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Bush Backed Spying On Americans

jb.hl.com writes "President Bush allowed security agents to eavesdrop on people inside the U.S. without court approval after 9/11, the New York Times has reported. The report says that under a 2002 presidential order, the National Security Agency has been unconstitutionally and illegally monitoring international communications of hundreds in the U.S. When asked about the programme on U.S. TV, the Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, said, 'The president acted lawfully in every step that he has taken.'"

156 of 1,092 comments (clear)

  1. Palpatine loses one by beforewisdom · · Score: 4, Informative

    Palpatine loses one:
    http://msnbc.msn.com/id/10496539/

    1. Re:Palpatine loses one by the+arbiter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm not certain what you mean by "less kind intent".

      No Democrat would deny Senator Lieberman the right to say or do anything that he likes; but if he's going to insist on taking a position contrary to what the majority of his party believes in, he will not get the support of, or access to, the resouces of the party - plain and simple.

      The Republicans coined a term for this kind of politician as they also have a few mavericks who refuse to toe the party line...they call 'em RINOs (Republicans In Name Only). We have a DINO in Mr. Lieberman.

      --
      Boycott everything - they're all trying to fuck you one way or another
    2. Re:Palpatine loses one by TallMatthew · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Jeez, as soon as a Democrat stops marching in complete lock-step with the Party, all the little rats really turn on him, eh?

      Lieberman is more than a Democrat, he's a Jewish democrat, and if you've heard the rhetoric coming out of Iran (from their president no less) directed towards Israel, you'll understand why he's behind our military's occupation of that region.

      Personally I think that's crap and indicative of the Democratic Party's utter lack of courage and direction. The only thing more disturbing than this administration's rampant abuse of authority, as evidenced yet again by our sitting President ordering wiretaps without court orders, is the Democrats' failure to capitalize on this malfeasance, politically or otherwise. They seem perfectly content to sit back and wait for polls to tell them what to say, when any rational set of humman beings would have stood up long ago and put an end to this nonsense. I mean if you can't stand up to a dope like George Bush, who can you stand up to?

      What a mess.

    3. Re:Palpatine loses one by AKAImBatman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      if you've heard the rhetoric coming out of Iran (from their president no less) directed towards Israel, you'll understand why he's behind our military's occupation of that region.

      Lemme see, the Iranian President has claimed that the Holocaust never happened. It was entirely made up by the media to gain support the Jews. He also states that Israel should be wiped off the map and moved to Europe or Alaska. In short, the guy is nuts.

      A commentator wrote an article in the Chicago Sun Times this morning that pretty well covered how it's going to go down:

      1. The US has used up its "attack bad country" card for the time being, so they won't do anything.

      2. Israel will take the threat seriously and bomb the hell out of Iran's caches of missiles and nuclear weapons facilities.

      3. The UN will make more pointless resolutions condemning Israel.

      Sound about right?

    4. Re:Palpatine loses one by MarkGriz · · Score: 4, Informative

      "The Republicans coined a term for this kind of politician as they also have a few mavericks who refuse to toe the party line...they call 'em RINOs (Republicans In Name Only). We have a DINO in Mr. Lieberman."

      Yes. God forbid a politician think for him or her self, instead of doing what they are told.
      It's politicians like Lieberman (not that I'm a big fan) and McCain who stand up for what they believe in *despite* party affiliation that keeps me from losing respect for the political process entirely.

      --
      Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder.
    5. Re:Palpatine loses one by Echnin · · Score: 2, Insightful
      And why was he elected in the first place? because of US military activity and Bush ridiculing the country. Reported on Fox, nonetheless: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,160070,00.html :

      Iran's spy chief used just two words to respond to White House ridicule of last week's presidential election: "Thank you."

      --
      Lalala
    6. Re:Palpatine loses one by Rei · · Score: 5, Insightful

      said the holocaust never happened

      Not quite. He called it a myth, claiming that not nearly as many people were killed as is commonly claimed (which is a common position to take in Iran). Not that Ahmadinejad isn't a rather disturbing character. It shows how poorly the "Domino Theory" for the middle east went, when someone like Khatami was replaced by someone like Ahmadinejad. The guy is frightening even to many Iranian hardliners because he's a follower of Ayatollah Mohammad Taghi Mesbah-Yazdi, a supporter of the Hojjatieh movement with close ties to the Haqqani theological school. The movement is based on the goal of bringing about the return of the 12th Imam by creating chaos on Earth, and was used by the Shah to try to wipe out the Bahai faith. I sincerely hope that he's not a member of the Hojjatieh movement. At least Ahmadinejad has stressed the importance of development and justice to bring about the Imam's return.

      What a disturbing inverse-domino-theory this turned out to be :P

      --
      Man on crucifix terrorizes church, demands they eat his flesh and blood. Details at 11.
    7. Re:Palpatine loses one by mikapc · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes it does, I'm happy to find someone who has a similar point of view. UN is worthless, US is in the Dog House, and Israel is going to have to fight their own wars. That shouldn't be a problem as that tiny nation fended off attacks from multiple nations at once.

    8. Re:Palpatine loses one by Guppy06 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "The US would just say that Israel worked out something with the Iraqi government, and feign complete innocence."

      You're humorously short-sighted. If an Israeli attack hits Iran from Iraqi airspace, Iran will cross the border into Iraq.

      "Either that, or the Israelis will be flying F-22 stealth fighters with full radar jamming and supercruise capability. In which case you'd never even see them coming."

      Stuff blows up. People look up, see planes flying south by southwest. Iranians put 2 and 2 together, invade Iraq.

      Heck, that's even worse: it allows the Iranians to assume the planes were US forces.

      (By the way, if you're jamming radar, you are the exact opposite of stealth.)

    9. Re:Palpatine loses one by Rei · · Score: 2, Informative

      How did that post have anything to do with mine? Did you even catch onto the nation of reference which has:

        * 200-400 nuclear weapons, most mated to delivery systems
        * Threated Iraq
        * Threatens Iran

      But, lets take the bait anyways. So, the Iraqis gained immensely from our invasion, eh? True. They gained this, this, this, this, this, this, this, and this.

      --
      Man on crucifix terrorizes church, demands they eat his flesh and blood. Details at 11.
    10. Re:Palpatine loses one by einhverfr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As someone who has studies WWII in a great deal of depth, I would agree that the Holocaust *as we generally think of it* is a product of late war and post war propaganda. Furthermore, this has generally been exacerbated by research by Jewish scholars who are primarily interested in the experiences of their relatives. Not that this scholarship is incorrect-- it is just incomplete and people assume that the limited point of view (i.e. the Jewish experience in the camps) is the entire view. The real horrors of the work and death camps take shape only when the full scope of what happened there become known and parallels are drawn to the kinder, gentler genocides that were being quietly perpetrated in this country, in Canada, in the UK and elsewhere.

      I am not one to speculate on figures-- what do the numbers matter anyway? What difference does it make if it were five hunderd thousand, six million, or fifteen million? The horrors of the death camps were systematic and independant of the number of those that lost their lives there.

      The concentration camps were an integral part of the Nazi political machine. They were used to threaten those they wanted to join the party. They were used to get rid of dissidents. They were used to suppress any possible alternative political voice and so every nationalist organization unafilliated with the Nazis was generally banned by Himmler (examples included the Guido von List Gesselshaft, the Armanenshaft, and many others, some of which have survived to this day). Such bans were in effect regardless of whether the group opposed the Nazis or not. Indeed, I believe that the strategy was to use ethnic minorities (most notably Jews and Gypsies) as examples which could be used to threaten or intimidate the other citizens of the Reich into fearful loyalty to the Nazi party. In many ways, this is more horrifying than if it were simply a matter of racial hatred.

      We should not forget so easily that genocidal programs were in effect in the US, and that some of the same ethnic groups that were targetted in the Third Reich were targetted here (most notably the Roma/Gypsies), mostly through forced sterilization. Such practices were common in the US, Canada, and the UK. Sure we didn't kill these people in mass numbers, but this doesn't make these actions any less evil. Similarly, a large number of techniques were employed to destroy the Native Americans as a cohesive social unit. These incldued some forced sterilizations, but also systematic attacks on native languages and culture. The institutional focus on the destruction of native languages and culture have remained in effect in this country through at least the early Clinton years (I do not know if anything has changed since 1994-- I believe it has but I have seen no concrete evidence that this is true).

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    11. Re:Palpatine loses one by KCRWreck · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Point of information: Lieberman joined his fellow Democrats today and voted against cutting off debate on the renewal of the Patriot Act provisions. As far as being a "Democrat in name only", Lieberman is nowhere near as bad as Zell Miller was.

    12. Re:Palpatine loses one by dscruggs · · Score: 2, Informative

      Israel will take the threat seriously and bomb the hell out of Iran's caches of missiles and nuclear weapons facilities.

      Unfortunately that probably won't work, as was detailed in this war game simulation put on by the Atlantic last year. Here's the salient quote:

      What about a pre-emptive strike of our own, like the Osirak raid? The problem is that Iran's nuclear program is now much more advanced than Iraq's was at the time of the raid. Already the U.S. government has no way of knowing exactly how many sites Iran has, or how many it would be able to destroy, or how much time it would buy in doing so. Worse, it would have no way of predicting the long-term strategic impact of such a strike. A strike might delay by three years Iran's attainment of its goal--but at the cost of further embittering the regime and its people. Iran's intentions when it did get the bomb would be all the more hostile.

      Iran is run by kooks, but surely they're smart enough not to put everything in one place like Iraq did.

  2. Wow, there's a shocker. by Skyshadow · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Whoa, wait: President Bush abusing his power? No, you've got to be kidding me. I can't believe it. After all, this is the guy who *wanted* to help New Orleans but just couldn't because of those darn rules maybe being in the way.

    That aside: Bad week for the Neocons.

    First, they're not allowed to torture people anymore (not that we ever did, right? I mean, I'm sure the folks at those secret CIA prisons in eastern Europe were Geneva Convention poster boys). Then the PATRIOT act gets blocked so they have to go deal with those darn activist judges to get warrants again. Now, people are acting like the President can't override statute with an executive order! Next thing you know, people will actually want leaders who follow the Constitution. Heck, this keeps up and nobody'll want to be President of the United States anymore - we're just takin' all the fun out of it.

    I personally look forward to the day when the GOP has something to do with, you know, conservatism again. "Spend responsibly" rolls off the tounge better than "constant wanton abuse of power". Still, at least it was just violation of the basic agreement that forms the basis of our government and not, you know, a blowjob. Otherwise the nation might have to sit through another impeachment.

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    1. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't understand criticizing the president for not bringing troops into New Onleans, particularly if you don't like him.

      It seems to me that if you believe that Bush does habitually abuse his power, you would be especially supportive of a law that prevents him from using the military in that way.

      One day the military are brought in during an emergency to serve as a temporary police force without following proper legal procedure, the next day they're brought in during an "emergency" to "gaurd" polling places.

      The particular law governing the use of the military as a police force has been around since Lincoln, and for good reason.

    2. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by Onan · · Score: 5, Insightful
      First, they're not allowed to torture people anymore...
      Sadly, they appear to have, at least for the moment, found a way around such onerous strictures as that expectation that we behave like human beings. McCain's bill mandates that all US interrogations conform to the methods laid out in the Army field manual.

      Given that it appears to be passing unvetoably, the Pentagon has simply changed the manual.

      And declared the new version classified.

    3. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by _KiTA_ · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Unfortuantely, President Bush has proven quite well that the Republicans are anything BUT the party of responsibility -- be it Personal Responicibility, Financial Responsibility, Military Responsibility, what have you.

      Sad thing is, as much as the Republican PR machine would like you to to believe otherwise, the Democrats have been the party of at least financial responsibility for quite some time. Military Responsibility too, unfortunately -- at least the Democrats haven't sent people off to war with no plan other than "sit tight for a few years, we'll think of something."

      What I don't get is why the people in the Republican party who really do have morals and ethics don't speak out against the path that Bush, Rove, and Cheney are taking their party down. It's clearly a complete 180 from where they're claiming to be. An ethical person coming out and saying "Ok, I don't care what Bush says, he's NOT a Republican, we're disowning him" would solve so many problems...

    4. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by nizo · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Then the PATRIOT act...

      This brings up something that really bothers me; I wish that all references to legislation would simply be a number, instead of some (usually misleading) title. I keep waiting for someone to create the "Stop clubbing baby seals act" that in truth cuts funding for all public programs. It is too easy for people introducing legislation to avoid putting a spin on the name.

    5. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by dr_dank · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sadly, they appear to have, at least for the moment, found a way around such onerous strictures as that expectation that we behave like human beings.

      Even more sadly, looking back at our recorded history, we are acting like human beings. We haven't evolved much from the ape who first used a tool to club the crap out of the ape with the nicer foodstuff. Only the tools have changed.

      --
      Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
    6. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Slashdot. Leftwing, liberal and generally useless."

      If you don't like it there are plenty of places you can go to where they see things more your way. I suggest Faux News, or redstate.org. Or you can continue to bitch about it and along the way, support this "liberal and generally useless" website with every page view and comment you make.

      Me, I'd rather you left.

      -one coward to another

    7. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by tgd · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What the fuck is wrong with this country?

    8. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      LOL ad hominem attacks from an AC. There's a shocker. Whats the matter, you can't find any good points to defend your president with? Maybe you're like the AC a little farther up who basically said "but Carter did it first". Blah, blah blah.

      The whole "but he did it first" argument seems to be all the defenders of the slime heap that both the Republicans and the Democrats have become can pull out in their defense any more. Ever wonder why our country is going to hell in a handbasket? Because both parties are aiming pathetically low. What do you expect from a country who re-elects perverts and liars to the presidency?

      You feel that? That feeling is the weight of responsibility being lifted from my shoulders. No longer do I need to worry about how citizens of the best country on Earth should comport themselves, because we're plummeting fast. Best military? Please. In the 24 hours after hurricane Katrina, the US military managed to land 2000 troops across Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. In the 24 hours of D-Day, Canada managed to land at least five times as many on a single beach, against German fire. Canada. Feel that?

      Meanwhile, our president and vice president waste their breath defending an interrogation technique that has been discredited for centuries. So much for human rights. I have to wonder how many of the "credible threats" that never panned out ended with "... now PLEASE take this stick out of my ass!" How many millions of dollars have been wasted so that some sadists could get their jollies? Wait, what was the excuse of the year for invading Iraq? Oh right, it was to remove such a horrible despot from power, because only horrible people torture other peo... oopsie, did I say that? My load seems to be getting lighter still.

      We're being lied to on an unprecedented scale. Defrauded by the people we put into power. But it's ok, because the people we elect don't need to be any better than the guy before them. Every election, we slide farther down into hasbeen status.

    9. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by dada21 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't support Bush, but he's no better than Clinton or any President going back 3 generations. Both parties are power hungry and both push their powers as far as they can.

      Why do you think it took so long to release papers from Kennedy's time? National security?

      Lies. Everyone has secrets to hide.

    10. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by cmacb · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, in the event that your curiosity is sincere, here are some points:

      (1) I don't consider just raising taxes to cover every spending spree you go on to be "financial responsibility". Republicans regularly vote for smaller spending increases than Dems. And I can't think of the last time a departments budget was actually cut. ("cut" means CUT, not just reduce the increase).

      (2) The reduction in the size of government that Clinton likes to take credit for consists almost entirely of military base closings that were voted into place during the previous Bush administration. How about we do the same thing for domestic departments that have long since outlived their function? I don't hear any of these responsible Democrats calling for such things. If they did, I'd vote for them.

      (3) Most Republican voters as well as Democrats are "good" people. What confuses you is that you have been told that all Republicans are evil when in reality most Republicans have a distrust, that is well founded in history of governments that get too big and try to live people's lives for them. There is no instance of government "giving" money to individuals that does not come with strings attached. As "kind hearted" as many of those programs sound, they will, and have largely already, produce a population unable to think for themselves and such a society cannot sustain itself. Never has, never will.

      If there were a "Leave me the Hell Alone" party that had electable candidates I would vote for them. Until then, I will continue to vote for the party that comes closest to that philosophy, even if there is only a hairs breadth of difference between the two existing parties.

      Here is a quote from Jimmy Carter's new book "Our Endangered Values":

      "Soon after arriving in Washington, I was surprised and disappointed when no Democratic member of Congress would sponsor my first series of legislative proposals -- to reorganize parts of the federal bureaucracy -- and I had to get Republicans to take the initiative. Thereafter, my shifting coalitions of support comprised the available members of both parties who agreed with me on specific issues, with my most intense and mounting opposition coming from the liberal wing of the Democratic Party. (One reason for this was the ambition of Senator Ted Kennedy to replace me as president.)"

      (http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?stor yId=4984885)

      When Carter took office, even though I hadn't voted for him, I thought he was a nice guy, and his statements on reforming government gave me hope that he would do the right thing. His presidency was one disaster after another, some probably beyond his control (the gas crisis), but his own party sabotaging him is not a reason for me to consider voting for another Democrat until the Democrat party does more to distance itself from people who for all practical purposes are extreme socialists. Again, the problem with the socialist philosophy isn't that the intentions are bad, it is that the system does not work.

      As they say, "The road to Hell is paved with good intentions." Maybe that should be the motto for the Democrat party.

    11. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by lawpoop · · Score: 5, Insightful
      "I don't support Bush, but he's no better than Clinton..."

      I disagree. Look at their wars:

      Cliton got us into Kosovo.
      • We acted in concord with NATO, the UN, and our allies, and we got the job done without alienated every other country in the world.
      • We are *done* in Kosovo. When Clinton was selling the war to the American people, all the Republican congresspeople and right-wing pundits said this was going to be Clinton's Vietnam, that we were entering a quagmire, etc. etc. Guess what? Situation is peaceful.
      • We have had no combat fatalities in Kosovo. We are done and the war is over. Service people have died, but not because of enemy combatants and insurgents
      • Clinton never lied to the American people, and never relied on cooked up intelligence to sell the war. We went in to stop genocide and get rid of the bad guy. We did just that.
      Bush got us into Iraq.
      • Bush alienated every country except Britain getting us into Iraq. We are now a pariah at the UN.
      • Bush lied to us about why we were going in and used false intelligence to build the case. Bush's said reasons for going into Iraq have changed several times since he first started selling the war
      • Bush's team had absolutely no plan for reconstructing Iraq, and they have no plan to this day. This has resulted in about 9 billion dollars dissapearing from the budget in fraud and corruption.
      • 2000+ soldiers have died, and there is no end in sight. The violence it getting worse, not better. The military is stretched to their limits. This cannot continue without instituting a draft


      "Both parties are power hungry and both push their powers as far as they can."

      Yes, but power-hungry Democrats have actually helped this country and its people. FDR packed the supreme court and installed himself for an unprecedented 3rd time. Talk about abuse of power. But, he got us in a good position to win WWII, and his New Deal programs modernized the US, so that now America is a modern industrial country like those in Europe, instead of a corrupt, poor backwater bananna republic like in Central and South America.

      Yes, politicians are power-hungry and corruptable. However, your average American fares far better under Democratic presidents than they do under Republican presidents. Politicans aren't all the same. Bush is *much* worse than Clinton.
      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    12. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by Z-Knight · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is a complete fabrication and outright lie. I'm not a fan of Bush or Clinton or Kerry or anyone else but at least I don't go around making up crap like this. And just because someone says these are from "real sources" doesn't mean they are crap.

      I'm so glad you tried to compare Kosovo and Iraq...that is so perfect and I love how bad you got the facts. First of, I love how the US is accused of attacking a country that never attacked us, when speaking of Iraq...interestingly I don't recall when Kosovo or Slobodan attacked us yet we still went into Kosovo. Interestingly also, the security council (including China, Russia, France, Germany) tried to block us going against an oppressor like Slobodan Milosovic. Not suprisingly, those same stupid countries were against us going into Iraq. And I don't know how you can miss the fact that WE WERE ATTACKED BY IRAQ!!!! We were attacked every day while our planes were flying over Iraq. We were shot at constantly, but that little tidbit escapes most of the Angry Democrat arguements. In addition, no one ever mentions the countless UN resolutions (supported by most countries) that were passed against Iraq and that Saddam and Iraq constantly broke.

      Furthermore, we did NOT go into the war with Saadam only with Britain...that's insulting to all of the 30 other countries in the UN that agreed...again the only dissenting votes were China, Russia, France, Germany. Interestingly those dissenting countries stood to lose millions of dollars if the US went in and cut them all of from the illegal dealings in oil and weapons that had been going down under the watchful eye of the UN.

      "Clinton never lied to the people..."...never? I seem to recall he lied about several things...blow job ring a bell? That's besides the point. Bush NEVER lied so why do you have to make up crap that he did. The intelligence that he presented to Congress was provided by the CIA which happened to be lead by George Tenet (A CLINTON APPOINTEE). That intelligence was confirmed by the British. That intelligence was confirmed by Spain. That Intelligence was confirmed by RUSSIA!!! Hello...Russia, who was opposed to us going, confirmed our intelligence...PUTIN was even quoted as saying so!!!!

      So, please give me a freaking break and get of your damn soap-box and stop whining how your idiot Kerry got robbed and should be president. Go whine somewhere else. Saadam was an angry, evil, dangerous man who brutally murdered thousands of his own people..much less (likely) than have died in Kosovo. He attacked/invaded other countries. He attacked our troops. He developed weapons of mass destructions and USED THEM to gas his people. He had stockpiles of WMDs that have not all been accounted for....how disposes of various germs/chemicals/bombs/etc and does not provide proof to the UN inspectors? If I supposedly did that, I would generate false documents if necessary to show that I did destroy things. The Missing WMDs are likely in Syria or Iran by now and that transport was likely the result of us not going in to Iraq sooner and is a huge mistake on our part.

      I can't write anymore because I'm sick and tired of arguing with angry Democrats that result to making up lies to suit their own agenda. I'm glad this country finally took a stance against an oppressor instead of waiting for millions more to be gassed or burnt alive like when the US and others waited for a long time before taking Hitler out...at least we saved some lives by going in early.

    13. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by lawpoop · · Score: 2, Informative

      "'Clinton never lied to the people...'...never? I seem to recall he lied about several things...blow job ring a bell?"

      You are misrepresenting my statement. I said "Clinton never lied about the reasons for the US to go to war in Kosovo. You are a Clinton-basher and you do a bad job of disguising it. It really comes out later when you cry about being "sick and tired of arguing with angry Democrats".

      "He developed weapons of mass destructions and USED THEM to gas his people."

      Bush told us we were going to war because Saddam was an IMMINENT THREAT to THE US, not because he gassed his own people back when Reagan was supporting him. Bush LIED to us. He lied to you and he lied to me. I hate him for it, and you lick it up like a lap dog. It's disgusting how you refuse to hold Bush accountable to that.

      "Furthermore, we did NOT go into the war with Saadam only with Britain...that's insulting to all of the 30 other countries in the UN that agreed..."

      "...he forgot about Poland!" Those countries supported us in name only. They didn't put troops on the ground.

      "So, please give me a freaking break and get of your damn soap-box and stop whining how your idiot Kerry got robbed and should be president. Go whine somewhere else."

      You again are misrepresenting me. I never mentioned Kerry in my original post. You are using a straw-man argument.

      Bush and his cronies have been creating fake intelligence since they got into office. They relied on intelligence from Curveball, who has been roundly discredited. They relied on intelligence from Ahmed Chalabi, who was the darling of the Neocons. He has fallen out of favor since the Iraq invasion because he was spying on us for Iran, and Bush had the naivete to seat Chalabi next to his wife. What kind of sucker president seats a spy next to the first lady? What a joke.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    14. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by lawpoop · · Score: 5, Informative

      You sound like an armchair fiscal conservative.

      I suggest you travel the world a little and see how different political systems pan out. You will probably come to the realization that:

      1. Communism doesn't work. Old News.

      2. Capitalist countries with social services and little governmental corruption do the best for their average citizen -- i.e. Japan, Australia, Northern European countries. They have a large middle class, with social mobility.

      3. Purely capitalist countries fare the worst -- they have no middle class. Most of the people live literally on the street or in shanties -- I'm not talking crazy homeless guy, but mom, dad, and kids. There is a small class of wealthy elite who run the entire economy and government, and they keep it all for themselves. It never trickles down. They have unchecked power, and they have no interest in letting go of *any* of their power and money.

      You want to know what country has the most productive economy? Finland. Yes, Finland, a country with cradle-to-grave social services. It also has a high standard of living and a large middle class.

      I'm sick of these neocon hucksters trying to destroy the middle class. If you like corruption and business elites running everything, MOVE TO SOUTH AMERICA. You are trying to destroy the American dream. You and your ilk have worn out your welcome.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    15. Re:Wow, there's a shocker. by Buran · · Score: 2, Informative

      Freeloaders aren't exactly a good thing either. Why should I expose myself to marketing BS just to get you an ipod that you're too cheap to buy for yourself? That's just selfish. Like too many people these days. Not giving a damn about others is responsible for a lot of our ills. Or have you not noticed that other countries don't like us anymore?

      Pot. Kettle. Black.

  3. do something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
  4. Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Your posts are being recorded and may be used against you. I'd also like to take this opportunity to thank the President for all his hard work in protecting us from Eastasia, at great personal gain to himself.

    1. Re:Reminder by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 5, Funny


      You seem to be mistaken...Oceania has always been at war with Eurasia.

      Eastasia is our staunchest ally.

      Please report to the nearest reeducation center. Thank You.

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

  5. But the problem is... by Jordan+Catalano · · Score: 5, Insightful

    lawfully != ethically

  6. In related news.. by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 4, Informative

    The senate recently rejected extensions to the patriot act.

  7. None of this is tied a book release, oh no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
    1. Re:None of this is tied a book release, oh no. by Politburo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Does that somehow make the actions less wrong?

  8. From TFS... by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "The president acted lawfully in every step that he has taken." [emphasis added]

    But is it still legal when the steps are combined? It will be interesting to see how this plays out.

    --
    If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
  9. Sounds strangely familiar... by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 5, Insightful


    Hmm...wasn't there another president who got in trouble for spying on other americans? Watershed...waterfall...waterbed...definitely water-something...

    Oh yeah! Here it is!

    And this is just the latest of Dubya and Company's shocking assaults against their own nation...sadly, an offence that would have been considered grounds for immediate impeachment (not to mention additional criminal prosecution) thirty years ago hardly raises an eyebrow today. Apparently, we're used to this sort of thing by now.

    I'm pretty sure that this is not what the Founding Fathers had in mind when they fought and died so that we might have a nation free from tyranny.

    --
    ____

    ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

  10. Something else to trouble you: by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm a little more concerned about http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/12/15/torture.bil l/index.html, which basically says that the Nuremburg trials are no longer valid precedents for US law.

    "(It) basically says that if a person, a reasonable person, would feel that someone was acting under orders ... then it could be a defense in case of accusation,"

  11. Nothing new .. by Entropy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Not that I am defending Bush, but the NSA spying on Americans is nothing new. Read "The Puzzle Palace" and "Body of Secrets" by James Bamford if you want a good look inside "no such agency" .. the only things to change from the book would be the tech, not the policies, politics and yes, paranoia.

    --
    The sea changes color, but the sea does not change.
    1. Re:Nothing new .. by Pollardito · · Score: 2, Informative
      i think you missed the part about "without court approval". here's some more information about what the NSA is supposed to be doing :
      [Director Michael] Hayden said the NSA has not spied on Americans since the 1970s. Congressional committees, led by U.S. Sen. Frank Church and U.S. Rep. Otis Pike, found that government agencies, including the NSA, had eavesdropped on actress Jane Fonda, Dr. Benjamin Spock and other anti-Vietnam War activists.

      As a result, Congress passed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which created a procedural structure with a special court for considering and approving certain surveillance activities that occur in the United States and involve rights guaranteed by the Constitution such as the ban on unreasonable search and seizure.

      ...

      In certain cases, the NSA can look into the activities of U.S. citizens or residents if it believes they are acting as agents for another country. The agency must first get the permission of a special court created by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act and then get the U.S. attorney general's consent.

      Hayden said the burden of proof is on the NSA when seeking such authorization. He declined to say whether the agency had ever been turned down.
    2. Re:Nothing new .. by Coryoth · · Score: 3, Informative

      They don't handle foreign affairs, but focus on at home threats (Which made me question the need for Homeland Security, but anyway). The point is, their entire job is to monitor the US and US Citizens.

      I'm honestly not sure how you could be more wrong. Instead of just guessing at what you think they do based on your own bizarre interpretation of the name of the agency, you could try actually looking up real information on what the role of the NSA is. From their website we see that their stated mission is a dual one, involving "Information Assurance" to protect US information, and "Foreign Signals Intelligence" to collect and process foreign communications. Feel free to actually read the executive order that defines what the NSA does. Spying on US citizens is precisely what the NSA is prohibited from doing, and handling of foreign intelligence is part of their mission statement.

      Jedidiah.

  12. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Do you, GOP fans, want the NSA reading your email?

    Sure. Maybe they can make something out of the 1000s of 'approved mortgage' and 'p3nis 3nlarger' messages.

  13. President acted lawfully by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    He acted lawfully the same way that the mob boss doesn't actually "kill" someone, they just happen to know the guys that shot the victim. In the words of John Gotti, "It's good to have guns around ... but you don't want to carry a gun. You might get arrested."

    --
    stuff |
  14. Re:This guy is Shilling his book by Skyshadow · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Oh, gee, if there's a *book* about it, then that makes it all better.

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  15. Great quote by Josh+Coalson · · Score: 5, Interesting
    from here

    "God forbid that there be a terrorist attack that could have been prevented by the Patriot Act after it has expired," said Sen. Jon Kyl, an Arizona Republican.

    Hell, why stop there, let's wipe with the constitution a little more and go straight to a Police State Act, then Sen. Kyl can argue "God forbid that there be a terrorist attack that could have been prevented by the Police State Act before it was passed." Yeah, a prison could be real safe too.

    If 47 senators are so for it, maybe they should just "opt-in" to giving up their rights, instead of passing another odious law that will apply to them too? Oh yeah, that's because it won't apply to them. They are elite. Their names will never be on a no-fly list. Their personal information will never be stored at a company like ChoicePoint (if you ran ChoicePoint, the first thing you'd do is create a blacklist so that no one who could mess with your business model could be affected by a scam). But they're oh-so-ready to shackle the common man to keep him safe.

    1. Re:Great quote by Politburo · · Score: 2, Informative

      Their names will never be on a no-fly list.

      Actually, Ted Kennedy showed up on a NFL. There is a Republican Congressman who is also on the List.. can't recall the name off the top of my head.

      Also, there's no mechanism for getting off of the NFL. What they claim to do is add a note next to your name on the list.

    2. Re:Great quote by netfunk · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If 47 senators are so for it, maybe they should just "opt-in" to giving up their rights, instead of passing another odious law that will apply to them too? Oh yeah, that's because it won't apply to them. They are elite. Their names will never be on a no-fly list.

      Tell that to Ted Kennedy.

      --ryan.
      --
      Don't say, "don't quote me," because if no one quotes you, you probably haven't said a thing worth saying.
  16. This makes slashdot? by tpgp · · Score: 3, Informative

    Why does this make slashdot when in the last two days we've had bush resisting torture legislation and his complicity in kidnapping citizens of allies

    --
    My pics.
  17. Re:Oh dear by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "Condoleezza Rice, said, 'The president acted lawfully in every step that he has taken."

    I think what she means is: "Since the president defines what is legal, then what the president does, is, by definition, legal." Very much in keeping with the administration's claims of "Presidential Infalibility".

    --
    I am not a crackpot.
  18. Bush & Co. should not be above the law by Savantissimo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How many crimes does Monkeyboy have to commit before he is held to account? There isn't a single person on death row or executed in the history of the USA who has who has ordered so many killings, kidnappings and tortures. His utter contempt for the constitution and human rights is the root of the many forms of his criminality. Ordering illegal spying on thousands of Americans should by itself be enough to get him impeached, tried and sentenced to life in prison, but on the scale of his other misdeeds it barely deserves mention.

    Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Ashcroft and Gonzales should be quickly tried and promptly executed as a deterrent to our future officials who might think that they can use power for their own purposes rather than as servants of the electorate. We need to put our so-called leaders in permanent mortal fear of even getting close to violating their oaths to uphold the Constitution. Until then, they will continue to think that they can rule us rather than represent us.

    --
    "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    1. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by vk2 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Pray NSA is not monitoring the network between your machine and slashdot :-)

      --
      No Sig for you.!
    2. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Funny
      I think he could quite convincingly plead diminished mental capacity as a defence. Take today's example when asked how one used an iPod:
      "I get the shuffle and then I shuffle the shuffle," he told confused reporters.
      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    3. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by Seumas · · Score: 5, Funny

      How many crimes does Monkeyboy have to commit before he is held to account?

      As many as he likes, as long as they don't involve consensual sex and hummers.

    4. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by Jtheletter · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Good show. I just posted almost the exact same thing. Death or at least life in prison should be the minimum sentence for mucking with constitutional rights. As it stands now there's no fear from the politicians, at worst they serve a year or two of a reduced sentence in some cush-job prison (compared to true federal prisons). Most first-offense everyday crimes carry stricter minimum sentencing guidelines than what polititcians get for abusing an entire nation's rights.

      --
      -- I'm not a pessimist, I'm a realist. It's not my fault that life sucks so much. --
    5. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Cautious? Why? The OP called for Bush (among other Administration officials) to be "quickly tried and promptly executed". This is a direct statement of a lawful process. The Congress has every right to Impeach Bush, and in fact any President. The courts of the land also have every right to try the President for crimes, once he's removed from office.

      If we started calling for Bush to die from old age, will the Secret Service really have a case against us? Is the President immune from being indicted and tried for crimes that carry the ultimate penalty? What ARE you saying, exactly?

      I disagree with the OP about ONE thing, however. As a clear enemy to the people of the United States, upon Bush's indictment for war crimes, he should be held in prison before seeing trial for the exact number of days that he has held Jose Padilla (who is on his third year and counting).

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    6. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by Savantissimo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Threatening the life of the President or Federal officials would be a serious crime. I am not doing that. I am saying the President and his administration are subject to trial under the Constitution for violations of the law, including capital offenses, and that I believe there is overwhelming evidence that they have committed such offenses. Proposing that the law be upheld is not proper grounds for issuing a warrant, and would be at best a questionable basis for monitoring the excercise my Constitutional right to free political speech in a public form. That said, yeah, someone at the the FBI or Secret Service (not likely the NSA) will be skimming my posts now, I expect.

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    7. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by Bogtha · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How many crimes does Monkeyboy have to commit before he is held to account?

      Just one. However, it has to be one that the majority of the USA cares about. Killings, kidnappings, torture? The average American doesn't care, as long as it doesn't happen to them. Now if Bush was caught getting a blowjob, it would be a different matter altogether.

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
    8. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by killjoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Saddam is on trial for torturing and killing people, maybe one day Bush too will be ontrial for torture and murder. He has tortured people and killed people after all. There is no dispute about those facts.

      So the question is how many people do you have to kill and torture before you get the death penalty? I say one death is too many but hey what do I know, I am not a republican.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    9. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by babyphatman · · Score: 3, Informative
      I've got a good quote from Noam Chomsky regarding Bush's supposed "diminished mental capacity"...

      "Both political parties and the media are far to the right of the general population on a whole host of issues. And the population is just disorganized, atomized... And that's why the media and campaigns keep away from (political) issues. They know that on issues, they're going to lose people. So therefore you have... George Bush... this pampered kid who came from a rich family and went to prep school and an elite university. And you have to present him as an ordinary guy who makes grammatical errors, which I'm sure he's trained to make--he didn't talk that way at Yale--and a fake Texas twang, and he's off to his ranch to cut brush or something. It's like a toothpaste ad. And I think a lot of people know it."

      --
      A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals...
    10. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by cens0r · · Score: 4, Funny

      But what if he got caught GIVING a blow job? That would make heads explode!

      --
      Jack Valenti and Orrin Hatch will be first up against the wall when the revolution comes.
    11. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by millennial · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's a bullshit comparison. Why was Clinton being examined in the first place? Because he had CONSENSUAL SEX with an ADULT. Why did he lie? To try to salvage his marriage. Who died? NOBODY. Why is Bush being examined in the first place? Because he lied about WMDs. Because his vice president used to head the company that the government hands all its war-on-terror-related oil/rebuilding contracts to. Because he has given executive approval for the transfer of foreign POWs into prisons where we know torture takes place. Why did he lie? To protect his own ass, and cover up the crimes of people in his administration. Who died? Over 2100 American troops, tens of thousands of Iraqis (military and civilian), and several dozen tortured detainees.

      --
      I am scientifically inaccurate.
    12. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by Damvan · · Score: 2, Informative

      Bush swore, when he took the oath of office, to uphold the Constitution. Ordering the spying on Americans, against the Constitution and statute in place, is a violation of that oath. Hence, perjury.

      Not to mention lying to justify a war that has killed 2000+ Americans and countless Iraqis. But of course, he is not under oath during the State of the Union address, so that doesn't count as perjury, right?

    13. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by Damvan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So lying about having an affair, when being questioned about something entirely unrelated, is justification for impeachment. But lying to start a war which has killed 2000+ Americans, and countless Iraqis, and cost TRILLIONS of dollars, is ok? Oh, I forgot, he wasn't under oath during all those speeches and the State of the Union address, so Bush is allowed to lie as much as he wants. He isn't under oath!

      How any rational human being can consider what Clinton did worse than what Bush has done and is doing is beyond me.

    14. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by timeOday · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Just one. However, it has to be one that the majority of the USA cares about. Killings, kidnappings, torture? The average American doesn't care, as long as it doesn't happen to them.
      I guess you're right. I just checked the CNN quickpoll on their front page.

      Question: Should the government have been given the authority to spy on Americans without warrants after the 9/11 attacks?
      Answer: 69% no, 31% yes.

      A third of the US thinks establishing a secret police force with no judicial oversight is a real good idea.

    15. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by kimvette · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Both Clinton and Bush are dirtbags, and both should have been accused of treason, but for different reasons.

      Clinton: for selling nuclear tech to China

      Bush: for encroaching inalienable rights outlined in the Constitution

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    16. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by ScuzzMonkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A third of the US thinks establishing a secret police force with no judicial oversight is a real good idea.

      Well, I'm pretty sure what they are actually thinking is, "Damn it, if those pinko Democrats would just let Dirty Harry and Rambo go after those raghead bastards and stop pesterin' 'em with all their RULES and their REGULATIONS, hell, we'd kick some ass and get unleaded down to $.50 a gallon by Christmas!"

      --
      No relation to Happy Monkey
    17. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by fleaboy · · Score: 2, Informative

      Weird how this kind of behavior flies when people are taught to worship criminals, i.e, Trump, Gates, and other such scum. Crimes against humanity only apply when you don't 'play ball' with those in power. Futhermore it's the people who 'placed' Bush in office that scare me as he is clearly not intelligent enough to get as far as he has gotten in his terms as president.

      --
      Life is a gift. And my Karma couldn't possibly be 'Positive'
    18. Re:Bush & Co. should not be above the law by lewp · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What it REALLY comes down to is "He's OUR dick, so lets leave him alone". Just as the Democrats never had any problems with a certain Pres lying under oath to a Grand jury.

      I can't stand either major political party, but I have a real hard time drawing a parallel between lying about getting a blowjob and sending 2000+ of your fellow citizens off to die because it fit your agenda.

      Maybe you can shed some light on that for me.

      --
      Game... blouses.
  19. Re:Support the President! by bersl2 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Use < and >

  20. Status of encryped Voice-over-IP and email? by mozumder · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So what do we do now? Can we standardize on encrypted VoIP and email protocols now?

    I wonder how long it is before they use NSA intercepts to implement other authoritarian measures, such as drug/copyright/misc law enforcement.

    And, is anyone surprised that Vice President Dick "Go Fuck Yourself, we're gonna invade Iraq and torture/kidnap people for my profit" Cheney is pushing the whole spy-on-american-citizens philosophy as well? The guy is the single greatest point of all things evil in the world, and must be removed from power & influence immediately.

  21. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by AKAImBatman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Just playing devils advocate for a moment (since it appears that Slashthink(TM) is in full force), but isn't this EXACTLY the type of thing that the Patriot Act made legal? I'm not saying that I like the Patriot Act, but it did get passed by a majority of the house and senate.

  22. I am hereby moderating this entire story... by Caspian · · Score: 2, Insightful

    (-1, Flamebait)

    --
    With spending like this, exactly what are "conservatives" conserving?
    1. Re:I am hereby moderating this entire story... by Caspian · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, no shit. They do this sort of crap to me all the time. It was meant as a joke; how it was a Troll is beyond me. (Maybe they resented my English-Nazi signature?)

      Of course, I'm sure some vengeful fuckwit is going to mod me (-1, Off-topic) for this response here. Shit, I get (-1, Off-topic) for plenty of perfectly on-topic stuff on a regular basis.

      Go ahead, crackheaded mods. Do your worst.

      (Oh, for the record? I can't stand Bush.)

      --
      With spending like this, exactly what are "conservatives" conserving?
  23. NY times sat on this for a year by wwwrench · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The fact that the American government snoops on its citizens without any oversight is frightening, but perhaps not as freightening as this:

    "The White House asked The New York Times not to publish this article, arguing that it could jeopardize continuing investigations and alert would-be terrorists that they might be under scrutiny. After meeting with senior administration officials to hear their concerns, the newspaper delayed publication for a year to conduct additional reporting. Some information that administration officials argued could be useful to terrorists has been omitted."

    And how exactly is knowing that the NSA isn't under court-oversight, gonna help terrorists???? I guess Bin Laden is now gonna hold off on making all those phone calls to the States, now that he knows the NSA doesn't need to call a judge before starting the wiretap.

    The New York Times simply cannot be stupid enough to believe that this knowledge will help terrorists. They are a bunch of sniveling, subservient, fart-catchers. They care less about informing the public, then in protecting their pathetic "access" to the powerful.

    That the government removed the provision that wiretaps should be (effectively) rubber-stamped is shameful. That they kept the people in the dark about this decision is even more shameful. But that the supposed free press also kept this massive decision secret?? That's so fucked, I don't even know where to begin.

    A vibrant democracy has a free press. In a democracy, you can speak your mind without fear. Your government is open, and their decisions are public and can be scrutinized. Heck, the public can even influence the decisions!

    What America has is a vote every few years to choose between one of two figureheads. There are certainly places in this world, where they don't even pretend to live in a democracy, but this shouldn't give one much comfort.

    America: Please. Do something. Your democracy is so shallow, it barely exists, except as some cheap idea evoked by your rulers to justify the invasion of other countries.

    Why we aren't all at the barricades is beyond me.

    --

    Deconstruct the State
    1. Re:NY times sat on this for a year by Neph · · Score: 5, Interesting
      After meeting with senior administration officials to hear their concerns, the newspaper delayed publication for a year to conduct additional reporting

      Oh crap, I want a firmer number here. Did they wait exactly a year? Was it a roughly a year? Was it maybe a bit more than a year? Was the article originally going to be printed before election day 2004?

  24. a Goddamned piece of paper, surprised? by isotope23 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When Bush can say the constitution is "just a goddamned piece of paper"
    how is anyone surprised?

    BTW, for those who didnt notice, the times held the story for a YEAR.

    And this guy broke the story.

    --
    Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
  25. It sounds worse than it is by rapierian · · Score: 3, Insightful

    First of all, the news the article is relaying is a year old: the reporters witheld the information for a year for security reasons. Note they still released it after only removing "some" of the issues that the security people had with the article. Even the article acknowledges that since then Bush had the Department of Justice look over and revise the program. Second, the original eavesdropping was only on traffic into and out of the country, not on internal traffic. Also, the initial impetus for monitering some of this traffic was a couple of captured terrorist's cell phones and computers. The numbers that they recieved from those and several similar and related captures are the numbers that they've been monitering. Again, they've since limited their criteria even further. For an excellent view of the right-wing's side of the debate check out: http://michellemalkin.com/archives/004090.htm

    1. Re:It sounds worse than it is by smitth1276 · · Score: 2, Informative

      They won't listen. This site is full of pimply-faced teenagers who have no since of perspective, and hold irrational, dogmatic beliefs that are dangerous to the security of the free world. If they had their way, it would be illegal to investigate terrorists at all.

      Civil rights, in this case, is simply a pretext for incoherently bashing somebody that they don't like after a simply cursory reading of a summary of an article which in turn summarized another article, which omitted some information after withholding the entire story for a year.

      Such is the immaturity of Slashdot's readership (generally speaking, of course... there are some genuinely intelligent people here).

    2. Re:It sounds worse than it is by sammy+baby · · Score: 2, Informative
      Yeah. See, here's the problem:

      Regardless of the scope of the surveillance conducted by the NSA, the subjects they're allowed to snoop on are severely restricted. Here's the relevant bit:

      (1) Notwithstanding any other law, the President, through the Attorney General, may authorize electronic surveillance without a court order under this subchapter to acquire foreign intelligence information for periods of up to one year if the Attorney General certifies in writing under oath that... there is no substantial likelihood that the surveillance will acquire the contents of any communication to which a United States person is a party;

      (this is way, way, out of my field of expertise, but my brief reading of the code didn't yield anything that would have placed this in the Preznit's purview.)

      So anyway. The code basically says, "You can conduct surveillance without a court order, so long as there is "no substantial likelihood" that you're spying on Americans. The President's order said, essentially, "Do it anyway."

      The Department of Justice, as you noted, reviewed the program: however, this is a DoJ which has been notoriously dismissive of civil rights. Take John Yoo, for example, who recently claimed that crushing the testicles of the child of a suspected terrorist should be acceptable behavior. Or Alberto Gonzales, who has in past legal memos revealed himself to be unabashedly pro-torture. These are not people I would view as well qualified to provide balance to issues of civil rights.

      I have to say, though, Michelle Malkin is even worse, given her support for the internment camps for Japansese during WWII, and for Muslims now (and utter fabrications/slanders she's made to justify these positions.)
  26. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by thiophene · · Score: 2, Informative

    I only wish more people used gpg/pgp. Unfortunately, I know only one other person that I regularly correspond with that also uses it. Unfortunately, it's my fianceé and I kind of forced it on her. Though it does give me hope that given a proper setup, she's able to use it easily and fairly seamlessly. Perhaps someday more people will catch on.

  27. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by ak3ldama · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'll cling to the principle that the government cannot intrude on my privacy for a very long time, and you deserve to lose yours for beliefs like that.

    --
    "but money is the God of Algiers & Mahomet their prophet." - Rich. O'Bryen June 8th 1786
  28. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by east+coast · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do you, GOP fans, want the NSA reading your email?

    You don't think that didn't happen with the presidents "offical" aproval? Let's not get out of hand here.

    But we already know what will happen, the Dems will take the presidents office in 2008 maybe and the same crap will be pulled but instead we'll just have the other half saving the same thing...

    Washington is not going to change until you get some real competition in there and that means a third party. If we don't get motivated to throw another party into the mix and force parties to do more than lie and smile we're just going to have the same thing again and again, a new Waco, a new 9/11, a new Watergate, a new infringement somewhere somehow and the finger pointing will continue and so will business as usual.

    You don't seriously think a Democrat is any more forthright than a Republican? Hell, they feed off each other and at the same time use each other as crutches. They know and accept this business deal. They know people accept them as the only game in town.

    --
    Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
  29. Re:This guy is Shilling his book by vontrotsky · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Um, his book looks like it's about the CIA. TFA is about the NSA. This is a new and different way in which the government has been infringing the rights of people.

    Anyhow, why would it matter if he had written about it in his book. Wonton abuse of power is still news worthy, even if it is reported multiple times.

  30. Let's impeach President Dummard by NFNNMIDATA · · Score: 5, Funny

    If treason isn't a good enough reason to be impeached, maybe we can come up some kind of blow-job scenario.

  31. Ooh geez, I wonder by Swift+Kick · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Could this ground-breaking article have anything to do with the upcoming release of a book written by the author of the NY Times article, which happens to deal with this exact subject matter?

    Before you start lashing out against the government, notice that the article states that the monitoring activities are of individuals believed to have possible ties to terrorist networks, and no mention is made if they're even US citizens.

    Of course, you can say that they could technically monitor anyone they want as long as they made it a 'national security' matter, but then again, you are probably wearing tinfoil hats and living confortably in your tempest cages, so you have nothing to worry about.

    --
    "We'll need 2000 crickets, 4 cans of Easy Cheese, and the fluid from 18 glowsticks for this plan to work...." - ph0n1c
  32. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by WindBourne · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The patriot act was all about giving DOJ/FBI access to NSA's tech. It is suppose to be in the name of chasing terrorists.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  33. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by ortcutt · · Score: 5, Interesting
    This is a good question for GOP fans who claim to be conservatives. Conservatives don't believe in violating the nation's laws. That's what domestic surveillance without a warrant is.
    Kate Martin, director of the Center for National Security Studies, said the secret order may amount to the president authorizing criminal activity.

    The law governing clandestine surveillance in the United States, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, prohibits conducting electronic surveillance not authorized by statute. A government agent can try to avoid prosecution if he can show he was "engaged in the course of his official duties and the electronic surveillance was authorized by and conducted pursuant to a search warrant or court order of a court of competent jurisdiction," according to the law.

    "This is as shocking a revelation as we have ever seen from the Bush administration," said Martin, who has been sharply critical of the administration's surveillance and detention policies. "It is, I believe, the first time a president has authorized government agencies to violate a specific criminal prohibition and eavesdrop on Americans."

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic le/2005/12/16/AR2005121600021.html
  34. If this is lawful then we need new laws! by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Condoleezza Rice said, 'The president acted lawfully in every step that he has taken.'

    If this is true, it only shows how corrupt our laws have become. No serious person could think that Jefferson, Franklin and the other Constitution authors would ever think it's OK for a president to do something like this.

    1. Re:If this is lawful then we need new laws! by cain · · Score: 2, Informative
      If this is true, it only shows how corrupt our laws have become. No serious person could think that Jefferson, Franklin and the other Constitution authors would ever think it's OK for a president to do something like this.
      Well John Adams outlawed criticism of the gov't - and he was one of the founding fathers:

      "The Sedition Act posed the biggest challenge to civil liberties, undermining the core of the First Amendment protections of free speech and press. It prohibited spoken or written criticism of the government, the Congress, or the President."

      The founding fathers aren't that high and mighty either. I'm just glad they set up a system where (evenutally) bad politians get what's coming to them. At least the system is transparent enough that we see these things and talk about them.

    2. Re:If this is lawful then we need new laws! by Derling+Whirvish · · Score: 2, Informative
      If this is true, it only shows how corrupt our laws have become. No serious person could think that Jefferson, Franklin and the other Constitution authors would ever think it's OK for a president to do something like this.

      Like FDR did when in WWII ALL outgoing and incoming mail and telegrams were intercepted and censored if the government deemed it to be necessary?

      Franklin Delano Roosevelt establishes the Office of Censorship in 1941 to censor communications between the United States and foreign countries and to prevent news organizations from publishing information the enemy might be interested in. Roosevelt appoints Byron Price, a respected journalist, to run the office. Price accepts the post on the condition that the media can voluntarily agree to self-censorship. The office employs 14,462 civilians to monitor cable, mail, and radio communications between the United States and other nations....

      From December 19, 1941, until August 15, 1945, the Office of Censorship had the power to censor international communications at its "absolute discretion." With a staff of more than 10,000 censors, the office routinely examined mail, cables, newspapers, magazines, films, and radio broadcasts. Its operations constituted the most extensive government censorship of the media in U. S. history ...

  35. Third agency in 48 hours by jamie · · Score: 5, Insightful
    In the past 48 hours or so, it's been reported that the NSA, FBI and DOD have all overreached into Americans' privacy.

    At some point the question becomes: which of Bush's TLAs is not illegally spying on us?

  36. But the saddest thing of all by WormholeFiend · · Score: 4, Insightful

    is that people seem to forget that the previous president was nearly impeached for lying about a blowjob in the oval office.

    Where are the calls to impeach Bush over his bloody lies?

    1. Re:But the saddest thing of all by BraceletWinner · · Score: 2, Insightful
      people seem to forget that the previous president was nearly impeached for lying about a blowjob in the oval office.
      You left out two very important words: "impeached for lying under oath about a blowjob in the oval office."

      Politicians lie all the time - this is nothing new. A sitting President lying under oath was new.

      And he was impeached... it wasn't "nearly".

    2. Re:But the saddest thing of all by talksinmaths · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Baseless lawsuit or not, you shouldn't be able to lie under oath and get away with it.

      I agree. You should only be able to get away with your lies if you speak them outright (in, for instance, an address to the citizens of your country). You should also be able to get away with your lies if you speak them to foreign governments or the United Nations. Or to the military. Or to the news media (or at least those members of the news media who aren't already on your payroll). Or to congressional investigators, the 911 commission, or other such agencies. There may be some others I left out, but the point is that that by no means should one ever get away with lying under oath.

      --
      Don't you have someone you'd die for?
  37. Re:Support the President! by Belseth · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Apparently you drunk the kool aide and I assume you voted for the SOB. You don't "have" to support a President that is abusing power. We here back in 1776 call in a democracsy and people have the right to support who they want not who they are told they have to support. I support the country and I support the troops. I do not support Bush and I do not support the war. Bush is a facist that makes jokes about how much easier it'd be if it was a dictatorship. Not sure how much easier he wants it given he gets pretty much everything he wants as it is. Haliburton and others are raping this country and Bush and his cronies are holding us down while we are gang rapped. Our rights have been taken away and yet studies have shown we aren't really any safer. Making us safer was never the issue. This is about power and robbing us blind. He deserves to be impeached. They impeached Clinton for lying about cheating on his wife. Bush is breaking laws that affect us all and has killed tens of thousands of people doing it, over two thousand americans. He's killed nearly as many americans as the terrorist and the war is still going on. What standard do you have for impeachment? "Well first they have to be a Democart" apparently. I'm not a Democrat, I don't like either party. Just how much lying cheating and stealing can go on before we do impeach him? He was making a case for invading Iran until some one pointed out to him that we don't have any troops to spare. If we really did get attacked now we'd be in a desperate situation. All our forces are aimed at Iraq. They've even been pulling them out of Europe to support the war. He says we'll pull out 30,000 this year. Well he sent 15,000 more last summer and the fighting hasn't slowed. Welcome to Viet Nam II the sequel. Funny a lot of us saw it coming. Wonder why he didn't?

  38. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by Syberghost · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Where are Dubya's defenders now?

    Waiting for the retraction in the NYT in a couple of weeks.

  39. Re:The truly amazing part is that we elected him.. by jd · · Score: 3, Funny

    The cards were rectangular, the chads were roundish and the legal case went in circles. Nothing square about it.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  40. History repeats itself... by Dr_Ish · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Are there any other really old netizens still around? Those who have been on-line way too long will remeber something similar quite a few years ago. Back in the late 80s when the word went out that the NSA was packet-dipping network and e-mail traffic. I think this was one of the first paranoid conspiracy theories to hit the net. All sorts of wild evidence was cited to 'prove' this rumour. Anyhow, as a result of this story a fashion arose for people to put things like 'Bomb', 'President', 'Drugs' etc. etc. automatically into their .signature files. The idea was to try and trigger the NSA into recording all sorts of silly and trivial e-mails. The fashion did not last long. Of course, if people were to try to do this these days, they would no doubt be 'disappeared' to Guantanamo. There is one thing though that puzzles me: If supposed enemies of the nation (i.e. anyone who opposes Bush or Haliburton) are the target of this snooping, then how are they handling the State of Louisiana these days? Everybody in Louisiana hates Bush and Co. for their pathetic response to our Hurricane problems (they still want to charge the State $3.7 Billion for the money that FEMA workers are wasting in 4 star hotels). Do they really have the resources....opps, there is a knock on the door...men in suits...ARRGGHHH! ;)

  41. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by garcia · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Washington is not going to change until you get some real competition in there and that means a third party.

    Yes, because this holy "third party" will be so far detached from the two parties we currently have that none of this bullshit will go on, right? Oooh, you are thinking that we're going to get rid of ALL of those in office that are part of the "two party" system and replace them *all* with members from the "third party".

    Technically, the New-aged GOP is exactly that, a "third party" that no one has ever seen in America before. One where ignorance, blatant disregard for everything the US stands for, and religious beliefs take precedence over everything else.

    BTW -- I used to consider myself a Republican. I don't know what to call myself now.

  42. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by hzs202 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Do you, GOP fans, want the NSA reading your email?

    Who cares when we have OpenPGP data encryption and voice scramblers!

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  43. Quick by faqmaster · · Score: 2, Funny

    Someone give Bush a blow job so we can impeach him!

    --
    Are you...Are you some kind of genius?
    No, ma'am, I'm just a regular Slashdot reader.
  44. Re:legally done by isotope23 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Bush followed all the applicable laws, and members of congress knew about it. I don't see what the problem is.
    Bullshit.

    From the article :

    "Some NSA officials were so concerned about the legality of the program that they refused to participate, the Times said. Questions about the legality of the program led the administration to temporarily suspend it last year and impose new restrictions."

    When people inside the NSA have a problem with its constitutionality,
    I think thats a pretty clear indication of just how legal it is.

    --
    Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
  45. Dear Pres. Bush, by ENOENT · · Score: 5, Funny

    Why do you hate America?

    --
    That's "Mr. Soulless Automaton" to you, Bub.
  46. Ease up. by Gruneun · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A guy has information that is new, shocking, and reveals a blatant violation of the constitution, and just because he's also an author of an up-coming book he shouldn't come forward with it?

    I think the implication is not that he fabricated the information, but rather that if honesty and integrity in the executive branch was his single motivating factor, he would have yelled it immediately, not sat on it while he wrote a book. Quite obviously, he felt the information was important enough to have some monetary value, but not important enough to require immediate attention from the people.

    No matter what your opinion of Bush, the author comes out looking slimy. In my opinion, deservedly so.

    1. Re:Ease up. by AdmiralWeirdbeard · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "No matter what your opinion of Bush, the author comes out looking slimy. In my opinion, deservedly so"

      no, the author comes out looking like instead of writing an article about it and letting it devolve into the standard fox/nyt fight back and forth, he chose to sit back and research the shit out of it, then publish something that cannot be brushed away, something thorough and well reasoned.

      until we know the exact circumstances of the editorial decision not to print a year ago, it would be inappropriate to label the move opportunistic, well, any more opportunistic than a republican criticisng a liberal for sleazy business practices.

      They said that they delayed a year to do more research. DOESNT IT SEEM LIKELY THAT A YEAR'S WORTH OF RESEARCH MIGHT PRODUCE ENOUGH MATERIAL FOR A BOOK!!??? I for one, think it just might.

      And another thing, the NYT article very gingerly mentioned that the white house asked them not to publish. doesnt it seem likely that such a request, from the executive branch of the federal govt might make a paper a little hesitant to rush off and go shouting that the pres. had been violating the constitution and his oath of office? It would make ME slow down and do some research, that's for fucking sure.

      Gettting a full book's worth of info and then putting that out there is a much less easily dismissed statement than a few articles. Given the Bush administration's ability to talk its way out of immediate criticism of gross misconduct, I'd say that the NYT's actions were the only reasonable response to white house pressure not to publish.

      --
      Come read my stupid blagablog. Rants and Giggles
    2. Re:Ease up. by SoulRider · · Score: 2, Insightful

      doesnt it seem likely that such a request, from the executive branch of the federal govt might make a paper a little hesitant to rush off and go shouting that the pres. had been violating the constitution and his oath of office?

      For any credible news agency in a free democracy I would think this would be incentive to do exactly that.

    3. Re:Ease up. by AdmiralWeirdbeard · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I take your point, however, I would argue that the very nature of the revelation in question shows thta we do not live in as free a democracy as we like to think.
      When the story you're about to report concerns how the executive branch has seriously ignored the constitutional guarantee of due process and ordered domestic spying without judicial oversight, would you really feel entirely sure of your constitutional guarantee of freedom of the press? or would you perhaps take a step back and make sure that your claims were as rock-solid as possible, and present the public not with a simple article, but with a solidly-researched and exhaustively explained record of events?
      were I the editor of the NYT, I would also have have been very circumspect in approaching the presentation of this story.

      --
      Come read my stupid blagablog. Rants and Giggles
  47. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by bofkentucky · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not trolling here, but prove it, bring it to a court of law and prove it. Nothing is unconstitutional until the USSC says so or it is specifically defined in the Constitution.

    --
    09f911029d74e35bd84156c5635688c0
  48. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by ortcutt · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm calling bullshit. It's easy to respond to these outrages by saying that Republicans and Democrats are all the same. But you didn't see any violations of privacy under Clinton. And today, you've got Democrats standing up to oppose the renewal of the USA PATRIOT Act. Republicans and Democrats aren't the same, and we don't need a third party. We just need a government that gives a shit about civil rights.

  49. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by laughingcoyote · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, Martin Luther King wasn't doing a thing illegal. He didn't have anything to worry about from the FBI's surveillance, because the government has always acted in a proper and lawful manner.

    The principle here is that the United States constitution should be inviolable. It's a pretty good framework. It guarantees a few nice things like freedom of speech and religion, a fair trial by jury with the burden of proof on the prosecution if you are accused of a crime, and the prohibition of cruel or excessive punishment if you are convicted of that crime.

    Freedom from warrantless searches got put in there too. It did not get put there for no reason-surveillance of what you are doing, whether it's a search of your home or interception of your communications, is a violation of your basic rights. Sometimes it is called for due to probable cause that you have committed a crime. In that case, you go to a judge, and that judge reviews your evidence. If (s)he decides that you are correct and the search is called for, a warrant will be issued. That's the purpose of judicial review-an impartial judge must approve acts via due process of law that would normally be a direct violation of your rights, such as requiring you to pay a fine, imprisoning you, or conducting searches and surveillance.

    I do not -just- oppose these measures on the grounds that I don't want to be watched even -when- I have nothing to hide, although that's most certainly part of it. I oppose it on the grounds that those Constitutional guarantees are the very reason that America is referred to as the "land of the free"-and every time one gets subverted, that becomes less true. That is a reason. If you don't care, that is your right. But don't expect those of us who -do- happen to like our freedom to stand by and watch while it's chipped away piece by piece.

    --
    To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
  50. Re:Uh, guys...it was 9/11. by Politburo · · Score: 2, Informative

    Remember the lack of airlines for weeks?

    No, I don't. Airspace was re-opened on September 13. Most airlines resumed revenue flights within a couple of days.

  51. Re:a Goddamned piece of paper, surprised? by Politburo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm against Bush as much as anyone else.. but CHB simply is not a reputable source.

  52. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by chinadrum · · Score: 2, Funny

    NYT printing a retraction? They would rather go belly-up before admitting there is bias involved.

  53. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by Politburo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm as much a Bush hater as anyone else.. and I loved Clinton, but his administration supported things like ECHELON, DMCA, and the Clipper Chip. That doesn't mean that all Democrats are anti-privacy, of course.. and the triangulation wing of the Democratic party is going out of style.

  54. Re:a Goddamned piece of paper, surprised? by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When Bush can say the constitution is "just a goddamned piece of paper"

    Did he really say that? Has it been reported by anyone other than Doug Thompson? Who is Doug Thompson, anyway? I'd actually like to pass this around to some people, but I need to know that it's for real.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  55. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hint: It's in the Bill of Rights. The problem is that often the government will block anyone from taking it to court if they haven't actually been affected. The people who are affected probably don't know it or if they do, are in prison without access to the courts.

  56. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by Radres · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...or until we abolish winner-take-all politics. Instead of districting our states and having each district pick a winning politician, an alternative would be to have everyone in the state vote amongst the same group of politicians and pick the top-ranked politicians from each state. In other words, if a state currently has 30 districts and 100 people run for congress, you pick the top 30 from that 100. This opens the door for 3rd parties and alternative viewpoints to have representation. Once 3rd parties begin to take hold of more local offices, they will begin to have enough sway to take hold of higher offices like the Senate or the Presidency.

  57. Free press would be hardpressed to be free by Jtheletter · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The most important part of a functioning democracy is the free press. I have yet to hear a single solitary word about establishment of 'free press' in Iraq.

    Considering how the US has treated other free press agencies like Al-Jazeer by "accidentally" bombing two of their buildings (the precise coordinates of which were specifically given to the military to prevent that sort of accident) as well as harrasing and possibly shooting some of their reporters, somehow I'm not surprised that no one over there has been too keen to start publishing the US's actions over there. Also, Iraq's government and our government's interest in it has nothing to do with democracy, do you really think if the Iraqis voted tomorrow for the US to leave that we would? Puppet governments aren't gone, just getting updates to the facades. Our government is not in the habit of respecting sovereignty or the press.

    --
    -- I'm not a pessimist, I'm a realist. It's not my fault that life sucks so much. --
    1. Re:Free press would be hardpressed to be free by smitth1276 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The most important part of a functioning democracy is the free press. I have yet to hear a single solitary word about establishment of 'free press' in Iraq.

      Maybe that's because you haven't bothered to hear anything about it. You have predetermined what you want to be the fate of Iraq, and ignore anything that might contradict that near religious view.

      For some of the hundreds of new news outlets that have appeared in Iraq since the fall of Hussein, go here.

      That's old, it appears, but it was the relevent link that I saw when I googled it. Google is here if you ever get the urge to read up on things before parroting the drivel of the likes of Noam Chomsky.

  58. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by anaesthetica · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I'm reminded of a story, not sure if it's true or not.

    Some medieval mathematician was trying to figure out the relationship between regular shapes and circles. He saw that every time you added a side to a regular shape it came closer to approximating a circle. A triangle becomes a square becomes a pentagon becomes a hexagon and so forth, until you reach an n-sided shape that is very very close to being a circle as perceived by the eye. Then the mathematician realized that contrary to becoming more like a circle, by adding sides he was in fact moving further away from approximating a circle: a circle has no sides, whereas he was moving towards more and more and more sides.

    What's needed is not a third, fourth, fifth, sixth, n-th party. What's needed is no parties. Parties are essentially money-laundering organizations. What's money-laundering? "To conceal the source of money as by channeling it through an intermediary." That's their function: concealing the big money interests purchasing votes in Congress and purchasing influence throughout the government. Adding more parties just adds more avenues for the corrupt to practice their quasi-legitimized venality.

    What need to happen is not some goofball third party candidate. We need to see politicians get put in jail. In significant numbers. Set up an FBI whiteroom and have a group of Mormon agents set up sting operations. Prosecute the hell out of them with independent prosecutors. It's the only way to scare them straight.

  59. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by TomTuttle · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah using the IRS to silence whitewater critics is soooo white knight.

  60. Thank God for fallacyfiles.org. by for(;;); · · Score: 2, Insightful
    From http://www.fallacyfiles.org/adhomine.html:

    A debater commits the Ad Hominem Fallacy when he introduces irrelevant personal premisses about his opponent. Such red herrings may successfully distract the opponent or the audience from the topic of the debate.

    Ad Hominem is the most familiar of informal fallacies, and--with the possible exception of Undistributed Middle--the most familiar logical fallacy of them all. It is also one of the most used and abused of fallacies, and both justified and unjustified accusations of Ad Hominem abound in any debate.

    Thanks for playing. Don't forget your gift basket on the way out.

    --

    "Whatever happened to fair use?"
    -- Duff-Man
  61. Re:Oh dear by jdigriz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sorry, no. Previous Presidents ordered the NSA not to spy on Americans because they took an oath to "preserve, protect, and defend the Constititution" Presumably that includes obeying it, since the Office of the Presidency only has power by virtue of it. The 4th Amendment states "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated"

    A person's communications are his effects, even if they are not papers. Paper was the only external data recording and transmission medium available to the Founders. They would surely have included electronic communications today.

  62. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by palutke · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'll grant you gun control, but copyright laws? The constitution grants congress very broad authority with regard to regulating copyrights and patents. Congress's actions with regard to copyright are stupid and shortsighted, but not unconstitutional.

    --
    'I ain't a liar, baby, and I ain't proud I just want what I'm not allowed.' -- Violent Femmes, 36-24-36
  63. It won't just be the NSA reading your mail by Stalus · · Score: 4, Informative

    There's a part of the Dept of Homeland Security known as NVAC (National Visualization and Analytics Center). I'd suggest taking a look at their research agenda. Particularly the "Grand Challenges" section, and particularly the "Scalability Challenge" part of that.

    Their target is to handle 1 billion structured messages/transactions per hour and 1 million unstructured messages/documents per hour. For reference, there are 6.5 billion people in the world, according to the CIA world factbook. 296 million in the US. When these numbers were presented to the IEEE Vis conference in 2004, questions arose as to whether they were going to get warrants for all of these transactions. The basic response was that they were going to 'anonymize' all of the data. First, do you honestly think that will happen? Second, how much do you trust the anonymizer? And lastly, do you trust the government to not turn off the anonymizer switch? It's a nice, warm, fuzzy feeling, isn't it?

  64. Tighten it up a bit... by delcielo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I do think that we're more ripe for a third party now than we have been for a very long time given the division within the GOP; but I don't think it's going to happen. The stigma that comes from starting a 3rd party in this country is one of being a crackpot. Also, the money and support machines that are our 2 popular parties make it too easy to get help with your campaign compared to the do-it-yourself approach that starting a successful third party would require.

    While I agree in general that the Democratic party is just as guilty as the GOP regarding dirty tricks and corruption, etc., I think the current administration takes the all-out hands-down prize-winning cake for being corrupt and for abusing power. I would think so if they were Dems or libertarians or pastafarians. They have made such a mockery of our system of government that it is insulting to those of us who lead law-abiding lives.

    As for 2008, unless things change I don't see a Democratic president. Their front-runner is Hillary, who is one of the most divisive and polarizing figures in American politics. Whether that's earned or not is rather irrelevant. She's going to have to do some serious image work between now and then to make a realistic show of it in the 2008 election. There are better, more presidential and electable people who could make a run for it who haven't announced, don't have any money or both. Bill Richardson(gov. NM) strikes me as one who could make a serious challenge if the party supported him.

    On the GOP side they are only suffering from having too deep a bench. Rudy Guliani, John McCain, Bill Frist (though current legal troubles may end that), Mitt Romney, Haley Barbour, Sam Brownback, Chuck Hagel, Mike Huckabee, and even Condi Rice are all being bantered about as being serious potential candidates. Personally, I think Condi would be more divisive than Hillary, and I think all the others are going to have a tough time competing with either Rudy or Sen. McCain.

    But the Democrats are in a serious hurt as far as the '08 presidential race goes. They're in a better position for the mid-terms coming up; but even that could get jacked up if they don't start doing some serious strategy work and putting forth some real candidates.

    The Republicans have put them in this spot by stealing their lines. The GOP is now the party of the God-fearing folk. They are now the party of the little man, protecting said peasant from the tyranny of the Ivy Leage Elitist, etc. There has been a lot of talk about how the Democrats need to come up with a message. The truth is, they need to take their message back from the people who stole it if they are to have any election successes in the near term.

    Personally, I'd be okay with either Rudy or McCain. The rest in my earlier list turn my stomach; but so does Hillary. It's a tough time to be a centrist and to watch the GOP turning ultra-conservative, and the Dems put Hillary out as the answer. Fortunately, the two most moderate GOP frontrunners are still in fact running in front. I hope it stays that way.

    --
    Hot Damn! It's the Soggy Bottom Boys!
  65. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by gg3po · · Score: 2, Insightful
    But you didn't see any violations of privacy under Clinton.

    Actually, I seem to recall that there were several very serious and prominant instances of questionable constitutional rights violations by the federal government under Clinton.

    Stop accepting their groupthink. Stop being a Democrat or a Republican and start being a human being.

    "We can't be so fixated on our desire to preserve the rights of ordinary Americans ..." -- Bill Clinton
    --
    ---
  66. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Uhh... how is that even remotely similar to secret wiretaps performed by the government at the behest of the leadership?

    Seriously... the politics in all countries are fucked up (and probably appears doubly so if you happen not to lean in the direction of the existing leadership *cough*conservatives*cough*), but at least in Canada, the government respects the rights of it's citizens (or did you forget about those post/9-11 omnibus security bills that got shot down because of fear of human rights violations?) Seriously, say what you want about Canadian politics, but it's a far FAR cry from what's going on down south right now.

    Oh, and as a side note, remember who it was that wanted to take Canada to war based on false intelligence... those 'scary' conservatives.

  67. Re:The truly amazing part is that we elected him.. by selfdiscipline · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Don't be sure that we elected him the second time, either. I think Diebold can claim that honor. But we'll never know.

    --


    -------
    Incite and flee.
  68. Re:Oh dear by Locke2005 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wait, isn't that the crux of Sadam Hussein's legal defense? "I have not violated the laws of my country. I am the president. Whatever I say IS the law!"

    --
    I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
  69. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The new-aged GOP is actually a very old American party: It's the Jacksonian party. Their core values haven't really changed (there's no mention of slavery, and they talk about the Arab Terrorists instead of the Indians, but that's just sematics).

    --
    'Sensible' is a curse word.
  70. Re:The truly amazing part is that we elected him.. by dkleinsc · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Actually, there's a decent chance that the President has never won an election fair-and-square. Texas governorship: One of the most corrupt states politically. Case in point: Tom Delay, who guilty or not has a habit of bending the rules. I don't have the details handy on his gubenatorial elections, someone else probably does. 2000 presidential election: As you pointed out, a blatently political decision that fails to meet the impartiality test (would the same Justices vote the same way if Bush's and Gore's positions had been reversed?) 2004 presidential election: Voting irregularities, especially in districts using Diebold ("I promise to deliver the electoral votes of Ohio to Bush") were the norm in Ohio and other closely contested states. Notable were the discrepencies between the normally extremely accurate exit polls and the actual results, as well as the difference between time needed to vote in various districts (suburbs: 15-20 minutes, cities: 3-5 hours). Not to mention the widespread corruption in the Ohio government (governor convicted of some crimes, several officials currently being tried), and the CEO of Diebold's recent resignation.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  71. Of course you are right! by LibertineR · · Score: 2
    Yale, Harvard MBA, Fighter pilot, Governor, President, he's got to be a loser.

    While YOU, bright boy have spare time to post bullshit on Slashdot every day.

    I'm sure he wishes he was you!

    1. Re:Of course you are right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And not a single one of those done without daddy's friends or connections.

  72. Re:a Goddamned piece of paper, surprised? by isotope23 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ah, a lefty mouthpiece reports it... So it must be true, right? The libs are letting their hatred for Bush blur the line between reality and fantasy. These kooks are the GOPs best friends.

    If he did nothing wrong, he has nothing to hide.
    Just have him answer whether he said it UNDER OATH.

    (sound familiar???)

    --
    Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
  73. Yet another impeachment count ... by willtsmith · · Score: 3, Insightful


    Yet another impeachment count if the Democrats can find the spine to win the 2006 elections.

    If you're not concerned about the president creating a US KGB, then you're a fascist and you don't deserve to be an American. You're an American hater because you hate the Constitution of the United States.

    Flying flags does not represent patriotism. Nor does sporting yellow magnetic stickers made in China. Belief and upholding the CONSTITUTION makes you an American.

    GW Bush is NOT an American. He is a demonic usurpur. He'd be far more comfortable living in Saudia Arabia.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  74. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by Mr.+Flibble · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Republicans and Democrats aren't the same, and we don't need a third party. We just need a government that gives a shit about civil rights.

    I never really understood this aspect of the American political system, perhaps it is because I am Canadian, and I have so many parties to choose from - especially in the upcoming election we are about to have...

    If you are in the U.S. it seems to me that you can choose either the left, or the right. There is no middle ground. Indeed, the terminology in the states only supports "left" or "right" no "up, down" or anything else. It is my feeling that a whole host of problems result from this aspect of the system. Yes, I am biased, but IMO, the 2 party system is horrifically broken. IIRC there were other parties in the U.S. earlier, I think that the Moose party was one, but I have not looked into U.S. political history in some time.

    I guess I just feel that if I had a choice of Repulican, or Democrat, and I did not like either I would not even bother to vote. To me, it represents a lack of choice, and therefore a lack of freedom. But then again, I live in a society that has multiple party freedom.

    --
    Try to hack my 31337 firewall!
  75. Before everybody gets worked up... by smitth1276 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Some informative commentary:

    Some brief background: The Foreign Intelligence Security Act permits the government to monitor foreign communications, even if they are with U.S. citizens -- 50 USC 1801, et seq. A FISA warrant is only needed if the subject communications are wholly contained in the United States and involve a foreign power or an agent of a foreign power.

    The reason the President probably had to sign an executive order is that the Justice Department office that processes FISA requests, the Office of Intelligence Policy and Review (OIPR), can take over 6 months to get a standard FISA request approved. It can become extremely bureaucratic, depending on who is handling the request. His executive order is not contrary to FISA if he believed, as he clearly did, that he needed to act quickly. The president has constitutional powers, too.

    It's also clear from the Times piece that Rockefeller knew about the government's eavesdropping, as did the FISA court. By the time this story is fully fleshed out, we'll learn that many others knew about it, too. To the best of my knowledge, Rockefeller didn't take any steps to stop the eavesdropping.


    -- Mark Levin at NRO.

    It really is a good idea to get out of the echo chamber on occasion and read some of what the "other side" has to say. The NYT isn't exactly notorious for giving you the full story, nor is the BBC who simply summarized the NYT article.

  76. Fighting for our freedom by aplusjimages · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I love it when people say that our troops are "fighting for our freedom". I thought the terrorists were supposed to be the ones affecting our freedom, but it turns out its our government instead. Too bad the troops are in Iraq helping the Iraqis get their freedom while we slowly lose ours.

    --
    Can I bum a sig?
  77. Re:No Dispute? by bored · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "faulty intelligence"

    I would like to present a new term "Faulty judgement".

    Which in my opinion is more acurate. There wasn't anything wrong with the intellegence. People conviently forget the organizations questioning the "intelligence" before the war because they wern't mainstream news outlets which were all busy being a mouthpiece for the administration. The Powell speech before the UN just proves this. It didn't convince anyone at the UN because all the "intelligence" they presented was either hearsay, or renderings of what "could be". Not a single hard fact in the whole thing. In fact I didn't see a single hard fact during the whole "discussion" supporting the white houses position. On the other hand, there was quite a lot of hard evidence that there wern't any weapons, and the logical problems with the "give us your weapons, or we will attack you" argument was a joke. I saw and read letters from numerious _EXPERTS_ saying things like weapon x Sadam had during GF1 has a shelf life of x years, and has long since become inert, and other similar testimonies. Where were these guys on the news? Being covered up thats where.

  78. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by dabigpaybackski · · Score: 2, Informative
    Correction: Andrew Jackson, despite his hatred of the native peoples, was also a bit of a populist. For one thing, he loathed the big banks and vowed to eliminate them. Not surprisingly, the banks outlasted President Jackson.

    The current Republican Party is anything but populist, and as for their attitude toward banks and every other sort of corrupt corporation...well, for all practical purposes, the entities of Party and corporation are indistinguishable. The Republican Party and the Democratic Party are just the corporations public sector representatives, with completely interchangeable personnel. It's just kleptocracy, that is, "government by high-functioning sociopaths." What I find just absolutely amazing is how successfully conditioned ordinary people have been to grovel before a bunch of crooks in fancy suits. As long as whatever lunacy the elite presently schemes toward is presented by dignified men in fancy suits who speak in stern, paternal tones, then the regular person nods in agreement. There's no discernment whatsoever; it's just, "Oh, well Senator So-and-so says it, and he's a Republican like me, so it must be true. Hey, are there any more Doritos in the cupboard?" *munch munch*

    If the public is that fucking dumb, can you blame rich sociopaths for regarding them as human cattle? Think about how con-artists work. They snare their marks by appealing to greed, pride, lust--all the worst sentiments of humanity. Politicians are con-artists whose medium is masses of people.

    --
    "OH SHIT, THERE'S A HORSE IN THE HOSPITAL!"
  79. But legislative branch was informed! RTFA! by thule · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hello people... the article mentions that the CIA and the Executive branch informed the Legislative branch this was happening. They were informed that phone number and email addresses collected during an arrest could be used to find ties to others. According to the article the information had to be acted on quickly. It worked. Others were ferreted out and arrested.

    Anyone ever hear of FISA? Since the calls and email were international communications, it is within the purview of the CIA to intercept them.

    The article also mentions that the government still has to get warrants for domestic taps.

    If you don't like it... get FISA repealed!

    1. Re:But legislative branch was informed! RTFA! by swiftstream · · Score: 3, Informative

      The difference between this and FISA is that FISA requires prior approval by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, FISC, as you would have known had you actually read the first three lines of the page you linked to:

      Requests are adjudicated by a special eleven member court called the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.

      These taps were done without any judicial permission, which even FISA requires. The time required for a FISC approval (as short as a few hours if a case is urgent) was claimed to be too short, justifiying this.

      One of the things I find most worrying about the entire thing, though, is summed up in this statement by Trent Lott:

      ``I want my security first. I'll deal with all the details after that.''

      (see e.g. http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000103&si d=aJFRC0JDD0lY&refer=us)

      I don't want any man who puts security before freedom in my government. If I lived in Mississippi I'd try to do something about him; alas, I live in Utah, so I've got Orrin Hatch to worry about.

      --
      Be a PATRIOT--because the only thing we have to fear is the lack thereof.
  80. No, he didn't really say that. by Cryptnotic · · Score: 3, Informative

    It is absolutely not real. It was from an editorial piece written by Doug Thompson. He was just making up a story describing what he thought a conversation with Bush would be like. Note in the article that Scalia says that the Constitution can mean "whatever we say it means". That is another ridiculous statement.

    Basically, if you go around repeating this quote as real (as many on the "blogosphere" have done), it makes you look like an idiot.

    --
    My other first post is car post.
    1. Re:No, he didn't really say that. by isotope23 · · Score: 4, Informative

      It is absolutely not real. It was from an editorial piece written by Doug Thompson.

      From the article :
      "I've talked to three people present for the meeting that day and they all confirm that the President of the United States called the Constitution "a goddamned piece of paper." "

      from the followup

      "When a GOP operative first emailed me about the White House meeting where Bush called the Constitution "just a goddamned piece of paper," I put it aside as one of many reports I get about the President's temper tantrums."

      "We get tips about Bush's temper and his comments all the time. Most of the tips don't get used because we don't go with information from just one source. The tip about "the goddamned piece of paper" seemed destined for the byte bin until a second aide, in casual conversation, mentioned the comment.

      So I called a third source who has confirmed information in the past. At first he was defensive.

      "Who told you about that?" I told him I'd picked it up from two other sources.

      "Look, you know how the President is," he said. "He gets agitated when people challenge him."

      All I wanted to know was did the President of the United States call the Constitution a "goddamned piece of paper."

      "Yeah. He did." "

      It was not an imaginary converstation

      We were the first news outlet to identify the names of women who claimed sexual abuse by Bill Clinton when he was attorney general and later governor of Arkansas. We were the first news outlet to report on the ethical problems of many members of Congress in our series: America's Criminal Class: The Congress of the United States. And we were the first to report on the abuse of underage girls on teen model web sites. Links to all of these award-winning stories can be found on our home page.

      That doesn't mean you should take everything we print as gospel. Never do that with us or any other news source. Do your own research and reach your own conclusions. And consider the record of the sources you use for news and information. We've published more than 25,000 stories since going online on October 1, 1994, and we've had to retract two of them. That's a record I'm willing to stand on.

      My bio can be found on this link. I put my name on everything I write. And I stand behind what I write. I'm an arrogant, stubborn, driven bastard who takes no prisoners and backs down from no one. When I'm wrong, I admit it. Thankfully, I haven't had to do that very often. When I'm right I don't give a damn who doesn't like it or what they say about it.

      An editor who taught me a lot once said: "If you piss off both sides you're doing your job."

      That's good enough for me.

      --
      Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
  81. Why bother reporting this? by koreth · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Anyone who still likes Bush will do one of (a) not believe the report, (b) blame the situation on a liberal something-or-other (or focus on some bad thing a left-wing person did in the past, on the theory that two wrongs make a right), or (c) say "we're at war, so whatever he does is okay, even stuff we would have gone apoplectic about had a Democrat done them." Hmm, or (d) say "if this turns out to be true, I will be first in line to call Bush to account for it," then when it does turn out to be true, claim they never meant it. Those seem to be the four things a Bush loyalist does at the first sign that something might be rotten in Crawford.

    I have to admire, though, the way Bush has managed to run roughshod over just about every conservative ideal there is while still managing to keep a sizable percentage of the country fiercely loyal to him.

    • Moral behavior: Photographic evidence of torture by US troops. (With the Vice President lobbying strongly to stop torture from being banned by Congress, it takes a special kind of thinking to truly believe there was no official sanction.)
    • Isolationism: Nation-building exercises. (Remember the term "nation-building" from the Bush vs. Gore debates? Yeah, it was that thing Bush promised never to do, but shh!)
    • Frugality: The biggest, most expensive new social program in decades (the Medicare prescription drug plan) not to mention massive budget deficits.
    • Privacy: Surveillance with no court orders or oversight by other branches of the government, see current story.
    • Piety: Here's a fun quote for you. "But if any one strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also." I defy any Bush supporter to name one instance in which Bush's foreign policy has followed this rather central tenet of the religion he claims is so important to him. I sure haven't seen it. Yet somehow he manages to hoodwink the religious right into thinking he's a born-again, devout believer.

    I could go on, but as I said, why bother? Anyone who doesn't already see the darkness is never going to be swayed by words.

    And before you say it: No, I'm not particularly left-leaning. I think conservatism has a lot of good things to offer. If only it were actually being practiced.

    1. Re:Why bother reporting this? by talksinmaths · · Score: 2

      I have to admire, though, the way Bush has managed to run roughshod over just about every conservative ideal there is while still managing to keep a sizable percentage of the country fiercely loyal to him.

      I think Bush's die-hard supporters are primarily religious conservatives, and not people who are conservative in the more traditional sense of the word. As you note he fares poorly when judged by traditional conservative milestones. However when it comes to migrating America from a freedom and Democracy to intolerance and Theocracy he's doing a good job.

      --
      Don't you have someone you'd die for?
  82. Gain is nice but not the issue by jscotta44 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Whether or not the Iraqis gained anything from the US prosecuting the consequence for the Iraqi government's violation of the Cease Fire is not the point of our involvement in the country. We are there...again...because the Iraqi government led by Saddam Hussein violated the terms of the Cease Fire. A Cease Fire that was brought about by the invasion of Kuwait by Iraq-a pure invasion of conquest. They, the Iraqi government was told that "dire consequences" would result from violating the Cease Fire. Every government involved in the liberation of Kuwait signed off on it. Since everyone knows that the UN is a toothless old corruption dog, everyone knew that the US or another nation with the will to act would be required to put teeth into the agreement. Teeth that bite, as Saddam Hussein found out. That said. I truly hope that the Iraqi people can directly benefit from the current involvement of the US. And perhaps they will. However, it is not right of you to blame the deaths of the people killed by the insurrection (terrorists) on the US. The US would have pulled out long ago had the terrorists not fired up their machine of violence. I think it would have been a mistake to pull out, but that is what they would have done.

  83. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. (Too late) by laughingcoyote · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While I'm glad you're paying attention, the right to bribe a police officer, judge, juror, or any other public official is not free speech, nor should it be. Why should bribing a Senator/Congressman be?

    With respect to private property, not sure if you're talking about the recent eminent domain ruling, but absolutely agree there. I was real sorry to see that one, and I hope the SC will have the good sense to reverse itself shortly.

    --
    To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
  84. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by ortcutt · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Clipper was a bad idea but it never went anywhere. Clinton did also repeal the export restrictions on strong crypto.

  85. Re:Constitution just a piece of paper. by Arandir · · Score: 3, Informative

    That post was a rant, a sarcasm, a fiction, a collection of invented quotes. It was made up. It's obvious that it was made up. *YOU* know it was made up. Yet you present it as factual quotes.

    People wonder why Bush and Co. can get away with the stuff they do. But it's easy to get away with stuff when your opponents are habitual and compulsive liars. If you don't want Bush to get away with this crap, THEN STOP LYING ABOUT IT!

    --
    A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
  86. Re:No Dispute? by onemorechip · · Score: 2, Informative

    Manipulated intelligence, you mean. This was reported by Knight-Ridder long before the Downing Street memo came to light; in fact it was reported even before the illegal invasion itself.

    --
    But, I wanted socialized health insurance!
  87. Re:Well, that's a big shocker. by slashmojo · · Score: 2, Funny
    BTW -- I used to consider myself a Republican. I don't know what to call myself now.

    NSA case file #4653268137 ? ;)

  88. Paperwork?! by Grendel+Drago · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... because somewhere between 500 and a couple of thousand people with possible / likely connections to terrorists didn't (allegedly) have all of the needed paperwork for proper surveillance filled out by the government?

    Paperwork? Paperwork? Paperwork?! That "paperwork" you casually mention is the rule of law that separates us from the land of police-state Do-As-You-Please. There's a difference between being accused of a crime and convicted of one; no matter what the crime, it is never sensible to treat the former group as the latter.

    I'm aghast. Are you bloody serious? By you, arresting and holding someone with neither charges nor a warrant is just a paperwork problem? Look at what you've become! If standing behind your president means a casual dismissal of the thin but so, so vital line separating us from rule-by-Kingly fiat... shouldn't that set off some kind of warning sign?

    --
    Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca
  89. Re:How many Jews were murdered in the Holocaust by einhverfr · · Score: 2, Informative

    You have some valid points, but I don't think you understand my points at all.

    What has been largely erased was the role of the concentration camps in political persecutions and the scope and bredth of these persecutions. Consequently, you don't hear stories like those of Fredreich Bernard Marby.

    Marby was a nationalist who was heavily involved in the Volkische movement. He had written books attempting to create a national German form of yoga called Runenyoga, and these books had some antisemitic content (which is why you never hear his story, I am convinced). Marby was never a member of the NSDAP. Early in the war, the SS approached Marby and requested his involvement in their organization. Marby declined and was subsequently imprisoned in Dachau. He was repeatedly threatened with his life, and told that if he joined the SS, that he would be let out. He was still in Dachau ten years later, when the Allies arrived.

    There are several reasons why the Volkische persecutions get no coverage in history books. These include:
    1) The persecutions were entirely authorized and organized by Himmler, and there is little evidence of other high-ranking Nazi party member involvement.

    2) Many of those persecuted espoused antisemitic sentiments between the wars and were often considered part of the problem both by the Allies and later by many of the scholars interested in the Jewish experience of the death camps.

    3) These persecutions were wide ranging and included religious/mystical/occult groups (Eugen Groshe was imprisoned because of his leadership of the Fraturnitas Saturnii), nationalist groups, and many of those that crossed these lines (The Guido von List Gesselshaft, the Armanenshaft, etc).

    4) While many of these individuals were imprisoned in concentration camps, ordinary jails and summary executions were often used as well.

    To appreciate why these persecutions occurred, however, it is important to understand that the NSDAP itself was a hybrid of Hitler's Marxist DAP and a number of Volkische-oriented nationalists (such as Himmler, Hess, and others). Many in the Volkishe movement did not ascribe to the vision of a great German empire (von Lebenfels, for example, had an alternative vision of a large number of small, German-run states in a loose confederation, and Guido von List while strongly nationalistic was hardly cheuvanistic about it--- he maintained extremely good relations with a number of Kabbalistic schools and collaborated with some of the Rabbis there on comparitive mystical works).

    In essence although most of the nationalist movement was fairly racist, at least in believing in the superiority of the German people, there were a large number of beliefs about the role of nationalism in the future of Germany. Many of the Volkische simply saw Hitler as a new sort of German quasi-communist and wanted nothing to do with him. So what Himmler did was use the SS and the concentration camps to ensure that no Volkische vision of Germany could exist outside the SS. This was largely a power play on his part and it is likely that Himmler was attempting to take over the Reich at some point. Note that towards the end of the war, Hitler attempted to fire Himmler and was unsuccessful which gives you an idea of how powerful Himmler was (after Hitler's death, Doenitz successfully fired Himmler, and he recounted in his memoirs how terrified he was of Himmler during this encounter). After his dismissal, Himmler used the SS as his private army and negotiated his own surrender apart from the general surrender of the German military negotiated by Doenitz.

    Several other oddities which are worth noting:

    1) There is some evidence that Hitler asked Churchill for permission to send the Jews to Madagascar as an alternative to killing them.

    2) A terrorist organization known as the Stern Gang in British Palestine, led in part by Yitzach Shameer (later PM of Israel for a brief time), attempted to enter into a military alliance with Hitler and broker a de

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