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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."

85 of 817 comments (clear)

  1. 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 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!
    2. 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.

    3. 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.

  2. 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.

  3. 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 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
    2. 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.

    3. 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
    4. 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
    5. 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.
    6. 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
    7. 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
    8. 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.
    9. 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.
    10. 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?

    11. 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.
    12. 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.

    13. 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.

    14. 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.
  4. 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.
  5. 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.
  6. 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.

  7. 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?

  8. 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!

  9. 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
  10. 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.

  11. 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 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."
  12. 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."
  13. 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!

  14. 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.

  15. 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
  16. 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 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.

  17. BULLSHIT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Patriot Act is now being used for non terrorist cases.

  18. 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
  19. 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 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
    3. 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
    4. 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.

  20. 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.

  21. 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"....

  22. 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!
  23. 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)

  24. 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.

  25. 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.
  26. 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)
  27. 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.

  28. "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.
  29. 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
  30. 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.

  31. 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.
  32. !!!!!!!! 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
  33. 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

  34. 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.
  35. 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
  36. 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.
  37. 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-...

  38. 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.

  39. 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.

  40. 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.
  41. 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.

  42. 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.

  43. 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?

  44. 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."
  45. 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.

  46. 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.
  47. Re:Shhhh! by Billly+Gates · · Score: 4, Funny

    In Communist Russia the government spies on YOU!

    Oh shit, what a minute.

  48. 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.

  49. 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 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.
    2. 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...

  50. 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.
  51. 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?
  52. 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
  53. 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.

  54. 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.

  55. 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.

  56. 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.