Without Clinton, none of this would have happened. At the start of Clinton's term, Republicans were the minority.

      God Bless Bill Clinton!

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    9. Re:What do you have against the Democrats? by red+floyd · · Score: 1

      My point exactly.

      --
      The only reason we have the rights we have is that people just like us died to gain those rights. -- Cheerio Boy
    10. Re:What do you have against the Democrats? by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Your absurd and unfounded generalizations aren't going to get you much respect either.

      Think about it: All the citizens from every country on Earth want nothing more than to live in the United States? The French are nailing themselves into boxes and mailing themselves to Akron, Ohio? The Aussies are building makeshift rafts and setting out for southern California?

      It's not true. A certain percentage of the citizens of any given country will be wishing they were somewhere else. Some French folks want to be Americans. Some Germans want to be Swedes. A lot of Malaysians want to live in India. A sharply increasing number of Americans would prefer to live in Canada [National Motto: "Eh?"].

      But much in the manner of the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation, your glaring, superficial logical fallacy serves to draw attention away from the more subtle, fundamental logical fallacy: a person can want to live here even as they hate us.

      Sure, we've got our hands full trying to keep people from coming in illegally. But while some come for political asylum, many more try to sneak in for the same reason that Willie Sutton robbed banks: "That's where the money is."

      Just because somebody takes a job with a company, it doesn't mean they love the people running it, or the way it's run. Most people are quite willing to take a paycheck even while thinking that the people paying their salary are a bunch of ignorant pricks.

      Further, it is possible for someone to be pissed at certain foreign policies we insist on inflicting on everyone, without it rising to the level of "hate."

      And another thing: What did the parent post say that had anything to do with socialism? Everyone who dislikes Bush and his policies is a socialist?

      You seem to have difficulty grasping subtle distinctions. This makes me sad.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    11. Re:What do you have against the Democrats? by toupsie · · Score: 1
      How do you know the MP3.com employees weren't being productive?

      They do but when they arrive, we stamp it "Return to Sender".

      What did the parent post say that had anything to do with socialism? Everyone who dislikes Bush and his policies is a socialist?

      Majority of the nations "pissed" at Bush are socialist. And yes most of the people that "hate" Bush are socialists not because they oppose Bush but they are truly Socialists. Sweden, Germany, Norway, France, etc. are socialist nations.

      You seem to have difficulty grasping subtle distinctions. This makes me sad.

      Cheer up. Until the rest of the world steps up to the plate and deals with international security, you will have the United States doing it for you. Step up to the plate or be stepped over.

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    12. Re:What do you have against the Democrats? by toupsie · · Score: 1
      Oops, pasted from another thread in my reply here is what should have been in the paste.

      The French are nailing themselves into boxes and mailing themselves to Akron, Ohio?

      They do but when they arrive, we stamp it "Return to Sender".

      That should make more sense than something about MP3.com employees.

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
  76. So that's what he does by Chooche · · Score: 1

    After after he got kicked off american idol.

    1. Re:So that's what he does by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're not funny.

  77. And whatever's banging around inside Viet's head.. by stealth.c · · Score: 1

    I have the utmost respect for those who engage in this (national conversation), even when I am unfairly maligned because those persons are willing to engage in order to advance the national conversation and contribute meaningfully to our process of governance. Somebody once said that democracy is not a spectator sport. We should all applaud each other for getting into the game and risking injury because of it, because at the end of the day we all win if we do engage.

    ...he at least is able to regurgitate THAT maxim.

  78. Christ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This is what you call chickens coming home to roost.

    To think fascist policies are the result of our most ignoble war.

    Who'da thunk? Who indeed...

  79. !!!!!!!! Mod Parent Up !!!!!!!!!! by blueberry(4*atan(1)) · · Score: 5, Insightful
    F_ckin' A !!! The ironically named "Patriot Act" is a sinister civil-rights disaster.
    "Once a government is committed to the principle of silencing the voice of opposition, it has only one way to go, and that is down the path of increasingly repressive measures, until it becomes a source of terror to all its citizens and creates a country where everyone lives in fear." --Harry S. Truman
  80. Re:BZZZZZZT! WRONG! by El · · Score: 1

    The Constitution also doesn't grant the government the right to organize a standing army or collect income taxes... and your point is?

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  81. The best way to have both security and liberty by kfg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is to secure liberty.

    Yes, this does reduce safty in some areas, but that is the price you pay to avoid the real risk involved in allowing desaparacidos.

    On the whole it's a pretty good bargain.

    If we do not remove liberties than the people who died on 9/11 (I'm a New Yorker, so that list includes acquaintences and directly affected family members) did so as patriots protecting liberty.

    If we use 9/11 as an excuse to remove liberties then they died so that we might all be less free and subvert the constitution.

    If I've gotta die I'd rather do so for liberty, not a police state.

    KFG

    1. Re:The best way to have both security and liberty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So I propose banning all sort of law (except this very one), and thus ensure maximum freedom for every one.
      Or am I getting this wrong ?

    2. Re:The best way to have both security and liberty by shatteredpottery · · Score: 1

      If I've gotta die I'd rather do so for liberty, not a police state.

      Yes, I believe there was some wacky gentleman who agreed with you about 230 years ago. Something about "Give me liberty, or give me death."

      Name was Patrick Henry, helped write some idiot thing called the Bill of Rights. Very dangerous nutcase, one of those commie pinko liberals, no doubt. Or whatever they called people like that back then.

      (Note for the sarcasm and history impaired: Patrick Henry was a very conservative fellow, and he essentially wrote the 2nd Amendment to the U.S. Consitution.)

      --

      A witty saying is worth nothing - Voltaire

    3. Re:The best way to have both security and liberty by kfg · · Score: 1

      Or am I getting this wrong ?

      Rather.

      KFG

    4. Re:The best way to have both security and liberty by houghi · · Score: 1

      I am sorry and will be publicly punished for this. I read: ... he essentially wrote the 2nd Amendment to the U.S. Confusion.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    5. Re:The best way to have both security and liberty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks.

    6. Re:The best way to have both security and liberty by 10am-bedtime · · Score: 1

      you must die, period. (so must everyone.)

      what matters is what you do before you die.

  82. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    No 'ability' is a liberty. That is the old Socialist argument that says, "Who cares if I'm 'free' to own a Lexus if I can't in practice?" Liberty simply means that you have a right to *attempt* to do something - that doing so is not illegal.

  83. Another Anonymous Coward Heard From by Winkhorst · · Score: 2

    Forgeting for the moment that you don't even have the balls to hide behind a pseudonym, and also forgeting that folks like you complain on the one hand that folks don't give enough specifics when the whole corporate methodology consists of hiding behind a smokescreen of secrecy and proprietary IP, and on the other hand come up with silly little reposts like this that simply consist of hurling an epithet (look it up if you own a dictionary), what really galls me is that your definition of "troll" seems to be anyone who dares to think about anything but computer code and video games. People died for the freedoms you once took for granted, and not just guys in silly Revolutionary War garb, but millions of men who fought the forces of--no, not naziism and fascism, but--stupidity and ignorance and just plain tunnel vision during two world wars. But then you don't have to worry about the draft any more, so it's "Rah Rah Rah! for the home team and bring me another beer, Mabel" while the folks who joined up to elevate their status in society get shot and mangled and crippled and shipped home in a box as the folks we just "liberated" begin to understand that George's promises of free elections are no more true than his mythical weapons of mass destruction. How dare you....

    --
    "Is this Winkhorst a nova criminal?" "No just a technical sergeant wanted for interrogation."
    1. Re:Another Anonymous Coward Heard From by Endive4Ever · · Score: 0, Troll

      Ooooh, when you get mad, you forget all about using periods to end sentences.

      --
      ---
    2. Re:Another Anonymous Coward Heard From by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      youre gonna die youre gonna die. u suck u suck suck and i heav not read a single line of your rubbish.... YOU ARE GOING DOWN!!!!!!!11

    3. Re:Another Anonymous Coward Heard From by Winkhorst · · Score: 1

      So you determined it was rubbish by sitting on a print out of it and absorbing it by osmosis? Or was it just the link to Randi Rhodes that set you off? You'd better get some more of those little blood pressure pills the doctor gave you because, buddy, we're gonna retake the media from you demented little pinheads and you're gonna hear more of the same for a long time to come. Get used to it.

      --
      "Is this Winkhorst a nova criminal?" "No just a technical sergeant wanted for interrogation."
    4. Re:Another Anonymous Coward Heard From by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I'm under the effect of some sleeping pills right now. Before you get tired, you get pretty much... well... funny... and if you're sitting before the screen at that time, you'll type tons of shite!!!!

      YOUREGOING DOWN MISTER!11111111

    5. Re:Another Anonymous Coward Heard From by Winkhorst · · Score: 1

      I apologize for picking on the sleepless. I know what it can be like. You might want to consult a good psychiatrist, though. You obviously have some repressed aggression to deal with. Personally, when I get that way, I just find a dentist and beat the shit out of him, but that can have unexpected consequences....

      --
      "Is this Winkhorst a nova criminal?" "No just a technical sergeant wanted for interrogation."
    6. Re:Another Anonymous Coward Heard From by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like this guy.. good rant my friend, good rant.

  84. Big Whoop! by ITR81 · · Score: 1
    The NSA has been doing this for yr's. For about a couple grand I can get all your banking info and so forth..from a local data miner or I can do it myself.

    What is privacy? Your privacy ends once you open your mouth and speak. Your privacy ends once you post something on the net.

    Want privacy think for yourself and shutup and listen and move on.

  85. 5th amendment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did he refuse to incriminate himself under oath in this article? Or maybe he demanded a grand jury indictment.

    Perhaps you mean the 1st amendment.

    1. Re:5th amendment? by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      " Did he refuse to incriminate himself under oath in this article?"

      Yes, he did - when he provided vague, inaccurate, or offtopic responses to questions whose truthful answers would have had him admitting illegalities.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    2. Re:5th amendment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And which illegalities would those have been? For full credit, you'll need to be specific.

  86. Joe McCarthy by earthforce_1 · · Score: 4, Insightful


    He falls into the same trap as Senator McCarthy, by destroying the very thing he seeks to protect in his zeal. I remember stories of the neighbourhood "stazi" agents in the former East Germany, and thought what a horrible sort of place to live. Of course I would fight to the death to avoid having to live in such a society. Then you read about initiatives such as TIA and the PATRIOT act initiatives, and wonder if we really won the cold war after all....

    This danger exists on both the right and left of the political spectrum. Censorship and repression in the name of "political correctness" is the other side of the coin.

    In one way at least, Al Queda has won the war on terror - they hate the idea of a free, tolerant, pluralistic society, and they have managed to make ours considerably less so.

    --
    My rights don't need management.
    1. Re:Joe McCarthy by Laser+Lou · · Score: 1

      For a different view os Senator McCarthy, read this book.

      --
      No data, no cry
  87. Re:BZZZZZZT! WRONG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are still just as incorrect. Bush and every member of congress pledge/swear to uphold the Constitution. Virtually none of them have. You have yet to prove that the Constitution grants the government dictatorship over "privacy", where I state that the government has no such right. Please at least try to respond to the challenge rather than drag other issues in to the discussion.

  88. Good Point... by WiseWeasel · · Score: 1

    That's a very good point! Though the fear is often irrational, and people fail to understand that their safety is much more jeopardized by riding in an automobile, living unhealthy lifestyles, etc. than by what some group of religious extremists is capable of doing. The Patriot Act is an affront to our constitutional rights as citizens, and really sets the stage for all kinds of abuses should they need a new scapegoat someday. Our only hope is for it to be struck down as unconstitutional.

    --
    "I like systems, their application excepted", George Sand (French)
  89. Does this or does this not have... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    something to do with Vin Diesel?

    I'll take the answer off the air.

    Thanks.

  90. Re:Not justified? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now there is a real man. Go tell 'em.

  91. Re:Not justified? by blincoln · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How about all those UN resolutions and the 11 years when nothing was done?

    Nothing was done about what? The complete lack of threat from Iraq to any other nation?

    If international law alone is so important (IE enough so to go to war because someone is ignoring some memos from the UN), why is the Emperor and his corporate advisory board so adamant that US citizens must be immune to the ICC?

    The real reason wasn't just to get saddam, it has changed the middle east

    You're right - in a few years, the Middle East (except for Israel of course) will be entirely under hardline Islamic law.

    --
    "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
  92. Re:Name one civil liberty that has been violated by Moofie · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And, I think it's super-important to state baldly:

    Suspected terrorists are ENTITLED to these civil liberties. I don't care where we found them (Afghan sheep fields or Boston, MA), they are human and are entitled to human rights.

    I think too many people think that Constitutional liberties apply only to American citizens. The Constitution enumerates restrictions on the US Government, enjoining it from infringing on liberties that were "endowed by our Creator".

    I think Mr. Dinh totally fails to understand this.

    --
    Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  93. Your fellow Americans... by SuperBanana · · Score: 5, Insightful
    No, the greatest threat to my liberty comes from a government willing to take the freedom and liberty guaranteed me by the Constitution, and replace it with the illusion of security.

    Actually, the threat is mostly from your fellow citizens, who just don't care enough. Many have forgotten that democracy and freedom have risks, and the only way to protect them is to recognize, and ignore, that risk. If I stand a .00005% chance instead of a .00001% chance of getting blown up on a plane- but I and my fellow citizens remain free(ie, i didn't have to take my shoes off, didn't have to hand over "papers") so be it. If you aren't, you are a -coward-, and you can damn well pack your bags and move somewhere else, because America was founded by a bunch of guys who got -really- tired of exactly this kind of crap. What gives -you- the right to take -my- freedom, for -your- illusion of security? Franklin said it best: "They that give up essential liberty to obtain temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."

    Nevermind that the risk is infinitesimal; in one year, +10x more people died on our highways than did in all the planes+buildings involved in the terrorist attacks. Every three days more people die of heart disease than died in the terrorist attacks(700,000 people a year, roughly). Nope, I can't have universal healthcare, but I can have Johhny Ashcroft breathing down my neck.

    Planes aren't being hijacked because we stop the dreaded nail clipper from coming on board.

    Exactly. Further- if you want proof of just how ineffective these measures are, look at countries where "security" is tightest. Israel, for example, is indisputable proof that no matter what you do, you just can't stop someone determined enough; when they stopped Palestinian men, women started strapping bombs to themselves. Then there's England; no end of security procedures did little to stop the IRA. Those video cameras in London, which practically outnumber people, have yielded no drop in crime; same goes for their thousands of radar-speed cameras; in fact, speeding's gone -up-...

    1. Re:Your fellow Americans... by roystgnr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Every three days more people die of heart disease than died in the terrorist attacks(700,000 people a year, roughly). Nope, I can't have universal healthcare, but I can have Johhny Ashcroft breathing down my neck.

      My preferred analogy is to automobile accidents (roughly 30,000 people a year, which isn't nearly enough for us to resume Prohibition, lower speed limits, etc.), but the point is the same.

      However, something just occurred to me. We're comparing death rates among the general United States population. Well, the general population isn't voting on anti-terror laws, the Congress and President are.

      And, considering that IMHO the two most likely targets for the next terrorist attack are the White House and the Capitol building, is it possible that the risks which are negligable to you or me are great enough to them to scare them witless? It's not like we're going to put term limits into the Constitution or start voting out incumbents en masse any time soon, so most of our Senators and Representatives are planning to spend the rest of their careers going to well-publicized meetings in buildings which are prime targets for the next set of maniacs who can fly a plane or assemble an artillery piece. Perhaps their reaction to the terrorist threat seems greatly exaggerated because their vulnerability to that threat is also greatly exaggerated.

    2. Re:Your fellow Americans... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize, of course, that your line about the speeding in London is based on the statistic that motorists are speeding more often now that there are cameras watching them, correct? However, your statistic merely proves that people are being caught more often by these cameras rather than escaping. You nor I have any way of knowing how many people sped before, and speed now. All we know is how many tickets are issued, and they have gone up. If the number of tickets had gone down, and surveilance had increased, perhaps you could have argued otherwise.

    3. Re:Your fellow Americans... by stephenbooth · · Score: 1
      Franklin said it best: "They that give up essential liberty to obtain temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."

      The only major problem I have with that quote is that some people seem to have really wacked definitions of 'essential' and 'temporary'.

      Stephen

      --
      "Don't write down to your readers, the only people less intelligent than you can't read" - Sign on Newspaper Office Wall
    4. Re:Your fellow Americans... by LarsWestergren · · Score: 2, Informative

      I was surprised to see your claim that security cameras in London have had no effect on crime rates. From what I had heard, they had a significant drop in crimes, but Googling around seems to refute that. I did find this interesting article though, which seems to say that its a bit of a gray area. It is almost two years old though, don't know if statistics have changed since then.

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/2071496.stm

      --

      Being bitter is drinking poison and hoping someone else will die

    5. Re:Your fellow Americans... by eclectic4 · · Score: 0

      And that would have to be one HELL of a nailclipper to get past the reinforced cockpit doors. Maybe a hijacker could wrestle a gun from one of the air marshalls....

      --

      "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." - Daniel Boorstin
    6. Re:Your fellow Americans... by dave420-2 · · Score: 1

      You mention crime in the UK and cameras... they're not there only to prevent crime, but more to catch perpetrators on film so they can be brought to justice later on. That means they don't create a drop in crime, but a rise in prosecutions. It's a subtle difference.

    7. Re:Your fellow Americans... by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Possibly they need sharper lenses. I know that the security camera at work caught a photo of a thief. About all we could say was the color of his/her skin, hair, and clothes. And it might well have missed small items of clothing. Like a scarf or neckkerchief. I doubt that it was wearing a hat.

      OTOH, I also heard that crime has decreased directly in sight of the cameras. (It only had to move about 100 feet, or some such.)

      I'm certain that with good enough cameras, and enough cameras, and enough police, crime would decrease. However the government chose to define crime. HOWEVER the government chose to define crime. And that being the case, they would be more interested in defining it to their benefit, and less interested in defining it to anyone else's benefit. That's the way the balance of power shifts in power politics.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    8. Re:Your fellow Americans... by hawkfish · · Score: 2, Insightful
      My preferred analogy is to automobile accidents (roughly 30,000 people a year
      At least most of the victims are in cars so it is more of a fair fight. My preferred analogy is 3000+ people a year die as pedestrians in crosswalks. So it's not OK for foreigners to kill 3000 defenseless americans with heavy machinery, but it is OK for americans to kill a comparable number in roughly the same way?
      --
      You will not drink with us, but you would taste our steel? - Walter Matthau, The Pirates
    9. Re:Your fellow Americans... by neuron132 · · Score: 1

      "Israel, for example, is indisputable proof that no matter what you do, you just can't stop someone determined enough;" El Al has Never had a hijacking.

    10. Re:Your fellow Americans... by electronerd · · Score: 1

      And likely neither has AmericaWest...

  94. Smells about the same, I'd imagine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A shitty deal either way.

  95. Stupid goddamn egotists. by dwaggie · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There was never any proof that more than one attack was ever planned. In fact, one attack was more than sufficient to do the worse thing possible: the begin of the American public to accept having their entire right structures being ripped from them.

  96. Logical impossibility by st0rmshad0w · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "I think right now at this time and this place the greatest threat to American liberty comes from al-Qaida and their sympathizers rather than from the men and women of law enforcement and national security who seek to defend America and her people against that threat."

    It seems to me that the only person(s) capable of restricting, denying, or otherwise effecting MY liberty are those individuals in authority to whom I am supposed to defer. That would be law enforcement, national security and those who rule them. Al-Quaida and its sympathizers have no control over me, none. I can't recall ever having to obey their rules, or having them tell me what to do. Attitudes like this piss me off to no end. I am not an infant, I can bloody well take care of myself, and I would thank my fellow Americans if they would stop acting like babies, expecting to be coddled by the powers that be and their tools.

    Always remember that a jail also protects those within from those on the outside.

  97. The problems always out there eh? by !ucif3r · · Score: 0, Troll

    This is so typically American. Look somewhere else for the problem, so you can ignore the problems at home. While anyone can agree that terrorism is a problem, it is the problems at home that we can actually do something about. Fretting about terrorists is exactly what the terrorists want if I'm not mistaken. Looks like the terrorist and Big Brother have something in common.

    --
    "Take that Lisa's beliefs!" - Homer Simpson
  98. een volk dat voor tirannen zwicht by Yaa+101 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    een volk dat voor tirannen zwicht
    zal meer dan lijf en goed verliezen
    dan dooft het licht....

    H.M. van Randwijk

    When the people give in to tirans
    they will loose more than body and spirit
    then the light will extinguish...

    my translation to english.

  99. Re:OK whats more dangerous Communism or Republican by dominion · · Score: 1

    I'm drawn to libertarianism because it opposes government so I'm a dangerous person?

    If the only reason (or biggest reason) you are a libertarian is because you are opposed to government, then yes, you are a dangerous person.

    Listen, I'm an anarchist, I'm opposed to government on a much greater level than you are. But anarchism's opposition to the state is not what sold me on the idea.

    I was sold on the idea of huge town halls filled with debate, with free education, networks of mutual aid and cooperatives, and what could only be termed an 'open source' society.

    Once in a while I meet somebody who was attracted by anarchism only by virtue of what it opposes.

    I distance myself from them as much as possible.

    Well watch out motherfucker and that goes for whoever modded your bullshit comment "insightful".

    Ah, I never should have even bothered responding to this, but I figured I should clarify a bit.

  100. For future reference by roystgnr · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you're going to karma whore by plagiarizing someone, it only works if you don't post anonymously.

  101. "right now at this time and this place" by hey! · · Score: 2, Redundant

    But for how long?

    The problem isn't necessarily that we can't trust law enforcement officials; its just that's not how our system works. Our system is based on transparency and accountability, because in the long term it works better.

    The last time the US was in a situation like this was after WW2. Things looked, if anything, bleaker with the communists advancing throughout the world. We let agencies run wild on the "desperate times/desperate measures" theory. They ended up doing a lot of stuff that was just pointless, like experimenting with LSD on unwitting citizens, or having our legislature take part in a witch hunt that was in the end turned out to be run by a pathetic liar.

    The institutions that did these things didn't start being disgraceful and stupid; indeed they were not entirely or even mainly so. But they ended up doing a lot of things they wouldn't have otherwise just because they had a license to operate without outside scrutiny and criticism.

    Panic is not a good mode to run a war in. The Patriot act is just congressional platform for political posturing that doesn't do anything real for security. It's all a big sideshow. The 9/11 hijackers could have been stopped with the laws we had then, had we only taken the threat of air piracy seriously. We could have stopped them then if we had the will. Years later now we still don't have the will. Sure the air travel system is a bit more secure, but it's only a matter of time before somebody who is not a prankster sneaks a weapon on board or walks/forces his way through an unsecured perimeter.

    What we really need to do is hard, expensive work. We need to do a lot more scrutinizing of critical facilities and hire armies of people to secure them and more armies of people to check up on the those guys. Sure, we're doing a little of that, but it is not even within two orders of magnitude of say the Iraq effort, which is absurd when you consider their relative security value (note I didn't say Iraq had zero value; it might have had some but on balance probably has negative value). What we've got, however, is the Patriot Act which does nothing for our security but gives our elected representatives the all important political "cover". Look! They're passing laws! They're having debates! They're talking about security! It's harsh! Like brusing your teeth with Clorox!

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  102. My Rant.... by SkorpiXx · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ::deep breath::

    Okay kids, here's the thing. We can all sit on /. and bitch and moan all we like but if we aren't doing anything about it, it's like... uh... pissing in the wind.

    Can you even fathom what a political power the members of /. could be if everyone got out and just voted?

    Don't like what you see? Don't talk, do.

    Wan't a coup? Fine. Let's have one in November.

    S

    --
    bah.
    1. Re:My Rant.... by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Wait till the election gets closer and the people here start boasting about how they NEVER vote because it doesn't make a difference. 9 times out of 10 it's laziness, but that's not quite as good an excuse.

    2. Re:My Rant.... by nicklaszlo · · Score: 1

      Hey... No fair! If I was old enough, I would have voted for Gore. I tried to anyway.

    3. Re:My Rant.... by marcilr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I *do* vote and I do write letters to congress. It doesn't work. All my congress cares about is pork, power, and bull. Don't believe me. Listen to NPR and watch CSPAN. If voting mattered voting would be illegal. Unfortunately we are well past fixing the system. The time has come for a complete reset. Remember "the first rule of fight club is you do not talk about fight club."

      --
      Azurite is fine covellite is mine.
    4. Re:My Rant.... by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      Don't start in washington. Your quip about what they care about is accurate. Start in your county. If your state is small enough go there. My sister has been doing that, and while it has taken several years it looks like her bill will pass the state legislature, despite the medical comunities objections.

      You have to start at the bottom with most things, including politics. Just not swimming. ;)

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    5. Re:My Rant.... by nickco3 · · Score: 1

      Can you even fathom what a political power the members of /. could be if everyone got out and just voted?

      We'd have awesome policitical power, just as soon as we've settled vi-vs-Emacs, Linux-vs-BSD, etc, etc.

      --
      -- Nick "Hallo this is Beel Gates, und I pronounce weendows as ... WEENdows"
    6. Re:My Rant.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vote for whom? The only presidential candidate who made a strong statement against the war and PATRIOT got torpedoed by the media...and even he said a couple years ago that we should crack down on the Internet. I vote Libertarian, myself, but those guys get zero media coverage.

      Beyond voting, I try to participate by donating to advocacy groups...but the Supreme Court just said it's fine to restrict their political speech in the months before the election, so that's not going to be as effective as it used to be.

      If you think that guys like us are going to fix things by participating in this sham of a process, you're dreaming. If we're going to fix it, we'll have to fix the process.

    7. Re:My Rant.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I'm voting in this election, no doubt. Bush has to go, and the Reaganist dynasty has to end. (Offtopic: What good are presidential term limits if they can all keep selecting the same people for their cabinet. Cheney and Ashcroft have spent far more time in the White House than any president could. Maybe it doesn't suprise anybody over 30, but being 22, the similarities between the Reagan administration and the two Bush administrations I've been told about have been shocking.)

      That said, I simply don't believe voting will make a big difference. In future elections I plan on voting for a third party, but I don't expect anything to come from it. I do not see how a third-party candidate could ever become president in a system built to keep them out. The only options are Democrat and Republican, and that is not much of an option. I'll probably get modded down (or rather, being AC, not modded up) because I'm stepping on people's sacred beliefs, but I don't think voting in the system now can make any significant changes. You people who say "Get out and vote and you'll make a difference," please explain how it makes a difference. With the two major parties practically legislated into the government, how can a third-party candidate become president?

      Explain to me how my cynicism is not justified.

  103. Dumbass... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You dumbass!

  104. Eisenhower by TooTechy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "A people that values its privileges above it's principles soon loses both" - Dwight D. Eisenhower

  105. Re:Not justified? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Man the brainwashing runs deep in some parts.

    Get a mind of your own, shitwit.

  106. Damn, I can't mod you any higher by jeko · · Score: 1
    Finally find a post I'd want to mod up when I've got mod points, but you're already at +5...

    How about if I just say "AMEN?"

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  107. indeed by mix_master_mike · · Score: 1
    "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
    -- Ben Franklin

    :)

    --

    mix_master_mike
    vafrous

  108. Tales from the Future... by softspokenrevolution · · Score: 1

    ...Please remember folks, the death weilding cyborgs are only for your security, and for the protection of your liberties. We hope you enjoy your mandatory consuming experience... Take that as you like, I like to take it with humor, others enjoy alcohol, large quantaties of alcohol.

  109. The reasons the 9/11 terrorists were successful... by darkharlequin · · Score: 1

    is that we provided for them an apparatus that they could abuse to achieve their means. Some patriot act powers may be necessary, but for god's sake, do not let someone walk into this country and 'discover' an apparatus by which to control the populace maliciously.
    I was in Manhattan on the day, and still remember everything. I, however, do not want the heroes of that day, of all generations of americans, to have wasted their lives because a panicked public demands prophylaxis.
    All I can do, however, is vote.

    --
    i am so very tired....
  110. Re:BZZZZZZT! WRONG! by El · · Score: 1

    Actually, I agree with you that our current government doesn't uphold the Constitution, as I understand the original intentions of our founding fathers. How would Jefferson have felt about a Constitutional Ammendment defining who can and cannot marry? The point I was trying to make is that the Constitution, like the bible, is subject to interpretation. Hell, Constitutional scholars are still arguing about the Second Ammendment, which seems pretty cut and dried to many. I stand by my original point -- the "right to privacy" is a right created by the Court, based on their interpretation of the Constitution, not a right explicitly spelled out in the Constitution. And the principle that all rights not explicitly granted to the government are reserved for the people has been violated since day one. Furthermore, I'm not sure you could run an effective government based on that principle, as it is impossible to foresee all possible future circumstances and therefore reserve all possible necessary future rights.

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  111. the PA has been abused already by solosaint · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I was all for the PA until they used to for something other then terrorism, that is when they raided a strip club in Vegas and shut it down, using the PA for an excuse, how can anyone say that it is a law that has been absused?

    1. Re:the PA has been abused already by BCW2 · · Score: 1

      I agree, I am worried about the patriot act being abused. The problem lies with the individuals with that kind of power. There are more bad cops than ever. The kind that would have felt at home in the Gestapo or KGB (since those two are in reality, interchangeably identical).

      The act needs to go.

      I'm a veteran and I vote!

      --
      Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  112. Re:BZZZZZZT! WRONG! by petabyte · · Score: 2, Informative

    Umm, you failed civics didn't you? :) If you look at your amendments:

    Article XVI.

    The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration.


    And that my friends, is why the 16th amendment is the most hated. The standing army thing is probably justified under the elastic clause. You can look that one up :).

  113. Sentences are not limited to three words. by Winkhorst · · Score: 3, Funny

    You've obviously never read "The Turn of the Screw," by Henry James, which points up the fact that sentences are not limited to a few words, but can be perfectly grammatical and quite effective literarily and still take up, in the case of the aforementioned James novel, as much as a full page and more, though this kind of extended sentence structure does require a certain intellectual prowess on the part of the reader not normally required of those, like yourself, who feed on a steady diet of comic books and technical manuals, but then, I would expect nothing less from this bastion of Linux and Java and Microsoft bashing, an attitude with which I heartily agree but do not allow to get in the way of my other interests including the reading of books with sentences of more than a few words, an enumeration of which I will leave to the reader's imagination. Touche!

    --
    "Is this Winkhorst a nova criminal?" "No just a technical sergeant wanted for interrogation."
    1. Re:Sentences are not limited to three words. by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      Yes, but your non-stop run-on verbiage makes one stop a bit of the way in.

      'Touche!'?? WTF?

      I read a lot of quality fiction, i.e. a DeLillo novel I finished just last weekend. I've read a lot of William S. Burroughs and some from the 'avant-garde.' And Gaiman's 'Sandman' graphic novel series was damn fine, I read it as the issues came out from the Comic book store, and they're now 'collectable.'

      Henry James is the kind of stuff people only read because their English professor assigned it.

      --
      ---
    2. Re:Sentences are not limited to three words. by Winkhorst · · Score: 1

      You read Bill Burroughs and you complain about "run-on verbiage"? Sorry, but something here just doesn't quite compute. Perhaps you are thinking of Edgar Rice Burroughs?

      --
      "Is this Winkhorst a nova criminal?" "No just a technical sergeant wanted for interrogation."
  114. Re:BZZZZZZT! WRONG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the "right to privacy" is a right created by the Court, based on their interpretation of the Constitution, not a right explicitly spelled out in the Constitution.

    Any liberty-minded person should interpret that as "the right to privacy is created by the Constitution due to the non-existance of the right to revoke it granted to the government". But call me a goofball commie Liberal for wanting freedom...

    it is impossible to foresee all possible future circumstances and therefore reserve all possible necessary future rights.

    9th Amendment. Rights, particularly those in the Bill Of Rights, are not "reserved" or "granted", rights are natural. Government don't grant natural rights, they can only revoke them.

  115. Re:Name one civil liberty that has been violated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah right. I'm so afraid that they'll throw me in jail if I say something on Slashdot about how bad the Patriot act is. Why do liberals WANT the US to be worse than it is?

  116. You're not from Texas, are you? by jeko · · Score: 2, Insightful
    How about we get all the illegal aliens out of the country and lock down the borders.

    Got a map handy? Maybe a globe? A copy of a RISK game board would do.

    Look at our Northern border. Damn. Stretches thousands of miles, doesn't it? Did you know that since there are no natural obstacles, like say, a horrific uncrossable chasm, any schmuck with a pair of hiking boots can just walk right in?

    Now look South. Yep, that big long blue line is the Rio Grande, one of our natural borders to the South. Guess what? You can wade across the bloody thing. The biggest natural obstacle to entering the US is the Southwestern desert of Arizona and New Mexico.

    Why do I think that a bunch of Arab terrorists might be familiar with living in desert conditions?

    By the way, the War on Drugs has been trying, with fairly serious military hardware, to "seal the border" for years, which of course is why no one could possibly buy anything illicit in a heartland city like St. Louis.

    The US is not Japan, a nation with fairly stiff natural borders. Hell, we're not even Armenia.

    Say it with me. We could have an army of sleepless "Squiddies" from "The Matrix" patrolling the North, and an army of Terminators and HKs patrolling the South (Yeah, I know, Reese thinks the HKs are easy to dust) ...

    ... and we still would not have a prayer of "sealing the borders."

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  117. Waste my time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I doubt you are opposed to government at all talking of "town halls filld with debate".
    As for opposition to the State perhaps we both agree.There is more than one type of anarchism after all. Unfortunately leftist anarchists are usually marxists or their dupes.

    1. Re:Waste my time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I doubt you are opposed to government at all talking of "town halls filld with debate".

      i think you've proved his point more than once

  118. American Liberty... by Tatarize · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "the greatest threat to American liberty comes from al-Qaida and their sympathizers" - What the heck? When did al-Qaida get the right to toss me in prison without a trial and never tell anybody where I am or why? I mean sure, perhaps they'd like to kill me... but deny me liberty? I think not.

    --

    It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
  119. Patriot Act renamed! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....to the Patridiot Act (for all the idiots who find acceptable having fewer rights than they had BEFORE the American Revolution.

  120. Patriot Act ad infinitum by forgetful · · Score: 1

    How can so many posters miss the obvious? The greatest defense against terrorists, WMDs, and losing your job is a Constitutional Amendment against gay marriage. Scheeesch!

    --
    "...while history is usually explicable it is often irrational" --Roger Spiller
  121. How? by dentar · · Score: 1

    So how are a bunch of whaco towel-heads going to take away my freedom? What're they going to do? Burn the constitution?

    --
    -- I am. Therefore, I think!
  122. Al Qaida has won... ARGH!!! by afxgrin · · Score: 5, Interesting

    They never said they hate the idea of a free, tolerant, pluralistic society - they hate the result brought to them because of it....

    Did ANYONE EVER read the letter from Bin Laden to the "United States".

    Here's an article from the Observer containing the full translated text.

    Here's some key pieces of the text for those who are too lazy to click on the link:


    Why are we fighting and opposing you? The answer is very simple:

    (1) Because you attacked us and continue to attack us.

    a) You attacked us in Palestine:

    (i) Palestine, which has sunk under military occupation for more than 80 years. The British handed over Palestine, with your help and your support, to the Jews, who have occupied it for more than 50 years; years overflowing with oppression, tyranny, crimes, killing, expulsion, destruction and devastation. The creation and continuation of Israel is one of the greatest crimes, and you are the leaders of its criminals. And of course there is no need to explain and prove the degree of American support for Israel. The creation of Israel is a crime which must be erased. Each and every person whose hands have become polluted in the contribution towards this crime must pay its*price, and pay for it heavily.


    And here's a part regarding liberty and freedom...


    (3) You may then dispute that all the above does not justify aggression against civilians, for crimes they did not commit and offenses in which they did not partake:

    (a) This argument contradicts your continuous repetition that America is the land of freedom, and its leaders in this world. Therefore, the American people are the ones who choose their government by way of their own free will; a choice which stems from their agreement to its policies. Thus the American people have chosen, consented to, and affirmed their support for the Israeli oppression of the Palestinians, the occupation and usurpation of their land, and its continuous killing, torture, punishment and expulsion of the Palestinians. The American people have the ability and choice to refuse the policies of their Government and even to change it if they want.


    Again, it's out of context, you need to read the letter to understand the point he's making.
    I don't necessarily agree with what he's saying, but let's get the facts straight. It's not that they hate a free society, but they hate the fact that this free society allowed the oppression they've supposedly felt.

    I have a feeling that if history occured differently, there would be a bit more acceptance for the things he argues against later in the letter (such as gambling, drug use, ... things he considers sins against Allah). If you read the whole letter you'll notice a lot of it has to do with Palestine....

    1. Re:Al Qaida has won... ARGH!!! by Goonie · · Score: 2
      If you read the whole letter you'll notice a lot of it has to do with Palestine...

      As I understand it, there's a belief in some quarters that, with respect to Palestine, OBL is taking a leaf out of the Trotskyite handbook in taking advantage of local grievances.

      Not sure whether it's true or not, but it's plausible. I think we've seen plenty of BS from Western politicians in regards to actions in the "war on terror" so far...

      --

      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
      --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
    2. Re:Al Qaida has won... ARGH!!! by earthforce_1 · · Score: 4, Insightful


      Yes, I have read similar publications from them. A typical propoganda piece, full of historical distortions.

      Bin Laden is a Saudi, not a Palestinian. None of the Sept 11th hijackers were. Very few Al Queda memebers are. The Palestinian Authority has gone to great lengths to distance themselves from, and denounce Al Queda. They use the existance of the state of Israel is a straw dog. I was able to speak with somebody before in the Egyptian government about the Yom Kippur war. It was quite revealing - the allies never trusted each other, and he admitted that even had the state of Israel been utterly destroyed, there would be no peace or stability in the region. Quite the reverse in fact.

      American has lent much material aid to Israel, no doubt about it. They have also lent considerable aid to Islamic countries as well. Turkey enjoys very good relations with the US. They conveniently forget how the NATO, particularly the US and GB went to war to save Muslims in Bosnia.

      Al Queda loves to beat their chest about the evils of the 800 year old crusades, (true enough) yet forget about the enslavement and mandatory conscription of Christan children to serve the Ottoman empire.

      But you do have one point. Some of the things I see coming from the religious far right in the USA bear an uncomfortable resemblance to statements that might have come from the Taliban.

      Although it is not mentioned in your statement, they DO hate a free society. Look at the model society they built in Afghanistan. It wasn't enough even to be a practicing Muslim, look what they did to the Sheite minorities, they considered heretic. You were forced to exactly follow the edicts of their particular (warped) interpretation of Islam.

      Not to pick on Muslims by the way, there seems to be an equal distribution of intolerance distributed among all faiths.

      --
      My rights don't need management.
    3. Re:Al Qaida has won... ARGH!!! by Ticklemonster · · Score: 1

      If you would educate yourself on what is ACTUALLY HAPPENING between Israel and Palestine, you'd know that Bin Laden's rhetoric is just that. Rhetoric. So when do we go back to Europe and give the keys to Washington to Geronimo?

      --
      Karma: Bad is the liberal way of saying this guy won't drink the kool aid here on slash dot. I wear my Karma with pride
    4. Re:Al Qaida has won... ARGH!!! by afxgrin · · Score: 1

      Well it only makes sense.

      How else is he supposed to recruit?

      These people that are willing to sacrifice their life for the cause Bin Laden is supposedly fighting for make Al Qaeda what it is.

      Without the international network Al Qaeda would be nothing. Historically there's a lot of correct information in his letter to the United States, but he interprets everything through very militant Islamic attitudes.

      Again, everything is about taking advantage of local grievances.

      I'm sure local grievances had something to do with the movement towards independence during the initial stages of American independence.

      How else do a group of people from one area appeal to a group of people in another?

    5. Re:Al Qaida has won... ARGH!!! by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

      Osama bin Laden didn't mention the Palestinians for a long time. His big complaint was foreign troops on the sacred ground of Arabia. Imagine how a medieval Christian might have felt if Turkish troops had been providing security for the Vatican.

      Understand it or not, this was a HUGE issue. You can talk to a level-headed Muslim from outside Saudi Arabia and hear the same resentment, fear of recolonization, and humiliation at the reminder that after transferring a quarter trillion dollars to the West for weapons, the Saudi's still can't take care of their own defense.

      Saudis have had a hot button about foreign troops for a long time. In the 50's the US had an air base in Dhahran. Its presence caused a general strike.

      Now that the US has left Saudia Arabia bin Laden has to invent fresh "reasons" to rally the troops.

    6. Re:Al Qaida has won... ARGH!!! by Kor49 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Turkey is not an "islamic" country. It's a democratic republic with muslim majority; quite a bit different from many so-called islamic countries in the region...

      Moreover, the muslims in Bosnia are of Turkish descent. Arabs and Turks have never got along well. Turkey also has economic and military ties with Israel. So I wouldn't be surprised to hear that Arabs don't really care what happens with Turks...

    7. Re:Al Qaida has won... ARGH!!! by TJmoney · · Score: 1

      So essentially the cause for terrorism against the U.S. are lobbies, big oil and the friends of isreal. If we could find an alternative energy source (we could subsidize liquified coal for years, if not discover somthing better with the $89 billion + we spend in Iraq), and stay out of Isreal's buisness, there would be no reason whatsoever to interfere with middle east affairs. Did anyone notice that there are pleanty of islamic dictatorships in africa what could harbor or help potential terrorists as much as Iraq, with leaders with human rights records equal to or worse than Sadam? We don't care though, because they dont have enough oil, or are not near enough to de-stablize an oil producing region for us to care.

    8. Re:Al Qaida has won... ARGH!!! by dave420-2 · · Score: 1
      He's not speaking as a Palestinian, but as a Muslim, and an Arab. The Palestinians are also (mainly) Muslims and Arabs. On that level, he is Palestinian. He's defending his brothers, who are being killed by the US government.

      Saving some muslims from ethnic cleansing doesn't stop you from being guilty of killing hundreds of thousands over the years. If that were the case, a murderer has but to save a life to be fully exonerated.

      Al Qaida doesn't hate free society at all. Again, you're using one example to define their principles. By your logic, America hates freedom because there's a prison somewhere in the US. As you can see, it's clearly not the case. And anyway, it was the Taliban who built Afghanistan, not Al Qaida.

      Please, read some more before you debate. You've just got a few bare facts and none of the substance.

    9. Re:Al Qaida has won... ARGH!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yep yep, the church and state are separate in turkey.. but that doesn't mean the religious majority doesn't have any sway.. just like the US and protestants.

  123. "security without liberty," eh? by MoFoQ · · Score: 2, Insightful

    what about liberty without liberty? (that phrase itself sounds like some food product; fruit juice without a single drop of fruit juice.

  124. Fascism IS Socialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No Fscism,first implemented by Mussolini-a leftist,achieved its greatest toxicity as National Socialism,NAZI,in Germany.
    Lenin,Stalin,Mao,Pol Pot,Castro,Kim il Sung certainly didn't consider themselves "extreme rightists" they were MARXISTS.
    Fascim vs Communism was an intercine squabble of the Left.

  125. We came real close to being attacked by lapdancers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "Where the department has suspected people of terrorism it will prosecute those persons for other violations of law, rather than wait for a terrorist conspiracy to fully develop and risk the potential that that conspiracy will be missed and thereby sacrificing innocent American lives in the process."

    I wonder how many lives were saved when the DOJ used police powers implemented under the Patriot Act to go after the owners of a strip club:

    http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/2003/Nov- 04 -Tue-2003/news/22512794.html

    Thank God we were saved from those terrorists cleverly disquised as a topless dancers.
    ______________

    -----Lick Bush in 2004, the Supreme Court says it's legal!

  126. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by estes_grover · · Score: 1

    The Patriot Act is the threat to our liberty, effectively nullifying the Bill of Rights when it comes to searches and siezures, and the right to a FAIR and SPEEDY trial.

    Very true! To me FAIR means Identical. The government should (I know, just a theory) treat every citizen identically. Everyone should come before the law as equals.

  127. Wake up already! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  128. President Bush ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... Tear down this wall!

  129. mac ruoc? by 10am-bedtime · · Score: 1

    chiu` hom nai khong duoc ngu? ngong. chiu` ngai` mai khong duoc di ve^`. dai. qua', o^ng dinh, dai. qua'!

  130. Patriot Act at School by nicklaszlo · · Score: 1

    We are talking about the Patriot Act in the Debate Team at school. I am unfortunately on the afirmative side of the resolve "The safety provided by the PATRIOT Act outweighs one's right to personal liberty." I looked up liberty with KDict, and sure enough, I couldn't find a thing in the definition that the PATRIOT Act effected. Privacy is not a part of liberty, nor is the right to information about why your liberty has been taken away. If you want my openion, I don't care for privacy, and I trust the government not to detain people for no good reason (at least not very often). What bothers me about the act is the cost.

    1. Re:Patriot Act at School by psykocrime · · Score: 1

      I looked up liberty with KDict, and sure enough, I couldn't find a thing in the definition that the PATRIOT Act effected.

      Then what you need is a better dictionary.

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    2. Re:Patriot Act at School by psykocrime · · Score: 1
      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    3. Re:Patriot Act at School by Steve+B · · Score: 1
      I don't care for privacy
      nicklaszlo
      (email not shown publicly)
      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
    4. Re:Patriot Act at School by nicklaszlo · · Score: 1

      It still does not mention privacy.

    5. Re:Patriot Act at School by nicklaszlo · · Score: 1

      That's awfuly narow. Under that definition, I could imprison you and it wouldn't take away your liberty.

    6. Re:Patriot Act at School by nicklaszlo · · Score: 1

      More precisely, I don't care about legal controls over privacy. I don't see why anyone (sane) would be interested in anything I don't want them to know about me. I'm not interested in what you don't want me to know about you. I can't think of any reasons for secrecy besides 1. Insanity, 2. Covering up something one shouldn't have done, or 3. Trying to prevent a crime. Perhaps a beter solution to privacy "problems" would be to fix the crazy people who are interested in other people's private buisness on impulse, and to adjust our economy and culture so that noone will want to commit crimes.

    7. Re:Patriot Act at School by psykocrime · · Score: 1

      It still does not mention privacy.

      So? Who said it did, or that it needed too? The point is, the Patriot Act affects a lot more than just privacy. To say that Liberty != Privacy means the Patriot Act doesn't interfere with Liberty, is just silly.

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
  131. the most disturbing part of the interview... by Richthofen80 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    is that while the interviewer was attempting to illustrate the fear people may feel about the patriot act, it hardly at all actually specifically cites the offending sections. Except for section 215, the interviewer doesn't specifically say the parts of the patriot act that are damning.

    By not mentioning the specifics of the act, and instead talking about how people are afraid of the act, this report manages to, surprise surprise, actually stir up more fear (hence all the posts on slashdot.)

    What I would like to see is a specific breakdown. here's what patriot act ACTUALLY SAYS and here's what the constitution says, and show me differences. then I can make an opinion. Here's why X is bad, here's why Y is bad.

    Also, shame on you if you posted against the patriot act in this thread and have not actually read it yourself. you shouldn't trust the trolls around you to summarize it with their slant.

    I for one thought Viet's response to the one accusation, section 215, was actually reasonable. The powers he mentioned exist and have existed on state level and make sense nationally.

    and finally, to those who say that our greatest threat comes from our own government: Physical violence against citizens in the most blatant way, murder, is preventable. Each one of those twenty hijackers made a conscious effort. America did not deserve it. not one person who died deserved it. And it could have been prevented had a decent enough intelligence effort been put forth. If the government did NOT put forth efforts to protect us, it would be abdicating its duty.

    --
    Reason, free market capitalism, and individualism
    1. Re:the most disturbing part of the interview... by psykocrime · · Score: 3, Informative

      What I would like to see is a specific breakdown. here's what patriot act ACTUALLY SAYS and here's what the constitution says, and show me differences. then I can make an opinion. Here's why X is bad, here's why Y is bad.

      I wish I had time to do it for you myself, but here's a pretty good analysis of the USA PATRIOT act and why it's bad:

      http://www.epic.org/privacy/terrorism/usapatriot

      Physical violence against citizens in the most blatant way, murder, is preventable.

      Wrong. The only way that would be possible would be for each and every person in the US to have an armed guard in their company 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 52 weeks a year. Life is dangerous, that's a fact of life. I've said it before, and I'll say it again.. live long enough, you die. Every time, no exceptions.


      Each one of those twenty hijackers made a conscious effort. America did not deserve it. not one person who died deserved it.


      No argument there. I'm a firefighter, so 343 of my brothers died on 9/11 as a result. I definitely feel the pain of what happened. But if we start sacrificing our civil liberties in the name of psuedo-safety in the aftermath of 9/11, then those brave men and women died in vain, and there memories are tarnished forevermore.


      And it could have been prevented had a decent enough intelligence effort been put forth.


      That's debatable. The intelligence we DID have wasn't acted on appropriately. Would more intelligence have really helped?


      If the government did NOT put forth efforts to protect us, it would be abdicating its duty.


      No, no, no. Nobody has any obligation to protect me (or you) but myself (or yourself). It's a simple concept called personal responsibility, and it used to be considered a basic principle in this country. The government is not a full-time nanny who can watch over each and every one of us around the clock.

      The thing is, no matter how careful you are, bad things can still happen. That sucks, but it's life. How many of you really thought you were going to live forever, anyway? But while you are living, you should be able to live with Freedom and Liberty, as a free man, according to the principles defined in the Constitution.

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    2. Re:the most disturbing part of the interview... by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

      Individualy the people did not deserve it but as a country the US had it coming. 50 years of screwing around with other countries, sponsoring dictators like Saddam and Pinochet (Chile).

      --
      -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
    3. Re:the most disturbing part of the interview... by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

      I forgot to add that it does not make it ok and the terrorists should be hunted down.

      --
      -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
    4. Re:the most disturbing part of the interview... by Steve+B · · Score: 1
      while the interviewer was attempting to illustrate the fear people may feel about the patriot act, it hardly at all actually specifically cites the offending sections. Except for section 215, the interviewer doesn't specifically say the parts of the patriot act that are damning.... I for one thought Viet's response to the one accusation, section 215, was actually reasonable.

      Well, duh. If a dozen aspects of your position are indefensible but one aspect of your position is actually half-decent, which one are you going to talk up and which ones are you going to try to ignore?

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
    5. Re:the most disturbing part of the interview... by Richthofen80 · · Score: 1

      my qualm is that the interviewee is not going to volunteer points against his... so its the interviewers job. and he didn't do it well, if you ask me. he mentioned section 215, but hardly said what the patriot act said in section 215...

      if his positions are indefensible, bring up the offending patriot act problems, and have him defend them. the interviewer failed to do this. instead he asked how people 'felt' about the act. What the act says is important. whether it pisses people off is not.

      --
      Reason, free market capitalism, and individualism
  132. Contemptible? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, at best, his post is +4 funny. At worst it is contemptible. It is a counterproductive jab at the lunacy of reality. While it is counter to a productive conversation, it is well within the bounds of humor, as is the following:

    And America won the figure skating competition at the olympics when America's dazzling miss Yamaguchi beat Japan's Idori Ito ... yay America.

    This post is both abrasive and funny, like farting at a funeral. What is ignorant is to believe that this statement was intended to be part of the mainstream conversation. It was meant to be laughed at and promptly ignored while we went about the difficult conversation of actually dealing with losing our own liberty and protecting our own country from racism while we are barely above being racist ourselves, as recent history shows.

    So please, smile, and then move on. Are you one of the people who thinks that a mere movie like Dogma or more recently The Passion has the power to destroy society?

    - theed

    1. Re:Contemptible? by toxic666 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, contemptible. An AC post that inflamatory indicates a lack of willingness to be accountable for the comment.

  133. I will continue to champion..... by ramdac · · Score: 1

    the quote by Ben Franklin

    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin, Historical Review of Pennsylvania, 1759.

  134. Offtopic, but .... by supz · · Score: 2, Informative

    This may be a somewhat appropriate forum to make sure that people know about these two bills that might get passed:

    HR 163 http://www.congress.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d108:H.R .163:
    S 89 http://www.congress.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d108:S.8 9:

    Pretty much, if you are persuiing higher education, that no longer matters, and you can still get drafted. Also, if I read it correctly, it states that everyone HAS to mandatorily serve under military service.

    I cannot stand the nazi Bush regime, and their total disregard for our status as human beings.

    1. Re:Offtopic, but .... by psykocrime · · Score: 1

      Pretty much, if you are persuiing higher education, that no longer matters, and you can still get drafted. Also, if I read it correctly, it states that everyone HAS to mandatorily serve under military service.

      I cannot stand the nazi Bush regime, and their total disregard for our status as human beings.


      HOLY SHIT, thanks for posting that!!! I had no idea such a bill was floating around in Congress. I've already e-mailed a boatload of people and a couple of mailing lists I'm on, to let them know about this... Tomorrow I'll be calling my Senate and House reps to let them know how I feel (for all the good it'll do, of course).

      People... vote Libertarian... let's put an end to this nonsense... for the love of ( God | Allah | Satan | Mohammhed | Bhudha | insert deity here )
      this shit cannot be allowed to continue. This is America damnit, not fucking Soviet Russia.

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
  135. The Cause of 9/11 Sits In the White House by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does this asshole actually expect us to believe that the cause of the WTC collapse is anything other than a planned implosion?

    Al-Queada must have a device that can change the laws of physics to allow jet fuel to melt steel.

  136. Like the man said... by giantsquidmarks · · Score: 3, Insightful
    ...I can't wait until the war on terrorism is over and there is no more terrorism...

    The real problem with the "War on Terror" is... there is no end. When all the Muslims are dead, something else will be classified as terrorism. Unions, "file-sharers", hackers, cable television thieves...

    The government of the United States should be concerned with INCREASING my liberty and privacy; not the opposite. If they want to pass a law regarding oversight of law enforcement activities... why don't they pass one INCREASING oversight?

    Only one thing will save us and the world from our out-of-contol political system and wannabe emperors... eventually, we will be so far in debt that tyranny will bankrupt itself.

    Bush is the most transparently corrupt and immoral president in modern United States history. He does not value our democratic traditions. The only thing more putrefied than Bush and his administration; is the heart of every citizen in the United States who voted for him. We get what we deserve.

    1. Re:Like the man said... by purplejacket · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I agree with you.

      1) "Terroristm" is just a label that the current group of people in power use to move people around, scaring them in the most convenient direction, namely towards claiming middle east oil. Iraq has 11% of world reserves, Saudi Arabie 23+%. Keep your eyes out for who might be our next target. As to Afghanistan .. they wanted to build pipelines through that territory and the Taliban said "no way." Hence "terrorism" conveniently came along to motivate Americans to invade. In August 2001 the administration announced to the taliban that they would be invaded in October. Then came 9-11. Funny how that timing worked out.

      2) You wrote: "The only thing more putrefied than Bush and his administration; is the heart of every citizen in the United States who voted for him." ... Yeah, I have a hard time with Americans too -- the ignorance of them. But it's easy to manipulate people when corporations own media and corporations bet on the leaders who will profit them the most. Really, it's not good enough to read the news, you have to go out and research the news. Communicate with people on slashdot. Talk to people you know. Compare sources. Secondly, how do we know that the polls and votes are really accurate? I've never been polled about political issues, nor heard anyone I've ever met mention being polled. Where do the numbers come from? People are easily fooled, it's not just that they're stupid.

    2. Re:Like the man said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only thing more putrefied than Bush and his administration; is the heart of every citizen in the United States who voted for him. We get what we deserve.

      But I didn't vote for Bush. Neither did the majority of Americans who voted. Not even the majority of people in Florida meant to vote for Bush (unless you really believe that tons of liberal old people in a Miami suburb really voted for Buchannan).

  137. Sometimes they affect liberty too... by alexhmit01 · · Score: 0, Troll

    A few summers ago in New York, when my wife and I were dating, we went to the observatory on the Empire State Building. I hadn't been to the one on the World Trade Center since I was a kid, but we weren't up for two in one trip. We figured that we'd get to the WTC next time.. Well that liberty of movement wasn't taken away by the Justice Department...

  138. Re:OK whats more dangerous Communism or Republican by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, I see your point. For example, in the software world, there are "Microsoft Haters", and "Open Source Lovers". It's a lot healthier to be an "Open Source Lover". I run Linux, and I contribute to Linux development, because I like Linux and open source. I see Microsoft as a competitor, not as something evil.

    Similarly, businesses like IBM have an ethos where they focus on their relationship with their customers, not on bad-mouthing the competition.

  139. Re:Not justified? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "How about all those UN resolutions and the 11 years when nothing was done?"

    You talkin about Isreal or Iraq?

  140. Other than the the lack of a Palestine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A key distinction, Vietnam is a place on a map, "Palestine" is a mandate of the League of Nations drawning a name from a deriviation of the Roman territory that stuck in the Ottoman Empire because it was a backwater area that nobody wanted to live in.

    Nobody lives in "Palestine" because it doesn't exist.

    The "Palestinians" are the Arabs that live in disputed areas comprising Gaza, Judea, and Samaria (the latter two comprising the west bank of the Jordan river) captured from the land originally offered to the stateless people for a nation in 1948 (but turned down) by Egypt and Jordan.

    But why let the facts get in the way.

    You claim to not take a position, yet immediately accept factually incorrect terminology pushed by the PLO for decades and accepted by members of the East Coast media establishment. Nobody has been born in "Palestine" for over 50 years, when Palestine was divided into Trans-Jordan, a kingdom established for an influencial Arabian family (to keep them from fighting the House of Saud in Arabia) and a Jewish state, with portions left to be under International control.

    Words matter.

  141. I just don't get it... by localman · · Score: 1

    I am completely baffled how a man who had his father taken away and "reeducated" by the communist government can be so cavalier about giving more power to those in power.

    My only guess is that because communists overtook his country first, that he thinks that the overtaking is where the greatest danger lies. But it just doesn't wash to fear al-Queda will take over Washington. The danger is a policy of giving too much power to those in power. It doesn't matter if they're righties or lefties. Stalin and Hitler proved that as far as I'm concerned. Power is the problem.

    Anyways... what do I know. My grandfather was kidnapped and tormented during the cold war for five years by the Polish secret police because they were sure he was a spy. This guy had a similar experience with his father. He wrote the PATRIOT act, I think it's the worst thing to happen to America in a long time.

    Sigh.

    1. Re:I just don't get it... by giantsquidmarks · · Score: 1

      I'm sure the United States at it's worst is a thousand times better than Vietnam ever has been. This man has low expectations and a naive trust in the United Sates government born of appreciation.

      He's not a person to move freedom forward. He's just happy with something to eat.

      He's not standing on the shoulder of giants, he's trying to pick himself up out of the mud.

    2. Re:I just don't get it... by localman · · Score: 1

      Interesting points. Pretty odd that such a fellow was chosen to write the act.

    3. Re:I just don't get it... by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

      U are 100% right. Never have I heard a truer (not a word I know) statement on /.

      As the old saying goes

      Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely

      --
      -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  142. so whats new...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Looks like Bush is protecting us from the Vietnamese in the same way he did 30 years ago.

    What irony...

    A Vietnamese man is throwing United States citizens into captivity while Bush sits by and does nothing.

  143. riiiigggghhhttttt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have many gripes with this. First, Dinh was 7 when his father was taken and he was 10 when he came to the US. He says that "he had seen government that did not work." Honestly, how much could you understand about how a government works between the ages of 7 and 10. Also, how much can he remember of what happened at that age other than the fact of his father being taken and he left to come to the US. Hell, I, have a photographic memory and I can't remember all that much from when I was that age, just bits and pieces. Second, Dinh does not justify why 5,000 people were detained since 9/11. He says that 500 were deported because of interest in the 9/11 investigation and 300 were criminally charged. By my count that is 800. 5,000 to 800, hmmm that is a pretty lousy ratio. Also he says that "where the department has suspected people of terrorism it will prosecute those persons for other violations of law." In other words they'll "find" something to charge them with if there is nothing to charge them with otherwise. Next he says that Al-Qaida is the biggest threat to liberty and not "men and women of law enforcement and national security who seek to defend America and her people against that threat." America has a history of these men and women of law enforcement and national security who have abused the power given to them. Another case of who is watching the watchers. He also says that it is hard to back the criticism up with facts and concrete evidence. Tell it to the man of middle eastern decent who was taken into custody and his personal files, computer, and other belongings confiscated all because he attended an anti war protest(I can't remember what his name was or where it happened, but I'm sure somebody knows what i'm talking about and can post a link). He was released but nothing was returned to him. And what about the subpeonas that were issued for attendees at a Drake university antiwar protest and were withdrawn after public outcry. I hate to say it but 1984 is here and livin' large thanks to Bush and his cronies.

  144. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The ability to live without fear is called bravery.

    I may be anonymous but you sir are a coward.

  145. So... by DaveCBio · · Score: 1

    I wonder how long until /. is closed down for being subversive and a danger to America? After all there is some fairly radical thought around here, like freedom of speech even if it goes against large corporations and the status quo. Ideas that could give people information that might make it difficult for gov'ts to hack into their systems for information. The overall trend in the western world to continue tightening the grasp of irrational fear instead of dealing with the possible causes of terrorism frightens me. I lived during the height of the Cold War and even that seemed benign compared to gov't behaviours lately.

  146. Nice boxes you all live in by Ticklemonster · · Score: 1

    My God, look at all the rhetoric. Yeah, let's kill the patriot act, and then what? Which one of you actually steps back once in a while and thinks outside of the boxes you are all trapped in? Which one of you has been hurt by the patriot act? And don't feed me any mumbo jumbo, I want to know which of you actually were dragged away from your families, kicking and screaming while your wife was holding your crying children, telling them that you would be back, knowing it was a lie? Where are the storm troopers? The Gestapo? The Gulags for political dissenters? Hello? Black and white, here, no grey area. Which of you have had car batteries attached to your testicles to force you into admitting lies that would incriminate others? How many mass graves are there in this America you all seem to think is turning into a totalitarian state? Quit feeding on your own psychosis and think for yourselves for a change. Liberty without security is a short romp in the park. Security without liberty is no life for me. Security and liberty must be in equal balance, or we are all doomed. For too long, we had no security because of the yammering of nattering nabobs of negatavism like I see posting here. Who is going to stand up for America? Who is going to be standing there drawing fire from the "feel good, anything goes" mindset? Who is going to clear the monsters from under your bed at night? Oh heavens, monsters have rights, too!!! (I am after all, the Ticklemonster, so who should know better, eh? ;) ) Jesus Christ you people get more rattled up about our government trying to safeguard our liberty than you do about people trying to crush them.

    --
    Karma: Bad is the liberal way of saying this guy won't drink the kool aid here on slash dot. I wear my Karma with pride
    1. Re:Nice boxes you all live in by MarkPNeyer · · Score: 1

      I couldn't agree more. I hate big government. I think all americans should - this country was founded by people who hated the government messing with their buisness. I abhor almost anything a government does to give itself power. But I really can't muster up any sort of 'concern' about this patriot act. The biggest government interference in my life is excessive taxation, not the patriot act. In times of war the goverment has always granted itself more power. You've got the Alien and Sedition Acts, Lincoln Suspending the writ of habeas corpus, wilson jailing dissenters, FDR shipping the japanese off to internment camps. All of these things DO go away when the conflict is over, and they've all gotten milder as time has progressed. The patriot act is nothing compared to what FDR or Wilson did, which both pale in comparison to Lincoln's doing or the Alien and Sedition acts. While the government's power to put people in jail has been fluctuatory, the one power that has never decreased has been the power of the government to tax the citizens for frivolous purposes. And it is that function of our government which i find most abhorrent and unconstitutional. It is also this power on which most of the /.ers seem to be strangely silent. The government isn't rountinely dragging people off and locking them up without trials, but it is routinely helping itself to a chunk of your paychecks.

      --

      My blog
    2. Re:Nice boxes you all live in by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1
      Nice box yourself! I'll bet you are caucasian. If I am wrong, i apologize for the assumption. But I have read numerous accounts of Arab or middle-eastern looking people being detained for months without charges being brought against them. This is without access to their families or a lawyer. It has and is happening. Just not to you or your friends.

      The reason I am concerned about the PATRIOT Act is that there are a number of new provisions that do not require oversight by a judge. The FBI can now enter your home and collect evidence without a warrant. They can collect information on you from the library and bookstores without showing probable cause and can then prevent anyone from telling you about it.

      I just don't trust the government, and I especially do not trust John Ashcroft. But this is about the law not the man. There needs to be oversight and accountability. And frankly, there needs to be some justification. What is it about these new powers that would have prevented the Sept. 11 attacks? Hindsight has shown us that the info and intelligence was there, but the CIA and FBI didn't connect the dots. How will the PATRIOT act help them connect the dots? It won't, and it is a power grab that is sure to be abused.

      I am an opponent of the PATRIOT Act not because of what has happened to me personally, but because I see a larger picture.

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  147. Norwegians know how to deal with Greenpeace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fire a whale harpoon through their stupid little rubber boat.

  148. Re:OK whats more dangerous Communism or Republican by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I was sold on the idea of huge town halls filled with debate, with free education, networks of mutual aid and cooperatives, and what could only be termed an 'open source' society."

    And anyone not mutually cooperative enough will be shot..........as a counter-revolutionary running dog lackey of the Capitalist/Imperialists.
    Yeah we know the drill Comrade.

  149. Re:BZZZZZZT! WRONG! by DougWhite · · Score: 1

    Actually Thomas Jefferson stated that he believed the constitution to be a living document, and that each generation should have thier own. So I think he would be more concerend that we were trying to interpret it the same way as the founding fathers.

    We are stuck with the policy considerations of 9 old people who spent their whole life studying the past, because the constitution is more or less unamendable. With the right 5% of the population you can block any amendment.

    Look at how beign the last 10 amendments to the constitution have been

    27 - congressional pay raise occurs in next term
    26 - voting age 18
    24 - poll tax
    23 - DC residents get to vote for president
    19 - women's right to vote

    These are all no brainers in today's society for various reasons.

    25 - presidential succession
    20 - presidential term/succession

    This was important to spell out in order to make sure the government worked in a crisis

    22 - presidential Term limits
    21 - legalization of alcohol
    18 - alcohol illegal

    These are true policy decisions made by the country. And really these pale in comparison to the previous 17.

  150. All of the people... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All of the folks who rush to complain about PATRIOT probably don't even know what PATRIOT does or when the controversial parts expire.

    It's the fundamental problem with liberalism/socialism: Liberals don't bother with facts, nor do they ever question leftist axioms or their own points of view. They're just as despicable as peckerwood bible thumpers, only they managed to co-opt the universities, and the peckerwoods didn't.

    Ever stop to consider that Al-Qaeda really is a bigger threat to the USA than PATRIOT? No, of course not. You're too busy blaming American foreign policy (and probably a conservative, it *had* to be a conservative's fault) for 9/11. Blame Reagan for 9/11, you know you want to.

    Mod me down as a troll. Prove me right.

  151. Relative Threats by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think right now at this time and this place the greatest threat to American liberty comes from al-Qaida and their sympathizers

    Actually according to a pentagon report the greatest threat is from a changing environment and it's consequences on global societies.

    The terrorist threat is arguable greater today then it was 3 years ago. Fighting "terrorist" militarily is like squeezing a pimple it only makes it worse and takes longer to heal. Terrorism is best countered by emphasizing ideas (such as liberty , equality, education) and centering a foriegn policy more on these ideals then self-interest.

  152. Re:OK whats more dangerous Communism or Republican by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And anyone not mutually cooperative enough will be shot

    wait, do people who refuse to work on open source software get shot? Did I miss the memo?

  153. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by k_head · · Score: 1

    There is no such thing. There never will be such a thing. There never has been such a thing.

    Sorry to break the news to you.

    --
    The best way to support the US war effort is to continue buying American products.
  154. !!!MOD PARENT UP!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is most certainly NOT flamebait.

  155. Ashcroft is scary...... by nuetron · · Score: 0

    Remember Ashcroft lost to a dead man in Missouri link

  156. Totalitarianism by PuffCammy · · Score: 1

    He once said that he was drawn to study the government because he "had seen government that did not work," and he was drawn to the Republican Party because of his hatred for communism.

    So he went from one totalitarian government to another totalitarian government?

    --
    And the day came when the risk to remain closed in a bud, became more painful than the risk it took to blossom.
  157. Just a thought.. by BlueStrat · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I read somewhere that as population increases in density, individual rights suffer to maintain order. I think the PA, along with other various trends in loss of personal freedoms and individual liberties and increasing world turmoil may be at least partly a function of the increases in world population densities. Up till relatively recently in history, there has always been unexplored/unsettled lands for citizens who had "had enough" of their gov/empire/whatever to go to, and be free of _any_ power but their own. In the past, citizens could just vote with their feet. Not these days. I just hope that the civilization here can last long enough without imploding until space travel becomes viable as a way to escape
    overbearing/overwhelming gov control. Seems to be a very slim hope, at the moment.

    --
    Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    1. Re:Just a thought.. by garstka · · Score: 1

      And on an even more basic level, in anthropology back in school (was it that long ago?...I'm getting old) we learned that conflict rises in direct proportion to population density. So, as areas become more densely populated, they also become more beleaguered by violent clashes. Hence the need to increase security and, as a by-product, erode personal freedoms.

  158. Re:Ashcroft is scary...... by nuetron · · Score: 0

    Dude, he lost to a DEAD man...HELLO!

  159. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by Rotten168 · · Score: 1

    Then why is "providing for the common defense" in the constitution?

  160. 10/26/2001 - a date which will live in infamy by purplejacket · · Score: 2, Informative
    from FTW:

    On October 26th - a date which will live in infamy - the President signed the USA/PATRIOT act, officially known as HR 3162. And you should well note that, according to Representative Ron Paul (R) of Texas - as reported on November 9th by Kelly O'Meara of the Washington Times' Insight Magazine - the bill had not even been printed and members of the House could not read it before they were compelled to vote on it. O'Meara wrote, "Meanwhile, efforts to obtain copies of the new bill were stonewalled even by the committee that wrote it." Most of its provisions have nothing to do with fighting terrorism. Under this so-called anti-terrorist measure:
    • Any federal law enforcement agency may enter your home or business when you are not there, collect evidence, not tell you about it, and then use that evidence to convict you of a crime; (This nullifies the 4th Amendment to the Constitution). And, says the ACLU, it doesn't even have to be a terrorism investigation, just a criminal investigation. [Section 213 - The Sneak and Peek provision].
    • Any federal law enforcement agency may, if they suspect that you are committing a crime, monitor all of you internet traffic and read your emails. They may also intercept all of your cell phone calls as well. No warrant is required. (This violates the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the Constitution) [Section 202 and 216] [See FTW on Carnivore, Vol. IV, No.2 - April 30, 2001].
    • The FBI or any other federal law enforcement agency may come to your business and seize any of your business records - if they claim it is connected with a terrorist investigation - and they can arrest you if you tell anyone that they were there. (this violates the First and the Fourth Amendments to the Constitution) [Title II, Section 501
    • The CIA can now operate inside the U.S. and spy on American citizens. And, as directed by AG Ashcroft on November 13, it is also permitted to share its intelligence files with local law enforcement agencies (and vice versa). The CIA has spied on Americans for decades, but the fruits of that spying have never been admissible in court. Now law enforcement will have the ability rewrite the intelligence as a probable cause statement, conduct an investigation and introduce it as evidence. This, from material that was collected outside the rules of search and seizure. (There goes the Exclusionary rule of the Fourth Amendment). [Titles 2 & 9].
    • The foundation for an international secret political police agency is laid by allowing the CIA to receive wiretap information from any local agency and then share it with the intelligence services of any foreign country. [Section 203]
  161. terrorist threat: the numbers by e_lehman · · Score: 4, Informative

    According to the US State Department, around 20-30 Americans are killed by foreign terrorists each year. Typically, ZERO of these attacks are on American soil. In many cases, the attackers were no doubt unaware that their victims were Americans. For example, when Chechens took over a Moscow theater, there happened to be a few Americans in the audience.

    The 2001 attack was the big exception: 3000 Americans were killed that year on US soil.

    However, to put this in context, about 40,000 Americans are killed every year in auto accidents.

    So this is what we're sacrificing liberty for: a phenomenon that is typically less than 0.1% of the threat from auto accidents, and didn't evern break 10% in the worst year ever.

  162. Re:Name one civil liberty that has been violated by marcilr · · Score: 1

    Dude, things are bad. I used to think that "things were good" now I'm not sure. I started making some observations, always a bad idea in this day and age. My first clue is I can no longer send air cargo. So you think I'm crazy? Call up 1-800-DLCargo (Delta Air Cargo) and try to ship something. I was talking with one shipping consolidator who was worried about medical and blood supplies going bad because he couldn't meet forthcoming regulations to inspect *every domestic *package. Yeh, this makes a lot of sense.

    Gee, I now have to present 2 forms of ID at the airport in order to fly to the lower 48. Oh, got ti show up 2 hours early also.
    Your papers please!

    I guy here in Alaska had his home (a log cabin) destroyed by customs who thought he was "suspicious." Oh yeh, I forget to mention they did this because his wife had a deadly "pipe" in her purse. They took a quisinart to his cabin then told him to go f*ck himself. P.S. The feds have it out for anybody they smokes dope.

    I have a number of other stories exactly like this. Like this one for example...Take for example the time the feds ripped my truck apart (quite literally). They saw a nice pelican case in the back (with a digital camera in it). I was standing there bitching to customs quite verbally about this. When they finally asked what I wanted from them (as they were tearing my truck apart) I responded "Welcome back to Alaska?" They told me in uncertain terms to "go f*ck myself."

    By the way did you know we have a number of large anuses up here in Alaska? Did I also mention that for every 4 dollars Alaskans pay for federal gas tax (supposedly for the roads) we only get 1 dollar back in highway aid? Exactly what do the feds spend it on? Oh, wait thats classified. Here, try an experiment. Call of your local FBI office and ask for a copy of their budget and names of officers. Is this not the definition of "secret police?"

    Try this on for size... What are the names of all the enemy combatents incarcerated in this country that are full U.S. citizens? I checked, this is classified information (WTF!).

    Try this on for size. Which country incarcerates the highest percentage of its population? What are the top four countries for number of executions per capita?

    We just hit iraq with 350 tons of depleted uranium (almost pure urananium 238). Sure alpha particles are harmless. Remember we only did it for the WMD...

    Yep, must be a liberal crackpot. /rant

    --
    Azurite is fine covellite is mine.
  163. Black bag searches do not sunset by MacDork · · Score: 1

    And were repeatedly declared 'legal' by Janet Reno during the Clinton administration. Either party would have done this, Al Gore would have simply made the destruction of the 2nd amendment priority where GWB chose to destroy 1 and 4. This is hardly the "People's will". The people generally do not vote. It is not because we are lazy. It is because the candidates we have are preselected by monied organizations who have their best interest in mind, and not that of the people. I have a suggestion to illustrate the true will of the people. Put "None of the above" on the ballot and then see who wins.

  164. Stupidity is the mother of fascism by theolein · · Score: 1

    My fuck, sometimes my blood boils over when I read fascist bullshit like this. The Patriot Act is an excuse to control you Americans. It has nothing to do with the vague War on Terrorism. The War on Terrorism is an excuse, IMO, for a cabal of corrupt bastards to stay in power irrespective of elections and make more money than they already have.

    What has this got to do with stupidity? Please, two days ago it was on the news on all across the globe that the German intelligence service had given Marwan al Shehi's name and telephone number to the CIA more than two years before the 2001 attacks. And everyone knows about the FBI field agent who was simply ignored. Not only this but your intelligence agencies ignored Al Qaida until they went ahead and bombed you in your own country, or have you forgotten the bombings of the Tanzanian and Kenian embassies and the USS Cole?

    It was almost written in the fucking heavens that someone was gunning for the US badly. Terrorists hadn't stopped at bombing places in Europe before and they had even tried to bomb the WTC in 1993, yet no one gave a damn.

    The Patriot Act wouldn't have stopped any of those attacks. A ziny bit of intelligence would.

  165. Regarding writing/emailing congress critters by bezuwork's+friend · · Score: 1
    I know the parent thinks writing/emailing congressional representatives/senators is not worth it. I agree that we don't have as much input as we should have, but contacting them is one of the few tools we have.

    Previously on /. I've seen discussions on what method is best - email, snail mail, telephone calls, in person interviews.

    Common sense says in person would likely be the best, provided you are really up on a subject.

    [pipedream]
    Maybe /.ers should try and form a concerned citizens group of some kind. Then one /.er from each state could approach his/her congress critters with the consensus views. Being from such and such citizens group might have more weight than just being a solo citizen.

    Geeks for rational use of technology or somesuch.
    [/pipedream]

    As far as writing/emailing/telephoning goes. I am in a Legislative Drafting class which happens to have a few students from the hill (i.e. who work in congress as staffers). Due to the past /. discussions debating which was the better way to contact congressional members, I did raise the question. I was told that it didn't matter - your 'vote' would get tallied with the other 1000s that come in.

    While they didn't say it. I suppose it would be more worthwhile to keep letters to your congress critters short and to the point. Polite and respectful, of course, but I would guess there is no need to research or put lengthy reasoning behind your views. Just set forth that you live in their jurisdiction, what issue you are writing about, and your position on it. Only if you are passionate about the issue, have your reasons at hand, have the time to spare, etc. would writing a lengthy treatise on why your position is the best be worth it.

    This way, you can afford to write several letters stating your position on a variety of issues instead of one really detailed letter that probably will not do anything more than be a tick on some tally sheet. More letters = more ticks on more tally sheets.

    Just my 2 cents.

  166. I respectfully disagree.... by HotNeedleOfInquiry · · Score: 1
    I vote and I can't help the fact that scumbags like Nixon, Clinton, Bush and Bush get elected. I can't.

    On the other hand, I see where Gideon got the right to an attorney even though he couldn't afford one, Roe (actually Norma McCorvey) was given the right to have a safe and legal abortion, and Miranda had to understand his rights before what he said could be used against him.

    These are cornerstone decisions protecting US liberty that the fsking politicians didn't have a thing to do with.

    Voting is good, voting is proper, but the bottom line is that we the people have very little power in chosing honest and wise politicians.

    The reason that California now has an action movie hero for a governer is because in the last election we had to choose between two major slimeballs and the people here were ready to try anything other than another career politician.

    I wished to God that you were right and that we could just vote in a good government. The reality is that we can't. The only thing that keeps the government in check is the Bill of Rights.

    --
    "Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
    1. Re:I respectfully disagree.... by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      The only thing that keeps the government in check is the Bill of Rights.

      Ummm, if that is the case we are in trouble, cause the bill of rights hasn't squished the patriot act yet, and it doesn't seem too likely anytime soon.

      Hate to sound all pessimistic and stuff, but the only thing capable of keeping the government in check, is the point of a gun. (well, lots of them anyway)

      yea, yea, second amendment is in the bill of rights and all that. Where is my assault rifle? Oh wait. . .

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    2. Re:I respectfully disagree.... by HotNeedleOfInquiry · · Score: 1
      Ummm, if that is the case we are in trouble, cause the bill of rights hasn't squished the patriot act yet, and it doesn't seem too likely anytime soon.

      Give it time. Supreme Court decisions on constitutional issues take years to resolve. The day will come...

      --
      "Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
  167. um. by mushroom+blue · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I'm so damn tired of this quote. What is essential liberty? Isn't that the crux of the matter?

    I'd say the Bill of Rights would count as "essential liberties", wouldn't you?

    quote still works for me.

    1. Re:um. by KingJoshi · · Score: 1

      How much about privacy is in the Bill of Rights? How much implied? What degrees of privacy is essential? Those are the questions. Some people don't care about privacy to the same degree as others. Some aren't as educated about historical patterns about governments abusing powers. Some think the risks are worth it. There are issues to be discussed. More than just the damn quote ad infinitum.

      --
      In times like these, it is helpful to remember that there have always been times like these. - Paul Harvey
  168. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by k_head · · Score: 1

    How does that give you the ability to live without fear?

    --
    The best way to support the US war effort is to continue buying American products.
  169. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
    History lesson!

    At the time the constitution was written, we were under the articles of confederation, a hastily contrived union that got us through the revolutionary war. It had flaws, big ones. That is why a constitutional convention was held, to try and fix these flaws. (bored yet?) The part that you quoted from the constitution is from the preamble. All of the things listed in the preamble to the constitution were serious flaws in the articles of confederation. As for the common defense part, Congress, under the aarticles of confereration had no authority to raise funds for the military, beyond asking the states for money, which they could, and often did refuse or fail to do. 'Common defense' means military.

    Ben Franklin was of the opinion that the declaration of independance was a far more fitting preamble. Oh, and since he was the only man who had a direct hand in both documents, his opinion should matter.

    --
    Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
  170. Full Metal Jacket ?!? IEATAGWTCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever watched one of the best movies made ? A memorable quote from that great American movie was..." inside every Gook there's an american trying to get out..".

    Patriot Act protects us. From whom? Now we as Americans need rice paddy Gooks to protect us...Goddamn..this country is going to shit. What next ? Mexicans are going to turn into innovators !?!?

  171. What is Liberty? by serutan · · Score: 1

    From the perspective of the people who actually run America -- the ones whose money determines which politicians get elected and which laws get written -- Liberty means uninterrupted consumption and business activity. It means freedom from distracting influences that might discourage people from buying things they don't need with money they don't have. It means freedom from the ravages of common sense.

    People do have fundamental common sense, at least at an instinctive level. When they feel insecure they don't spend as much money. When they feel safe they are more willing to go into credit debt. The virtues of Self Reliance and Common Sense, once held in high esteem in America, have been the enemies of Commerce since about 1950, when the Advertising Industry came of age and discovered that it could get people to spend money like idiots. Anything (terrorism, environmentalism) that disrupts buying habits is automatically evil.

    The WTC destruction was much less deadly than various processes of product-induced death and suffering that we've learned to ignore. 3000+ people got killed. That's how many people have been getting killed by drunk drivers every couple months since about 1960. Alcohol's a big industry, so the government doles out enough money and PR to placate the vocal minority that really gives a shit, never really doing anything that will fix the problem. Same routine with tobacco. Money and PR for lung cancer. Business as usual. Same for artery-clogging fast food. Money and PR for heart disease. Business as usual.

    What made the WTC destruction a threat to Liberty was that it scared the shit out of people in a way that they couldn't be soothed to ignore. Something that could reawaken their normal instinct to stock up on canned food, stay home this vacation and maybe put off buying that 42-inch TV for a while, because You Never Know.

    Loss of consumption = loss of Liberty. Even the President routinely refers to the American public as "consumers" rather than "citizens." Liberty means easy access to lots of shiny new stuff, and gracious companies willing to let you get in debt to them for the rest of your life, so you can't afford to quit your job. So STFU and get back to work.

    1. Re:What is Liberty? by emtboy9 · · Score: 1


      What made the WTC destruction a threat to Liberty was that it scared the shit out of people in a way that they couldn't be soothed to ignore. Something that could reawaken their normal instinct to stock up on canned food, stay home this vacation and maybe put off buying that 42-inch TV for a while, because You Never Know.


      Actually, the difference is that in the examples you mentioned, there is a level of choice. Choice == liberty and freedom to make that choice == liberty, and $OTHER_THINGS==liberty.

      The people who died in the WTC and Pentagon didnt choose to have fully fueled aircraft flown into their buildings.

      People who smoke (and I do smoke) made a choice to smoke. If we die because of smoking related illness, it was because we CHOSE to smoke.

      If I get fat and die of a heart attack from all the artery hardening goodness of a fast food burger, it was my CHOICE to eat at McD's or BK instead of having something more healthy to eat.

      No one forced me to eat the burger and fries, adn no one forced me to smoke.

      Same with the alcohol. The only correlation you can make with alcohol consumption is that there ARE innocent victims in alcohol related accidents. BUT, conversely, the people who are responsible for the wrecks do pay the price (admittedly, thanks to lawyers being a dime a dozen, most DUIs get off with little more than a slap on the wrist).

      Liberty means easy access to lots of shiny new stuff, and gracious companies willing to let you get in debt to them for the rest of your life, so you can't afford to quit your job.

      Actually, this says different:
      liberty ( P ) Pronunciation Key (lbr-t)
      n. pl. liberties

      1.
      A. The condition of being free from restriction or control.
      B. The right and power to act, believe, or express oneself in a manner of one's own choosing.
      C. The condition of being physically and legally free from confinement, servitude, or forced labor. See Synonyms at freedom.
      2. Freedom from unjust or undue governmental control.
      3. A right or immunity to engage in certain actions without control or interference: the liberties protected by the Bill of Rights.

      --
      "Our funds have never taken part in toxic or death spiral convertible financings of any sort" -BayStar's managing partne
    2. Re:What is Liberty? by raind · · Score: 1

      you obviously never got a dui!

      --
      Get up!
  172. Re:Not justified? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "What" consists of Iraq's failure to properly account for its weapons following Gulf War I. The promised accounting was part of the agreement that ended that war and the subject of numerous UN resolutions.
    The vast majority of people involved in the inspections process were saying before the war that Saddam had lost virtually all WMD capabilities. An invasion could only have been justified if there was credible evidence that Saddam was an iminent threat to the US. This was presumably the origin of the risible allegations that he was in league with terrorists (given that he doesn't have any ICBMs...)

    Because you know as well as I do that cases will be brought to the ICC against the US to settle politcal scores. There is sufficient anti-Americanism that there is no guarantee that any cases brought to the ICC would be tried fairly.
    I agree, the US method of invading other countries to settle political scores is far preferable to an internationally agreed judicial system. Do you really think the US would be the only country that might have cases brought against it for political reasons? The court is international, which means that if a single country has a political score to settle with America, it probably wouldn't find the ICC a very effective means of doing it.

  173. Re:Al Qaida has won... ARGH!!! - Join the Taliban by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (i) You are the nation who, rather than ruling by the Shariah of Allah in its Constitution and Laws, choose to invent your own laws as you will and desire. You separate religion from your policies, contradicting the pure nature which affirms Absolute Authority to the Lord and your Creator. You flee from the embarrassing question posed to you: How is it possible for Allah the Almighty to create His creation, grant them power over all the creatures and land, grant them all the amenities of life, and then deny them that which they are most in need of: knowledge of the laws which govern their lives?

    This is what is all about, and since history is all about POWER, then 'injustice' is the oldest excuse to grab power.

  174. Idiot. by torpor · · Score: 1

    Regarding the 6-week deliberation period of the Patriot Act:

    And while the process was very quick, it was also the most deliberate process that I have seen in Washington, D.C.

    ALL THE MORE REASON TO BE SUSPICIOUS OF IT YOU FOOL!!!

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
  175. Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are two groups of slashdot readers. The first lot think that anything left of Fox news is communism. The other lot falls into the engineers fallacy of assuming that just because they can easily spot the flaws in a system they can understand it enough to fix it. These are human systems that don't work in the same way as software or hardware.

    You want to make sure there is smaller government ? There's only one way of doing that in your present system, and that doesn't involve voting Libertarian. Realistically they'll never win.

    -- ac

  176. Minor point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IIRC, most (~80%) of what was palestine is current;y under Syrian control. Why not ask for that land back?

    It's a reason, but I suspect it's more of a smokescreen.

  177. Re:BZZZZZZT! WRONG! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How would Jefferson have felt about a Constitutional Ammendment defining who can and cannot marry?

    I don't know. How would he have felt about an amendment banning slavery throughout the United States?

  178. MS patriotism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yea We can sell patriotism too ;-)

  179. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've seen some tables that have very sharp corners.

    I think those are more of a threat to my safety than any terrorists could ever hope to be..

  180. Here's a novel idea by jazman · · Score: 1

    Here's a novel idea for you (not just Americans, but us Brits as well, although we suffer terrorism to a lesser extent)

    Since you can't (a) bomb terrorists into submission (bombing Afghanistan and Iraq didn't work, how many more countries will you bomb before you realise this? With our direct experience of the IRA I would have thought we of all people would have known that) and (b) defend effectively against terrorism (another poster mentioned Israel's inability to stop Palestinian suicide bombers), how about considering option (c) - trying to figure out why these people hate you so much and trying to defuse the hatred? Surely that is a far better way of achieving peace than passing Acts which only serve to restrict normal people without actually doing something about the problem?

    Patriot Act and others are part of the vicious circle, not the solution. Terrorist strikes. Government doesn't want to consider (c) because it would mean admitting it was wrong. Government restricts people's liberties without fixing the problem. People grow resentful. Government manages to pull the spin that terrorists caused this problem, rather than Government power-hunger and short-sightedness. People decide they hate terrorists more than power-hungry politicians and vote for governments that hate terrorists. Governments continue to piss terrorists off for their own ends, who continue to strike, and so the circle continues.

    Solution: Government admits it was wrong, fixes what drives people to blow themselves up in protest, circle of hatred ends, everyone lives happily ever after. How difficult would it REALLY be to give Israel its own state within the USA, or some other Israel-friendly nation (Jerusalem, I know, but you can build a bigger better New Jerusalem, point out that God is not limited to one small country, and that once we have peace with the Palestinians, Jews can visit the Original Jerusalem(TM) just like Muslims can freely visit Mecca, or Christians can freely visit Rome)?

    Yes, I am considering running for PM :-)

    1. Re:Here's a novel idea by Steve+B · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Here's a better idea: If you present your grievances in a civilized manner, we will address them. If you engage in terrorism, we will not only make sure you don't get what you want, but also take away what you already have along those lines (e.g. the Taliban regime).

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
    2. Re:Here's a novel idea by boligmic · · Score: 0

      Israel isn't the bad guy? Why should they move their country? that's the dumbest thing I have ever heard? why not ask the arabs to recognize that Israel has a right to exist? I hope to god that we bomb and kill everyone but Israel, including you.

    3. Re:Here's a novel idea by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1
      A major issue here is American exceptionalism. We are American and therefore we do not make mistakes and all of our motivations are honorable. Besides, we are the richest and most ass-kicking country in the world, so we must be the best. Really, I have tried to have conversations about America's role in creating our current situation and no-one wants to hear it. There is, in America, a deliberate ignorance about the actions of our government abroad. Many Americans honestly think that we, as a country, were just walking along minding our own business and got jumped from a dark alley or something. The truth is, we are in everyone's business and some of them resent us for it. Combine that with poverty, a lack of justice and some religious fundamentalism, and BAM! You've got Sept. 11. It's pretty clear to me, but the jingoists will take issue.

      Sometimes America gets a bad rap, and sometimes we deserve our rap. And it is not a matter of "blaming" America for terrorism. Everyone is at fault and no-one is innocent. But if we, as a country, are not willing to honestly examine our actions and their effects, we will never know peace.

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    4. Re:Here's a novel idea by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1
      how about considering option (c) - trying to figure out why these people hate you so much and trying to defuse the hatred?

      What if they hate us because:
      • our women vote
      • we don't pray 5 times a day to their god
      • our media is 'blasphemous'
      • we say what we want when we want to whom we want at all times
      • our freedom, and the material success it engenders, makes them envious

      ?

      There's no reasoning with 'we want you dead', there's only killing it before it kills you.
    5. Re:Here's a novel idea by jazman · · Score: 1

      Yes, but terrorism happens when people *don't* have other choices. Israel was founded in 1948. Sept 11 happened in 2001. IANAMEE so they may not be linked, but if they are, what exactly was happening for those 53 years?

    6. Re:Here's a novel idea by jazman · · Score: 1

      Fair comment. Do they?

      Britain should have been bombed even more then, because not only do our women vote, and most of the rest also apply, but we even had a woman Prime Minister (Margaret Thatcher). And there's the Queen of course.

      I realise your last line is probably a signature, but imagine the following hypothetical conversation:

      Arabs: Here are our problems.
      Americans: (fingers in ears) La la la I'm not listening!
      Arabs: Here are our problems.
      Americans: (fingers in ears) La la la I'm not listening!
      Arabs: Here are our problems.
      Americans: (fingers in ears) La la la I'm not listening!
      Arabs: Right, we want you dead.
      Americans: Blimey, there's no reasoning with you people!

      As I said, purely hypothetical. Who, exactly, can't be reasoned with in this completely made up, imaginary, hypothetical, and probably thoroughly inaccurate scenario?

    7. Re:Here's a novel idea by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

      Fair comment. Do they?

      Well, after reading that Al Qaeda manifesto, I'd have to say yes.

      The 'complaints' in that manifesto (and, one assumes, believed by those who wrote and promulgate it) outline essential differences in cultural outlook that they're willing to start a war over, and are essentially non-negotiable (particularly support for Israel's right to exist, which IMHO must be absolute and clad in a nuclear guarantee (as should our nuclear umbrella shield an independent Taiwan IMHO, but that's a whole other story)).

      I would posit that England has not been a target largely _because_ of the 'Troubles', and the security that the UK and most of Europe has had since the IRA, ETA, and marxist pinko bombings during the 70's and 80's. Europe was better prepared than a nation that hadn't experienced a foreign attack since the early 19th century, no doubt. But don't think for a second that France is safe, maybe we'll see the Eiffel tower smacked down in the next year or two after that headscarf ban passes any legal challenge. Oh, and btw where were these people radicalized? In oh-so-multicultural-friendly France and Germany of course...

      Their attempts at justification are laughable. I don't buy the anti-Israel stuff at all, and the 'call to Islam' is a fucking joke. _They_ went to the next level with violence, and are now in the process of reaping the laser-guided whirlwind.

      Oh, and BTW There will be no peace in Israel until there's a Palestinian civil war or coup in which a) those who believe in the end of Israel are defeated and there can be a 2-state solution on a solid basis of trust or b) those who believe in the end of Israel win and there's a war between Israel and Palestine where the Israelis will force Palestinians to either leave the country or die in battle.

      OTOH, it could be worse, Sharon could play by Arabic Hama rules...

  181. I just follow the rules... by Jay9333 · · Score: 1
    Secret arrests, supposed "terrorists" being held indefinitely without trial, widespead wiretap priviledges.. the list goes on.

    No offense, but Congress (not just one administration or one judge) as a whole many, many, years ago instituted the policy of "military tribunals" and the classification of "enemy combatants" to combat situations exactly like the boundryless and extensive network of terrorists we're fighting. Numerous judges through the years have given these classifications merit, and they are historically parts of our countries international legal system. If I follow a few rules, I can keep myself from being held as an "enemy combatant".

    1) Don't fly to the Sudan to attend terrorist training with an Osama Lieutenant.

    2) If I happen to be in the Sudan and the US invades for whatever reason, don't pick up a gun and start firing on US troops.

    3) Don't raise financial support for organization on the Feds list of organizations that support terrorism.

    Is that really too much of a restriction on my freedom? I don't think so. It only takes one of these terrorist bastards to take you (and a *whole bunch* of the rest of us) out, and rip this country a new one.... again. The Feds have a job to do, so I'm going to let them do it with the tools Congress has given them. It isn't going to take another 9-11 for me to support this act.

    Now using this act against non-terrorists (if it isn't meant for that) is a different story. That would be wrong. So far, I haven't heard of any innocent person being wrongly convicted or having his privacy invaded because of this act. If I do start hearing of those things, I'll ask that the act be changed (not necessarily repealled).

    For now, as I see it, better safe then sorry. No judges have even ruled that a criminal has been wrongly prosecuted under this act, much less an innocent person (though some criminals have been prosecuted, and will have their day in court). We can always change the act if it gets out of hand, or the judges who hear these cases can rule on the Acts constitutionality or enforcement. That's what Federal Judges are for. Correct me if I'm wrong, but for now I think safe is better then sorry.

    1. Re:I just follow the rules... by strike2867 · · Score: 1

      No judges have even ruled that a criminal has been wrongly prosecuted under this act

      Read the act before you make these comments. BTW yes I do know this is /.. The contravercial part of the act that we have trouble with is the fact that someone can be detained without the courts approval. Under the act the FBI could just keep someone for however long they want without reporting it to anyone. And they have. Read some of the other posts showing people which have been detained for months at a time.

      --

      Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    2. Re:I just follow the rules... by Jay9333 · · Score: 1
      Read the act before you make these comments... someone can be detained without the courts approval. Under the act the FBI could just keep someone for however long they want without reporting it to anyone. And they have. Read some of the other posts showing people which have been detained for months at a time.

      From what I understand, this is nothing new. Classified "enemy combatants" have been allowed to be so detained since WWII, for reasons that have withstood the courts and the test of time. I'm not sure if "material witnesses" should be kept without telling anyone (or whether or not this has actually happened... a supporting link would be helpful), but if those occurances can be applied only in situations involving terrorism and will help in foiling terrorist plots, then I say bring it on.

      The courts will rule on all this in time. This is why we have checks and balances. I think it is better to have an act that is a little too strong (and which the courts then refine) then to have one which is too weak (which the courts have no problem at all with) and lets terrorists do their thing.

      Obviously we are facing an enemy unlike any other we have ever faced before. And so obviously our current laws will have to evolve to respond to this threat. Using war-time clauses to maximize the Justice Dept.'s ability to transform itself from a "reactive, prosecutional" entity to a "proactive, preventative" entity is a good idea. Changes will have to take place. Most people don't lik it, but it will have to take place. So just be careful not to mess with Big Brother, because he's out to save his ass and he's pissed off. I don't blame him, and am glad he's taking this seriously as hell. The checks and balances of this nation will keep him more or less straight over time. The enemy is literally all around us and we have suffered the first attack on our mainland's soil... and they promise more and more devestating attacks. This is a new and different era, and it will take time and sacrifice to adjust to it.

  182. All talk by Triskele · · Score: 1
    We keep hearing a lot of this talk from Americans. Often in the same breath as defending their constitutional right to own guns as defense against big bad government.

    Strange thing is we never seem to see the riots on the streets as the American people overthrow their oppressors by force. Just how far do they have to go for you to act? Or do you not really believe in such violence after all? Seems that constitutional right was just talk after all.

    --

    --
    USA: home of the world's largest terrorist training camp.

    1. Re:All talk by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      " We keep hearing a lot of this talk from Americans. Often in the same breath as defending their constitutional right to own guns as defense against big bad government.

      Strange thing is we never seem to see the riots on the streets as the American people overthrow their oppressors by force. Just how far do they have to go for you to act? Or do you not really believe in such violence after all? Seems that constitutional right was just talk after all."


      The idea isn't to try overthrowing the government by force - that's absurd. No modern revolution works in an industrialized nation without the support of the police and the military. The idea is that if the government should ever become so corrupt that our basic rights, such as the sanctity of our homes, are infringed upon, we will have some manner of defending ourselves.

      The idea is, when Uncle Sam sends his goons to break down my door, I'm taking as many of 'em with me as I can. The good citizens of the great state of New Hampshire said it best:

      "Live free or Die"

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  183. I can't wait, by StrawberryFrog · · Score: 1

    I can't wait until the war on terrorism is over and there is no more terrorism

    Yeah, and I can't wait until the war on drugs is over and there are no more drugs.

    It's just as likely.

    --

    My Karma: ran over your Dogma
    StrawberryFrog

  184. ahhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what shit is that?

    the patriot act is like "government can do whatever government wants to do"
    you are a terrorist so you will be punished...

    and this schi ming whatever likes that?
    and? some people in the usa want to keep their freedom?
    death sentence to all terrorist...
    omg... I think you are one to....
    no you need no court I just kill you now
    we have the PATRIOT ACT
    (aka IDIOT ACT)

  185. America you are AT liberty by SkunkPussy · · Score: 1

    dear america,

    a couple of years ago 3000 of you (and brits and others) died. out of a population of 300 million.

    every year far more than 3000 of you are murdered with guns, by your own people. [cant find find the link i'm thinking of here]

    Your biggest threat is not terrorists, but yourselves.

    America, you ARE at liberty.

    --
    SURELY NOT!!!!!
  186. This is scary by ChocoboKnight · · Score: 1
    It may well be that a number of citizens were not charged with terrorism-related crimes, but they need not be. Where the department has suspected people of terrorism it will prosecute those persons for other violations of law, rather than wait for a terrorist conspiracy to fully develop and risk the potential that that conspiracy will be missed and thereby sacrificing innocent American lives in the process.

    After reading this I fear for whoever is SUSPECTED of a crime, not only terrorism. The Patriot Act allows the authorities to charge a person of terrorism and hold him, without a public trial.

  187. And Benjamin Franklin said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.
    -- Benjamin Franklin, Historical Review of Pennsylvania, 1759

  188. So how do you measure it, then? by daveschroeder · · Score: 1

    Subject says it all...

    1. Re:So how do you measure it, then? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Measure what? The amount of additional power I concede to the state so that they can "protect me" from terrorists?

      Zero. Not any. None. I am much less worried about terrorists than I am about state tyranny.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  189. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

    Have you ever considered that the ability to live without fear for one's safety is (a) liberty?

    Lack of fear for one's safety is extremely dangerous.

    People fear they will face disapproval. People fear their family members and friends will die. People fear their own deaths. Each of these fears is a normal and healthy product of the reality that the world is not a "safe" place; without these fears, people would be reckless.

    Without these fears people would feel there is no consequence to them for their most destructive actions.

    Religious leaders have for centuries encouraged people to be "God-fearing", to raise their awareness of the consequences of their actions.

    The job of the government is not to make people free from fear; that would simply encourage the kind of actions normal people are afraid of.

    A suggestion that people ought to have the "liberty" to live without fear is, in effect, a call for anarchy.

  190. U R Weird by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " The joke is offensive because it implies that the most interesting or important thing about Vietnamese people is that they were involved in a war in the 1970s and that somehow they should all be stigmatized by it."

    If the offense is that long to describe, than I would say officially that you are "reaching".

    I'll bet you're offended when a middle age chick shows a saggy boob on TV, too.

    I mean, I was offended, but only because I hate looking at saggy boobs.

  191. because... by NumbThumb · · Score: 1

    ...no one in congress actually reads the laws s/he votes on.

    --
    I have discovered a truly remarkable sig which this 120 chars is too small to contain.
  192. It used to be the Constitiution vs the Viet Minh.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It used to be the Constitiution vs the Viet Minh boys of Vietnam. Oh wait, I guess it still is.

  193. German uniforms by Ethelred+Unraed · · Score: 1
    What do modern German military uniforms look like, anyway?

    See for yourself. (Sorry, uses Flash.) Click on the images along the right to see the various uniforms currently in use.

    You can also see the military ranks here. 'Heer' is the Army, 'Luftwaffe' is the Air Force, 'Marine' is the Navy, 'Sanitaetsdienst' is the medical service.

    Cheers,

    Ethelred

    --
    Everyone wants to be Ethelred. Even I want to be Ethelred.
  194. Re:Not justified? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Israel, of course. Nothing was done to Israel because the US are sympathetic to Israel. So they are free to murder, invade lands, etc.

  195. When we build monuments to freedom... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... we imply that freedom is dead.

  196. History is full of ironies... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Seriously, if there is a god, he has a really weird sense of humour....

    Maybe God is more human than we thought...?

    *chuckles* You gotta laugh sometimes...

  197. What I really need is.. by MasTRE · · Score: 1

    Viet Dinh? What, named after the country? What I really need is someone from Vietnam telling me how great the Patriot Act is.. They seem to have it down in 'Nam.

    Yes, furry little friends o' mine. The name of the game is communism. And we're edging ever-so-closer to it's methods in the good ol' US of A. Shame, shame, shame!

    --
    Must-not-watch TV!
  198. Don't be dense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Are you implying that people aren't trying to commit terrorist acts against American targets?"

    No, he's implying that not enough time has gone by to determine if these laws are doing anything useful.

    The truth is the 19 hijackers would not have been deterred by the patriot act. It would not have caught them. Nothing could have stopped them.

    Call back in 10 years. If there is another terrorism attack, will you admit that the patriot act is a failure? Or will you be stupid and just say we need more laws?

    I suspect I already know the answer.

    1. Re:Don't be dense by elmegil · · Score: 1
      No, he's implying that not enough time has gone by to determine if these laws are doing anything useful.

      Precisely.

      To further elaborate: Any terrorists we have thwarted since 9/11 have been thwarted not so much because of the provisions of the PATRIOT act, but rather because of our heightened attention to their real threat. Particularly the case mentioned above about the Washington Sniper (who honestly I wouldn't put in the same class as al Quaeda; not international terrorists) was broken by good old fashioned police work, and congratulations to those who did that work.

      And what about that college kid who got box knives and such onto a plane? PATRIOT didn't stop him. It wouldn't stop anyone else who was more malicious. The only thing we've done that really concretely addresses THAT part of the threat is reinforcing the cockpit doors (and hopefully the bulkheads on either side), and perhaps the additional traffic in air marshals.

      Add that to the already occurring abuses of the act (despite Johnny A's assurances to the contrary) and I can confidently say the PATRIOT cure is far worse than the disease.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
  199. if he's so concerned with liberty... by GoldenBB · · Score: 1

    Then why did he help write the damn thing at all? The PATRIOT Act is a direct affront to the Bill of Rights. There is no getting around that fact.

    Also, Mr. Dinh is buying into the myth that al qaeda is a bigger threat to the US than our own government. Let's see now:

    Al Qaeda == small, relatively insignificant (on a whole-nation scale) pin-prick attacks that can only do damage to "America" if we let them cow us into submisssion.

    US Federal Governemnt == Pervasive, all-encompassing central organization that can do serious damage to civil liberties.

    Yes, if there is another terror attack, people will die. But if there is tyranny in America, a lot more people will die.

    1. Re:if he's so concerned with liberty... by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      Thank you! Will somebody explain to me how Al Qaeda is such a threat to my freedom? To hear people talk, you'd think the barbarian hordes were massing at the border...

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  200. Re:We came real close to being attacked by lapdanc by Molina+the+Bofh · · Score: 1

    Of course they were fembots.

    --

    -
    Roses are #FF0000, Violets are #0000FF, find / -name '*base*' |xargs chown -R us && mv zig greatjustice
  201. so unite the independants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    the only way you'll get real change is by getting all the independants together in one room, getting them to pick a respected nonpartisan figurehead (you'll never get the likes of Nader, Buchanan etc to agree to follow "the other guy"), and then have them all run that person as the most boring middle-of-the-road candidate whose only non-caretaker policy goal is to bring in instant runoff voting for the Presidency

    it's in their interest(s) the long run, because under the current system, as individuals the best they can hope for is to be irrelevant

    so it should be easy, right? >)

  202. T. Jefferson by kbonapart · · Score: 1

    "Those who would sacrifice liberty for security deserve neither liberty, nor security."

    Thomas Jefferson said that, and I believe that if he were alive today, he would flee America to start a country where the government doesn't invade your privacy to protect everyone from what you might be capable of. I believe that he would guarantee everyone's Right to Privacy, and state that every person deserves thier life, thier liberty, and thier pursuit of happiness to be un-infringed by thier government. I beileve that he would see today's legislation as infringing on his liberty, and that he would be aghast at what has happened to his ideals, and to his country.

    It's my country too, but I have to remember that I can't read what ever I please at the library without it coming up in a database in Washington. They already have the power to pull up the names of every single person who has ever checked out any book in any public library. What makes you think they haven't already? That kind of information at thier beck and call, and you think they haven't looked at it?

    Think about that next time you go to the library. Do you remember every book you've every checked out? You can bet Washington does. Have you every read about anything Islamic? In an attempt to understand one of the fastest growing religions on the Earth, have you un-knowingly cast your name into a very large hat of, "persons of interest"?

    The other thing that bothers me is the FBI and CIA sharing thier info. While, yes, it is a good thing that intel groups share thier info, and possibly better see terror events coming, it allows the CIA to indirectly monitor the comings and goings of U.S. citizens, which is expressly forbidden by thier charter. The CIA are /not/ allowed to keep any information, or investigate any United States Ciziten. They are supposed to be watching the rest of the world, while the FBI is supposed to keep tabs here. They were kept as separate enities to protect a citizens right to privacy. The CIA is allowed to use methods that the FBI cannot.

    But with the sharing of information, the walls come down. The CIA can analyze and categorize data that it was only supposed to collect on other citizens of the world. It allows them to send us through the same filters it uses for terrorists, and what do you think the FBI will do if you fall into the same category as nineteen Egyptians with box-cutters?

    Do you think the FBI is going to say, "Well, yeah, thanks CIA, that's good to know, but he is a US Citizen, so we're going to protect his privacy, and liberty, and not investigate(interrogate) his immediate family, co-workers, friends, loved ones, classmates, old baby-sitters, retired teachers of this young man."

    Sure

    --
    There are no gods but ourselves.
  203. Have you been affected? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    I see lots of grumbling about the Patriot Act.
    How many people here have been affected by it or lost their liberties? I am not talking about hypothetical here, I am talking about serious lost of liberties? Have you had your doors kicked in? Your library cards examined?

    Maybe it wasn't you personally, but a friend? How about a friend of a friend? I want to read real "horror stories" about the Patriot Act instead of just chicken little whining.

  204. Al Qaeda the greatest threat to fr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I think right now at this time and this place the greatest threat to American liberty comes from al-Qaida and their sympathizers..."

    Well, let's see now...

    Who extorts over a trillion dollars every year from Americans? It ain't Al Qaeda -- it's an organization called the United States Federal Government.

    Who routinely kidnaps and imprisons Americans for years on the flimsiest of excuses (cleaning out a ditch on your own property that some bureaucrat considers "wetlands" because there are some rain puddles in it; importing lobsters from Haiti in plastic bags instead of in cardboard boxes; etc.)
    It ain't Al Qaeda -- it's the United States Federal Government.

    Dinh is delusional. Al Qaeda shot their wad on September 11 in one spectacular criminal act, and haven't been seen on these shores since. The United States Federal Government, on the other hand, terrorizes Americans on a regular basis.

  205. They are doing such a good job now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Save American Lives?

    9/11 ~ 3000 killed.
    cars ~ 60,000+ killed every year.
    smoking ~ tens of thousands killed and more every day. (Increasing your health care costs!)

    Tobacco is Terrorism and
    Smoking is a biological weapon.

    If they want to save American Lives:
    Ban the sale of tobacco.

    If they want to save American Lives:
    up the car safety test speeds X 2.

    'Terrorism' is bad, but it is the everyday stuff that gets most people killed.

    How about stopping the crack-heads?

    You are far more likely to die from
    'common crime' and high risk behavior
    (smoking / overeating / hypertension)
    than some sort of political cause.

    The problem with building a police state
    (with all good intentions of safety and security)
    usually ends with the power in the hands of some totalitarian.

    The few in power abuse that police state system to hurt the many. In the USA, perhaps the 'total information awareness' data will be exploited for economic gain, or to remove the 'unwanted' people, like democrats.

  206. First past the post voting system. by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 1

    Part of the problem is that the first past the post voting system tends to deliver governments which over-represent large minorities.

    For example, the Labour party in the UK got around 43% of the total vote. That's a minority. The first past the post voting system gave them 412 seats out of a possible 658 or 62% of the seats in the House of Commons, that's a big majority which pretty much allows them to do what they want with legislation. A large minority now governs country.

    The thing is, the first past the post system is a throwback to when representatives were individuals and didn't owe their loyalties to a party machine. These days it takes a party rebellion to derail the plans of the government and it causes swings of power back and forth between extremes.

    The US electoral college system has a similar effect on representation.

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
  207. What's he got to lose? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't have kids.

  208. This has been going on for 200 years in the US. by elBart0 · · Score: 1

    I think Benjamin Franklin put it best in 1755.

    "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."

    BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, Pennsylvania Assembly: Reply to the Governor, November 11, 1755.--The Papers of Benjamin Franklin, ed. Leonard W. Labaree, vol. 6, p. 242 (1963).

    Bartleby

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
  209. Who determines what "supporting terrorism" is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a serious question, given that "terrorist" has been used as post 9/11 shorthand for, among others, the following:

    Rage against the Machine
    Sami al-Arian
    Anyone living in *stan
    Various dead Iraqi civilians

    .. and anyone plain honest enough to see patriotism as the retarded quasi-ideology that it is.

  210. Actually, no, the majority don't choose by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 1

    "Yes, the "people" (the majority) choose who obtains power"

    Unfortunately not. Sizable minorities choose who obtains power. In the UK for instance it was around 43% of voters, which is a minority for a start and around 25% of the total population decided who would be governing the country.

    e.g.
    http://www.psr.keele.ac.uk/area/uk/e01/par tycand.h tm

    In the US in 2000 famously, the electoral college elected George Bush over Al Gore even though Gore recieved more popular votes. Both candidates with minorities of the popular vote BTW and both with around 25% of the population voting for them. So, again no, the majority don't choose.

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
  211. my secondary u.s.history teacher is a terrorist... by LifesABeach · · Score: 0

    with the pres'es pet monkey stating that the n.e.a. is a terrorist, obstructionist group. the 'patriot act' looks positively level headed.

    "its because of people like me that thieves, liars, and cut throats have a bad name." -- michael thompson

  212. Agreed by EgoBoy · · Score: 1

    Your right. As a reaction of what they did, we are voluntarily giving up our "way of life". The freedoms and due process that our laws provide are being bypassed, and people think its un-patriotic to say anything about it.

    What I don't understand is why it took so long for people to realize this. When Bush started this, everyone stayed silent. Only recently did the Democrats come out and begin talking about these issues...

    My parents moved to this country to get away from opressive governments only to find that we too are going the way of those governments abroad...

    I hope people wake up and get involved with the political system before its too late.

  213. Re:BZZZZZZT! WRONG! by El · · Score: 1

    If you follow Jefferson argument that "all men are created equal" to it's logical conclusion, then the banning of slavery naturally folllows, but the claiming that people that happen to be attracted to people of the same gender have LESS rights then people that are attracted to people of the opposite gender does not. Furthermore, a very small percentage of people are born true hermaphrodites... are they then denied the right to marry ANYONE, because it is not clear whether they are male or female? Or do they get more rights than everyone else, and can marry either a man or a woman? The Constitutional ammendment which are president is currently proposing with a straight face definately conflicts with the concept of "equal protection". Our founding fathers must be spinning in their graves. (Oh, and for the record -- I'm married to a person of the opposite sex.)

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  214. LOL by strike2867 · · Score: 1

    LOL just LOL. Youre entire comment just LOL.

    But to be specific:Obviously we are facing an enemy unlike any other we have ever faced before.

    Many countries have had to deal with terrorists for centuries. We have faced enemies that werent there before. Remember all those commie bastards that killed all of us. Or how about those damn Japs while they were locked inside camps. And just screw those Jews wreaking havok on the German economy. Gotta kill em all.

    So just be careful not to mess with Big Brother, because he's out to save his ass and he's pissed off

    I still remember voting against Big Brother. God those were happy times. Ohh I am glad he is taking this seriously. These 3,000 deaths, 10 years since the last attack btw, are so much worse than the 30,000 people dying on highways every year. Or how about the 18,000 getting murdered each year. Those people dont matter at all. We need to care about the corporate assholes that were in these buildings. I say its too bad they missed Ashcroft at the Pentagon.

    This is a new and different era, and it will take time and sacrifice to adjust to it.

    Dont be so full of yourself. This has happened before over and over again. Read a book once in a while. France is still struggling with terrorists every day. Israel has been working with terrorists ever since they became a country. This is old news.

    From what I understand, this is nothing new. Classified "enemy combatants" have been allowed to be so detained

    Ford threw that policy long ago. If I remember correctly the resolution numbers were 9066 to instate and 7000 something to remove. Look at the books, thats why they needed to reinstate it again. And we are not in a war now. The gang members outnumber the Al Quaida by the thousands. Why dont we pick a target thats actually causing damage.

    And in general read what I said, the point of this law is to remove the Judicial branch from the process. This takes care of all your Justice Dep't crap.

    --

    Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    1. Re:LOL by Jay9333 · · Score: 1
      Dont be so full of yourself. This has happened before over and over again. Read a book once in a while. France is still struggling with terrorists every day. Israel has been working with terrorists ever since they became a country. This is old news.

      "Gang members" never would've dreamed of suicidally taking out the World Trade Center. 9-11 changed the US forever. Our mainland had never been attacked by foreigners, especially with the sole intent of taking as many lives as possible, with the suicide of the killer a very likely. Sure, Israel has been dealing with terrorists attacking them on their turf for years... and their laws have developed accordingly. Now ours must develop as well, to be more preventative then "prosecutional after the fact."

      I don't say that to offend you. But obviously your intent is to offend me as you offer your insightful tibits to this discussion such as, "Dont be so full of yourself," and, "read a book." I have no need to deal with trolls like you who can't disagree with someone without flaming and insulting him.

      Would've been nice to have had and learned from a conscientious discussion with you. But I get the feeling you just wanted to troll all along.

    2. Re:LOL by strike2867 · · Score: 1

      Gang members kill people. Terrorists kill people. You are saying we should deal with them differently. And that just because most terrorists are located outside this country makes them more important. You may say that if we let them go, it would just give other nations the green light that we are ok with people attacking us. But that is just not true. That may be a sensible approach by the Bush administration. To scare other countries shitless. That would make an excelent reason to attack Iraq. What I am trolling about as you call it, is all the lies he uses to string us along. And while our world opinion as an agressor might be a possible path, I think there are better options. Overall I would just like to see more money spent in the direction of solving domestic problems, and the stopping of corporate monopolies controlling government decisions so much.

      --

      Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    3. Re:LOL by Jay9333 · · Score: 1

      As I said, gang members are criminals, not warriors and fighters. Many, many years ago this country instituted a system for dealing with combatants during a war. It has been supported by Congress and judges through the years, because it is more effective for wartime scenarios and for gathering intelligence to defend the nation. The administration of President Bush is using that system to defend us. I'm glad about that. I'm glad we don't have some sissy president that's going to do whatever the French tell us to do, and is willing to only fight terror *after the fact*, so long as the French don't get agitated at us.

      Terrorists are different from gang members in that *mass* death and extreme destabilization of the nation is their goal. This is much, much more similar to war then other crimes. In war, you are better safe then sorry... because when you're "sorry" thousands (or even millions) are dead and the entire nation takes a huge downturn. That is why the system of military tribunals, etc. exists. Our laws must acknowledge that we are at war, and our laws must become more preventative then "prosecutional after the fact" when it comes to dealing with terrorists.

      "Lies he's using to string us along"? 9-11 was no lie. That's all I need to know that we are at war. And the terrorists are trying to top even that. Two years, how quickly some people forget. Or maybe you think "Dub-ya" orchestrated 9-11. That wouldn't suprise me, the way you've been talking. There are people out there who believe that ridiculous assertion.

      Anyway, I see you've written an entire post to someone you disagree with without using one flaming insult. Good job. I'm proud of you. I suppose you aren't just a troll after all. Nonetheless, your original malice toward anyone with a viewpoint different from you has made me realize that discussing with you is probably useless. I doubt I could learn anything useful from a person with your intolerance toward discussion and diversity. This conversation is over on my end.

      Have a nice day,

      jay

    4. Re:LOL by strike2867 · · Score: 1

      First of all French currently hold the most powerfull and largest army in Europe. You and I are both in the US so we have not heard about it in the news, but its a known fact. In other words, I think it may be a little worthwhile to listen to what they have to say. You say "terrorists are killing thousands, millions", but they are doing so in small instances. They killed 3,000 in 10 years. As opposed to gangs which are killing that much every year. So lets see, 3,000 vs 30,000 in 10 years. Ohh hey lets get the ones which kill less people. I dont think Dubya (and thank you for calling him that) orchestrated 911. So lets see gangs have killed 6,000 since 911, highway accidents have killed 60,000. While I see billions of dollars going to defence, I dont see anything near that much going into highway safety. I travel on the highways every day. The chances of me getting killed by a terrorist are 0. Let me say it again, 0. Just yesterday I was driving normally and some guy blabbing away on a cell phone cut me off. Nearly killed me. I was so pissed I nearly dropped my razor into my cereal. There are more important things to worry about then 100 people 100,000 miles away. When I walk on the streets of Chicago Im more woried about someone pulling a gun on me. I would like to see stuff like that taken care off before we spend another 100 billion on defence from nothing compared to what happens on a domestic level.

      And as an after thought, I gave Bush some leeway if you didnt notice. I said that if had attacked Iraq just to scare other countries, I said that was fine. Makes more sense every day since we obviously know they didnt have WMD, otherwise we wouldnt have attacked them. You dont see us getting ready to go into North Korea. And we know they have WMD. And dont even dare say Iraq or Hussein had anything to do with terrorists. You know it didnt. Its a fact known to everyone around the world except Fox News, CNN.

      --

      Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    5. Re:LOL by Jay9333 · · Score: 1

      Sorry to break it to you, but we will always have homocides in our society. There will always be some punk kid "Donovan" who rapes "Jonathon's" girl after stealing a car in the the city and taking her for a joy ride, and then gets stabbed by Jonathan. Yes, we can fight gang and youth violence and we should, but it isn't a battle we can ever win completely. Violence is part of the human nature, and every culture and country in the world experiences homocides and violence.

      I'm not saying that gang members don't have intrinsic value... but the death of 3000 of them doesn't have nearly the impact of the death of 3000 productive, law-abiding citizens, managers, and even CEO's in the center of New York.

      We should continue to seek to control and prevent gang violence and violent, criminal youths from killing eachother and being in gangs, even though it is a battle that we can never fully win. We can, however, keep terrorists from flying bombs into our major economic centers and slaughtering law-abiding, productive, innovative citizens and leaders of our country by the thousands. We can do everything possible to keep WMD's out of the hands of Islamic madmen and those who would attack their neighbors, attack us if they could get the weapons here, rape and kill innocents, and refuse to be open and cooperative with international inspectors.

      Taking the war to the terrorists and the madmen is expensive, yes. But if we don't do it, we give them a safe haven in which to plan further attacks against us. And if we did that, trust me... the number of gang-related deaths would pale in comparison that of terrorism related deaths of productive, law-abiding citizens. And this country would suffer immeasurable consequences for letting that happen. That is something we can prevent, if we are willing to sacrifice. It is something we must prevent... or we won't even be around to try to help youth gangs stop killing eachother.

    6. Re:LOL by strike2867 · · Score: 1

      Why are you so content with saying we will always have homicides in our society? In our country something like 3.97 per 100,000 die from homicides every year, compare that to Japans 0.01! Or Canadas 2. We are way above average. We more than double it. If we were at least average, it would save at least 9,000 people every year.

      How are managers and CEO's productive citizens. I have no respect for paper pushers. Although I realize we need some for our society to function, I hate those that steal money, and try to suck every dime out of the average consumer. While the smoke from the factories fills the air and the Gov't turns its back on us.

      One of the only good things that increases our safety released by the Gov't thus far have been the resistant doors to the pilot chambers. Everything else is just retarded. I had to go to the Cook County Court House a while ago for a ticket and they took away a 1 inch blade that I had. When I came back on a Saturday for traffic school there was no security and I just walked in. I could have hid that knife anywhere. Or even a gun, there were plants, lockers, drawers all open. No security. But on weekdays they will take away your weapons. Now how dumb is that. This is what Im paying taxes for? Ironically I do work for the government, and all the taxes I pay I get back in my paycheck anyways.

      I dont see what attacking Iraq had to do with keeping WMD out of Islamic hands. I have already told you that Iraq did not have WMD and had no direct contact with the Taliban. I was not as opposed to attacking Afganistan, which cost less and had direct ties to Al Quida. We are still in direct contact with countries who donate regularly to the Taliban. Uzbecherstan(dont know if thats the correct English spelling) has always donated money to the Taliban and still does so on a regular bases. We have perfectly fine contact with them. No sanctions no nothing. As you can see we are not bringing the war to them.

      To add onto all this, why are we letting Dubya pass out gov't contracts to his friends. Why has there been no bid process to see who should get the money to rebuild Iraq? His entire administration is filled with millionares and billionares who are afraid. I am a programmer. My parents are engineers and we will not be visiting either the Pentagon or any large capital building any time soon. The terrorists are not trying to kill me. The business assholes are scared shitless. Did you visit the World Trade center on a regular bases? Im guessing no. Look at the statistics, when the Towers colapsed they took with them 35 of Concordes regular passengers. A one way trip on the Concorde was what, 10 grand? I would like to meet the programmer who makes enough to fly the Concorde at least once a month(actually programming).

      --

      Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    7. Re:LOL by Jay9333 · · Score: 1

      Why are you so content with saying we will always have homicides in our society? In our country something like 3.97 per 100,000 die from homicides every year, compare that to Japans 0.01! Or Canadas 2.

      Actually, if you'll read what I wrote you'll find I said, "We should continue to seek to control and prevent gang violence and violent, criminal youths from killing eachother and being in gangs, even though it is a battle that we can never fully win." I didn't say we can't do any better. I said that violence will always be there, but terrorists being able to kill thousands upon thousands of innocent, law abiding citizens *at one time* doesn't have to be a problem that is always in our midst. We can beat that one. And yes, we can decrease gang violence... and we *have* in the past 5 years or so. But if we don't rid ourselves of the terrorist threat (which we have made a lot of headway in doing so far), we won't even be around to try to help youth gangs stop killing eachother.

      How are managers and CEO's productive citizens. I have no respect for paper pushers.

      Law abiding, hard working citizens are much more productive (and valuable to our country) then gangsters who live to steal cars, commit crimes, and fight/kill one another. Law abiding, hardworking citizens also tend to have more wealth then gangsters and criminals (on the average, there are exceptions). The fact that someone has money shouldn't tell you that they are evil or don't matter. It is entirely possible for someone to be law abiding, hard working, and *moral*.

      One of the only good things that increases our safety released by the Gov't thus far have been the resistant doors to the pilot chambers.

      Riiggghht. And the following facts have done nothing to make us safer?
      1) Al Quaida no longer has a safe haven from which to direct operations intended to kill massive amounts of Americans in a single blow,
      2) 90% of Al Quaida leadership is captured, and the rest are on the run and likely will be killed or captured soon
      3)a madman and brutal dictator of a mostly Islamic country who even the UN agrees wasn't forthcoming nor cooperative in allowing international inspections of his WMD programs is captured
      4)other terrorism havens (i.e. Libya, Iran) have seen the example in Iraq and are being more forthcoming with their programs, or are promising to end them all together and let us inspect them to make sure of this.

      These points you're making are utterly ridiculous. Are you sure you're not just trolling, or am I misunderstanding you?

    8. Re:LOL by strike2867 · · Score: 1

      Why would I be trolling to change the mind of one person, my money is on that we are the only ones still reading this.

      This one time comes around at most every 10 years. I do not see something that comes around every 10 years as much of a priority compared to something hapenning every day. Your entire argument seems to based on the fact that terrorists wish to commit mass murder at a single instance in time. Realize that no matter how much money we spend, one day there will be a thermonuclear explosion on our territory. Its inavidible. As time grows greater and more countries acquire the knowledge on nuclear power the chance of it happening approaches 1. That is not something we can ever fully stop. But getting our murder rate to be anywhere near the ballpark of where Japan is today is a lot more reasonable. Its domestic, so by doing it we wont get more people around the world upset with us. Realize that the CIA told Congress that by going into Iraq it would make our country less safe. This is a known fact. It was on the record. Probably publicly available now. Now the chances of us getting hit by another terrorist attack by either Al Quida or some other group is much more likely. By us attacking Iraq they have probably had more recruits then ever. We may think we have captured 90% of their intelligence, but we dont know exactly. Plus their ranks have probably trippled during that time. Did you know that finding Osama is no longer a priority? Bush was quoted saying this. We are barely doing anything to find him. He is just sitting perfectly safe transmitting satelite signals from somewhere in the mountains. We cant follow him b/c the local police has to be with us and approve all our actions. He is not going to be either captured or killed anytime soon. Weve been after him for 3 years now and are not any closer.

      Direct operations? They still are, its by satelite and we cant stop it. These terrorists you are talking about lived in America for years before boarding those flights. They were nowhere near any base. And their base, if they had one would have been in Afganistan, not Iraq.

      Stop being so racist. Not all Islamic people want to fly into buildings. Al Quida followers have a different understanding of the Koran. Specifically sections dealing with Jihad. There is a specific phrase, but I dont remember what it is. Most Islamic people are peaceful and dont give a damn about the Taliban. But now that we have attacked them and their way of life, Im sure many more are coming over to the Talibans side.

      I already explained that they didnt have WMD, and we knew about that. Give it up.

      --

      Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    9. Re:LOL by Jay9333 · · Score: 1
      one day there will be a thermonuclear explosion on our territory. Its inavidible

      Once again, we disagree.

      Realize that the CIA told Congress that by going into Iraq it would make our country less safe. This is a known fact. It was on the record.

      I've never heard that. Certainly some people have thought it makes us less safe. Certainly the administrations position is that as a whole we are more safe. And certainly I've outlined why (and cited specific examples and readons why) I believe we are better off with out Sadaam.

      Did you know that finding Osama is no longer a priority? Bush was quoted saying this.

      As ussual, you have no specific quotation or supporting reference. This is why I think you're a troll. Maybe you just get off on wasting other peoples time, so you string me along as if you really want to have an intelligent conversation, then pull shit like that above comment. I know Bush has said that there is more to Al Quida then Bid Laden alone, and that without his network of leaders he can't do us much harm. And that is true, and he said that in response to people who think all we have to do is catch Bin Laden and then its all over. Those people are ignorant and wrong.

      As far as if Bin laden is still a target, Bush has continually said he believes we're going to catch him (he said this in the state of the union address) and recently defense departement leaders have said the believe we'll get him before the year is up (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/34305 77.stm)

      Stop being so racist. Not all Islamic people want to fly into buildings.

      I didn't say all of them did. Why do you put words into my mouth? Likely because you are are a twisted troll. I can't see any other reason why you'd have to put words into my mouth like this. I love Islamic people, have travelled to Turkey and Iran amongst other places, and have Islamic friends. If you'll read what I said, you'll find nothing contrary to that. The fact that Islamic countries harbor the terrorists who seek to destroy us is a fact that we just have to admit is true (not all Islamic countries... don't put words into my mouth).

      Enough were "on the Taliban's side" to begin with and make 9-11 possible. So now we've taken the war to them, and will continue to. You just want to give up like a fucking sissy and wait for your "inevitable" nuclear explosion. Well, not I. Preveting that catastrophe is entirely possible, and is why the international atomic agencies exist and why we have so much intelligence and satalites, etc to detect which countries are developing nuclear technology (it takes resources only a country could muster).

    10. Re:LOL by strike2867 · · Score: 1

      Definition of troll:Troll. Dont accuse someone of doing something you dont understand.

      I know this is a terrible source, but if any of it had been untrue then it would have been all over the press. In it he states quite clearly that there were no terrorist connections in Iraq. And also no WMD. Look at the numbers. Accusations of tons of rockets by Romsfeld.

      October 5, 2002 CIA letter to Congress does not support the White House's view that Iraq presents an immediate threat to America. (Knight-Ridder 10/05/02)

      October 2002 Steven Hadley, Deputy National Security Advisor receives two memos from the CIA and a phone call from agency Director George Tenet raising objections to an allegation that Iraq was seeking to buy uranium ore from Africa to use in building nuclear weapons. Both memos are also sent to chief speechwriter Michael Gerson and one is sent to National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice. (CNN.com, 7/23/03)


      Also from source specifically debating my point.

      "I don't know where bin Laden is. I have no idea and I really don't care. It's not that important. It's not our priority." George W. Bush, March 13, 2002

      Source of above Enjoy.

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    11. Re:LOL by strike2867 · · Score: 1

      And I forgot to mention, nuclear weapons are not as hard to make as you think. I use to be a Physics Engineering student. And worked with small samples of Uranium. I dont want to say any more to give anybody any ideas.

      --

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    12. Re:LOL by Jay9333 · · Score: 1
      In the definition of a troll you cited, one example of a type of troll was one who intentionally started flame wars. That is what you do when you spout the unsupported nonsense I referred to earlier, *and* give no documentation.

      You still haven't cited anything where "the CIA" offically stated that it believed toppling Sadaam would make the US more unsafe in the long term (or the short term for that matter). You cited something about the controversy surrounding the British Inteligence agencies belief that Iraq was seeking uranium... but that isn't what I asked you to document. You had said, "the CIA told Congress that by going into Iraq it would make our country less safe. This is a known fact." Documentation please. As I said, "certainly some people have thought it makes us less safe. Certainly the administrations position is that as a whole we are more safe." I've cited why I think the administrations position is correct. Of course there are ways that it has openned us up to more attacks (particularly our troops that are over there)... but in the long run, it will help us achieve peace, and has caught the attention of terrorist sponsoring states and let them know we will enforce our demands that they not produce WMD's.

      "I don't know where bin Laden is. I have no idea and I really don't care. It's not that important. It's not our priority." George W. Bush, March 13, 2002

      I've only been able to find that quote on anti-bush websites (such as the source you cited), and haven't seen it reported in any independent news outlets. And none of them that I've found give the primary source (i.e. what speech, date, etc.). That makes me question if it was even said... don't believe everything that starts circulating on the internet, especially if you only find it on biased websites.

      That being said, even if the source is true I woudln't be suprised or concerned. If we made finding Osama our most important priority, we could probably take him out in a year... but his network and leadership would still be able to attack us. What we've done is pursue him *and* his network and leadership, and I've already cited our profound success in that pursuit. I've also already cited sources and quotes showing that pursuing Osama is still an important goal of the Defense department and the administration. So your out of context quote was likely just that... taken out of context (if it is a true quote at all). And the context likely was that of saying Osama isn't our "only" priority. If you examine the whole of Bush's quotes on the subject, you'll find that finding Osama is a goal, but not the only goal. I've cited independed sources confirming this, as well as noted Bush's own comments in the State of the Union address. Any troll can pull one quote of an anti-bush website and (ignoring context and all other evidence to the contrary) use it stripped of its original meaning. It is a common practice by trolls, which is why I've questioned if you were one... just trying to get a rise out of me or start a flame war/waste my time.

      And I forgot to mention, nuclear weapons are not as hard to make as you think. I use to be a Physics Engineering student. And worked with small samples of Uranium. I dont want to say any more to give anybody any ideas.

      Sure.

      jay

    13. Re:LOL by strike2867 · · Score: 1

      I do not see what a bunch of politicians think as relevant. What is relevent however is what the experts think. My sources show that all allegations for going into Iraq have proven false. So if all the reasons for going into Iraq were proven to be wrong what reason do you have for still supporting that invasion. You did not comment on the numbers at all. There is one interesting number missing. The number of Iraqi citizens killed in our attempt to free them from this dictator. Whom btw we installed. And supported for many years. Im sure you have seen the picture of him shaking hands with Rumsfeld.

      And the source you have for finding OBL is fine. I will agree that we are still pursuing him. You may have noticed I had never disagreed with pursuing him. In fact I was fine with the invasion of Afganistan. Most of the world was not that opposed to it. I was just saying that finding him is not our top priority. I never said we were not still looking for him.

      I couldnt explain how to build a hydrogen bomb yet, but I can specifically explain how to build a nuclear bomb. And where to get all the materials right here in Chicago. You have pissed me off enough that I am willing to say it right on the internet. Just say the word that you dont believe me and I can do it.

      In your reply please explain how going into Iraq has made us more safe. We have no proof that they had WMD. So any other country around them would see that just because you dont have WMD we might still go in there and try to find them. And also there were no connections between Iraq and Al Quida. I do not see what nations harboring terrorists have to do with that. Was Afganistan not enough of a signal for that. Why do we need to compound something so simple. Ruling out these two reasons, why did America go into Iraq?

      When you say my sources for the quote are bad, keep in mind that:16 --Words proven false from the President's State of the Union Address.

      October 2003 US Weapons Inspector Kay files interim report and testifies before Congress. At best, Kay's report showed that Hussein had a continued interest in developing weapons, perhaps once international sanctions were finally lifted -- a far cry from the imminent threat claimed by President Bush. (New York Times, 10/4/03)

      I like this source. Ill have to look more for the CIA files. But as you can see if you read my entire source all allegations of Hussein seeking Uranium have been proven false.

      --

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    14. Re:LOL by Jay9333 · · Score: 1

      The toppling of Sadaam was good because:

      1)We can rest assured the madman doesn't have WMD's. We couldn't before. He wasn't being totally forthcoming abouth is WMD programs. The UN agreed on this point. He, for whatever reason, would play games, deny inspectors access to certain sites, and fail to present the evidence necessary to prove he'd destroyed his WMD's. No one disagrees this was the case. So to know for sure, we had to go in by force so he could no longer deny us access. If he'd have been forthcoming, he would still be in power. Who knows why he chose this route instead. But when it comes to WMD's in an Islamic nation ran by a madman, we must be better safe then sorry. However unlikely you think it would be for him to use the weapons on the US (his declared enemy) or give it to others to use on us... that "chance" (however slim you think it might be) isn't one we needed to take.

      2) countries that have supported terrorists (i.e. Libya, Iran) are being more forthcoming no as to their WMD programs, and we are less likely to have to use force in the future to make sure terrorist-sponsoring states aren't developing WMD's. We will have an easier time avoiding war as we go after terrorist sponsor's in the future. Believe it or not, I think avoiding war when possible is a great thing.

      3) no more mass murders, rape rooms, and other consequences of rule by a brutal dictator. A liberated Iraq

      Post whatever you want to about a nuclear bomb. I'll ignore it, and won't respond to it. I have not the expertise to know if its true or not. All I know is that many independent media sources have cited known experts as saying that although a "dirty" bomb would be fairly easy, it requires significant resources as I said to develop and detonate a true nuclear bomb. So if you you think you can build one in your basement, fine. I don't believe you, and showing me your "directions" won't prove it to me. So that's the end of that.

      The President said that British Intelligence reported that Iraq was seeking uranium. This is true, brit intel did report this. There are still Brits that believe Iraq sought Uranium. However, there are other intel analysts that don't think Iraq did. It hasn't been "proven" one way or another. But what the president said was true: British Intelligence reported that Iraq was seeking uranium. Perhaps he shoudln't have included it, since some people disagreed with the brits. I personally don't care, because its over and done with and we needed to take out sadaam either way (see reasons cited above).

      Ill have to look more for the CIA files

      Do continue to look for the source of your quote. I doubt you'll find it. At least you're admiting you can't find a source for it. I'm sorry if I offended you by thinking you might just be trolling or flaming for some perverse reason. But that is often my first assumption when someone posts such things with no documentation.

    15. Re:LOL by strike2867 · · Score: 1

      1)We can rest assured the madman doesn't have WMD's. We couldn't before. He wasn't being totally forthcoming abouth is WMD programs. The UN agreed on this point. He, for whatever reason, would play games, deny inspectors access to certain sites, and fail to present the evidence necessary to prove he'd destroyed his WMD's. No one disagrees this was the case. So to know for sure, we had to go in by force so he could no longer deny us access. If he'd have been forthcoming, he would still be in power. Who knows why he chose this route instead. But when it comes to WMD's in an Islamic nation ran by a madman, we must be better safe then sorry. However unlikely you think it would be for him to use the weapons on the US (his declared enemy) or give it to others to use on us... that "chance" (however slim you think it might be) isn't one we needed to take

      Well since it has been proven he never had WMD, Id say it would have been pretty hard for him to prove he had destroyed them. I would not like to see our country invade a country based on poor intelligence reports. Many of which were withdrawn. And in the Uranium example countered by CIA. From the source I cited, we knew that the proof for Iraq seeking Uranium had been forged before we went to war. The worst weapons we found were missles that he was completely honest about. That could only go at most 200 miles. And were said to be no danger to both us and our allies.

      2) countries that have supported terrorists (i.e. Libya, Iran) are being more forthcoming no as to their WMD programs, and we are less likely to have to use force in the future to make sure terrorist-sponsoring states aren't developing WMD's. We will have an easier time avoiding war as we go after terrorist sponsor's in the future. Believe it or not, I think avoiding war when possible is a great thing.

      Due to sanctions on these countries, it is illegal for any of them to be developing any WMD. There should be no programs at all. And some of these countries are still supporting terrorists. Iranian gov't pays the families of terrorists who blow themselves up in Israil's land.

      3) no more mass murders, rape rooms, and other consequences of rule by a brutal dictator. A liberated Iraq

      I would still like to know how many Iraqi people died while we liberated Iraq. Why is our gov't censoring us from this number.

      I could never build a nuclear bomb in my basement. I never said that. I could however get the resources and the tools to do so at the University of Illinois at Chicago. There is quite a large assortment of materials. The Uranium I worked with was in small samples. Cased in either cement, or some weird plastic. We had to wear special suits and listen to this lecture on the effects of radiation on the body. This gov't guy came in and told us it was completely safe, if we stayed below a simple limit. It was pretty interesting, he said the human body makes radiation, and told us exactly how much radiation we get during a plane flight. And what media thinks is irrelevant. They are payed to keep you entertained. They get money only if you dont switch the station. You should find out what scientists have to say about it. After all, most of them could care less if anyone is listening to them. I had a dumb ass job my first year. I worked on research proposals. I would look at know that no one was ever going to read them. And then I would look at the multi-million grants that were sponsoring this research.

      Our own intelligence department proved conclusively that these reports were false. They said they were faked. In the end all we had for proof that Iraq was seeking Uranium were some faked reports. These reports were very important. They were our only reason to believe Iraq had WMD. How come most of the public was not informed that these reports were fake? Putting it on page 13 of an unknown newspaper is not informing. Giving it a 10 second segment in a 2 hour news report is not reporting, when it was given a total of over half an hour to repo

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    16. Re:LOL by Jay9333 · · Score: 1
      Well since it has been proven he never had WMD, I'd say it would have been pretty hard for him to prove he had destroyed them.

      Actually, it was universal known that he possesed WMD's in the 90's, and had even used them on the Kurds. Every nation in the UN knew this. So it *is* a big deal that for 8 years he played games with inspectors, denied them access to some sites, and refused to present adequate evidence of those WMD's destruction. The UN admits all this is true... they were just to fucking sissy to do anything about this madman playing games for years upon years. We had to assure ourselves he had no WMD's. If he'd have cooperated, he'd still be a free man. But he chose not to. We backed up our talk with "walk", and now other countries that shouldn't be developing WMD's (i.e. some terrorist sponsoring states) will know we mean business. Libya has already been much, much more cooporative, and is vowing to end its weapons programs. Iran is being more open to nuclear inspections also (by the UN agency), and that agency is finding some pretty scary things that have been going on there. On top of that, the Iraqi's are no longer under a brutal, murderous, freedom-hating dictator.

      it is illegal for any of them to be developing any WMD

      And it'd be illegal for you to build a nuclear bomb in the basement of the University of Chicago. But that wouldn't necessarily stop you (assuming of course that you could build one, which I of course don't believe).

      I would still like to know how many Iraqi people died while we liberated Iraq. Why is our gov't censoring us from this number.

      How many Iraqi's total (including soldiers and civilians who were firing on US forces) or just how many innocent civillians? There are independent sources who are trying to compile these numbers, I'm sure. You don't need to go to the government for those types of things. But check a variety of sources (not just a couple of anti-Bush websites) to make sure you get as unbiased a report as possible.

      Our own intelligence department proved conclusively that these [uranium] reports were false

      No. Some in our intelligence department believe the documents were fakes. Others don't. Again, many British intelligence analyists still believe the documents to be real. And that is what Bush reported, that British intelligence analysts believe Iraq sought Uranium in Africa.

      It has been proven that 60 of Fox News believe we found WMD in Iraq...I would like to see less biast news sources. And as you can see media cant be trusted to actually report facts.

      I question that number... at least if you took the poll today. There have been some times in the past months when teams have thought they may have discovered WMD's (for instance, a Danish team had some shells they found last month in Iraq test positive for sarin gas in the field, but later lab tests showed no presence of sarin). At a time like that, such a poll would show people thinking WMD's have been found, because news reports are coming in all over the place saying Danish initial tests were positive. But if you take the poll right now, the number won't be nearly that high.

      Foxnews aims to be unbiased, and in my opinion they do a better job of that then say CNN. But no media outlet is going to be totally unbiased. That is why I try not to watch the news for "entertainment" purposes. When I want to research a story, I go to as many various sources as possible... sources (and websites) that have a conservative "tilt" and sources that have a more liberal tilt. Then I can be sure I can do my best to find a medium... and not make a fool of myself when I quote some partison's twisted data.

    17. Re:LOL by strike2867 · · Score: 1

      Could you please not respond to single quotes but entire passages. You have ommited anything about terrorists. I believe this was a very recent poll. They would have obviously mentioned something such as unproven allegations in their report if this was during that time. And again you seem to be straying away from the terrorist issue.

      They never had WMD. They had dangerous chemicals(which the CIA gave them). These dangerous chemicals were never WMD. Rumsfeld was quoted as saying they had hundreds of tons of this stuff. Enough to fill 16 Battleships was it? We found none. Stuff like this just doesnt disappear. You cant just diffuse it with water. It doesnt work that way.

      March 8, 2003 U.N. and independent experts determine that Niger uranium evidence is forged and that Iraq did not plan to use imported aluminum tubes for enriching uranium and generating nuclear weapons. (Washington Post, 3/08/03) March 16, 2003 President Bush claims that "intelligence gathered by this and other governments leaves no doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess and conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever devised." (Washington Post, 3/18/03)

      As you can see it wasnt just the CIA. The only ones that did believe these were real were the British. And apparently Dubya.

      July 11, 2003 CIA Director George Tenet says that he is responsible for President Bush's false allegation in his State of the Union address that Baghdad was trying to buy uranium in Africa. (MSNBC.com, 7/11/03)

      Yeah, they definetly had it.

      May 29, 2003 President Bush asserts that "we found the weapons of mass destruction." (Washington Post, 5/31/03)

      Exactly right. Our government knows exactly the number of Iraqi dead. They just dont want to release it.

      We got precise figures for the American dead, but not for the Iraqis. Recall Colin Powell after the first Gulf War, when he reported the "small" number of U.S. dead, and when asked about the Iraqi dead, replied: "That is really not a matter I am terribly interested in."

      Googled it and found 500,000. Theres your independent source. Do you realize what percent of their population this is. Ironically this is the number of votes Bush had less than Gore. But lets not get into that. Ive recently lost some respect for Gore.

      Ohh and dont worry, its natural to question results that oppose your view point.

      --

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    18. Re:LOL by Jay9333 · · Score: 1
      July 11, 2003 CIA Director George Tenet says that he is responsible for President Bush's false allegation in his State of the Union address that Baghdad was trying to buy uranium in Africa. (MSNBC.com, 7/11/03)

      This shows how biased you're sources are. The President never even alleged that Baghdad was trying to buy uranium (much less alleged falsely). He simply reported the *fact* that the British believed Iraq had sought uranium in Africa. This fact remains true to this day. Your news source, however, twists this and reports that Bush himself alleged Iraq sought uranium in Africa. The straight, unbiased data is that Bush told us that British intelligence analysts believed Iraq sought uranium in Africa.

      And I'll assume you have no citation of this "poll" your citing. Gee... I wonder why?

      Googled it and found 500,000. Theres your independent source

      Eactly why you are no better then a troll. "The Interenet" = an independed source? You're a fucking joke. I'm not going to even respond to any more of your lame ass and totally ignorant comments you made in the above post. 500,000 is absolutely ridiculous, by the way. I'd bet Iraqi soldier's deaths and civillian deaths combined isn't even that large. The US military (as far as Rumsfield's comment), by the way, has no interest in those numbers. It takes a lot of resources to compile that. They're trying to defeat the enemy, and time counting civillians is time wasted. Other groups are going to take care of that for them.

      I'm done with your dumb ass. You refuse to cite any reliable sources. Half the time you cite flagrantly anti-bush websites, and 99% of the other time you cite no source at all. Goodbye troll. Feel free to respond if you want to, I won't even be reading it.

    19. Re:LOL by strike2867 · · Score: 1

      The source for taht quote was MSNBC. Ive always said that MSNBC was biast toward republicans. You didnt even bother to check where I got the 500,000. I told you where to find it. The source was from a Russian expert. But they do count opposing casualties. They always do that. Counted for every war. Until now they usually revealed it. You dont believe I can build an atomic bomb on principle, or something you read by the media. Yeah MSNBC is completely anti Bush.

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  215. Night fall. by crush · · Score: 1
    "As night fall does not come at once, neither does oppression. In both instances, there is a twilight when everything remains seemingly unchanged. And it is in such twilight that we all must be most aware of change in the air, however slight, lest we become unwitting victims of the darkness."
    U. S. Supreme Court Justice William Douglas in 1976
  216. Re:Not justified? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Saddam got rid of all his WMD, and inspectors verified this, why weren't the sanctions lifted?

  217. This dude is another sellout Michelle Malkin. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This dude is another sellout Michelle Malkin. Just another sellout refugee from tyranny propping up the State.

    He's about as dumb as all them shitheads from ex-Soviet Union that vote for socialist liberals.

    dumb bitches website:
    http://www.michellemalkin.com

    And no, I'm not a member of either politcal party, they both suck!

  218. The World Trade Center collapsed? by Lester67 · · Score: 1

    I could have sworn each was knocked down due to a terrorist attack.

    40 years later, you would still see bumper stickers saying "Remember Pearl Harbor".

    2 and a half years after our generation experiences something similar, the press is already re-writing it as an engineering flaw.

  219. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by Rotten168 · · Score: 1

    You might wanna read up on the Constitution yourself there, jerky. "Providing for the common defense" is in the body as well as the preamble.

  220. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by danila · · Score: 1

    If they said these terrorist groups were the greatest threat to our safety, then I'd buy it.
    Psst! Wrong. Airliners falling from the sky by themselves are a greater threat. Trains derailing are a greater threat. Car accidents are a greater threat. Even hairdriers are probably a greater threat...

    --
    Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
  221. Sort of elected by junkgoof · · Score: 1

    I read it. He lost the first election, but his thugs did a good job of identifying and intimidating people who voted against him, and he did a good job of forming coalitions and duping other powerful and influential people. Germany was not a true democracy in the '30s anyway (political parties had street armies for one thing).

    --
    You got me into this! You were the ideologue! I'm only a poor assassin! - Twenty evocations, Bruce Sterling
  222. freedom by junkgoof · · Score: 1

    The problem is that the most patriotic people are often the most willing to give up freedom for nothing. Persecuting people for insufficient patriotism (like McCarthy, and now Bush) is only done to limit freedom and grab power.

    --
    You got me into this! You were the ideologue! I'm only a poor assassin! - Twenty evocations, Bruce Sterling
  223. Right back at you. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    pot.kettle.black.

    The hatred directec at Bush is nothing compared to the hatred directed at Clinton. I don't see any Democrat billionaires sponsoring personal lawsuits against Bush. I don't see them conducting extensive investigations that yield evidence of not one single crime.

    1. Re:Right back at you. by toupsie · · Score: 1
      The hatred directec at Bush is nothing compared to the hatred directed at Clinton.

      Oh please. Clinton never had the daily onslaught that Bush receives from his public enemies. No even close. Bush has to contend with every liberal organization in America gunning after him with lies and deceit. Clinton actually had Republican support for most of his major legislation like NAFTA and welfare reform. Most of Clinton agenda (outside of Universal Health Care) were passed not because of Democrats but because of Republicans.

      I don't see any Democrat billionaires sponsoring personal lawsuits against Bush. I don't see them conducting extensive investigations that yield evidence of not one single crime.

      Then what the hell is George Soros doing? Hmmm? He is pledging millions and millions of dollars to investigate and defeat Bush. And yes Clinton was found guilty. He was impeached. He escaped other prosecutions because witnesses fled the country or rolled over like Webster Hubble famously said on tape.

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
  224. How about this quote then by rodgster · · Score: 1

    What is it that gentlemen wish? What would they have? Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!

    - Patrick Henry

    --
    Who will guard the guards?
  225. MOD PARENT UP! - That's telling him! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MOD PARENT UP, great way to hammer the point home

  226. Re:Wonderful---more P.R. bullcrap from the Governm by tehdaemon · · Score: 1

    No "Providing for the common defense" is only in the preamble. the phrase "provide for the common Defence" is in the body

    --
    Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
  227. Sure it's Choice! by serutan · · Score: 1

    First, Free Choice is the classic head-in-the-sand argument for people who really don't want to understand the problem. If smoking, drinking, overeating and so forth were simple matters of Free Choice, then we wouldn't have multibillion dollar industries built around helping people quit smoking, quit drinking, quit overeating, etc. There wouldn't be any demand.

    Secondly, getting killed by a drunken idiot on your way home from work isn't a matter of choice, any more than getting blown up in your office by an airliner.

    Thirdly, I was defining Liberty in terms of what I think it means to the people who make the rules. They want the American public to be free enough to run through the maze and look for the cheese, but not so free as to be able to move the walls around.

  228. off topic but... by firew0lfz · · Score: 1

    "This is a world where eradication of the enemy is seen for what it is: a symptom of the problem, not a solution." - www.thematrix101.com

    --
    Try not to let life get in the way of living.