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DOJ To Claim National Security in NSA Case

deblau writes "Wired is reporting that the federal government intends to invoke the rarely used 'State Secrets Privilege' in the Electronic Frontier Foundation's class action lawsuit against AT&T. The case alleges that the telecom collaborated with the NSA's secret spying on American citizens. The State Secrets Privilege lets the executive branch step into a civil lawsuit and have it dismissed if the case might reveal information that puts national security at risk."

337 comments

  1. I think... by Dance_Dance_Karnov · · Score: 5, Insightful

    that this action by the fed pretty much confirms the EFF's claims here.

    1. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You're right, but the fact that the DoJ is invoking this protection is a strong indicator that they do have something to hide. Given the fairly narrow focus of the EFF claims (The NSA have wiretaps in major ISP data centers), the NSA obviously have something to fear from having to publicly defend itself against such a claim. At the very least we can surmise with some certainty that yes, the NSA probably do have some form of wiretaping program taking place on US soil, done in conjunction with US ISPs.

    2. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence

      That's right. Just because I can't see an elephant in my kitchen and can't feel an elephant in my kitchen and can't smell an elephant in my kitchen, see no reason at all to suppose that there's an elephant in my kitchen and have no reason to believe that there's an elephant in my kitchen isn't evidence that there isn't an elephant in my kitchen.

      Oh wait, of course it fucking is. The ONLY evidence we have most of the time for something not being there is the complete lack of all the evidence that we'd expect to have if it was.

    3. Re:I think... by Saven+Marek · · Score: 0

      1. the NSA is not an elephant
      2. the AT&T is not your kitchen

      your analogy falls down flat on both of those points.

    4. Re:I think... by jrmcferren · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think it is in the best intrest to let the case go on. The approval rating of the administration is very low and we are talking atomic bomb low. While I voted for Bush, this issue should not be covered up. The Bush administration's approval rating will drop either way, but the effects may not be as damaging if the truth is told instead of covered up. BTW: I wish Bush was censured, spying on American Citizens is wrong without just cause.

      --
      sudo mod me up
    5. Re:I think... by zCyl · · Score: 5, Insightful

      now all this case is about is absence of evidence as THERE IS NO EVIDENCE for what you're implying.

      Do you really think the federal government has the political capital to spend right now going around and covering up wiretapping that they're NOT doing?

    6. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your analogy falls down flat on both of those points.

      What analogy? Your claim was "Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence". You were clearly presenting that as a general principle to support your argument. Try reading your post if you've forgotten it already. I don't need an analogy to show that a principle is not valid, by giving an example.

    7. Re:I think... by Phoenix666 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Agreed. Where there's smoke, there's fire. I hope people keep after government spying. It brought down one administration, and it can bring down another. Once it starts to unravel, we're going to find out more about the vast conspiracy that is the neo-con movement, from rigging the ballot to treason to war profiteering and on and on. It will shake the republic to its very roots. But once we excise them from the body politic and expunge their backers (the ultra-wealthy who are behind it all), we'll be a much stronger country. See, those people think they're born with the divine right of kings and think they can command the rest of us like sheep. What they fail and have ever failed to understand is that America's strength is in her people.

      --
      Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.
    8. Re:I think... by JWSmythe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Correction:

          1) The trainer said they brought the elephant into your kitchen.

          2) There are elephant droppings leading up to your kitchen.

          3) The elephant has a huge interest in being in your kitchen.

          4) For national security reasons, we will not let you into your kitchen, nor tell you anything about what's happening in your kitchen.

          I'd be lead to believe there's a warm cup of coffee in your microwave. Oh no, it would indicate that there's an elephant in your kitchen.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    9. Re:I think... by keraneuology · · Score: 1

      Just because the former employee(s?) haven't testified in court doesn't mean their testimony isn't evidence. There are, in my opinion, credible claims that the NSA is behaving exactly as accused. Interestingly enough the media isn't making a big deal over this - a truly anti-Bush mainstream press would blare on every headline "Bush's NSA comfirms wire-tapping claims are state secret" or similar.

      --
      If the g'vt kept the data on you that google does you'd better believe you'd be calling it "doing evil"
    10. Re:I think... by dougsyo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I saw the government's weasel words about how their action shouldn't be construed as any confirmation. My response to the government: "If you haven't done anything wrong, then you have nothing to hide." The government tries to tell us that often enough.

      I'm not a court of law, but I'm sufficiently convinced that the government's done something fishy (again) and gotten caught at it (again).

      Doug

    11. Re:I think... by Triskele · · Score: 1
      What they fail and have ever failed to understand is that America's strength is in her people.
      I wish I had your faith in the people, friend. Or perhaps to put it another way, if America's strength is in the people, then the brains directing it to their own goals is the elite.
      --

      --
      USA: home of the world's largest terrorist training camp.

    12. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

      Agreed. Where there's smoke, there's fire.
      I agree with you, but that same attitude is why the government is spying in the first place, and leads to paranoid trends. However they have a problem of confusing fog for smoke.

    13. Re:I think... by tenchiken · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It's not quite that simple, any more then invoking the 5th admendment implies guilt. The reality is that there are good and sane reasons for some government wiretaps. The government could also be invoking the state secrets priviledge simply to keep details on how the current system works (legaly) out of the press and the court.

      If you don't think this matters, take the recent article about the Madrid bombings. The Bombers knew that their email would be read if they sent it from Hotmail or from Yahoo mail. So they shared a email account between them, shared the password, and hence never hit any of Europe's security flags.

      Please don't treat this stuff as if it were all one dimensional and simple. This is a complex issue, and a knee jerk reaction just proved how incapable people are of thinking through the issues.

    14. Re:I think... by ThatDamnMurphyGuy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > Did it ever ONCE cross your mind that the government could actually be spying on people who need to be spied on?

      That's not the problem. The NSA was built to spy on people who need spying on. The problem is, they, and the administration, are not following the laws set forthe to do so such spying (getting warrants, even after the fact). THAT is the problem here. They are breaking the law because they feel like it, and they believe they do not have to be accountable for doing so,

    15. Re:I think... by Legion303 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Did it ever ONCE cross your mind that the government could actually be spying on people who need to be spied on?"

      Did it ever cross yours that it should do it in the manner proscribed by the fourth amendment, which has worked great for the past 220 years?

      "liberals hate the word 'Constitution' because they know that if the American public were to actually read and understand the Constitution, the liberal platform would literally crumble into dust."

      Gosh, literally? I think you've been hitting that peace pipe a little yourself, hippie.

    16. Re:I think... by fatman22 · · Score: 1

      Aside from there being something fundamentally not right with the term "state secrets" being applied to the activities of a telephone company, if the phone company and the government have done nothing wrong, what do they have to worry about? Let the discovery proceed.

    17. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, it's that darn "vast right-wing conspiracy" (Hillary Clinton) is it?

      No, it's a vast "Government conspiracy". Wether the Government at the time happens to be Demopublican or Republicrat doesn't make any difference because they're both as bad.

      conservatives realize that big brother has a job to do, and lets them do it within the confines of the Constitution.

      Oh, but not the Bill of Rights? You know, that pesky part thing that means the NSA are not allowed to spy on American Citizens without a warrent? You're the Big Brothers Little Brother here.

    18. Re:I think... by Tim+C · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That was my first thought too. However, it is just possible that it could also mean "we're not doing that, but in order to prove it we'd have to tell you stuff that we simply can't tell you - ie, the real reason why all those packets are coming to us. We're not spying on you, but the truth (and proof of that) is classified."

      The cynic in me says "that proves it!". The scientist in me says that we can't be certain of that.

    19. Re:I think... by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you don't think this matters, take the recent article about the Madrid bombings. The Bombers knew that their email would be read if they sent it from Hotmail or from Yahoo mail. So they shared a email account between them, shared the password, and hence never hit any of Europe's security flags.

      Please don't treat this stuff as if it were all one dimensional and simple. This is a complex issue, and a knee jerk reaction just proved how incapable people are of thinking through the issues.


      You see, there are a few problems here:

      Any policy has to be executed to achieve anything, which means there are always a bunch of people involved. Any organisation that already cares shit about the legality of what they are doing, would have little problem obtaining information on such policies by means of infiltration bribary etc. Keeping any large scale policy really secret is practically impossible.

      No matter how complex and advanced your policy, getting around it is usually a matter of spotting a flaw and having a simple means to exploit that flaw, as per your example of the Madrid bombers.

      Combine those two things and you find that secrecy does not help preventing terrorist attacks, but does prevent normal civilians from knowing what is up and having a founded opinion.

    20. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      The statistician in me says that they are almost certaintly not "not hiding anything".

    21. Re:I think... by Rob_Bryerton · · Score: 1

      You're a ^&#%@* moron, and just as bad (if not worse) than these liberals you despise. The only difference is that you stand on the far opposite side of the fence. Make no mistake, just as the liberals sound like wackos to you, you also do to them. But you're right, because these are *your* beliefs, which could not possibly be wrong. Correct?

    22. Re:I think... by hunterx11 · · Score: 1
      Please don't treat this stuff as if it were all one dimensional and simple. This is a complex issue, and a knee jerk reaction just proved how incapable people are of thinking through the issues.

      Exactly. I mean, the British financed the French and Indian War, and were just trying to recover their losses with the Stamp Act. What kind of uncivilized people would demand no taxation with representation as a knee-jerk reaction?

      Oh right--Americans. Yes, we are supposed to have a knee-jerk reaction whenever our freedoms are trampled, if not a trigger-finger reaction. Terrorism is a much smaller threat than our own government. If the government can't collect domestic intelligence while respecting the law, then frankly I'd rather have them foil fewer terrorist plots than erode civil liberties.

      --
      English is easier said than done.
    23. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well said. That is the point people are missing here. Nobody, especially the president, is above the law. If the law is there, they have to follow it, or ask congress to change the law (which they probably would have done).

      They broke the law. There is no getting around that. You cannot spy on us citizens without a warrant. There is a system set up to get that warrant secretly, and "speedily". They chose to not get a warrant (or 10,000 warrants). It is that simple.

      Using "national security" as a reason is not good enough. I think the supreme court already said this Even if we had all of our communications monitored, that would not stop a terrorist who is determined to kill himself and take people with him. Giving up privacy will not help us stop the terrorists. Even if we imposed "martial law", as long as they have the determination, they would keep trying to kill themselves.

      Look at Iraq now, we have how many hundreds of thousands of troops there, who have the authority to impose curfews, search without warrants, etc, and STILL there are many, many suicide bombings every month.

      And, furthermore, since this is a war without a clear end, when will we know they are not monitoring our communications? Will they come out and say it, or will we just have to "take their word for it"? Sorry, that's not good enough. They have no credibility.

    24. Re:I think... by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 2, Interesting

      While your argument is logically-true, it is not reasonable or rational. You are ignoring incentive.

      What incentive is there for the FedGov to issue the State Secrets Act -- or become involved in any way with any case -- unless it involves them somehow? Unless the Federal Government has something to hide, why would it become involved?

      If our government has nothing to hide, then it wouldn't use this act. But it does, and it did...

    25. Re:I think... by gnuyarlathotep · · Score: 1

      Look at Iraq now, we have how many hundreds of thousands of troops there, who have the authority to impose curfews, search without warrants, etc, and STILL there are many, many suicide bombings every month.

      While I agree with your points almost entirely, the US and Britain combined have around 160,000 troops in Iraq, not many hundreds of thousands. Not only did W insist on going to war with trumped up charges, he tried to do it on the cheap.

    26. Re:I think... by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
      Not the federal government, the Bush Administration. And if you think they are concerned about political capital, you obviously haven't been paying attention.

      This vile administration is concerned only about money, power and more money, to the peril of the future of this country and society. The democracy has long been lost.

      One comment on the CIA (slightly off-topic, but still cogent), if they were truly, in any way whatsoever, an effective organization, then George Tenet would not be breathing - especially as he acquisced to Bush's outing of one of their own along with their NOC organization, Brewster-Jennings!
    27. Re:I think... by drDugan · · Score: 1

      I wish Bush was censured

      well, I want Bush in an orange jumpsuit with leg irons. He deserves no better.

      like this.

    28. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I have no doubt that Tenet helped bush by modifying some data, it should be obvious that he was trying to feed the admin with correct info, which the admin choose to ignore. If nothing else, note the fact that he was awarded, rather quiety, after being "fired" for "incompetitence". And that was after he said that the pres was incorrect on his SOTU address. From where I sit, it is obvious that even the investigation was a total farce (one which I hope that we investigate later when a moral admin takes over).

      In addition, I seriously doubt that tenet would in any way , contribute to the outing of plame. He is a patriot, through and through. But I do agree that if the CIA had found him to be out of line, no doubt he would have had a heart attack by now.

    29. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Point taken.
      The thing I wonder about is, if he is impeached, (either for the nsa thing or the cia leak), who would replace him, Cheney? Would that be any better?

    30. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      who would replace him, Cheney? Would that be any better?

      Yes, in that Cheney has and would have virtually zero support from anyone on any side. Even the president is extremely constrained and almost powerless to do harm when he has zero support. Cheney is *so* unpopular that I wouldn't be surprised if he himself were to then step down as president.

    31. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      the fact that the DoJ is invoking this protection is a strong indicator that they do have something to hide

      hello, citizen. I am a police officer. please show me your identification.
      no? what? you're refusing a police officer?!?!???????
      if you didn't have anything to hide, then you would present your identification upon demand.
      I'm taking you in, son.
    32. Re:I think... by Firehed · · Score: 1

      Somehow, I've got the feeling that the government isn't going to fall that "If you've got nothing to hide, it won't affect you" counterclaim. As a group that uses it as often as they do, surely they know it's a load of horseshit.

      --
      How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
    33. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hello, citizen. I am a police officer.

      "Citizen?" I'm the DoJ! I'm above the law! Now, get out of my face before I ship your sorry behind to Gitmo for some serious re-education.

    34. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you build strawmen for a living?

    35. Re:I think... by EvanED · · Score: 1

      While I agree with you, thinking this is very dangerous because it erodes the very idea of the 5th amendment. If we can infer guilt from saying "I don't want to say anything" that is exactly what is a major protection we're afforded.

    36. Re:I think... by inKubus · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think it's pretty obvious that everyone needs get excited.

      A. Vote in the upcoming election
      B. Send a letter to their congressperson/senator
      C. Donate $10-100 to the EFF or OTHER reputable HUMAN RIGHTS ORGANIZATION (don't have starbucks for 2 days and SEND MONEY.)

      DO IT! DO IT! DO IT! If you don't, you're a piece of shit.

      --
      Cool! Amazing Toys.
    37. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how can something be logical and irrational at the same time?

    38. Re:I think... by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      That'salso a gross simplification. It was a change of government, and it wasn't just the stamp act. American culture had split from British culture over the last 100 years in general, and it really was the denial of the ohio valley for settlers that was the straw the broke the camel's back.

    39. Re:I think... by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Wether the Government at the time happens to be Demopublican or Republicrat doesn't make any difference because they're both as bad.

      Nader? Is that you? Sorry, but the last 6 years have proved that claim of yours to be monumentally stupid.

    40. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow!

      You must either suffer from multiple personality disorder or at the time of posting been participating in an gay orgy changing partners constantly.

    41. Re:I think... by SetupWeasel · · Score: 1

      Yes, yes, yes. But how many secrets could they uncover if they weren't doing it. We know Bush is doing it. He has admitted it. It is against the law... the Bill of Rights no less. The people responsible must be held accountable.

      No state secret is worth our freedom, and that is exactly what is being threatened. The president feels that he can declassify anything he wants to simply sway the public. We now want the same privlidge to ensure our own interests--our very liberty. State secrets exist to protect us. We should decide if they are important enough to keep.

      I'm less concerned about potential terrorsts knowing the extent of our technical prowess than I am about ensuring the government isn't allowed to monitor my private conversations. Al Qaeda knows we are listening to them, and if we were using some crazy tech that they didn't know about, we would have already caught Bin Laden (if Bush has any interest in catching him).

    42. Re:I think... by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1
      Did it ever ONCE cross your mind that the government could actually be spying on people who need to be spied on?

      Well, if the government hasn't done anything wrong, then they certainly won't object to us having a little look . . .

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    43. Re:I think... by einhverfr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't think the 5th Amendment should apply to the Government of the United States because they are supposed to be the representatives of the people. This really is a special case-- the 5th Amendment was supposed to protect the people from the government. To use such an amendment to protect the Government from the People (who they are supposed to represent) seems sort of dangerous to my mind.

      If this were not a crime against the *people* of the US, I would not have a problem with this defense. But since it is, I think it is an issue that goes to the heart of *why* we even bother with a Constitution...

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    44. Re:I think... by Alsee · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Did it ever ONCE cross your mind that the government could actually be spying on people who need to be spied on?

      I won't belabor this point. The other replies have you nailed to the wall here. The issue is that if the government should be spying on certain people then the government damn well must do so within the confines established by the constitution and withing the the law. This administration has no respect for the constitution and beleives it is above the law, and the current story is about efforts to block the corts from looking at whether the current spying is being done within the law or being done illegally.

      No, of course not, because people like you immediately think that everybody in the world is going to get along if we all smoke the peace pipe together.

      Pardon me, but bullshit.

      That is nothing but your own bias and imagination. Nothing but you setting up a straw man and pretending that your opponent is some demon that he is NOT.

      I will lay strong odds that the person you are reffering to supported the war in Afghanistan, and I defy you to identify any meaningful percentage of "people like him" who opposed the war in Afghanistan.

      Someone who (for example) opposes the war in Iraq and who absolutely despises the current administration, that person is NOT some anti-war coward anti-american hippy peacenik if they were also "pro-war" on Afghanistan.

      And you automatically assume that the government is evil

      Heay, that not too far off from the position of the Founding Fathers and teh very basis of our Constitution. That basis being that the government is made up of humans, and that humans are sometimes wrong or currupt, and that even good people sometimes abuse power and do Bad Things even with the best of intent, and that no branch of government should be trusted! That every branch of government and every peice of power withing the government must be subject to checks and balances and review by other parts of government. And this very case is about the judicial branch exercising it's Constitutional Power to review the legality of actions by the executive branch, and the executive branch desiring to exercize it's power independantly and without checks and without balances and without review. It's about the executive branch saying "Trust Us", we are doing Something Good, and we shouldn't have any pesky checks and balances looking over our shoulders making sure that we respect the Constitution and that we obey the law.

      I'm sorry, but NO. The very basis of the Constitution is that no part of government should be trusted to police itself. The single most important time NOT to trust some part of government is when they make the very claim "Trust Us" and attempt to evade review.

      and that conservatives eat little African babies for a snack before dinner.

      Oooo! How recursive! A strawman of a straw man!

      Come on, there is no vast neo-con conspiracy going on.

      Well, I don't know exactly how "vast" it is, and maybe "conspiracy" is a bit grandiose, but many of the top positions of government are in fact held by self-professed neo-con,s and those self-professed neo-cons do self admittedly work and plan (aka 'conspire') with each other in furtherance of neo-con goals and policies.

      So while you might quibble that the language was loaded, you cannot dispute the fact that there is a very distinct group with a distinct non-mainstream philosophy working and planing with each other ('conspiring') for that distinct agenda.

      And don't even pretend to equate neo-con and conservative. There are a very large number conservatives becoming increasingly vocal of increasingly vocal in distancing "True Conservatives" from the policies and agenda of "Neo-Con".

      The current administration has an approval rating of 32%. You don't hit an abysmal number like 32% without seriously screwing up and pissing off a substantion percentage of even your own party loyalists. Ev

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    45. Re:I think... by anagama · · Score: 1

      Lethal injection?

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    46. Re:I think... by anagama · · Score: 1

      I suppose I should qualify this joke lest I dissapear to Gitmo or whatever. That punishment would of course be appropriate only after a treason trial if it was demonstrated that Bush has actively undermined fundemental American freedoms, ones he swore to protect, such as the right to privacy unless an appropriate warrant is issued by a competent court.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    47. Re:I think... by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1
      Simple. The GGGP wrote:

      that this action by the fed pretty much confirms the EFF's claims here.

      Then the GGP wrote:

      Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence or in other words what you are saying is only supposition and is not supported by the evidence. Remember don't look for the absence of evidence to prove something and now all this case is about is absence of evidence as THERE IS NO EVIDENCE for what you're implying.

      I shouldn't have said "logically-true", I should have said "logically-valid". It is certainly true that "Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence". An example is a murder case in which the police have no evidence on the person who committed the crime, even though that person is the actual killer. Just because something cannot be proven does not mean it is not true.

      But the argument the GGP makes *is* one of an irrational actor. It would be entirely-irrational for the government to interfere with a case if it has no reason to. If there is no reason to for a behavior, then that behavior is, by definition, irrational.

      Thus, if the government interferes with the EFF v. AT&T case, and the government has no reason to do so, then the government is behaving irrationally. But it *is* interfering. Thus, if we assume the government behaves rationally (and for as anti-government as I am, I will say that it tries!), then we must conclude that it has a reason for this interference.

      Hence, the GGP's argument is irrational.
    48. Re:I think... by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      Oh, I'm sure the govn't won't fall for it either. I just wish that people would apply that horseshit standard to the govn't as well as individuals, if we are going to have that standard to begin with...

    49. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i'm not reading that.
      this is all you need to know:

      logical Audio pronunciation of "logical" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (lj-kl)
      adj.

            1. Of, relating to, in accordance with, or of the nature of logic.

      logic Audio pronunciation of "logic" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (ljk)
      n.

            1. The study of the principles of reasoning, especially of the structure of propositions as distinguished from their content and of method and validity in deductive reasoning.

      irrational Audio pronunciation of "irrational" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (-rsh-nl)
      adj.

            1.
                        1. Not endowed with reason.

    50. Re:I think... by ltbarcly · · Score: 1, Troll
      This is a complex issue, and a knee jerk reaction just proved how incapable people are of thinking through the issues.


      I've thought long and hard about this, I have thought it through. The government is breaking it's our laws, and is being aided by a corporation which is also breaking our law. It is about to invoke a law which allows the government, in this case, to prevent the government's own lawbreaking from being exposed.

      In what universe does the person who stands to lose from a lawsuit also get to be the party which determines whether or not a lawsuit can go forward?

      This is the height of irony. The government is using a law to prevent the exposure of the breaking of a law.

      Who decides whether or not the government is allowed to do this? That's what I want to know. Do they have to at least convince the judge with more than their claim of national interest? Or can the powers that be just send a loyal friend to tell the judge to drop the case?
    51. Re:I think... by bigpicture · · Score: 1

      Well is that not what you get from any dictatorship? When the checks and balances that the founding fathers put in place are removed? No longer a government of the people, with the right to free speech, the right to bear arms against a dictatorship.

      You want to give your rights away then go ahead, Guantanamo is not that far away, Auschwich is just a little further. Watergate all over again.

    52. Re:I think... by tsrich · · Score: 1

      Wow, maybe the best post I've read on slashdot.

      Well, the best one that wasn't modded to 5 Funny :-)

      Unfortunately, you do know that your well-reasoned arguments are too much for his FoxNewsified brain to absorb?

      Bush-Chaney = good, liberals = evil. And the administration or Fox will be happy to tell us who the liberals are and what bad thoughts they think.

      Lord I hope the Repubs nominate a traditional conservative in 08. I'd like to just dislike the policies of the govt if they win, rather than despair that they're leading us down the trail to Mordor like today.

      --
      Tim
    53. Re:I think... by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1
      Your post is almost devoid of useful content, and you're an AC, so I don't feel particularly compelled to respond.

      That said, there are 2 kinds of logic: hard and soft logic.

      Hard logic is the kind used by mathematicians and software developers (I am one). It follows a set of absolute rules which *MUST* work. e.g.:

      if (x > 3), then
      print "x is greater than 3"
      endif


      Soft logic, however, is actually reasoning. It behaves in a logical manner, but is based on examples of real-world behaviors, not hard-and-fast rules. Thus, it is based on factors of both unconscious (but because the brain is a statistical device (learning occurs through sufficiently-high levels of neuronal stimulation, which often requires repetition), still-counted) probability and emotion. For example:

      George W. Bush is George H. Bush's son.
      George H. Bush attacked Iraq and was a target of the Iraqis in that war.
      Therefore, George W. Bush will attack Iraq.

      See the difference? This latter example *behaves* logically -- it has 2 true premises, and a true conclusion. The conclusion would seem to follow, if we assume that W. wants to retaliate for "trying to kill my daddy" (which is an easy conclusion to jump to, and may even be true).

      BUT, there is no reason to believe, on the basis of heredity alone, that George W. Bush will attack Iraq -- as this latter example suggests. This is "soft" logic. The conclusion requires a hidden assumption -- this is the essence of soft logic: one or more hidden assumption to reach a conclusion. Hard logic lays all factors out on the table (the factors may be way-off or wrongly-conceived, but they still must come together to form a specific, singular, no-arguments-about-it result).

      Hard logic requires the use of control statements or math. Soft logic requires accurate premises and conclusions, but the premises needn't actually be directly-connected.

      HOWEVER: seemingly-soft logic can actually be "hard" logic. For example:

      The elevator's suspension cable will break if another person gets on.
      Another person gets on the elevator.
      Therefore, the elevator's suspension cable breaks.

      If the first premise is true, and the second is true, then the third *must* be true. This looks like soft logic because it is stated in english and not in a programming language or math scribbles, but because it contains quantifiable elements and a strictly-defined path towards the conclusion which either must or must not occur, it is hard logic.

      Likewise, hard logic can defy reason. Take numerology as the classic example: it's mathematically possible to "prove" that girls are evil. We know girls aren't evil, yet the math undeniably suggests it's true. The factors are all there, and structurally and computationally, the algebra does correctly conclude, on the basis of the parameters, that girls are evil.

      Yet, if we look at this example of "hard" logic and dig beyond its superficial calculation procedure -- which is hard logic -- and examine the individual factors, we find that this is actually soft logic. Why? Because one of the premises is based on a quote which is actually just the opinion of various philosophers. Money isn't really "the root of all evil" (even though some emotionally believe so). Not, that is, unless you consider yourself a communist, because after all, money represents goods and services -- tangible things which, when viewed directly (and not through the pointer of money), we don't consider evil.

      This last example is just the sort of "logic" that is employed by social scientists everywhere, particularly economists. Their process flows and math and statistical calculations may all be correct -- but the data they use has some bias or some flawed premise (whether intentional or not), causing the the results from these data to be skewed. That's why 2 economists c

    54. Re:I think... by Voltageaav · · Score: 1

      So because you think keeping it secret is impossible, we shouldn't even try? That's like saying, The opposing football team will watch footage of our games and figure out our plays, so we might as well just send them a copy. They may figure out some things in those ways, but there are safeguards against that and that's no reason to give them all the answers. That's just stupid. The problem with all of this is balancing oversight with secrecy. Without secrecy about what they are doing to track down terrorists, the things they are doing are useless, as the terrorists will know what to avoid. On the other hand, people are worried about these methods being used to track down the terrorists being used on them. I can see where these people are coming from, I think they may be slightly paranoid, but they do have a valid point. In the end, it comes down to which is more necessary; security against terrorism, or the security of our freedoms. My personal opinion is that you have no freedoms if you're dead. If we let our guard down, 9-11 events will become commonplace. I assume you've heard of the near daily bombings in Iraq and frequent terrorist attacks in Israel. This can happen here too. We are not immune. Without the safeguards that people are worried infringe on their freedom, it will happen. There have been many terrorist plots foiled using these safeguards, but you don't hear about them for the most part. Information is the most valuable resource in the world; only a fool will give it to his enemies for free.

      --
      Someone save me from this sanity.
    55. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Your post is almost devoid of useful content, and you're an AC, so I don't feel particularly compelled to respond.

      that's a subjective concept. it was useful for the purpose that I had intended to use it for, and that's all that matters.
      I'm not an anonymous coward, contrary to what Slashdot would have you believe. I'm just an anonymous poster. I really don't give a shit about your pretentious little internet 'I-Post-With-My-Real-Name(Read: Nickname, So No One Really Knows Who The Hell I Am Anyway)-On-Slashdot-So-I-Am-Really-Cool-Well-Atlea st-My-Peers-Se-Me-That-Way-And-I-Get-These-Things- Called-Moderator-Points-Where-Are-Really-Cool-And- Make-Me-Feel-Good-About-Myself' Club.
      so if that's a barrier to conversation, then I can see how you'd have a problem rationalizing (he he) anything I've said up to this point. apparently, though, you felt compelled enough to respond... to respond. that's pretty interesting.
      I'm not really compelled enough to give a shit, though.
      and by the way, I didn't read your stupid post, yet again. (I stopped at the line which I quoted, for your information)
    56. Re:I think... by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      Awesome, I've been trolled. Thanks.

    57. Re:I think... by chrisv · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't know about you, but I'm less worried about the acts most people consider "terrorism", which usually involves such actions as bombings, hostage taking, and such; and more worried about the actions being taken by King George and his cronies, using "terrorism" as a magic word to get anything to go through Congress. So - do I give up my right to say what I want without having to worry about going to a Federal Pound Me In The Ass Prison because the government doesn't like it (no, that doesn't mean that my speech doesn't necessarily have consequences - but those consequences are from other people); or my right to not be searched (my person, my belongings, or my communications) without either good cause or my consent, or my right to not incriminate myself - simply because the government thinks it needs to know what I happen to be doing and saying at any point in time?

      My opinion is that you might as well be dead if you have no freedoms. On another note, such things as what happened on 9/11 weren't commonplace prior to 9/11; the bombings in Iraq are caused by our intervention there; the terrorist attacks in Israel are caused by our intervention there. Afghanistan is still a mess, because of our intervention there; it will be a mess for a long time as a result, and when it finally stabilizes, I highly doubt they'll be on anything resembling friendly terms with us. Is there a pattern there? Yes - we went in; with cause in the case of Afghanistan in 2001-2002, and with cause in the case of Iraq - in 1992, but not in 2004... in the case of Israel, we forcibly moved people who were there at the time and relocated people of Jewish descent there at the end of WWII; ultimately destroyed the nations in question for various reasons - terrorism, for example - and what proceeded to happen was that they became unstable territories and breeding grounds for exactly what's happening. The population originally in those places didn't want us there, but we shoved our noses in anyway. We pissed off a *lot* of people - now, we've got hundreds of millions of pissed off people, some with the desire to do something about it, in places where there isn't much of anything that they can do about it to make their issues known or otherwise correct the causes of their problems.

      So - without the "safeguards that people are worried infringe on their freedom", 9/11-style events weren't happening here regularly. They weren't happening here because our system works, for the most part - the events of 9/11 were (directly or indirectly) caused by the actions of our government. Certainly, we need to pay more attention, but the systems that were in place worked before 9/11, so what changed after 9/11 to cause the existing systems to break? My guess - not a damned thing. Lots of things did change as a result, sure - but the events of that day didn't show us that our system was broken, they showed us that the people running the system needed to open their eyes. The only thing that was broken before was that we were too complacent - assuming that nothing was going to happen to us, because that's just the way things were.

      Bit of a cliche here - but: those who would give up essential liberty for a little temporary security will soon have neither. Basically - if you think it's a good idea to give up your freedoms, just remember that it's a lot easier to give up freedom than it is to get it back later; and that the complacency that took place before 9/11 will come back soon enough, but the powers that were given to the government as a result of that day - taking away our freedom - won't go away.

      --

      Dogma: Dead (mostly because your Karma ran it over)

    58. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes, because anyone who doesn't conform to the social norm around here on good ol' Slashdot is trying to elicit some sort of emotion out of you, probably for the sake of sexual pleasure or something weird and twisted like that.
      or maybe you're just an incredibly stupid idiot who should look at himself, and maybe then you'll see the fucking truth - that you use the internet as a refuge from the real world, and the internet is yours to shape and see as you like it, because you don't have to answer to anybody on it.
      some of us just use the internet to extend our capabilities as members of society, and not to exploit it to assuage our insecurities, but keep thinking to yourself that I'm a "troll," and that what I've said will just go away when you switch off your tab in firefox. truth is, I'm not anything, since I'm anonymous (as you alluded to!!! how clever), but I'm a message that's been nagging at the back of your conscious for all of your life. I don't intend to bring it to light, as I may or may not have a purpose, but if I do, then I am oblivious to it. so perhaps I'm guided by the perpetrator of first cause--God, if you will--but I am an individual, and I'm echoing my sentiments, regardless of what ulterior motive some extra-terran being may have set out for me through uniform determinism.
      in short, this idea will keep haunting you for the rest of your life until you recognize its existence, because ideas do not die. (and yes, I just stole a meme from that terrible movie with natalie portman. boo hoo.)

    59. Re:I think... by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      So because you think keeping it secret is impossible, we shouldn't even try? That's like saying, The opposing football team will watch footage of our games and figure out our plays, so we might as well just send them a copy.

      No, this is like saying that cameras on the field are a nice extra safeguard to keep the game fair. More people can see what happens, it is more difficult to hide 'foul play', and yet it has extremely little effect on the ability to employ a game strategy by either team (unless that strategy would involve breaking the rules to begin with)

      Without secrecy about what they are doing to track down terrorists, the things they are doing are useless, as the terrorists will know what to avoid.

      Works 2 ways.. they'll know what not to do, and they'll know whom not to attack.
      They may even start considering that there are better and easier ways to make their point.

      I assume you've heard of the near daily bombings in Iraq and frequent terrorist attacks in Israel.

      Yes, unlike in the USA, news from around the world is usually the major ingredient for any news program where I live.

      You may not realize this, but people in many places around the world have seen terrorist attacks way before 9/11, and have been dealing with terrorism for much longer then the USA. Such people do not inmediately panic as the consequence of a terrorist attack, thereby greatly reducing the effectiveness of terrorist attacks. What happens in the USA however is in fact giving the current group of 'islamist' terrorists their way by eliminating the freedoms that those people so hate. This is the primary reason why the anti terrorism policy of the USA is extremely misguided and ineffective.

      The sooner you get over the panic and start using reason again, the better it is. Fear is not gonna do the job however.

      This can happen here too. We are not immune.

      The USA is not immune, good that after some few hundred years, people finally realize that.

      The USA will face the consequences of what it does around the world, regardless of having the most powerfull army on the planet. Solution, stop fucking over others.

      Just to help you understand this, ever heard about an organisation called IRA? They used to blow up stuff all over the UK as a protest against the occupation of Northern Ireland. Incidentely, the USA was the biggest financial supporter of the IRA.

      You know about this Bin Laden guy who supposedly wants to blow up as much of the USA as he can? Guess who supported this guy for like a decade with money as well as equipment and technology?

      If the USA wants to reduce terrorism around the planet, including for itself, it should start with not supporting terrorists itself.

      Without the safeguards that people are worried infringe on their freedom, it will happen.

      It would help if you'd provide a logical reasoning for this assumption. Fear is NOT an acceptable reasoning, it is a very bad one in fact.

      There have been many terrorist plots foiled using these safeguards, but you don't hear about them for the most part. Information is the most valuable resource in the world; only a fool will give it to his enemies for free.

      9/11 could have been prevcented if information that was there had been used correctly and had been passed to the right people. That conclusion is all over every serious investigation from any side with regards to 9/11.

      The extremely clear and simple conclusion from that is:

      THE INFORMATION WAS THERE.

      Sorry for shouting there, but it seems extremely difficult for people to
      grasp this. The information was there. More information gathering would
      just have made the problem of dealing correctly with it bigger, and as a
      result would have made it more difficult even to foil. Consequentely, 9/11
      is a bad and misguided excuse for intrusive information gathering.

    60. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      For whom should we vote for?

      I'm not an American, but I've lived in multiple countries before, and am a citizen of two.

      I've never voted in an election and halfway (or even less) through the term did not feel outraged and ripped off. At that point you decide you may have made a mistake, so you vote for the other guy. Once that happens you feel the same way.

      No, the issue here is the whole system is broken.

      Politicians should not be allowed in any way to receive money from companies. Companies as entities should not be allowed in any way to have political opinions or to back any political movement or organization. Politicians who lie about anything, and do I mean anything (like.. campaign promises, "Oh, no, we didn't take that money"), should be immediately dismissed from office, thrown in jail for a minimum for a few years, max life.

      It may seem harsh, but I think it's the only way we're going to see some type of change.

      Political office should in no way should look appealing. It shouldn't be seen as what every rich person wants to do, indeed what everyone wants to do; "Oh mommy, I want to be president when I grow up"

      No, it should be seen as a burden, and as a grave risk. Only those who are brave enough, and think they can do a good enough job should have any incentive to do so. I think the above plan will make that a reality.

      Past this point you need to reform voting practices. How most voting systems in the world today work is ridiculously bad.

    61. Re:I think... by rarkm · · Score: 1

      /DO IT! DO IT! DO IT! If you don't,
      / you're a piece of shit.

      Oh. Well, you've certainly convinced me...

      Now get the hell away from me.

      --
      [Insert pretentious and semi-clever sig here: ______ ]
    62. Re:I think... by inKubus · · Score: 1

      I think one of the major problems with the system is that people don't use it. More people vote for American Idol than in presidential elections, and even fewer vote in the mid-terms (like this year). Of course the problem is the system, but the system is symptomatic of our society. The American political/legal system is still very young and it was/is a great experiment. I believe in the system, I believe in the general good intentions of all men, but there are problems with the human nature that the current system does not solve and possibly cannot be solved by any system. Greed, lust, anger, etc. are all the essences of humans failing to exert control over themselves in a way that puts the betterment of society first over their own good. Not support of the status quo, not bowing down the concerns of security, not support of a government, but SOCIETY. The problems are easy to describe, easy to see, but what is not offered by most people are SOLUTIONS.

      Most people are content to let someone else come up with the solutions. Most people in America are taught not to think any differently than that in the public school system, or through their structure of church, family tradition, etc. The problem is that then, over time, the people who are in the position to make solutions are an increasingly small group. I think another problem is that people expect too much of the goverment instead of doing it themselves. The government is not there to feed you, provide you with shelter, etc. It's too provide a public protocol for the debate of crucial issues, creating laws where necessary, encouraging growth and learning, helping to make the world a better place. Increasingly, those ideals have fallen to the wayside as people instead look to the government for "security", "safety", and "defense".

      People, wake up. You have a responsibility. You are responsible for your own safety, just as you are responsible for your getting your own food, transportation, etc. You are responsible for your own solutions.

      The whole idea of national defense was pioneered by people like Rumsfeld and Cheney after WWII, when the spectre of atomic weapons made any new war seem likely to destroy all order and society very very quickly. I'm sure it was a very scary time, as people who were alive then will confirm. I think they did a good job of not using atomic weapons and I think they did a good job of keeping the American public in fear of the Soviets. When you think about it, though, the system is set up (globally) so that only a very few people have ultimate control over the atomic weapons, with fewer weapons under a person's immediate control as you go down the chain of command.

      This means that even if some crazy who wants to bring on the apocalypse or just murder a lot of people they might be able to get a few missles off but they can't really destroy the entire world. Sure, a big bomb in the middle of LA or Manhattan would kill a LOT of people, but it wouldn't be the end of the world, or even society as we know it. It's scary, but it's not blowing-up-the-whole-earth-and-exterminating-the-h uman-race scary.

      But our leaders and the media MADE IT SEEM like that was going to happen, even though the only two guys who could do it could not possibly do it.

      TODAY, it's a different world than it was 50 years ago. Most Americans didn't even have a phone then, let alone instant free access to other contries and continents. We know now that Russians are really quite a bit like us; they go to school, they go to clubs, they go to work, etc. We know that Iranians are really quite a bit like us also. All of us commoners are pretty much all facing the same problems world wide. There's a power-elite who is in charge. It has always been that way. It has to be that way though. If all of society is pulling in random directions, the only result is statis. Who makes the decisions? Well, we vote for people to make the decisions for us. Unfortunately, the majority of those have been granted me

      --
      Cool! Amazing Toys.
    63. Re:I think... by freedom_india · · Score: 1
      I think your single line response pretty much summarizes the whole discussion -:))

      You must be a writer/author i guess...

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
  2. No way! by Abalamahalamatandra · · Score: 3, Funny

    The Bush administration? Keeping secrets? Say it ain't so, Joe!

    1. Re:No way! by dbIII · · Score: 1
      The Bush administration? Keeping secrets?
      After looking at other democratic systems of government around the world I can't see why the USA is still stuck with a system that doesn't let the ruling party replace lame duck presidents with others. Surely after the situations where Nixon, Reagan and even some democrats couldn't get anyone to take them seriously towards the end we shouldn't be in the same situation or approaching it now?

      BTW, I'm not in the USA but live in a country with a Westminster style democracy instead.

    2. Re:No way! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bubbles: The fact that you speak of Nixon and Reagan in the same sentence, and DO NOT mention Clinton (the impeached horndog-in-chief) demonstrates conclusively that you have no idea what you're talking about. Certainly you're not someone to be taken at all seriously.

    3. Re:No way! by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      patch:

          > "Bush administration"
          < "Government"

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    4. Re:No way! by dbIII · · Score: 1
      speak of Nixon and Reagan in the same sentence, and DO NOT mention Clinton ... no idea what you're talking about ... not someone to be taken at all seriously
      Like an anonymous poster for instance :)

      The reason I grouped Nixon and Reagan is that each had nearly an entire term without the trust of the government, even though they were in the same party as the ruling party. I mentioned the other party so that people could find their own less obvious examples without pointless flames - but Clinton's party didn't have the numbers so the issue wasn't so simple, obvious and bipartisan (eg. no-one wanted Nixon to stay, he was a liability to his own party - so that's simple). The executive branch used to have equal power with the other branches and not the ability to behave as a monarchy that changes kings every few years - and when a President starts acting like a king even their own party will not work with them so it works to a point. The problem as I see it is how can you depose a bad king in the US system without it damaging the party in control to the point where they will lose the next election? If that can't happen then you'll never replace a President who is not facing serious criminal charges if his party is in control.

      The best example I can think of for a lame duck President who should have been replaced is Wilson. Due to a stroke he was not capable of acting as President at the end of WWI but was not replaced, and a lot of bad descisions resulted. No criminal issues - just not up to the job as history tells us. Somehow the invalid Roosevelt was up to the job later on - but Wilson just couldn't do it and still served to the end of his time.

    5. Re:No way! by joe+155 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Say it ain't so, Joe

      It ain't so

      --
      *''I can't believe it's not a hyperlink.''
    6. Re:No way! by hunterx11 · · Score: 2, Funny

      You mean the one who had record approval ratings when he was impeached for lying about fellatio? Yeah, I can easily see how one would equate covering up Iran-Contra and Watergate with a blowjob. I mean, the national security implications are pretty indistinguishable.

      --
      English is easier said than done.
    7. Re:No way! by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      After looking at other democratic systems of government around the world I can't see why the USA is still stuck with a system that doesn't let the ruling party replace lame duck presidents with others


      It's the same reason why the USA is stuck with a lousy cell phone infrastructure while other nations have much better systems. We implemented our infrastructure while the technology was still young, and thus we installed v1.0. Once a system is entrenched it's difficult to get people to upgrade it to something better.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    8. Re:No way! by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      "It ain't so"

      American Public: "That's good enoug for us."

      And the country continues to devolve into fascism.

      ~X~

      --
      ~X~
  3. Let me be the first to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    welcome our investigation-suppressing overlo..umph!

  4. So they're doing it then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Such an action could only be seen as a flat out admission that the EFF allegations are at least as bad as they claim, and quite possibly worse. There you go, Citizens, your Government is spying on you. Now lets watch as the major media outlets all ignore the story.

    1. Re:So they're doing it then? by VGfort · · Score: 1

      Exactly, the news had more fun talking about stupid crap like Rush Limbaugh being arrested (I cant stand him but who cares). Thats one reason I dont watch the News and apparently I'm not missing anything good, because they dont cover the important things. What's sad is that a lot of Americans depend on them to report this information, and well they arent being told whats going on, whats really going on.

    2. Re:So they're doing it then? by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Given the limited picture we have of what is going on, here is the probable scenario:

      The NSA has sophisticated hardware at various central offices and other switching facilities. This hardware is capable of analyzing *vast* amounts of digital information (including voice) and monitors it based on certain filters (calls to/from international numbers, for example). These analyzed calls are then filtered through additional filters which store the call for its duration and look for sets of markers including voiceprints of people on watch lists, certain key words ('jihad' for example), and so forth. Calls or other data which meets a certain threshold are probably stored and sent to NSA data processing centers for further analysis. The system could possibly be automated such that individuals whose calls are flagged enough times may have all subsequent international calls flagged.

      Note that this means that *every* international telephone call is probably monitored by the NSA.

      If such a system were connected in any way to the CAPPS II system, if you say the wrong things enough times in international phone calls, you might find yourself facing extra scrutiny in airports.

      What is the solution? In additional to the political imperitivesr (vote, write your representative and senators, and donate to the EFF), it is also important for everyone to speak out loudly on this subject as often as possible (including commuicating lists of suspected keywords like bin Ladin, Jihad, Zawahiri, Al'Zarqawi, etc. This helps force the NSA to spend additional cycles determining what is about their program and what is not. Even in the absence of legal remedies, we can help to push the noise to signal ratio up and make this program more intensive to operate.

      Please note that this post is a part of what I am advocating. If you are outside the US, you can assume that reading this will be monitored by the NSA, but hopefully this will continue to be mostly noteworthy as being uninteresting to the aims of their program.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  5. But we don't have anything to hide.... by Luke+Psywalker · · Score: 1

    So they say.

    1. Re:But we don't have anything to hide.... by babbling · · Score: 4, Funny

      No, no! The INNOCENT have nothing to hide. The government does.

    2. Re:But we don't have anything to hide.... by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 1
      The INNOCENT have nothing to hide.

      I know you were joking, but sometimes the innocent do have something to hide, like their whereabouts if, for example, they are fleeing an abusive father, husband, uncle or a psycho ex-girlfriend. Or, they just have information that they need to keep someone from knowing that can be used to make their life miserable. So, sometimes the innocent do have things to hide from the scum of the earth.

    3. Re:But we don't have anything to hide.... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Yeah, my common retort is "Ok, so do you mind telling me all your bank account and credit card numbers?"

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    4. Re:But we don't have anything to hide.... by babbling · · Score: 1

      Well, I wouldn't call it "something to hide", but I'll completely agree that no one likes being watched regardless of whether they are innocent or guilty. Any politician who doesn't think that is true should set an example by allowing people to install cameras and other surveillance equipment in their homes.

  6. The NSA defense by wfberg · · Score: 4, Funny

    "In our defense, your Honor, we did it in secret so as not to get caught."

    "Case dismissed!"

    --
    SCO employee? Check out the bounty
  7. But if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the Executive *didn't* use ATNT to spy on Americans then it is not a security matter.
    If the Executive *did* use ATNT to spy on Americans then its illegal (no warrant) and legal protection doesn't apply to illegal acts.

    Try it, the judge will bend over backwards to find a way to continue this case.

    1. Re:But if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      See, that's where you're wrong. There is legal protection that applies to illegal acts. The national security intervention throws out the case, regardless of the potential outcome of the lawsuit. It isn't meant to protect the lawbreaker, but that result is an accepted side effect of protecting the secrets which would be revealed in the lawsuit. The culprit is still on the wrong side of the law, but it doesn't matter because you can't sue him anymore. This happened in business cases as well, where the DoD plagiarized patented defense technology. The exploited companies couldn't sue because security sensitive details would have had to be revealed in the lawsuit.

    2. Re:But if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point that the grandparent is making is that the security classification itself had as its primary purpose the shielding of illegal acts. "Protecting the law-breaker" isn't a side-effect, but the intended effect. In the case you're talking about, the purpose of the classification wasn't to prevent the discovery of the plagiarism, but to protect the technology being plagiarized. In this case, the informatino classified is apparently the fact that the arguably illegal actions are taking place. In such a situation, the judge *could* throw out the secrecy protection, in much the same way that a lawyer who is himself a principal in a criminal conspiracy can't use attorney-client privilege to shield the conspiracy.

      Of course, he won't, as the whole system now seems to have decided to give up all its responsibilities to the chief of the executive branch, and we're all screwed. But if the judge had the cojones, he could do it.

    3. Re:But if ... by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Irrelevant. No law supercedes the Constitution, which guarantees every citizen's right to privacy and the right to a due process warrant for search and seizure. It doesn't say "unless the President thinks it's a national security matter". The national security clause would have to be in the Constitution to be able to override this kind of suspension of Civil Rights.

      Unless the Prisident is going to try to claim that he secretly declared martial law, there is no law in the land that will stop this from progressing. The best they can realistically hope for is a closed courtroom and sealed documents.

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
    4. Re:But if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As the secrets have not yet been revealed, all you can do is speculate about the reasons why the national security privilege could be invoked. You think that it's apparent what is being protected, but you could be wrong. The secret might be the technology, not its use in this particular case. Most likely the same technology and infrastructure which is used to spy on foreign affairs would be used to spy on US citizens as well.

    5. Re:But if ... by AstrumPreliator · · Score: 1

      The Constitution doesn't mean anything anymore though. I mean what haven't they obliterated? And I don't just mean recently it goes back way before the current administration. State rights have been demolished, personal liberties are on their way out, Federal power is nearing absolution and the American citizenship is perfectly okay with it - or oblivious to the fact - just so long as they can watch their sports and entertainment. So many citizens don't even know what the Constitution says and public education barely even teaches it. Or if they do teach it they usually flat out lie about it. For instance when I was in 2nd grade we had these "amazing" teachers who stated the Second Amendment only applied to the military! Needless to say my father had a conniption about the entire ordeal. We're heading for some rough times there's no doubt about that.

    6. Re:But if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Ultimately I guess you're right, but the way this goes one has to fight for the right to bring lawbreakers to justice first, and only then can you have the lawsuit over the actual case. Now the EFF will have to have the national security override thrown out before they can go after AT&T. This won't be easy because national security (not the privilege itself, but its goal) is also a constitutional right, and one which is currently in high regard.

    7. Re:But if ... by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 3, Interesting
      We always have an alternative:
      We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. -- That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, -- That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government [...]
      The framers believed that change up to and including revolution against your government is a fundamental right. If you truly believe that the state of this Union is as bad as you suggest, exercise your unalienable rights. Or leave the nation.

      "But the armed forces..."

      Will be just as divided as the citizens are. During the last Civil War, the leadership of the Armed Forces divided almost evenly between the North and the South. I can name 5 generals who would not follow Mr. Bush, although they still might remain loyal.

      Believe it or not, the moderate majority is beginning to get upset with our government. 70% of the nation now disagrees or is unsure of our leadership. Historically speaking, a President with less than 65% approval is considered ineffective. Mr. Bush is at 30%. Do you think the people don't see the unending corruption in the Legislature by big business and special interests? That they don't see the repeated illegal acts of the Executive and his officers, and his failure to lead the military effectively?

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
    8. Re:But if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question this case raises is:

      Do we operate under the Constitution or not?

      That is, is there a declared state of emergency that makes it possible for the executive branch to at least claim that it can circumvent the Constitution?

      As many others here have pointed out, the Constitution is the supreme law. No other law is even a valid law if it is unconstitutional.

      So, the executive's position is either absurd, or we have something like a "dictatorship-on-demand" where we can pretend we have a Constitution until it is inconvenient for our executive branch ruler.

    9. Re:But if ... by Bogtha · · Score: 1

      If the Executive *didn't* use ATNT to spy on Americans then it is not a security matter.

      Not true. If they are going to use this privilege at all, then they must invoke it even in cases where the allegations aren't even remotely true. Otherwise, by invoking it only for the legitimate cases, they are leaking information about classified projects.

      Think about it - if a foreign country wanted to know if the USA was working on a particular secret project, they could troll the courts with a dummy lawsuit connected to that project, and if it got dismissed, they would know that the USA was working on such a project.

      The only protection against this form of attack is to uniformly block all lawsuits referring to potential classified projects, whether or not those projects actually exist. That's what this part of the article is about:

      "[T]he fact that the United States will assert the state secrets privilege should not be construed as a confirmation or denial of any of Plaintiffs allegations, either about AT&T or the alleged surveillance activities," the filing reads. "When allegations are made about purported classified government activities or relationships, regardless of whether those allegations are accurate, the existence or non-existence of the activity or relationship is potentially a state secret."

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
    10. Re:But if ... by MustardMan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The really scary thing is, people act like those words from the constitution are unpatriotic. I got into a HUGE blowup a while back because I said I wished Bush would die in a plane crash. I didn't say I was going to asassinate him. I didn't even say I wished someone would asassinate him. I said I wished he would die so there might be a chance of a snowball effect that could free this country from the corruption in the government. I was BLASTED as unpatriotic, some folks going so far as saying I'd better hope the secret service didn't find out about my wishes, because it was clearly illegal.

      How far has our country fallen from those lofty goals set out by our founding fathers, who believed it was the RIGHT of a person to overthrow a government which took away his basic rights. Today, it's illegal to even suggest the president deserves to be killed for the murders, lies, and corruption he has brought to the American people. Land of the free my ass.

    11. Re:But if ... by timeOday · · Score: 1
      No law supercedes the Constitution, which guarantees every citizen's right to privacy and the right to a due process warrant for search and seizure. It doesn't say "unless the President thinks it's a national security matter".
      I don't think that matters anymore. The President never did offer a legal defense of his violation of the FISA act, he just said "it's something I want to do." And everybody went for it. In congress, Russ Feingold tried to get Bush censured (which is really just a gesture) and it went nowhere.
    12. Re:But if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, that's a plan. Let dick become the official commander in chief.

    13. Re:But if ... by physicsphairy · · Score: 2, Informative
      Irrelevant. No law supercedes the Constitution, which guarantees every citizen's right to privacy...

      Hmm...
      cat constitution.txt | grep -i "privacy"

      It would appear that particular aspect of the document is missing.

      I think that contemporary case law has been mistaken for a constitutional protection. But that is where you and I have the same problem, namely, government entities going and hazing things up with a delusionally enlarged sense of their own power.

      It's unfortunate that this notion of privacy was introduced as it was: a blatantly contrived re-reading of the constitution. Now those who jumped on board that judicial advancement for our rights are finding that it is being circumvented in the executive and the legislative and is quite often being approved with a wink from the judiciary. The right way to have done this would have been to have kept a constructionist philosophy to the consitution while ratifying an amendment to guarantee our right to privacy--then it would not be at so much of a risk of being swallowed up by the uncertain maneuvering room the government presently enjoys.

      Giving the government the power to redact the constitution in exchange for wonderful things like the right to privacy is exactly the same thing as giving the government sweeping augmentations of power in exchange for safety. It doesn't matter how shiny or seemingly good/humanitarian/beneficial the reward is, if you cede them any control in exchange, you are going to be losing much more in the end.

    14. Re:But if ... by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 4, Informative
      Hmm... cat constitution.txt | grep -i "privacy" It would appear that particular aspect of the document is missing.
      Didn't take a college government class, eh? Just because the word ain't there don't me the law ain't real.

      The US legal system is based on Rule of Law with precedence. That means previous court rulings on laws are considered the correct interpretation of laws, or, in this case, can effectively establish laws. Even constitutional ones.

      From http://www.usconstitution.net/constnot.html#privac y :

      The right to privacy The Constitution does not specifically mention a right to privacy. However, Supreme Court decisions over the years have established that the right to privacy is a basic human right, and as such is protected by virtue of the 9th Amendment. The right to privacy has come to the public's attention via several controversial Supreme Court rulings, including several dealing with contraception (the Griswold and Eisenstadt cases), interracial marriage (the Loving case), and abortion (the well-known Roe v Wade case). In addition, it is said that a right to privacy is inherent in many of the amendments in the Bill of Rights, such as the 3rd, the 4th's search and seizure limits, and the 5th's self-incrimination limit.

      More:
      http://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/index.php/Privacy

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
    15. Re:But if ... by Jon+Luckey · · Score: 5, Funny
      Hmm...
      cat constitution.txt | grep -i "privacy"

      It would appear that particular aspect of the document is missing.

      Hmm...
      echo cats cats cats lions tiger ocelots | grep -i "feline"

      It would appear that any feline aspect of that string is missing

      --
      -- 3 events that reshaped the world in the 20th century: WW1, WW2, and WWW
    16. Re:But if ... by Durandal64 · · Score: 1

      Actually, he did offer a hilariously stupid legal defense for his illegal wire-tapping. He claimed that, when Congress authorized him to invade Afghanistan, they also authorized him to do whatever he wanted in the name of fighting terrorism at home. (This idiotic interpretation of the resolution to invade Afghanistan has since been quietly dropped in favor of the "I'm King George, and you're going to do what I say" theory of American government.)

    17. Re:But if ... by Fred_A · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I don't think the USSR ever had a propaganda machine approaching the efficiencu of the US one. It's no wonder people react that way, they've been conditionned to do so since the craddle.

      I mean just look at the people with flags on their houses. Try finding a single other country worldwide where people feel compelled to do something odd like that. The very concept of the US has been turned into a godlike entity. Hosting critical thoughts is akin to criticizing the prophet in an islamic country (although you won't be lapidated just yet ;) ).

      What's interesting though is that elsewhere the people that are adamant when you criticise the county, party, whatever, are those that are in power. The common people will more or less maintain appearances but in private will very clearly take the propaganda for what it is. In the US, it's the common people who hold no power that seem to be the most thourougly brainwashed.

      This has always struck me as being both very odd and very unique. But then since don't visit very often and see things from a distance, I might get the wrong impression.

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    18. Re:But if ... by JourneyExpertApe · · Score: 1

      Of course they are going to use Advanced Tactical Networking Training to spy on people. If you're going to spy on people, that's the only way to go.

      --
      If you can read this sig, you're too close.
    19. Re:But if ... by freedom_india · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Doing a mistake once is acceptable, but then you stupid texans voted for Bush a second time.

      You americans deserve all you get as a result of electing dubya a second time.

      I have neither sympathy nor concern for you guys who are stupid enough to vote for an idiot, thief, AWOL president a second time.

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
    20. Re:But if ... by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      The only protection against this form of attack is to uniformly block all lawsuits referring to potential classified projects, whether or not those projects actually exist


      There is a third strategy: block some lawsuits and not others, mostly at random. Any information provided by that strategy would be cancelled out by an equal and opposite amount of misinformation, leading to effectively zero leakage.


      I think there is a larger issue here, though. Which is more important: that the government never leak information under any circumstances, or that the government is held accountable and not allowed to break the law? I'm much more concerned about the latter than the former, and frankly, the government doesn't seem too concerned about the former either, since they will deliberately leak intelligence info themselves when it suits their purpose.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    21. Re:But if ... by abirdman · · Score: 1

      You are, of course, absolutely correct. For awhile I've been saying that the problem with the current administration (and the rest of government, in fact) is that it's alll become very corporate. Every corporation has a set of guiding principles, vague nostrums like "the corporation shall act ethically and honestly with the purpose of delivering the best possible product and service to its customers." Look at the annual report of any company who has screwed you over recently, and you'll see some nonsense like this. These policies are rarely invoked, and can almost always be screwed around to fit whatever actions the chief executive cares to do.

      Now think of how the Constitution is being used by the Halliburton/Kellog, Brown, & Root...errr, I mean the current administation. I am pretty sure they figure the Constitution is a set of vague guiding principles to which they must pay lip service in order to stay in power.

      It's up to the legislative and judiciary branches to keep them more-or-less toeing the line. They've already demonstrated they're capable of pulling laws out of their butts to protect their own-- Bush said he was just "unclassifying" some documents to explain the Scooter Libby / Valerie Plame outing. Hocus, pocus, poof! No more problem. If they decide to monitor citizens' phone conversations, it's surely OK, because they're the good guys by definition, and the legislature has already let them know the American people want to be protected from big-bad Osama. Service to the customers, after all.

      The only problem is the legislative and judiciary are falling all over the administration to try and give them everything they ask for, and not confront them when they step over the line. The EFF is onto something here (maybe), but they will likely be rebuffed by the judiciary in the name of letting the executive have what they want. I'm just glad this administration is almost over, and that the mess they're leaving is obvious.

      --
      Everything I've ever learned the hard way was based on a statistically invalid sample.
    22. Re:But if ... by blincoln · · Score: 1

      I mean just look at the people with flags on their houses. Try finding a single other country worldwide where people feel compelled to do something odd like that.

      My family has lived in what is now the US since the early 1600s. When I was a kid, we would fly a flag on holidays like Independence Day. If I had a house instead of an apartment, and the last six years of neo-con fascism hadn't happened, I would be doing the same.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    23. Re:But if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I have neither sympathy nor concern for you guys who are stupid enough to vote for an idiot, thief, AWOL president a second time.
      Yeah, but... what was our alternative?
    24. Re:But if ... by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      Hmm...
      cat constitution.txt | grep -i "privacy"

      It would appear that particular aspect of the document is missing.


      Thanks! You just proved that the federal government has no right to invade my privacy. Have a nice day!

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    25. Re:But if ... by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Doing it on a national holiday is one thing, doing it every single day (plus the stickers, lapel pins, tshirts, etc.) is something else.

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    26. Re:But if ... by Crazyscottie · · Score: 1

      ... there is no law in the land that will stop this from progressing.

      There may not be a law that should stop the case from progressing, but that's assuming we live in a perfect world where judges and juries make infallible decisions and cannot be corrupted by politicians, big business advocates and the like. In the real world, we have quite a different situation. Yes, legally I do believe that this case should continue, and I certainly hope that it will. However, there's nothing to stop the judicial system from making the wrong decision. What if it does?

      --
      Just because it can't be explained doesn't mean it isn't true. Science fits into reality... not the other way around.
    27. Re:But if ... by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you are saying that the major opposing candidate at the last US presidential election was completely indistinguishable from Bush, and would have acted exactly the same in the circumstances that followed that election, then you are wrong. That idea appears to please quite a number of would-be anti-system people around here, but it is a childish excuse for not paying attention to detail.

      You had a choice (and, moreover, you already knew Bush from a previous term!)

    28. Re:But if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Flying the flag isn't bad. Flying it everyday isn't bad either. I love the US Flag and what it stands for. But it's my choice whether to fly it or not.

      What I hate is the type of patriotism which isn't simply the love for one's country, but the type of patriotism that makes people follow others (leaders) with blind obedience or never question the policies of their government. Of course, critical thinking is discouraged today, it goes against groupthink. Yet, you didn't hear the neo-cons screaming about "following your president" when Clinton was in office, did you?

      What people don't realize is that the founding fathers weren't peace-loving, follow the leader, etcetera type of people. They were rebels and terrorists almost to the point of anarchy. They hardly agreed with each other, much less blindly others, until it came to standing united against a common enemy. And that's what I like about them. Somehow, that spirit has been squashed in this country like nobody's business.

    29. Re:But if ... by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      It would appear that particular aspect of the document is missing.

      WTF is "the right of people to be secure in their persons, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures" then? It might not mean you are protected from snooping by your neighbor or by a corporate entity, but it damn sure is a right to privacy from government intrusion.

    30. Re:But if ... by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but... what was our alternative?

      Kerry, Edwards, Dean, Clark, Kucinich, plus an average of 200 or so third party candidates.

    31. Re:But if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      echo cats cats cats lions tiger ocelots | grep -i "feline"
      You leave captain kirk out of this!

    32. Re:But if ... by Guuge · · Score: 1

      [But the armed forces] will be just as divided as the citizens are.

      We're in a new era of propaganda. According to a poll taken early this year, 85% of the troops in Iraq believe that they're at war "to retaliate for Saddam's role in the Sept. 11 attacks." The military does not appear to be anywhere near as divided (or informed) as the citizens are.

    33. Re:But if ... by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Someone who may not necessarily have been better but definitely can't be worse. That wager would have been worth it.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    34. Re:But if ... by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      Most of us didn't vote for bush, dumbshit.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    35. Re:But if ... by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Try here.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    36. Re:But if ... by aralin · · Score: 1
      I was born and grew up behind the iron curtain and now live in US for 5 years. I completely agree with you. The propaganda in the Eastern Europe has never been even remotely close to the levels which I see in US. People, both democrats and republicans are totally brainwashed and cannot think for themselves. I used to think it was only the republicans, but then I tried to tell some of the democrat friends that I agree in part with some of the republican ideas and got the same reaction. And even people without affiliation to any party are totally hooked on the 'We are the Good Guys(TM)', 'Good vs. Evil' and 'We are Spreading Democracy' lines.

      In such environment it is quite normal that the Democrats get away with saying that half a million dead Iraqi childern is a price they are willing to pay. And the Republicans just go and invade the country without any real reason saying that all the loss in lives, health and wealth is price they are willing to pay. And the general population is still on the Good Guys bandwagon.

      --
      If programs would be read like poetry, most programmers would be Vogons.
    37. Re:But if ... by jc42 · · Score: 1

      cat constitution.txt | grep -i "privacy"

      It would appear that particular aspect of the document is missing.


      Yup; they didn't use our current fashion in language when they wrote that text. And some of them were lawyers anyway, so why would anyone expect them to use a simple word when a lengthy phrase was available?

      For another example, try grepping for "slave" or "slavery". You won't find either in the original Constitution (only in an ammendment from 80+ years later). But the Constitution clearly assented to slavery when it included that ratio between the value of a free man's vote and the vote of others.

      Similarly, the Constitution explicitly outlaws unwarranted search and seizure. This is probably about as close to "privacy" as a lawyer could manage. If this doesn't guarantee privacy, what does it mean?

      And a minor nit: The command should be

            grep -i "privacy" constitution.txt

      The gratuitous introduction of the spurious "cat" command is solely a waste of cpu time. It's a sign of newbiehood and/or cluelessness. You lost several geek points there.

      (And the quotes aren't needed either, though they mostly waste your own time. But the -i is definitely needed; take a look at the bizarre capitalization in the Constitution and try to make sense of it. ;-)

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    38. Re:But if ... by jc42 · · Score: 1

      I mean just look at the people with flags on their houses. Try finding a single other country worldwide where people feel compelled to do something odd like that.

      I've been in a number of countries where nearly every house displays a flag. In my experience, the absence of flags in the US is the oddity. I just went out on my front porch and looked up and down the street; I didn't see a single flag. A couple of odd banners, but no US flags. And this is a stereotypical suburb of a large US city.

      OTOH, a while ago I spent about a month in Finland (the country that gave us linux ;-), and there nearly every household displays a flag or a long, streaming banner with the flag's colors. Actually, a lot of houses along the west coast have a banner with Swedish colors, but nobody considers that unpatriotic, since Finland is officially both Swedish and Finnish. Some houses have a banner with a blend of both color schemes, to display their loyalty to both ethnic groups.

      I've also been in Mexico and Canada on numerous occasions, and I've seen many more flags there than anywhere in the US.

      If anything, Americans tend to consider the display of the flag as somewhat crass, and a bit of an embarrassment. But they tolerate and forgive the people who do it.

      I don't own a flag, myself. I don't see any reason to own one. It would add nothing to my life, and might lead some people to think I'm one of those right-wing extremists.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    39. Re:But if ... by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Well, I've been all over Mexico and don't remember ever seing a single flag on a private house with the possible exception of national holidays. Can't comment about Finland, the further north I've been in Europe being Stockholm.

      OTOH I've been in most of western/southern Europe, Northern Africa, a bit of Western Africa, most of the SW US, Mexico, Equador, Turkey, a number of Carribean islands, Iceland, India, etc. (I'm almost 40 so I've had a bit of time to travel around). I don't recall ever seing the same fascination with the national symbols as in the US.

      It's by no way a scientific study and of course YMMV. Just a gut feeling.

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    40. Re:But if ... by WorldRimWalker · · Score: 1
      Seriously, if you can name any type of privacy that federal courts will give constitutional protection to, OTHER THAN ABORTION, please give us the good news.

      This "right to privacy" is, in practice, a woman's right to have an abortion, and nothing more.

    41. Re:But if ... by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 1
      The most obvious example is the requirement of a search warrant. The executive branch must prove to the judicial branch that it has "probable cause" to suspend the civil rights of a citizen. Sure there are exceptions to that. Open fields, high-crime areas, stop-and-frisk, plain sight... but most of them simply use the lesser requirement of "reasonable suspicion".

      Here's a story about a student at the university I went to:
      A student with a backpack goes into a campus 7-11 and buys a soda. He pays for it, leaves, and begins walking down the street. A police officer pulls up in a cruiser and stops the student. The officer asks for ID. The student says he hasn't got any (or he might have refused; I don't remember, but at the time it was legal to do that, I don't believe it still is). The officer takes the student's bag and searches it (he later says he suspected that the student bought alcohol illegally). He finds two marijuana cigarettes, and arrests the student.

      In court, the student argues that the officer had no "reasonable suspicion" to search him, and violated his civil rights by doing so. He was not in a high-crime area of town (there is no such area at my University because the school is bigger than the town that it's in) and buying a soda, placing it in your backpack, and walking down the street is in no way a suspicious act. The judge agreed, and threw out the search and dismissed the case.

      I've heard people say he got off on a "technicality". Bullshit. The state violated his civil right to privacy and broke a Constitutional Amendment. That's no technicality.

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
    42. Re:But if ... by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      This "right to privacy" is, in practice, a woman's right to have an abortion, and nothing more.

      Pretty much everything having to do with sex, marriage and activities inside the four walls of your home is based on the constitutional right to privacy. Your statement would be quite a newsflash, given that the vast majority of states used to have laws against sodomy (even among consenting, married adults in private) but they have been overturned by the courts in the past 50 years.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    43. Re:But if ... by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      ...and of course every health care decision that doesn't involve abortion is still covered by the right to privacy. That's where much of the legal tension comes from in parental notification laws and HIV notification laws that some states have implemented.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    44. Re:But if ... by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      You're right, of course, which is why the CIA routinely declines to verify or deny rumors, no matter how outlandish. By doing so, they make it impossible to infer anything from denials.

      Unfortunately, that's not what we're dealing with here -- the federal gov't does NOT make it a routine policy to request cases be dismissed for national security reasons no matter how outlandish the case. And because of that, we most certainly CAN infer something from their actions, which is that they are either doing what is alleged, or something very close to it that will be uncovered if investigated.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    45. Re:But if ... by stinerman · · Score: 1
      It has already been said, but from my sig (which has been my sig for months now to counter people like you):

      Aside from contending that a bill of rights was unnecessary, the
      Federalists responded to those opposing ratification of the Constitution
      because of the lack of a declaration of fundamental rights by arguing
      that inasmuch as it would be impossible to list all rights it would be
      dangerous to list some because there would be those who would seize on
      the absence of the omitted rights to assert that government was
      unrestrained as to those.\1\ Madison adverted to this argument in
      presenting his proposed amendments to the House of Representatives. ``It
      has been objected also against a bill of rights, that, by enumerating
      particular exceptions to the grant of power, it would disparage those
      rights which were not placed in that enumeration; and it might follow by
      implication, that those rights which were not singled out, were intended
      to be assigned into the hands of the General Government, and were
      consequently insecure. This is one of the most plausible arguments I
      have ever heard against the admission of a bill of rights into this
      system; but, I conceive, that it may be guarded against. I have
      attempted it, as gentlemen may see by turning to the last clause of the
      fourth resolution.


      Its amazing how many people don't actually read the 9th amendment.
    46. Re:But if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ownage of the most pure kind.

    47. Re:But if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have obviously never heard of the 9th Amendment to the US Contstituion

      Amendment IX - The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

      Your grep results therefore indicate that the right to privacy is retained by the people.

    48. Re:But if ... by hopopee · · Score: 1

      Offtopic, but just trying to correct any misconceptions :-)

      Actually the only time Finnish people put up the flag is on either a) national holidays b) someone from the household (this includes big apartment buildings too) dying. Some people do this also when something big is happening in their household (the typical rituals like marriages etc.) that particular day.

      And btw. Finland is not both Finnish and Swedish. Swedish is just another official language, that's all. (Nitpicking, I know)

  8. I still don't see how state secrets applies by Raul654 · · Score: 5, Informative

    The 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (which established the FISA court) clearly and explicitely says that the US Government may not do survielance of American citizens without a warrant. I do not see how the government can assert privilege over the NSA's clearly illegal actions. (Nixon tried and failed - badly)

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
    1. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Totalitarian regimes usually find a way of keeping public scrutiny at bay. There are enough examples in history. Nothing new, just the same old stuff: industry controls government, everyday life gets less good, government finds an enemy, starts nationalist propaganda, tightens controls, limits civil rights. Propaganda advertising militant ideas, buzzwords are thrown around ("freedom" "free world" "democracy" are frequent in this case).

    2. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This means that the prosecution should be allowed to continue, in the UK we no longer have a right to silence, silence is now considered an admission of guilt. The government employees who made these decisions were acting outside their official mandate and should therefore be prosecuted as enemy combatants; their actions are directed against US citizens. I suggest arresting and torturing them without charge before considering a trial.

    3. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by Soulfarmer · · Score: 1

      Does it matter whether it is a case of illegal or legal actions when the security of the nation is close to being "compromised". Secret is a secret, even if illegal secret.

      Oh well, not my head-ache, far from the continent of america.

      --
      -Is the meaning of life vanity, or is vanity the meaning of life?
    4. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by praksys · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Under the US constitution power is divided between three branches of government. The central issue in this case is whether the power to conduct this kind of surveillence falls within the powers reserved to the executive branch. If that is the case then it doesn't matter what laws congress has passed, or what they appear to say. The only way to take this power away from the executive would be to ammend the constitution.

      Nixon did of course get smacked down for doing something that looks similar, but in that case the spying was strictly domestic. In spite of what everyone keeps saying about the current case, it is not domestic spying. One end of every communication intercepted is in another country, and the court that decided the Nixon case specifically noted that their ruling did not apply to international communications.

    5. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by Simon+Garlick · · Score: 0

      My fellow Americans, freedom stay the course terror terror. God bless America.

    6. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by Legion303 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "In spite of what everyone keeps saying about the current case, it is not domestic spying. One end of every communication intercepted is in another country"

      No, that's what the administration is claiming. The truth is, no one knows for sure and the administration is doing its damndest to make sure no one will. That sure makes me feel more secure!

    7. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Insightful
      In spite of what everyone keeps saying about the current case, it is not domestic spying. One end of every communication intercepted is in another country, and the court that decided the Nixon case specifically noted that their ruling did not apply to international communications.

      Are you sure about that? The way I read the EFF case and the and the Wired writeup, they are under the belief that ALL communications are being re-routed to the NSA. Not simply all calls which are going international.

      If they are truly getting copies of every single AT&T communications, this would most especially NOT be limited to international communications -- it would, in fact, be large-scale domestic spying with no warrants or specific targets. Merely recording everything that goes on to see if they can sift out anything useful.

      That is bloody scary! And, highly illegal.
      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    8. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by praksys · · Score: 1

      There is no way that the NSA is listening in on *every* communication. What the article suggests, if anything, is that the program is not targeted at specific individuals, but rather that they are looking for certain patterns of communication, or certain networks of communication, and then listening in on individual communications within the networks that stand out.

      In any case, as long as the communications that they listen in to are international (i.e. at least one end is outside the US) this doesn't affect the issues I raised above.

    9. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >The central issue in this case is whether the power to conduct this kind of surveillence falls within the powers reserved to the executive branch.

      No, the central issue is that this power doesn't fall within *any* branch of the government. The restriction is spelled out in the forth amendment, and no branch of government can ignore it at will.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    10. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by anothy · · Score: 1
      Under the US constitution power is divided between three branches of government. The central issue in this case is whether the power to conduct this kind of surveillence falls within the powers reserved to the executive branch. If that is the case then it doesn't matter what laws congress has passed, or what they appear to say. The only way to take this power away from the executive would be to ammend the constitution.
      you fundamentally misunderstand both the nature of separation of powers in the US government and the nature of the constitution. separation of powers doesn't come down to "this is my territory, this is yours, and we can't interfere with each other" - quite the opposite. the separation of powers wasn't built into the constitution to ensure efficient operation of the governement, but (arguably quite to the contrary) to provide a system of checks and balances. both the judicial and legislative branches can and regularly do "interfere with" the executive branch - just like the judicial and executive muck with the legislative, and so on. regardless of whether wiretaps are in the executive's power generally speaking, the courts have ruled that such things require warrants. the legislative and judicial branches have provided means for the government to conduct spying on an "emergency" basis without getting a warrant ahead of time in a manner still deemed legal - the administration decided even that wasn't enough. the executive branch has violated the constitution as interpreted by any relevant precedent.
      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
    11. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      Does it matter whether it is a case of illegal or legal actions when the security of the nation is close to being "compromised". Secret is a secret, even if illegal secret.


      The problem with that logic is that it gives the Executive branch a loophole through which they can get away with anything. Any time they want to do something illegal, they could just do it and claim that it is "secret" and therefore they can't be prosecuted for it. That's clearly unacceptable.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    12. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      What I find particularly troubling is that the Administration and its apologists are claiming that Article II, Section 2 trumps the Fourth Amendment. By definition, an Amendment to the Constitutions always takes precedence over the Constitution itself. The Fourth Amendment clearly limits the powers of the Chief Executive as outlined in Article II, Section 2. What's more, Article II, Section 2 grants the president the right to command the Army and Navy, when called into the actual service of the United States. It does not give him sweeping war powers over the civilian population in a time of foreign war. When Republicans are citing Roosevelt's sequestration of Japanese-American citizens as an example of the sweeping powers "the Constitution" grants to the President in a time of war, it's time to look out.

    13. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by jamstar7 · · Score: 1
      There is no way that the NSA is listening in on *every* communication. What the article suggests, if anything, is that the program is not targeted at specific individuals, but rather that they are looking for certain patterns of communication, or certain networks of communication, and then listening in on individual communications within the networks that stand out.
      Never heard of networked computers before? Howbout the Beuwolf cluster? Linux-derived. And the NSA has made SIGNIFICANT contributions to Linux's codebase. A sufficiently sized cluster CAN do this, it just takes programming. Were you implying that the Feds don't HAVE programmers? Remember 'Carnivore'? Or were you thinking of ONE computer PER CALL, with 4 operators on it (1 every 8 hours for the 168 hours in the week)? Automation is a lovely thing; you might wish to check it out someday. The task in mind (monitor EVERY conversation, flag the ones that are 'interesting') lends itself quite well to heavy networked automation.
      --
      Understanding the scope of the problem is the first step on the path to true panic.
    14. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by bigNuns · · Score: 1

      uhm, i seriously doubt this can be done in any sort of meaningful manner. and yes I have heard of networked computers and clusters... there is simply too much information... dont believe me? i just did a very quick search on google and came up with the following article:

      http://www.eff.org/Privacy/Foreign_and_local/?f=cs e_canada_sigint.overview.txt

      and to quote:

      "In any case, the volume of Canadian domestic communications is far
      too great for any Canadian intelligence agency, or even the
      enormous NSA, to monitor more than a fraction of it, even if
      Canadian communications were at the top of the monitoring priority
      list."

      thats canadians... you know how much more traffic is going on in the US? think about how often you talk about bombs and terrorists and airplanes and other nasty words on the phone with your friends... now, flag them all... now sort through them... good luck getting anything useful out of this... a much more likely scenario is that certain citizens have been marked to be monitored... my guess is all their communication was monitored, not just the communication taking place with someone outside the country.

      --
      .................... ...mmm farm fresh...
    15. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by praksys · · Score: 1

      you fundamentally misunderstand both the nature of separation of powers in the US government

      I think I understand it just fine. :) If the legislative branch could just pass laws constraining the power of the executive any way it liked then the executive wouldn't have any independent power, and thus couldn't act as a balance to the other two branches of government. But if you don't believe me, check the testimony of retired FISA judges who were asked about this issue:

      Senator Feinstein: No. I am talking about FISA, and is a President bound by the rules and regulations of FISA?

      Judge Baker: If it is held constitutional and it is passed, I suppose, just like everyone else, he is under the law too.

      ***

      Senator Feinstein: Judge?

      Judge Stafford: Everyone is bound by the law, but I do not believe, with all due respect, that even an act of Congress can limit the President's power under the Necessary and Proper Clause under the Constitution.

      ***

      Chairman Specter: I think the thrust of what you are saying is the President is bound by statute like everyone else unless it impinges on his constitutional authority, and a statute cannot take away the President's constitutional authority. Anybody disagree with that?

      [No response.]

      Chairman Specter: Everybody agrees with that.

    16. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by teknognome · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately the Necessary and Proper clause applies to Congress, and gives it the authority to "To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof." Which is why it's in Article 1 Section 8, which deals with the legislative branch. So I'm not sure how the President has any power under the necessary and proper clause. Nevermind that the Constitution only makes the president commander-in-chief of the military, not says that he can spy on and arrest whoever he pleases...

    17. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by praksys · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should write a letter to Judge Stafford and set him straight on that point.

    18. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why does our right to not be spied on without a warrant disappear as soon as we communicate outside the country?

    19. Re:I still don't see how state secrets applies by jamstar7 · · Score: 1
      uhm, i seriously doubt this can be done in any sort of meaningful manner. and yes I have heard of networked computers and clusters... there is simply too much information... dont believe me? i just did a very quick search on google and came up with the following article: http://www.eff.org/Privacy/Foreign_and_local/?f=cs e_canada_sigint.overview.txt and to quote: "In any case, the volume of Canadian domestic communications is far too great for any Canadian intelligence agency, or even the enormous NSA, to monitor more than a fraction of it, even if Canadian communications were at the top of the monitoring priority list."
      I'm still thinking the possibility for a 'supernetwork' is viable. After all, it just takes money. The US is what, 12 TRILLION dollars in debt right now? How much of that budget is buried under 'National Security, Eyes Only'? Where would that money come from? Do you REALLY think the government spends $3000 for a hammer, 5-15,000 for a toilet seat? And if the budget for these departemts is classified for 'National Security', you may never KNOW what kind of computing power the government has.
      --
      Understanding the scope of the problem is the first step on the path to true panic.
  9. The only thing putting national security at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    is the Bush administration

    global terrorism cases have jumped 5000% since Iraq

  10. Independent examiner by Alain+Williams · · Score: 4, Interesting
    So, will the US government allow this to be examined by someone completely independent who can then vouch that the government is clean ?

    The examiner would, of course, be bound to secrecy other than answering the above question.

    Need to get right: 1) who chooses the examiner (we don't want a gov't stooge); 2) who drafts the wording to the question to be answered.

    OK: the above is a nice idea, but it won't happen - governments don't like their workings scrutinised.

    1. Re:Independent examiner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      who chooses the examiner (we don't want a gov't stooge)
      how about China?
    2. Re:Independent examiner by fishbowl · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "So, will the US government allow this to be examined by someone completely independent who can then vouch that the government is clean ?"

      Why would they? Seriously, you're talking about the US. One of the few nations in history that can call a shot that it will invade a sovreign nation and replace its government, follow through on that threat, and face absolutely no opposition, and even come out with exactly the same alliances and trade relationships as before. Certianly no domestic rebellion or resistant military.

      And you think that country should, or would, subject itself to any scrutiny from someone outside its government because....?

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    3. Re:Independent examiner by digitalchinky · · Score: 1

      Independent reviews don't work.

      They will be led on a pony show and baffled with flashing lights, o-scopes, and spectrum analysers. Told about an infinite array of checks and balances that ensure 'bad things' could never happen. They will be spoon fed all the rhetoric they need for their final reports, then sent on their way.

      I have spent a large chunk of my life working in and around the Defence Signals Directorate. I've seen it happen more than once.

    4. Re:Independent examiner by jacksonj04 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Face absolutely no opposition? What are you smoking?

      --
      How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
    5. Re:Independent examiner by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, how about inviting an inspection team from the UN? After all, that's what's been tried on pretty much everything that stinks on this world.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    6. Re:Independent examiner by sachmet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Who allied with Iraq to fight against the United States?

      Words are one thing. Actions are another.

    7. Re:Independent examiner by CCW · · Score: 1

      Would you be talking about Grenada, Panama, Afghanistan or Iraq here?

      "absolutely no opposition" isn't really accurate. minimal or token opposition is more accurate I think.

    8. Re:Independent examiner by ghc71 · · Score: 1

      I don't think that the GP post meant a foreign national should lead the inquiry, but that someone outside the Bush administration should, in the same way that Clinton appointed Starr to investigate Whitewater - a rabidly partisan foe, whose conclusions would at least not be tarred with the claim of "whitewash".

      --
      - Sig files: contemptibly familiar the second time around.
    9. Re:Independent examiner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's really too bad that "we the people of the united states of america" can't pen a deal with the space aliens to wisk away all the corrupt leaders in the country for genetic alien-anal-sex experiments.

      In another thought, the united states of america are not really united anymore.

      put a frog in a pot of water and turn up the heat. - `were boilin now muthafucka!`

    10. Re:Independent examiner by ghc71 · · Score: 1

      Bear in mind that the US gave significant ground in its relations with other countries to stay their ire over invading Iraq.
      Consider the policy change on the Russian conduct of their war in Chechnya (and Dagestan, Ingushetya and the rest) - criticism of Putin's conduct of that conflict dropped to nil, and in return the Russians didn't complain *too* much about how the Bremer administration gave oil development contracts, which had been awarded to Russian and French companies under Hussein, to Bechtel and Halliburton.
      Ditto China - no serious opposition to intervention in Iraq, no serious criticism of human rights issues, IP issues, or an artificially-low exchange rate.
      France and Germany produced sound and fury, signifying nothing - but they were constrained to operate within the auspices of the EU, and the UK commitment to the intervention hamstrung that.
      Iran saw regime-change as an opportunity to gain influence with a Shia-majority post-Saddam Iraq - ultimately, to bring a Shia-led Iraq into the Iranian sphere of influence, not the US one. The Islamic Republic expected to *benefit* from regime change.
      Turkey was the most overtly negative to the US invasion - not because of political ties to Saddam, or economic benefits, but because US policy towards allowing the north-Iraqi Kurdish minority an autonomous regional government threatened to destabilise Turkey, which has had significant issues with its own Kurdish minority's separatist movement. But Turkey's power projection capability is... rather limited.

      --
      - Sig files: contemptibly familiar the second time around.
    11. Re:Independent examiner by jamstar7 · · Score: 1
      Face absolutely no opposition? What are you smoking?
      Better question: Why isn't he SHARING?
      --
      Understanding the scope of the problem is the first step on the path to true panic.
    12. Re:Independent examiner by mgblst · · Score: 1

      Yes, one of the many few nations in all of history. Just like England, France, Spain, Germany, Japan, China, Russia, Italy, Greece..... every nation that you have ever heard of almost (except for Australia!)

      Your time will come US, your time will come.

      (Not sure what that last statement is meant to imply, but it seems to finish my post on a dark note, which is not a bad thing)

    13. Re:Independent examiner by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      >Face absolutely no opposition? What are you smoking?

      No *meaningful* opposition. None of a military, political, or economic nature that would have had any chance of influencing the decisions of the leaders of the US. None whatsoever.

      Suggestions of ways the war in Iraq could have been prevented or delayed:

      1. The combined navies of the UK, China, Germany and Russia, in the Persian Gulf before the US arrived, as a blockade.
      2. An immediate and complete cessation of trade between EU nations and the US, or by China.
      3. A complete ban on travel for US citizens in those countries, with 24 hours notice for American tourists and business people to leave under penalty of death.

      The *people* in the US would NOT have accepted Iraq, had it meant that invading Iraq would also mean going to war with Europe, for example.

      NOTHING along these lines happened, and nothing short of this amounts to serious opposition, once the stakes are on the table as *war*.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    14. Re:Independent examiner by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      "Who allied with Iraq to fight against the United States?"

      Absolutely no one. And you are the first person ever to comprehend my point.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    15. Re:Independent examiner by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      "Bear in mind that the US gave significant ground in its relations with other countries to stay their ire over invading Iraq."

      The mere fact that such diplomacy was *possible* indicates that the invasion of Iraq is not significantly contentious.

      There is a difference between "we will roll over to let you scratch our belly" and "we will oppose this action if it takes the life of every able-bodied man in our country and the last coin from our treasury."

      Somewhere in-between those two extremes is what I would expect, if some nation truly considered the war to be wrong.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  11. legal system beond repair... Time for a reinstall! by gnarlin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Seriously, when the executive branch of the government can simply come swinging in and end any lawsuit they see fit without full explenation to all involved parties (including the public) sounds like what happens in banana republics. No justice for people when they can't get their few remaining rights enforced by the courts.
    There is also the constant media consert in fortissimo about how the ends justify the means, i.e. chopping off liberty for the sake of temporary safety and all that jazz. Then there is the issue of seperation of Church and state is slowly but surely being erased. Unfounded wars of aggression (arguable to some extend though I guess) and last but not least, many computer programs are being Censored.

    I find it easier to make a list (ala Kill Bill) no only for what needs to be done, but to check to make sure that basic rights are being violated. Lets call this list the constitution.
    Here is your assignment for today kids: Go forth unto the internet and find EXTREME cases of governmental violations of each part of the constitution and the bill of rights. Extra points for snappy quotes from goverment officials and spokespeople chanting the party line!

    Me thinks it time for a bloody revolution again!
    (tickets sold seperately).

    --
    A bad analogy is like a leaky screwdriver.
  12. Yep. They do that alright by RLiegh · · Score: 1, Insightful

    So we're gonna do what we all do best; bitch and moan and pretend like there's jack shit we can do about it.

  13. The real question... by spankaccount · · Score: 1

    The real question in this "State Secrets Privilege" issue is, what "secrets" does the State actually have... That is if you're not a conspiracy theorist.

  14. huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As a Muslim American, I'm told that I should invite violations of my basic civil rights with the only probable cause being my skin color, ethnicity and religion because I shouldn't have anything to hide. Yet, when the corporations involved with the government and the government itself has lawsuits filed against it based on evidence beyond the realm of "probable cause," they can invoke some act they pulled out of their asses. How do I go about obtaining an act like this but only to protect my civil/constitutional rights? Does the "if you got nothing to hide..." line work with the government too or is FOX news going to spin it some other way for all of us?

    1. Re:huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "How do I go about obtaining an act like this but only to protect my civil/constitutional rights?"

      That's a really good question, and I have a great idea!

      Why don't we enshrine fundamental rights such as this in a document that everyone can agree to, and then have our government representatives and agents bound by the terms of that document, exactly as demanded by the people? Kind of a government for the people, of the people, and, uh, by the people. Don't misunderstand -- it'll only be words on paper, and only be as good as the people and actions behind it, but at least it'll be there for people to use as a reference. I suspect a document like that would be especially useful in the activities of the courts.

      I know, I know, it sounds like a craaazy idea. Some people might even oppose it -- powerful people don't generally like limits being placed on their power. But bear with me. It will take alot of effort, but I think it might actually work in the long run. If we can get enough people to come on board, I think it could truly revolutionize democracy as we know it!

      [posted anonymously -- these are dangerous times, and I wouldn't want monitors to think I was suggesting something seditious]

    2. Re:huh? by jafac · · Score: 1

      How do I go about obtaining an act like this

      Incorporate.

      Seriously, it costs like $500.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    3. Re:huh? by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      How do I go about obtaining an act like this


      Incorporate.


      Seriously, it costs like $500


      Become a corporation doesn't magically get you influence. If you want influence you will need to buy (err, sorry, "contribute to the campaigns of") some lawmakers, and it will cost you much more than $500.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  15. Damn it, You just bummed me out by algerath · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I was ready to jump in here with something insightful about democracy and voting. I then realized that we would have to convince a majority of the population to stop voting based on religion and look at issues. I don't know if that is possible anymore. Don't believe me, go hang out at a Wal-Mart for a while. Look in the parking lot at how many cars have Bush stickers and Jesus fish on them. Look at how many elected officials are pushing ID as science.

    SHIT there isn't jack shit we can do about it.

    Thanks for f'ing up my day

    Algerath

    1. Re:Damn it, You just bummed me out by boredgourd · · Score: 1

      Don't confuse religion with weakmindedness. Were religion suddenly to disappear from the United States, the same weak-minded people would vote based on some other perceived authority. Conversely, very bright, moral, and activist people throughout history and today find strength and direction in their theology. At least you can hold religious people accountable for their claimed beliefs, and point out hypocrisy where it exists.

      Religion needs reform, as it always does. Our government needs reform, as it always does. We need to fight ignorance and hold our fellow man accountable, maybe more today than always.

      The religious beliefs of communities in which I've lived over the last decade lead their membership to aggressive criticism of these government policies, often to the point of open activism. The reason why you don't see religious organizations openly assailing the government secrecy policies in this case is because a) it's outside their area of expertise, and b) they're busy assailing the government policies on torture, ignoring or distorting environmental concerns, and silence on genocide which actually occurring *right now*. Oddly, these are perceived to be higher priorities.

      (I'll do us all the favor of not responding to the ID jab, which is blessedly off-topic.)

    2. Re:Damn it, You just bummed me out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The basis of fairytales to form and validate your worldview is a form of weakmindedness.

      Faith is great, but leave proselytizing about it at the door when you leave your house and join us non-believers.

      At least you can hold religious people accountable for their claimed beliefs, and point out hypocrisy where it exists.


      My religion promotes lying and murder and anarchy for the benefit of spreading itself. But at least you can hold me accountable to my beliefs:0)
    3. Re:Damn it, You just bummed me out by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Maybe this will help cheer up your day:
      The latest Bush approval ratings have him at 32%. (Compare, Nixon had a 23% approval rating when he resigned in disgrace.)

      32% is bad. Really really bad. Youdon't hit 32% without losing substantial support even within your own die-hard ranks.

      Go hang out at Wal-Mart and I think you'll start noticing a few ugly blank glue spots on those bumpers next to some of those Jesus fish.

      Look at how many elected officials are pushing ID as science.

      Yes, that's really really bad. But on the bright side again, it seems that every time they actually do anything, that it ends up blowing up in their face. That entire Pennsylvania school board got unceromoniously thrown out on their asses. Kentucky is more of a sick circus than a real threat to the nation.

      If any candidate openly supports ID in the next presidential election they'll certainly pick up a 100% of votes from the fundamentalists, but I think they'd lose even more votes in backlash.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  16. executive branch by sentientbrendan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I would like to see some serious punishment for some members of the administration after they leave office... People are talking about impeachment if the democrats get control of congress... but that seems like kind of a slap on the wrist, and would only effect bush himself.

    It seems like more than anything else, what has characterized this administration is the desire for power. The wiretaps don't piss me off because I think they are unjust. They piss me off, because wiretaps without any kind of oversight seem likely to be used against the administrations political enemies. The administration has already openly abused its power to try to destroy its such enemies numerous times... they've been hunting down the people that leaked the warantless wiretapping stufff forever (didn't they find one guy?) and will probably try to bring some kind of trumped up charge against their obviously legitimate whistlebloying. Who is to say they weren't tapping democratic campaign headquarters in the 2004 election? I'm not sure that, with the character the administration has itself to have recently, that I can say that is beneath them.

    At some point if the power of the executive branch isn't checked, the presidential office itself, could become a threat to the country. With the kind of power that the president has, how difficult would it be to just refuse to step down after your term was up? This president has shown no regard for the law, and a willingness to make up paper thin excuses for his abuse of power. Maybe Bush wouldn't, or couldn't take power like that, but if we set a precedent where we allow the president to break the law, and grab power like crazy all through his administration just like this one did, what's to stop someone more ambitious than him from going further in the future?

    I'd like to see congress put some mechanisms in place for checking the execute branch. Specifically, I'd like whatever authority that the administration *imagines* gives them the power to do warantless wiretaps specifically removed. Power to spy on whomever it pleases the administration, without even having to tell anyone in the other branches about it, is clearly a threat to the checks and balance system. Maybe a constitutional amendment needs to be made laying out the powers of the executive branch more specifically, and limiting the power to spy on anyone without oversight from the judicial, and maybe the legislative branch.

    1. Re:executive branch by stony3k · · Score: 1
      With the kind of power that the president has, how difficult would it be to just refuse to step down after your term was up?
      Let's say there was a war with Iran going on and the President claimed that it was necessary that he remain in power to finish this war, or let's say that suddenly Osama Bin Laden was found (but not caught) and the President wanted to stay in office till Bin Laden was caught.

      I can clearly see some scenarios that could be cooked up to bypass the term limits, and maybe even to bypass the elections itself. But how much support will Bush get if he decides to do this?
      --
      Freedom is not worth having if it does not include the freedom to make mistakes. - Mahatma Gandhi
    2. Re:executive branch by mrchaotica · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Who is to say they weren't tapping democratic campaign headquarters in the 2004 election? I'm not sure that, with the character the administration has itself to have recently, that I can say that is beneath them.
      Are you kidding?! I not only am sure that it's not beneath them, I wouldn't be surprised if they tampered with the vote (through Diebold) too!

      These fascist assholes shouldn't be punished after they leave office, they should be removed from power now!
      With the kind of power that the president has, how difficult would it be to just refuse to step down after your term was up? This president has shown no regard for the law, and a willingness to make up paper thin excuses for his abuse of power.
      Mark my words: unless Bush hand-picks a successor and that successor subsequently wins the 2008 election, there will be another big terrorist attack, which will conveniently require Bush to declare Martial Law and extend his presidency beyond the two-term limit (i.e., he will declare himself a dictator).
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    3. Re:executive branch by Edgester · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, what if there is another voting recount debacle? That would be a pretext to stay in office. The war trump card is more easily stretched, though.

    4. Re:executive branch by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1
      >I would like to see some serious punishment for some members of the administration after they leave office

      Shall we only threaten and be angry for an hour?
      When the storm is ended shall we find
      How softly but how swiftly they have sidled back to power
      By the favour and contrivance of their kind?
    5. Re:executive branch by deblau · · Score: 1
      how difficult would it be to just refuse to step down after your term was up?

      This hasn't happened yet, so there's no case law. I suspect that, if a sitting President remained 'in office' past January 20, someone would file a lawsuit that gets fast-tracked to the Supreme Court. (If a State filed the lawsuit, the Supreme Court would have original jurisdiction, and sit as a trial court. 28 U.S.C. 1251.) Since the 20th Amendment plainly states that the President's term ends on January 20th at noon, I believe the Court would rule that the person inhabiting the White House is, as a matter of law, not the President. The ex-President would be subject to a bench warrant for arrest (for a raft of crimes, the least of which is probably impersonating the President), and any action taken by anyone in support of that person could then be construed as conspiracy to commit sedition against the legitimate government. If the former President had substantial support in the military, then there might be a fracturing of the Armed Forces, and a civil war, with the losing side subject to summary execution for treason. I seriously doubt it would come to that, though. There are (still, thankfully) far too many sane people in this country.

      I'd like whatever authority that the administration *imagines* gives them the power to do warantless wiretaps specifically removed.

      You mean, the authority to provide for the common defense? That authority? Constitutional law is a tricky area when the policies specifically endorsed by the document come into conflict. Here's a choice quote from Cheney v. United States Dist. Court, 542 U.S. 367, 389-390 (2004):

      Executive privilege is an extraordinary assertion of power "not to be lightly invoked." United States v. Reynolds, 345 U.S. 1, 7 (1953). Once executive privilege is asserted, coequal branches of the Government are set on a collision course. The Judiciary is forced into the difficult task of balancing the need for information in a judicial proceeding and the Executive's Article II prerogatives. This inquiry places courts in the awkward position of evaluating the Executive's claims of confidentiality and autonomy, and pushes to the fore difficult questions of separation of powers and checks and balances. These "occasion[s] for constitutional confrontation between the two branches" should be avoided whenever possible. United States v. Nixon, 418 U.S. 683, 692 (1974).

      NSA wiretaps of communications between citizens located domestically and others abroad fall under the 'privacy versus defense' rubric, and they may or may not be constitutional. On the one side, you have the authority to provide for the common defense, and on the other, the privacy protections of the 4th and 14th Amendments (and maybe a few others besides). It depends on how the Supreme Court thinks the particular policies behind the laws play against each other, in light of the real facts of the case (as opposed to the media's take), and, shockingly enough, how well the lawyers write briefs and argue. I'm not going to dismissively cl

      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    6. Re:executive branch by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1
      At some point if the power of the executive branch isn't checked, the presidential office itself, could become a threat to the country.

      Either way, the country is screwed.

      One possibility is that Congress or Supreme Court move to check presidential power. Clearly, restraints more robust than those created after Watergate are in order. This necessarily weakens the presidency. Or perhaps the people act to restrain the President, working "around" the courts and Congress instead of through them.

      Or . . . Congress and the courts do nothing. The people do nothing. Or perhaps they attempt to restrain the president and fail. Now the president has unlimited power.

      Dubya has done a terrible thing, one that damages the country either through a substantial weakening or an unlimited strenghening of the presidency, destroying the three-way balance of power.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
  17. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 1

    Sources please?

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
  18. Turnabout by Odiche · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Sir, if you have nothing to hide, then you should have no objection to a full disclosure of the documents you have created and accumulated with your wiretapping activities."

    "But it is in the interest of National Security that I do not perform my legal obligations, and I do not wish to tell you"

    Hypocrites - A study in government responsibility.

  19. Yes, but who passes these laws? by algerath · · Score: 2, Insightful
    so far the abuse has been allowed by both other branches, in some cases abuses have been with the assistance of the other branches. Who passes laws to limit this? The people doing it.

    Even if you elect people who are less abusive of the power I doubt you are going to see any elected officials vote to reduce their own power/influence.

    Algerath

    1. Re:Yes, but who passes these laws? by An.+(Coward) · · Score: 1

      Even if you elect people who are less abusive of the power I doubt you are going to see any elected officials vote to reduce their own power/influence.

      I'll do it...vote for me!

  20. Fast-track it. by genomicon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Whatever the trial judge decides about the DOJ motion, you can bet this gets appealed all the way up the line to SCOTUS. The claim, as asserted by DOJ, would be a clear violation of the due process clause if the government could step into any case and inhibit discovery or evidence presentation. In other cases involving sensitive material, the trial judge has the opportunity to review such material before granting or denying the motion.

  21. just face it.. by essence · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...democracy is over. All the western countries are now becoming fascist. So what ya going to do about it? Write to your senator? pffft.

    1. Re:just face it.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the word you are looking for is Corporatocracy.

    2. Re:just face it.. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      "All the western countries"?? Uhh, as a Canadian, I must point out that a) the US isn't "all the western countries", and b) there are many western nations that aren't as fucked up as the US. Are they perfect? Hardly. But the US leads the way in corruption, primarily, I think, thanks to the fact that it's the only first world nation I know of where bribing government officials is not only legal, but protected as "free speech", giving corporations and other special interests unbelievable influence. Of course, it's two-party (or, some might say, one-party) system of government doesn't help, either, as the people end up with very little in the way of options for change (which has been exacerbated by the two main stream parties doing what they can to prevent a third option from gaining any traction).

    3. Re:just face it.. by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Sir, I humbly suggest to you and my fellow Americans that absolutely nothing short of open, armed rebellion against the federal government is the only thing that will fix our sordid state of affairs.

      Unfortunately, people think that patriotism means loving one's government*, not loving one's country, and American Idol is on.

      *so long as said government is Republican (not republican) in nature.

  22. I pledge the fifth... by Opportunist · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It kinda sounds like the NSA equivalent, at least.

    Ok, let's ponder. So it would endanger "national security" if they told that they used ATNT to spy on their own citizens. Now, those citizens are, at least if I got the system in the US right, the ones that elect the ones in power. They are the "nation". So it would endanger their security if they knew whether they've been spied on.

    Ignorance is strength... where've I heard that before...

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:I pledge the fifth... by daigu · · Score: 1

      The Fifth Amendment is about self-incrimination. Remaining silent does not get the charges against you dismissed whereas the States Secret priviledge does exactly that. They aren't the same at all.

  23. Bingo by Kludge · · Score: 2, Insightful

    People on /. have been complaining about the EFF filing lawsuits that they don't win. They may not win this one either, but it proves a point: The gov't is spying on a lot of us and doesn't want us to know it.

  24. Re:legal system beond repair... Time for a reinsta by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "A little revolution now and then is a good thing; the tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." -- Thomas Jefferson
    It seems to me that the tree is looking a bit dry at the moment; perhaps we should water it now. That is why we have a 2nd Amendment, after all!
    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  25. This country will be driven to the ground by thealsir · · Score: 2, Insightful

    in the guise of "national security."

    --
    Do not downmod posts "overrated" simply because you disagree with them.
    1. Re:This country will be driven to the ground by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

      It's always a bad sign when a state declares itself more important than its citizens.

      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
  26. how times have changed by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 1

    Seems to me that something like this subject should have senators and congressmen pounding on podiums with veins sticking out of their foreheads denouncing those involved and making a lot of stink to oust the bastards... or maybe that was just a reality tv show I saw once.

    --
    Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
    1. Re:how times have changed by Tony · · Score: 1

      . . . or maybe that was just a reality tv show I saw once.

      Yeah, it was a reality TV show. They called it, "Watergate." And it was nowhere *near* this bad.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  27. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

    Even if that is gross hyperbole, the AC still has a point -- if our government hadn't screwing around with them for the past 20-odd years, they wouldn't have attacked us in the first place. Bush's policy of retaliation just pisses them off even more, and makes things worse.

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  28. Rarely used? by olddotter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I wish it were true, but I don't think the term "rarely used" applies to the states secrets privilege any more. Unfortunately it is used far too often, and even used when there is no state secret but the need to cover some body's hind quarters.

    Perhaps it should be called the CYA privilege.

    1. Re:Rarely used? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I wish it were true, but I don't think the term "rarely used" applies to the states secrets privilege any more."

      How do you know that?

      Everybody knows nobody knows how many times state secrets are invoked because the number of times state secrets are invoked is a state secret.

    2. Re:Rarely used? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, following up to that, I was wrong. The answer is something like 9254 "National Security Letters" relating to 3501 people in 2005.

      It's still true for the pre-2005 numbers, which are, of course, classified.

  29. It's lucky for Bush, then... by mrchaotica · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    ...that he's managed to stuff the Supreme Court with dumbasses that see things his way!

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  30. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Rep. Waxman issued a Flash Report examining data released by the State Department and National Counterterrorism Center that shows that the number of reported global terrorism incidents has increased exponentially in the three years since the United States invaded Iraq--an increase of over 5,000% in the number of terrorist attacks and over 2,000% in the number of deaths in three years.
    report[pdf]

  31. Bullshit, how is does this even make sense? by TheNoxx · · Score: 2

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but the lawsuit is not over any government records, but those of civilians. The only aspect of this case that could be considered "national security" is the fact that the NSA and possibly other government organizations got the records from AT&T... Isn't there some statute or code that mandates relevancy? Or maybe, common sense? If they use this "privilege" in this case, couldn't they use it in any case concerning anything with the federal government?

    --
    Ex nihilo nihil fit.
    1. Re:Bullshit, how is does this even make sense? by John+Jamieson · · Score: 2, Informative

      You are right, they can use the excuse for anything they want! There was a defense contractor using a patented invention for a waterproof connector for use in high pressures(if I remember correctly). He spent years perfecting it, and helping them, then when it was time to pay, they said TOO BAD, WE DON'T HAVE TO PAY. He sued, but they did not have to provide any proof they were or were not using it because the government stepped in and said that it might reveal state secrets.

      He was screwed and basically got nada last I knew.

      Oh ya, the company was Lucent(lucifer?) technologies and relates to underwater connectors for fiber optics(Wanna bet they have tapped into every undersea fiber there is?).

  32. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by jcnnghm · · Score: 1

    You forgot "outside of the United States". Wasn't the whole idea to get terrorism out of this country.

    --
    You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. - Winston Churchill
  33. put PGP everywhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's about time to put an user-transparent version of GPG (or symmetric encryption) in about every open source project, which uses communication or stores something. I'm already wondering, why it's not included in Thunderbird by default (I know, the provided GPG plugin is one of the best available for mail systems see http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ ).

    Good programs would be:

    - encrypted storage for torrent files (F*** off RIAA)
    - Generate and upload GPG key when you install Thunderbird by default
    - Encryption for VoIP (yeah, Skype has it and it pisses of the feds)
            http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2006/04/voip _encryption.html
            or zfone http://www.philzimmermann.com/EN/zfone/index.html
    - GPG encryption in HTTP traffic (no more snooping on forms)
    - ...

    1. Re:put PGP everywhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see someone just volunteered to reduce the complexity of PGP (for normal users) and get encryption into SIP and RTP?

      And what is GPG encryption in HTTP traffic (no more snooping on forms) supposed to mean? Ever heard of SSL?

    2. Re:put PGP everywhere by m50d · · Score: 1
      - encrypted storage for torrent files (F*** off RIAA)

      Or use one of the many encrypted networks around. I'm partial to gnunet.

      I'm already wondering, why it's not included in Thunderbird by default

      It's there in kmail. Doesn't do automatic generation, no, but TBH that would probably make things less secure. You need people to care for encryption to work.

      - GPG encryption in HTTP traffic (no more snooping on forms)

      We already have SSL there and working.

      --
      I am trolling
    3. Re:put PGP everywhere by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I've been thinking over an idea recently that may be even better than that.

      How about some transparant process that hooks into the operating system's network layer. In all outgoing streams it either sets some flag in some unused bit of the packet protocol, or maybe for each new outgoing stream it sends some flagged ping packet to the same destination.

      If the computer at the other end happens to be runing the same software, then it signals back. And then the two set up an encryptioon key, and then transparantly encrypt/decrypt all data going over that link.

      Poof! Instant on the fly encryption for any and all internet programs you use, so long as the other end also happens to be using it. And if the other end isn't using it, oh well, then you're no worse off than you are now.

      It would be a great way to rapidly get a signifigant percentage of internet traffic to be encrypted by default.

      Even if it were relatively weak encryption, it would still be a valuable for turning much of the mass of internet communication into an obscure weakly encrypted haystack. An enormous mountain of even weak encryption can give you 90% of the practical benefit of ideal unbreakable encryption.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    4. Re:put PGP everywhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whether you use SSL or some other scheme doesn't matter, the point is: it should be turned on by default. So just install a unsigned SSL certificate with each Apache installation and you got it.

  34. state secret clause by Danathar · · Score: 0, Troll

    I find it funny how people are complaining about this particular tactic NOW. As if GW cooked it up and invented it.

    I don't recall people complaining when the clinton administration used it.

    Personally I think it sucks without oversight. When spewing this or that about the current administration, have some historical perspective.

    1. Re:state secret clause by Aim+Here · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Erm, the allegations are based a story that entered the public domain in an NYT story in December 2005 which alleged that President Bush signed a secret order shortly after September 11th 2001 to conduct warrantless wiretaps of US citizens. This is backed up by the testimony of one Mark Klein, an AT&T tech who was approached by the NSA in 2002 to do some of the work. Clinton had absolutely nothing to do with the current allegations of illegal domestic spying. This is GWB's crime all the way.

      Now I wouldn't call you a liar if you said that Clinton had perhaps done something similar sometime, but the reason people didn't complain about Clinton doing this is because there was, and AFAIK still is, no real evidence that he did so, and there was certainly no major news outlet or civil rights group making any allegations of domestic wiretapping when he was in power. If you remember, the US media jumped all over Clinton for all sorts of personal scandals when he was in power (Whitewater, Lewinsky, etc); if there wasn't an outcry over Clinton, it's because there wasn't an allegation to cry about.

      Why should people complain about things that they've probably not heard of, and for which there appears to be no evidence?

    2. Re:state secret clause by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Danathar,

      And that's grounds to ignore it? Wrong is still wrong.

      When your kids do something bad, do you let them get away with it, "beacause Tommy did it too!"

      Come on, that's retarded and you surely can do better.

    3. Re:state secret clause by Danathar · · Score: 1

      Hey...I never said is'nt wrong. I just read posts that sound like "hey...look! Gee Gawd! Only GW would ever do something like that!"

      Like "executive priv" has never been used before.

      Personally, I'm jaded. I've voted both democratic and republican. Both parties get into the white house defend the same policies (basically) when it comes to executive power.

      When the next democratic president gets into office you can be SURE that if any precedant has been set by GW, the new president will defend those new rights even if they dumped on the prior administration while running for office.

    4. Re:state secret clause by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed.

    5. Re:state secret clause by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't recall people complaining when the clinton administration used it.

      So you lie awake at night, wishing that the Republican party was as awesome as the Democrats? Forget it, it'll never happen. They should go back to their role of little government and protecting what it means to be American, they'll never be as cool as the Democrats are when it comes to taking a shit on the constitution.

    6. Re:state secret clause by Guuge · · Score: 1

      When the next democratic president gets into office you can be SURE that if any precedant has been set by GW, the new president will defend those new rights even if they dumped on the prior administration while running for office.

      Then why didn't Carter insist on as much executive authority as Nixon? Why didn't Clinton claim as much as Reagan did?

  35. Um, are you serious?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ...the judge will bend over backwards to find a way to continue this case.


    The judge will bend over for the Bush Administration...or haven't you been paying attention since, oh, 2000...?

  36. Possible Justification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Here's a scenario under which quashing the lawsuit would be a good thing.

    Suppose that AT&T has been cooperating w/ NSA, this wouldn't take a great stretch of anyone's imagination. Now suppose NSA is using that access to get information on foreign diplomats and intelligence officers in the US (legally allowed) and data transiting the US or used by Al Qaeda people outside the US, such as Hotmail or GMail accounts. They could have a list of known overseas email accounts, and just watch the SMTP headers and grab them as they come by, or watch for the logins to suspecte accounts, they could even monitor the IP addresses on that SMTP or HTTP transfer to insure the email was in fact being retreived from overseas. The servers are here, but all the communications are between people outside the US, and the pipelines are an easy way to access it all, instead of having to monitor a bunch of dial-up, DSL, and DirecWay connections in the Middle East and Europe.

    In this scenario, nothing illegal is going on, but for AT&T to defend itself, it would have to admit to cooperating w/ NSA, and would have to explain what traffic is being monitored, so as to prove it isn't helping monitor Americans, at least willingly or knowingly. That would definitely cause some of the bad guys to stop using US based servers, so we might lose valuable intelligence.

    Who knows, but that could be a large part of it, and in that case I would have to agree w/ DoJ 100% on quashing the lawsuit.

    1. Re:Possible Justification by jaywee · · Score: 1

      It surprises me how many americans go such length to explain actions of their goverment. Reminds me of my father who grew up during Communist rule in my country. Always tries to find a "positive spin" explanation for goverment actions. Echelon anyone?

    2. Re:Possible Justification by novus+ordo · · Score: 1

      they could even monitor the IP addresses on that SMTP or HTTP transfer

      Wait...what was that??

      --
      "You're everywhere. You're omnivorous."
    3. Re:Possible Justification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      "Echelon anyone?"

      Remember the Maine.
      Pearl Harbor.
      Operation Paper Clip.
      Intentionally uncured syphallis experiments.
      Unwitting LSD experiments.
      Northwoods documents.
      Various Church committee revelations.
      Waco.
      Ruby Ridge.
      Abu Gharib.
      Guantanamo Bay.

      And these are only the ones that have been 100% confirmed by historical fact and admitted too.

    4. Re:Possible Justification by charnov · · Score: 1, Redundant

      Remember the Maine.
      Last ruled accidental

      Pearl Harbor.
      Debunked many, many times. The best anyone can claim is that we underestimated and were imcompetent

      Operation Paper Clip.
      I would say this is actually a good thing. Northwoods was one of the projects to get as many of the scientific aparatus of the Nazi's before the Russians did. It lead to NASA, our nuclear program, and many other advances. I am assuming the error you are referring to here is that many of these people committed war crimes and were never prosecuted. Tough. They weren't living it up in the US; most were nearly slaves. Fare trade

      Intentionally uncured syphallis experiments.
      I am assuming you are primarily Tuskegee. This one you got right. It was horrible and a perfect example of abuse of power and utter lack of anything resembling a sense of humanity at the government. A huge black mark against our entire society.

      Unwitting LSD experiments.
      I am assuming you are referring to MKULTRA and associated projects. Although largely unsupported, I'll stipulate that this actually happened and to the scale that is widely reported. The people reportedly involved are also pretty much wack-jobs and I don't doubt they were capable of this. I don't think this rises to anywhere near to the level of other 'experiments', however, such as what was done to thousands of American troops testing nuclear weapons or NBC inoculations.

      Northwoods documents.
      A false flag op proposal that was never implemented and shot down by the COJCOS and POTUS. There are lots and lots of proposals like this every year. Welcome to military thought processes

      Various Church committee revelations.
      Bingo! Now you hit closer to the discussion at hand. The Church Committee refers to the Congressional oversight (or lack thereof) previous to Watergate. Before the public scandal, most ops in the US had very little oversight at all. Today, at least a bunch of somebodies (a couple of committees, the Joint Chiefs, Prez, etc.) are supposed to know what's going on and have a measure of control. These type of ops are nasty, ugly, unethical, and sometimes illegal. The world is not a happy place. The idea of the oversight is to only use as much force as is necessary. Trust me, we are a lot more reserved than just about anybody else out there (or at least pre-9/11 we were). The English and Isreali's have no problem killing anyone anytime. The French are frickin terrifying in what they do. Pretty much ever non-western intelligence apparatus makes us look like boyscouts.

      Waco.
      Huh? This was overzealousness and stupidity, nothing more.
      Ruby Ridge.
      See - Waco

      Abu Gharib.
      This is a little closer to the issue at hand, which is lack of oversight or a disregard for humanity as a whole. High value assets can be subjects to all kinds of horrible things in the pursuit of data, but that isn't what happened here. This is what happens when people think they know what they are doing, aren't particularly smart, and have no one to tell them to stop. This should have never happened and further illustrates the breakdown in control and professionalism in the Bush administration

      Guantanamo Bay.
      This type of thing has been happening for a long long time (decades). Unfortunately necessary in certain situations, the way it has been handled and the fact that it has been made public is a really bad thing. Playing dirty is one thing, being dirty is another.

      --
      [RIAA] says its concern is artists. That's true, in just the sense that a cattle rancher is concerned about its cattle.
    5. Re:Possible Justification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guantanamo Bay... Unfortunately necessary in certain situations

      Remind me to send a thank you note to Fidel Castro.

    6. Re:Possible Justification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That would definitely cause some of the bad guys to stop using US based servers, so we might lose valuable intelligence.

      I'm confused ... is that good bad guys like Hussein when he was attacking Iran or bad bad guys like Hussein when he attacked Kuwait?

    7. Re:Possible Justification by rolfwind · · Score: 1
      Waco.
      Huh? This was overzealousness and stupidity, nothing more.


      I like seeing cowboy vigilantism (yes, I'm talking about the government) resulting in a fire (intentionally set?) that killed 50 adults and 25 children.

      Oh yeah, to serve a warrant on a man at his compound, instead of catching him any given sunday on a streetcorner preaching.

      Yup, simple overzealousness and stupidity. Reminds me when a swat team shot a 70+ year old man in his bed because he was "reaching for a gun." Mind you, they were in his house in middle of the night where that might have been understandable. But it turned out he had no gun, he was reaching for the lamp. He was hit with over 20-30 bullets.

      Yes, our perfect government. Land of the Free and home of the dead.

      The only thing that makes me madder is that they portray these agencies practically as virtuous superheros in every other fucking night drama (law&order, CSI, NCIS, Numbers, etcetera).
    8. Re:Possible Justification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah because terrorists are stupid enough to use American based servers. :) And even if the terrorists were using American based servers and decided encryption was too hard there would still be little reason for your case.

      Clearly the terrorists could find out about the lawsuit (I mean /. knows about it) and that and that the Government is trying to stop it and realise that their traffic could be being monitored. In which case the damage is already done.

      On the otherhand though the government is likely abusing its powers to spy on its citizens, and idiots like you go to massive lengths to explain their actions rather than condemning them.

    9. Re:Possible Justification by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      You don't get it. You just....don't get it.

      *sigh* I'm not sure what makes me more sad, that crap like this is actually happening in the "land of the free" or that you simply don't get why this is so bad.

      You are more likely to be killed by lightening than a terrorist. Remember that when the last of your freedoms are stripped away.

      ~X~

      --
      ~X~
  37. Why do you think he doesn't got to FISA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He only gets backing from his cronies, the problem is he's stuffed the Supreme Court with cronies so he'll always win eventually. That doesn't mean that the lower judges will simply bend over backwards for him.

    Look at the issue at hand, why do you think he doesn't go through FISA, it's because FISA will only give him warrants to spy on suspected terrorists, not innocent Joe Sixpack and certainly not politicians and judges. If he can't get FISA to bend enough that he has to bypass them what chance will he get the lower judges to bend.

  38. Re:legal system beond repair... Time for a reinsta by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Has everyone forgotten the events that led to April 9, 1865 in the Appomattox Court House in Appomattox County, Virginia?

    Civil rebellion. Poorly-armed and -trained volunteers. Leadership that, while exemplery and genius, was against the industrial might of an entire nation. Seizing of lands, property, wealth, and persons without due process, warrants, or a fair trial. A legacy of bloodshed, hatred, contempt, mistrust, lawlessness, and general horror that lasted beyond the shooting war to become a silent specter to this very day.

    These things happened because men thought "we have the Second Amendment, we can protect ourselves from the Federal government". And those men all died in vain. Despite the insipid reasonings that led to that particular revolt and civil war, the very real facts stand that a large body of dedicated individuals attempted to simply remove themselves from the union and it ended very badly. An outright attempt to overthrow and usurp the government would likely be met with even greater violence and tyranny.

    Men are fools to believe a piece of paper can service their needs. In the end humanity answers to only one law: might makes right. It is something humankind has still not clued into, and this silly Second Amendment and Constitution worshipping is a symptom of it. It's a symbolism of men and women who continually live with just-world bias in their hearts. There is no such thing as a just world.

    The Federal Republic concept was tried and it failed on that cold April morning of 1865. The Federal government is simply a facade for the tyranny of the powerful, the wealthy, the strong, the cruel, the wicked, and the insane. Religions, businesses, and political parties exist to misdirect the common fool from these truths. The only self-evident truth is that man is either master or slave.

    Welcome to the result of millions of years of inborn, violent, heirarchical instincts.

  39. Sounds like they're not denying it -- why?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, either they don't have such a monitoring program, but they want the terrorists to think they do, and it would compromise state secrets to reveal the fact it does not really exist, OR ...

    It's exactly what people are suggesting it is, and the government is going to cover its ass with a big "state secret" stamp?

    What is this? The frickin USSR?

    Here's a clue: if the system had been set up via legislation, so that there was debate about its merits and it had some kind of legal legitimacy, it wouldn't be a big deal to keep the details of its implementation secret. But secretly set up something that sure sounds as if it must be violating well-established law, and of course people are going to be pissed off and demand answers to questions. They are asking now for answers and justification that should have been provided before the thing was deployed.

    At least the Great Firewall of China is openly admitted to exist, and everybody already knows the government there is authoritarian. Does a Great Firewall of the USA exist? The world may never know. But if its existence and justification is not properly explained to its own people it will say much more about the current US regime than the answers to the legal questions in this case ever would.

    In what kind of bizarro democracy would the government truly be better off not explaining itself? Shouldn't they dispell people's concerns about these rumors?

    1. Re:Sounds like they're not denying it -- why?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does a Great Firewall of the USA exist?

      Judging from the kind of shit I can pull up sitting here at home, I'm guessing no.

    2. Re:Sounds like they're not denying it -- why?? by Dark_Gravity · · Score: 1

      What is this? The frickin USSR?

      You misspelled USSA.

  40. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by ergo98 · · Score: 1

    Even if that is gross hyperbole, the AC still has a point -- if our government hadn't screwing around with them for the past 20-odd years, they wouldn't have attacked us in the first place. Bush's policy of retaliation just pisses them off even more, and makes things worse.

    Not only is this a defeatist attitude, but it's completely baseless to boot -- you have no idea how the world would have turned out under alternate scenarios, and you're just idealizing that under a non-intervention approach everyone would be holding hands and singing songs.

    In reality your approach could have led to extreme hardline overthrows of all of the Middle East, Turkey, Pakistan, extreme military hostilities with India, more violent wars between the secular Iraq and her neighbours, endless assaults on Israel, and so on.

    Given that most Westerner's live a life that would earn them a stoning to death, I think it's a bit ridiculous to think that letting them in peace would make them good neighbours.

  41. No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The reason he doesn't go that route is because he doesn't have to: they already own the people at the top of the ladder. Why dick around buying the underlings when you control their bosses?

  42. Do you even know what an analogy is? by donscarletti · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    1. the NSA is not an elephant
    2. the AT&T is not your kitchen

    your analogy falls down flat on both of those points.</i></blockquote>

    Um, if the NSA was an elephant and AT&T was his kitchen then it would cease to be an analogy, it would be an anecdote.
    --
    When Argumentum ad Hominem falls short, try Argumentum ad Matrem
  43. FOX news doesn't have to spin it another way... by babbling · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Does the "if you got nothing to hide..." line work with the government too or is FOX news going to spin it some other way for all of us?

    Neither! It seems FOX news, along with all other major media organisations, are not going to cover this case at all. When the DOJ sued Google because "Google won't give us information about people searching for porn" that was big news. This seems like even bigger news, but strangely, it isn't in the news.

    Why?

    1. Re:FOX news doesn't have to spin it another way... by wkitchen · · Score: 1

      Because "EFF" isn't a verb.

  44. Re:legal system beond repair... Time for a reinsta by Nexcis · · Score: 1

    I must say that quote got me a little choked up. I hope it doesnt come down to that but; as you say, the tree does look a tad dry.

  45. A friend and I discussed this recently. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He believes the members of this Administration will forever go unpenalised, just as their crimes will never be investigated (genuinely investigated), a la Kennedy assassination.

    OTOH I hope that one day, perhaps after we're long dead, the truth about the Bush cabal, and their crimes, 9/11, Iraq, etc, will come out.

    Of course if it does, the only result will be the severe embarrassment of any surviving Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld/Rice/et al descendants.

    What am I saying?: in America, no publicity is bad publicity. They'll probably get their own reality shows.

    Sigh.

    1. Re:A friend and I discussed this recently. by ihatewinXP · · Score: 1

      I dont know who said it but it has become a mantra of mine when discussing this administration and periodin our history:

      "History will not be kind."

      We lost the ground war in Vietnam but since they sell Coke there now I guess everything is kosher in the long run. Our policy in the middle east has brought us the first real atack on American soil since..... when? And repaid this in kind by destroying a country not responsible while giving Iran and DPRK all the time they needed to shore up their systems.

      Amazing. And after all this Osama is still alive.

      --
      ---- The real Slashdot is still here. You just have to browse at -1 to read the comments.
    2. Re:A friend and I discussed this recently. by Tony · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And after all this Osama is still alive.

      Of course he's still alive. Can you imagine Bush doing what he does if bin Laden were captured? He'd never get away with it. The public wouldn't let him.

      As long as bin Laden is free, Bush is free to rule however he wants.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  46. You have to be bold to be a lawyer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    [From the legal note]
    "The President has explained that, following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, he authorized the National Security Agency ("NSA") to intercept international communications into and out of the United States of persons linked to al Qaeda and affiliated organizations. See Press Conference of President Bush (Dec. 19, 2005), available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/ news/releases/2005/12/20051219-2.html. The purpose of these intercepts is to provide the United States with an early warning system to detect and prevent another catastrophic terrorist attack on the United States."

    So, let me get this straight -- they're justifying this on the basis of the President's admission and explanation, in 2005, of a secret program that existed since 2001, and that people wouldn't have known anything about unless it had been revealed via the press. Well, I have to give the government credit for making lemonade out of lemons.

    Oh, *that* secret program? Why, that's the same secret program we *already* disclosed and explained. And, as everybody knows, the explanation for that was entirely adequate.

    1. Re:You have to be bold to be a lawyer by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Bush also draws his authority to do the illegal wiretapping since congress passed the AUMF. Of course, it doesn't even tangentially allude to such power and even then, former senator Tom Dashcle was asked to slip a provision into the AUMF to do exactly that and he declined.

      For those of you keeping score, the Bush administration asked for a specific provision in the AUMF to do domestic wiretapping. It was denied. They then turned around and said that the text of the AUMF as it stands allows them to do just that anyway. Obviously, this raises the question of why they needed a provision in the first place if the original text would do just fine.

  47. Just in from the AP by codepunk · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The FBI secretly sought information last year on 3,501 U.S. citizens and legal residents from their banks and credit card, telephone and Internet companies without a court's approval, the Justice Department said Friday.

    And how many of these 3,501 where arrested as a terrorist? I suspect none or very , very few so how many of these where violated?

    --


    Got Code?
    1. Re:Just in from the AP by Fear+the+Clam · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter if it was 1 or 0. The fact is, an illegal operation was performed and it's time to reboot.

      Oh, God. I'm a geek.

    2. Re:Just in from the AP by PPGMD · · Score: 1
      It could also be that those 3,501 did business with or donated money to an organization that is a front for a terror group. Bin Laden and his associates did well to learn from the Irish Terrorists, using the same structure to get money. But now it's different since western countries are now cooperating to take these front groups down, and stop the flow of money.

      If any of the 3,501 that were linked committed a terror act, and weren't investigated, heads would roll, just like after 9/11. This isn't about skin color, or religion, the FBI and NSA knows that they can't do it that way, even if it makes sense to some, there are organizations (ACLU and others) that would hound them to death for any hint of racial profiling.

    3. Re:Just in from the AP by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 0

      And how many of them just one day disappeared and have been infinietly detained in one of the secret prisons around the world. I have many friends in the US and people have started to disappear or die under suspicous circumstances. Remember Chile?

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
    4. Re:Just in from the AP by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

      The problem of 9/11 wasn't a lack of investigation or power.

      >It could also be that those 3,501 did business with or donated money to an organization that is a front for a terror group

      That would be illegal. Where are the arrests?

    5. Re:Just in from the AP by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      If any of the 3,501 that were linked committed a terror act, and weren't investigated, heads would roll, just like after 9/11.


      Just out of curiosity, whose heads rolled after 9/11? If there was anyone in government held accountable, I must have missed it.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    6. Re:Just in from the AP by PPGMD · · Score: 1
      It would be illegal only if the people that did business with knew that they sponsored terrorism, and that it was a front for said organization. Front companies like this don't just advertise "Hello we are a Front Company to Bin Laden." They would operate like the IRA, fund raising for a peaceful organization, and then funneling the money toward the terror side.

      So it's very likely that they people did nothing wrong, and a quick investigation and interview would confirm that.

    7. Re:Just in from the AP by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      I've often wondered why, when after 9/11, Bush so often repeated something like 'anybody who gives aid or comfort to terrorists, we'll treat as terrorists,' nobody went after all the Americans who gave money to Sinn Fein.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  48. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by funkatron · · Score: 1

    It probably has since the word terrorism has been extended to mean "anything we don't agree with"

    --
    "Welcome to our world. We are the wasted youth. And we are the future too." Yes, I know these are stupid lyrics.
  49. No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, it won't. It will only be driven into the ground if Americans in general allow it to be.

    However, with the potent mix of FOX News and the severe lack of solid education we see in the US, you may just be right.

  50. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by Lokni · · Score: 1

    Wow, if you really believe that they are only spying on 'foreign nationals,' you are a sucker.

  51. EFF Loss = New Precedents against our Civil Rights by sakusha · · Score: 1, Troll

    The problem is not just that the EFF loses cases. The problem is that for every lost case, a new legal precedent is established that permanently reduces our civil rights. In this case, the EFF has given the government an opportunity to use a new legal theory, that they are immune from lawsuits to prevent illegal violations of the Fourth Amendment (i.e. illegal search and seizure) merely by invoking Executive Privilege with a National Security Letter.

    With their ill-conceived, poorly planned and poorly executed lawsuit, the EFF will permanently establish that the President and the Executive Branch is above the law and can violate the Bill of Rights at their whim, and that citizens have no redress. Thanks a lot, EFF!

  52. so what now by tehwebguy · · Score: 1

    what happens now, does it just go away? has this been getting news coverage or anything? i don't watch tv so i don't even know.

    --
    -- lol pwned
  53. Insightful? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He negates his own argument!

    "THERE IS NO EVIDENCE"

    But by his own words, "Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence...."

    How is a self-contradictory, inconsistent and illogical statement modded insightful?!

  54. Already happened by HangingChad · · Score: 2
    Specifically, I'd like whatever authority that the administration *imagines* gives them the power to do warantless wiretaps specifically removed.

    Those laws were passed in the wake of Watergate, but the White House acts like the law doesn't apply to them. So what good would it do to pass more laws the administration feels free to ignore?

    I say we take some of that massive intelligence apparatus and turn it on the Federalist Society. They're a bigger threat to our country than Al-Qaida. The terrorists might be able to do some damage to an airport or chemical plant, but the neo-cons are undermining our freedom, our government and the very foundation of this nation.

    It's time for those in law enforcement, the military and the Justice Department to start remembering that they took an oath to protect and preserve the Constitution, not the Republican party. The people threatening a building can't undermine the Constitution, it takes Dick Cheney to do that. They don't seem very worried about this fall, perhaps they feel they have the elections rigged well enough they can't lose.

    And after all these bozos are in jail I say we take a paddy wagon down K Street and round up every one of those sonsabitches.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:Already happened by jamstar7 · · Score: 1
      I say we take some of that massive intelligence apparatus and turn it on the Federalist Society. They're a bigger threat to our country than Al-Qaida. The terrorists might be able to do some damage to an airport or chemical plant, but the neo-cons are undermining our freedom, our government and the very foundation of this nation.

      It's time for those in law enforcement, the military and the Justice Department to start remembering that they took an oath to protect and preserve the Constitution, not the Republican party. The people threatening a building can't undermine the Constitution, it takes Dick Cheney to do that. They don't seem very worried about this fall, perhaps they feel they have the elections rigged well enough they can't lose.

      And after all these bozos are in jail I say we take a paddy wagon down K Street and round up every one of those sonsabitches.

      I agree.

      Save me a spot in the chow line at Gitmo, willya?

      --
      Understanding the scope of the problem is the first step on the path to true panic.
    2. Re:Already happened by HangingChad · · Score: 1
      Save me a spot in the chow line at Gitmo, willya?

      You bet. I got dibs on the top bunk.

      --
      That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  55. Re:EFF Loss = New Precedents against our Civil Rig by Bogtha · · Score: 3, Informative

    In this case, the EFF has given the government an opportunity to use a new legal theory, that they are immune from lawsuits to prevent illegal violations of the Fourth Amendment (i.e. illegal search and seizure) merely by invoking Executive Privilege with a National Security Letter.

    This is by no means a new legal theory. The State Secrets Privilege was first recognised by a judge in United States v. Reynolds, 1953 , and he drew on existing English case law to make that judgement. The precedent was set over fifty years ago, it's hardly being set by the EFF.

    --
    Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
  56. WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I start reading these comments and I think I'm on the DU website or the Daily KOS. Seriously people, you need to put away your tin hats.

  57. Re:EFF Loss = New Precedents against our Civil Rig by tepples · · Score: 1

    When EFF loses, judges tend to expand the scope of fifty-year-old precedents.

  58. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by Lokni · · Score: 1

    Ok, so lets not think about the previous 30 years, lets look at the last 3 years. Lets focus on Iraq. Iraqis now have less access to electricity, clean water, and natural gas. The price of gasoline there is more than what we pay here before taxes. Whole cities have been destroyed. Over 100,000 people have died. Do you really believe they were all terrorists? Prior to the United States invading, they had electricity 24 hours a day in most cities, running water,and gas pipelines for providing gas for heating and cooking. Food was easy to get. Yes, there were problems, but generally it was a better society than it is now, you just had to keep your mouth shut and toe the party line. So how would you feel if a foreign country invaded your country and took away every creature comfort you had, and then killed your parents and your sister? Hmmm... lets see here... join a terrorist group. Now we are threatining Iran, which is an elected democracy in every sense of the word (unlike Iraq's "democracy) and is surprisingly pro-west, with dropping nuclear bombs on them. Yes, the world is a lot less safer because of George Bush. Specifically it is a lot less safer for Americans and for America.

  59. Re:EFF Loss = New Precedents against our Civil Rig by Tim+C · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, seems to me that they have two choices.

    Either they go ahead with the prosecution and risk creating this precedent that you fear. Or, they do not, and the government gets away with it.

    Either way, with no consequences to their actions, the government is (or might as well be) above the law. At least with the EFF trying to prosecute, they

    a) have a chance of doing something about it
    b) bring it to people's attention
    c) in the event of losing, sow the seed in people's minds that they *must* have been up to something in order to quash the case like that

    Incidentally, you also mustn't forget that precedent is a guide, not an iron clad rule. Judges are free to rule differently; precedent just gives them something to use as guidance, and to point at in the event of their ruling being questioned.

  60. Time for participation by Infonaut · · Score: 1

    Me thinks it time for a bloody revolution again!

    We have a good system. What it requires is citizen participation. Yes, corporations have money. Yes, politicians are corrupt. But in the last presidential election, only 67% of eligible voters (and that's the most since 1968) turned out. That 2/3 of the electorate voted in Bush despite all the evidence that had accumulated since his election in 2000.

    A representative system only works if the people are engaged. The problem is, the people don't want to be engaged. They don't want a smart leader. They don't want to know what's going on in the world. They enjoy watching TV infotainment. They elected the man they felt would be the most fun to take a to a barbeque. Now people are coming out of the woodwork saying they are surprised and dismayed by the actions of the Bush Administration, even though they were willfullly ignorant of his autocratic tendencies in the first four years of his presidency.

    We have to point the finger of blame at ourselves, or we're no better than the politicians we elect. Excuses about media bias, corporate power, and so on are ultimately just mechanisms for us as voters (or in many cases, non-voters) to pawn off responsibility on someone else. If we want to fix the system, we need to convince other voters that protection of the balance of powers is of paramount importance, and the rule of law should be more than just a phrase we use when we're invading other countries. We need to do some hard work here at home.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  61. Secrets by Tony · · Score: 1

    . . .what "secrets" does the State actually have...

    If I told you, they wouldn't be secrets, now, would they?

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  62. I *just* finished watching Star Wars Episode III by peter+Payne · · Score: 0

    This is kind of bizarre. Like, 30 minutes ago the Emperor was reorganizing the Republic into the Empire "for a safe and secure society"...

    The poster who said "you get what you vote for" was dead on too. I mean, "we" (as in, stupid Americans, including stupid people from Florida) actually chose this???

    --
    You've got a friend in Japan: http://www.jlist.com
  63. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by ergo98 · · Score: 1

    Iraqis now have less access to electricity, clean water, and natural gas. The price of gasoline there is more than what we pay here before taxes. Whole cities have been destroyed. Over 100,000 people have died. Do you really believe they were all terrorists?

    Few would disagree that the Iraq war was a huge mistake. Nonetheless, interesting that you pin everything on the US. The US has spent billions upon billions upon billions trying to rebuild Iraq, but elements that want Iraq to be a cesspool keep, you know, blowing it and lots of people up. Yet the only villain you see is the US. Funny.

    So how would you feel if a foreign country invaded your country and took away every creature comfort you had, and then killed your parents and your sister? Hmmm... lets see here... join a terrorist group.

    Yeah, and go and blow up every burgeoning creature comfort of your country, and kill thousands of your countrymen. Yeah, that's a pretty logical progression.

    The "funny" thing is that most insurgents in Iraq aren't Iraqis (you know, those disaffected people who you think the US got up in arms). They're henchmen with a long running desire to shame the US, hoping it will stay back enough that they can take over Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, etc.

    Now we are threatining Iran, which is an elected democracy in every sense of the word (unlike Iraq's "democracy) and is surprisingly pro-west, with dropping nuclear bombs on them. Yes, the world is a lot less safer because of George Bush. Specifically it is a lot less safer for Americans and for America.

    Ha ha ha. Talk about blinders. The Iran whose leadership has openly and formally called for the annihilation of Israel. Yeah, can't see why Iran getting nukes would be a problem... The Iran that is being continually sanctioned by the UN (as always, the people with blinders can only see George W. and the US. While the US has the means, it's hardly the US that is behind censuring Iran).

    Personally I think the US should detach and let Iran to chart their course. Let the skeptics eat their cake when Iran inevitably nukes Israel, Israel retaliates, revolution kicks off in Saudi Arabia, and then spreads across the middle East. Damn that George W.!

  64. Re:EFF Loss = New Precedents against our Civil Rig by sakusha · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You obviously didn't read US v. Reynolds. The plaintiffs were seeking federal data to support their CIVIL lawsuit. The case established the Government's right to invoke Executive Privilege to stop disclosure in a tort.

    The EFF case is entirely different. The government claims that Executive Privilege is a higher power than the 4th Amendment in the Bill of Rights. And the EFF, in the process of losing their lawsuit, will permanently erode the 4th Amendment, and place the Executive Branch beyond the reach of the courts.

  65. Brilliant post by Tony · · Score: 1

    There is no such thing as a just world.

    There is no just world right now. But, if we fight for it, if we struggle for it, we might be able to make it just, make it fair, make it right. We are creatures of creation-- we life to create more than we live to destroy. If that weren't the truth, we wouldn't have civilisation, or buildings, or Apple ][ computers, or cans of soda.

    We live to create, even more than we live to destroy. If this weren't true, there would be no "weapons of mass destruction," because we would have used them all. The Beatles wouldn't have given us great music. Jimi Hendrix destroyed himself, but left behind an astounding creative legacy.

    We can make this world just, if we want. But it takes all of us, not just one or two.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  66. But if they win . . . by moultano · · Score: 1

    The EFF will get publicity an order of magnitude greater than they currently have. Then maybe will see a lot of people saying, "What else does this group that just saved my ass stand for?"

  67. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Why put our citizens and troops at risk to protect a region that only wants a blood bath? Maybe we can keep them from annihilating one another, but we are only poking hornet's nests here. People are being born with only one goal in mind: revenge. It's easy to make the USA the target, so that's what they continue to do. We are only there to keep friendly powers (or even ourselves) in control of oil. That is all.

    I wouldn't care if the whole place was a glass parking lot, if that's how they choose it in the name of their "god", so be it.

  68. Principles of freedom by Tony · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Quite a few people believe it is our duty to support our President, even if he's a lying, cheating, murdering, egg-sucking, goose-fucking prick (and he is, too). Many even think that "freedom of speech" goes too far, and that the government should approve news stories (it seems it is these days). These same people have perverted the meaning of patriotism.

    Patriotism is standing up for liberty. Patriotism is battling against tyranny, even if that tyranny is home-grown. Patriotism is putting the rights of the people before the rights of the government, and before the rights of corporations.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:Principles of freedom by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Quite a few people believe it is our duty to support our President, even if he's a lying, cheating, murdering, egg-sucking, goose-fucking prick (and he is, too).

      Care to take a guess as to how many of those people had the same protective attitude towards Clinton as they do to Bush? These people check for party affiliation before they decide if their outrage is for or against the person/issue in question. These people change positions so fast it would snap the spine of a normal man, and they had the nerve to attack Kerry for being a flip flopper.

      The best example of this is right here on Slashdot, in the form of Pudge's journal. You can usually go there any day of the week, calling non-conservatives liars left and right, but if a Republican is involved, he "doesn't see what the big deal is". The best part is when he flip-flips between one entry and the next. Like when he complained about how homosexuals were 'shoving gay marriage down everyone's throats', and then in his next entry he complains about his states requirements for homeschooling. So state interference in the right to marry is fine, but state interference is bad when it sets standards for homeschooling? You dumb fat fuck, Pudge.

      Or when he called Barbra Boxer a liar for saying that the Congressional vote to authorize force in Iraq was about WMD, "period", saying that the other part of the reason was Saddam's violations of U.N. resolutions. So lets say that half the reason for war was WMD's, and the other half was U.N. resolutions. However, most of those dealt with WMD's as well, making at least 95% of the reason to go to war...WMD's. This still wasn't enough to justify the use of the word "period" by Boxer, so she was still a liar. However, in his next entry, he talked about how Social Security running out of money really, really was a "crisis", despite that it wouldn't have problems for another 38 years, and even then could provide 75% benefits. So 95% doesn't justify "period", but something that's 38 years away and will still provide 3/4 benefits is a crisis?

      Pudge, leading the way in Republican hypocracy.

    2. Re:Principles of freedom by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Quite a few people believe it is our duty to support our President, even if he's a lying, cheating, murdering, egg-sucking, goose-fucking prick(*)

      (*) Some exceptions may apply

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  69. Re:EFF Loss = New Precedents against our Civil Rig by Bogtha · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Whether or not the executive branch believes it can ignore the Fourth Amendment is beside the point. The State Secrets Privilege is all about dismissing lawsuits before they even get to a point at which such a thing can be discovered.

    This can be used to cover up abuses of power, but that doesn't mean precedents can be set making the abuses of power legal. That doesn't make sense. To set such a precedent would mean that the lawsuit wasn't dismissed but went ahead anyway.

    --
    Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
  70. 1984 by treskel · · Score: 1

    in conclusion : You guys in the US are SO screwed. welcome big brother

    --
    Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana. Groucho Marx
  71. And hopefully... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After the trial the EFF will reveal those documents... All of them...

  72. Transcripts please... by foniksonik · · Score: 1

    I for one would love to see a sample of transcripts from the phone calls being intercepted... change the names to protect the naturally innocent until proven guilty but leave in the rest.

    Would be very interesting to see what sort of communication between US citizens/residents and foreign correspondent merits the attention of the US government.

    Is it merely the topics of conversation? "So did you watch Fox News on Satellite yesterday, when they talked about Moussaoui's case.... what did you think?"

    or would there have to be actionable statements in there somewhere? "So what are you doing over there to make the US case against Moussaoui look as weak and prejudice as possible?"

    or just a name... "Is cousin Zacarias out of the hospital yet... can't believe people in the US would throw rocks at him just cause he's got the name of that idiot, Moussaoui."

    --
    A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
  73. "Rarely used" State Secrets privilege... by swelke · · Score: 2, Informative

    The "rarely used" state secrets privilege may indeed have been rarely used once, but since Bush's actions started to become unpopular it's sure been in the news a lot. I can't think of a case involving the NSA lately that DIDN'T invoke the privilege.

    --
    Have you ever wondered How to Take Over
  74. Re:legal system beond repair... Time for a reinsta by LegendLength · · Score: 1

    as you say, the tree does look a tad dry.

    I agree. The democrat policy tree is very dry.

  75. Re:EFF Loss = New Precedents against our Civil Rig by hunterx11 · · Score: 1

    I would rather not have the executive above the law, but if they are, you're damn right I'd rather it be de jure than de facto. When the government's intentions are naked, fewer people will tolerate it.

    --
    English is easier said than done.
  76. Only if a Democrat did it! by Newer+Guy · · Score: 1
    With Congress firmly in the hands of the Republicans, this President can do whatever he wants! Let's also not forget that he's been stacking the Judicial branch with his cronies the past six years.

    This WILL be dismissed, without a single line about any of it in the 'liberal' (read: joke!) media.

    The fix is already in. Karl Rove (aka: Little Stalin) is already spinning the deceit. Jst watch....you'll see!
  77. Re:EFF Loss = New Precedents against our Civil Rig by krotkruton · · Score: 1

    Either way, with no consequences to their actions...

    Except for the 'possible' Bush impeachment hearings that a few states and quite a few cities and counties are trying to bring about. (This isn't to say that I don't completely agree with everything that you said, just wanted to point out that the EFF is no longer the 'only' one doing anything about the current administration)

  78. Absence of evidence by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 5, Informative

    >all this case is about is absence of evidence as THERE IS NO EVIDENCE for what you're implying.

    We have Mark Klein's written statement about tapping fiber at ATT facilities.

    > THERE IS NO EVIDENCE

    We have Russell Tice's testimony before the House Government Reform Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats and International Relations

    > THERE IS NO EVIDENCE

    Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez has defended the program

    > THERE IS NO EVIDENCE

    President Bush says he signed the order.

    > THERE IS NO EVIDENCE

    Could you try using boldface? Somehow the all-caps hasn't been enough to convince me.

  79. Re:legal system beond repair... Time for a reinsta by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    >Go forth unto the internet and find EXTREME cases of governmental violations of each part of the constitution and the bill of rights.

    Wouldn't you say the Third Amendment is holding up pretty well?

  80. Re:legal system beond repair... Time for a reinsta by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    Speaking as someone who loves my country, I'm going to work awfully hard to fix things peacefully. Look at the history of our previous civil war.

  81. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Few would disagree that the Iraq war was a huge mistake. Nonetheless, interesting that you pin everything on the US. The US has spent billions upon billions upon billions trying to rebuild Iraq, but elements that want Iraq to be a cesspool keep, you know, blowing it and lots of people up. Yet the only villain you see is the US. Funny."

    What's funny is that the ones suffering (the Iraqis) disagree with you. A vast majority wants the Americans out asap and there a plurality of people who not only sympathize with the "insurgents" but also support violent action against Americans. Of course, the reason is that those people are just too stupid to realize that Americans are angels from heaven and all raids, air and otherwise, on civilians is for their own good.

  82. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by ergo98 · · Score: 1

    What's funny is that the ones suffering (the Iraqis) disagree with you. A vast majority wants the Americans out asap and there a plurality of people who not only sympathize with the "insurgents" but also support violent action against Americans.

    Wow. Why don't you call up some of those Iraqis and ask their real opinion, because you're here spreading absurd misinformation flippantly. Most Iraqis want a timetable for US withdrawl (AS DOES THE US! Who the hell wants to spend hundreds of billions, and thousands of lives, putting another country in order?), but very, very few want the US to hop on a plane and fly out. They aren't crazy.

    Of course, the reason is that those people are just too stupid to realize that Americans are angels from heaven and all raids, air and otherwise, on civilians is for their own good.

    Yes, that's what was implied. Good strawman.

    The sad truth is that 99% of the people running roughshod over the boards to piss on the US a) don't give a flying fuck about the Iraqis, or any downtrodden peoples. They just like a wonderful opportunity to piss on the US, or b) they're racist and want the US out simply because Arabs aren't worth the trouble. Usually a), but occasionally one sees b) as well.

  83. Why the executive believes it can do so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since many are wondering why the executive believes it can do this, here's the reason: The so-called Unitary Executive Theory. It basically assumes that since the executive branch is a single entity represented by the president, it cannot act illegaly since an entity cannot sue itself.
    If someone is interested in legal ideas around that concept, I will, by invoking Godwin, give the hint to search for a legal theoretician named Carl Schmitt who is basically the inventor of that train of thought.

    1. Re:Why the executive believes it can do so. by stinerman · · Score: 1

      The Unitary Executive Theory isn't totally bull. I can sympathesize with some of their arguments. For instance, the President is the Commander-in-Chief of the military, so it is his job to execute any war that congress declares. Congress cannot pass a law that says "attack Basra with these weapons, using this platoon, etc." On the same token, some of its ideas are totally out of whack.

      The constitution is rather vague about the powers of congress regarding executive oversight. I'd say that under UET, congress can still simply not fund certain projects that they don't agree with. That'd be the major way congress could still do reasonable oversight. If the president reallocates funds without the approval of congress, that would certainly be grounds for impeachment.

  84. 911 Truth Movement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The genesis of the new cladestine governement began on 9/11/2001 with the horrific terrorist events that occured that fateful day. Summarily the US Congress gave the president carte blanche to basically use whatever means necessary to bring the terrorists to justice and protect the American people from future attacks.

    Today there is a strong and growing 911 Truth movement trying to find answers to legitimate questions about the inconsistencies and omissions in the official NIST and 9/11 commisions reports. Our US government has been less then cooperative in providing images, videos, and audio tapes that could either confirm or deny their assertion that middle east terrorist without assistance were soley responsible for 9/11.

    Do your own research and see the pictures and videos for yourself.

    "Whenever the people are well-informed, they can be trusted with their own government. Whenever things get so far wrong as to attract their notice, they may be relied on to set them to rights." --Thomas Jefferson to Richard Price, 1789. ME 7:253

  85. Re:legal system beond repair... Time for a reinsta by Triv · · Score: 0

    Amendment II
    A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

    Show me where in that there amendment it says anything about the purpose of the populace having guns being to overthrow the government if things start getting dicey. The amendment was drafted to keep us safe from foreign influence, not from the bozos in Washington.

    Yes it is a constitutional right to bear arms, but that interpretation includes an assumption or two not included in the original draft.

  86. Re:legal system beond repair... Time for a reinsta by Qzukk · · Score: 1

    Look up Bush's reactions to the Minutemen, a group which fits every definition of a well regulated (and armed) Militia. It's clear that he has no love at all for the second amendment, even when it's being used in the way you claim it's supposed to be used for.

    --
    If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  87. Re:legal system beond repair... Time for a reinsta by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

    Just because the text itself doesn't say it explicitly, doesn't mean that's not the reason Jefferson et. al. put it in. Once you read all the other stuff they wrote, it's obvious that this is how they intended it to be interpreted. Remember, they were revolutionaries themselves -- they were only re-affirming our right to do exactly the same thing they did!

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  88. 3. The elephant is on fire? by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Just a guess

    --
    My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
  89. Re:legal system beond repair... Time for a reinsta by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

    Well, obviously that's the best-case scenario... I'm just not as confident as you are that it's possible.

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  90. Idiotic by physicsphairy · · Score: 1
    That means previous court rulings on laws are considered the correct interpretation of laws, or, in this case, can effectively establish laws. Even constitutional ones.

    Wow, you really don't understand the point of a constitution, do you? What point is there in having some special set of fundamental laws if they can be reinterpreted?

    That makes them absolutely no different from a regular old federal law. The only distinction is that instead of having a general consensus of congress to establish the law now we are talking about having a general consensus of judges.

    I think you ought to read the ratification clause of the constitution. It is designed to make changing constitutional law extremely difficult and contingent on supermajorities, not simply majority consensus. I would take it to be pretty freaking obvious that an agreement between 5 guys on SCOTUS was not meant to be given the same legal significance as a two-thirds ratification in each house of congress followed by a three-fourths ratification by the states themselves.

    1. Re:Idiotic by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Wow, you really don't understand the point of a constitution, do you? What point is there in having some special set of fundamental laws if they can't be interpreted at all?

      Words must have meaning. It is impossible to give effect to the Constitution at all without interpreting those words in respect to some specific situation and applying the meaning.

      I just happened to come across this excellent quote from 1936:
      The average citizen has a very wholesome respect for the Constitution of the United States. His respect does not usually come from any clear or accurate knowledge of the document itself, but grows out of the belief that the Constitution sanctions those policies which he approves and forbids those which seem to him dangerous or oppressive. His reaction to the Supreme Court is similarly direct and forthright; its decisions are sound if he likes them and unsound if he does not.

      That quote is at least as true today as it was then.

      I have read a quite a few Supreme Court rulings and dissenting oppinions. Even where I strongly disagree with many of them, am hard pressed to cite many examples where I do not believe the judges were making an honest effort to accurately interpret and apply the Constitution.

      I have often people complain about specific Supreme Court rulings and accuse the court of ignoring, violating, or changing the Constitution. In such cases it almost inevitably turns of that the criticizer simply dislikes a specific result, and has no real knowledge or understanding of the actual constitutional issues involved. Such people simply assume that the Constitutional says and means what they want it to say and mean. And the sad and comical part is that they are generally oblivious to the fact that if the Constitution were to explicitly say and mean what they currently claim it says and means, that if the ruling were to go out the want they would like it to go, that the actual result of applying such logic and law evenly and consistantly would go horribly and disasterously against them in other cases.

      Often it is a case of "I like group X and I want them to have the right and freedom to do X" and "I dislike group Y and I do not want them to violate my rights and freedoms by doing X against me".

      The most important thing is that the law and rights must be consistant and symmetric. There must be a single consistant leagal basis for evaluating the constitutionality of X, and the meaning of the Constitution must be interpreted in a constistant manner in both cases. Someone demanding that one case must be resolved in one direction would be even more appalled and enraged by the other case being resolved in the same way.

      As for the constitutional power of the Supreme Court, yes in some ways it is enormous. As as Justice Robert H. Jackson once famously remarked, "We are not final because we are infallible, but we are infallible only because we are final.". The words of the Constutional must have meaning, and the Supreme Court is simply the final stop when there exists a dispute over what that meaning is.

      In other ways their power is the most limited. The Supreme Court has ZERO power to act independantly. Their sole power is to resolve conflicts between other parties that have been independantly brought to the court. They are extremely constrained that they cannot write law, they are limited to resolving the meaning in that immutable pre-existing text of law.

      I'd say the Founders did a pretty impressive job on Checks and Balances. Powers that are broad and unchallengable in one aspect are generally extremely limited in other ways. In some ways this Supreme Court power issues reminds me of the Jury Power. The Jury Power is limitless and final when they declare a defendant Not Guilty. No matter what the evidence is and what the law says, they have the de facto unchallengable power to decide Not Guilty and deny the government the power to imprison the person in question. However the Jury Power i

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    2. Re:Idiotic by dougmc · · Score: 1
      Well put.

      I'd mod you up if I had points, but I do not, so I'll just have to do this post instead :)

    3. Re:Idiotic by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 1
      Well said, well said.

      I don't think the SCOTUS is quite as powerful as a jury. While SCOTUS has the power to interpret laws and even rule them unconsititutional, the legislature and the states have the power to author new laws, including new constitutional amendments. Roe v Wade might have made abortion bans illegal, it doesn't prevent a new amendment explicitly banning them.

      Of course, I expect that kind of legislated morality to work about as well as the temperance amendment did.

      The point behind case law (precendent) is that it means your judgement as a judge is not biased (or is only as biased as the precedent). Equal protection under the law.

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
  91. Than's for doing the work for us... by moofdaddy · · Score: 2, Informative

    A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State
    Uh, it's right there. being necessary to the security of a free state. The security of a free state is not only challenged from outside influences but by insider actions as well. If the framers we're only concerned with external states coming in and challenging our sovernty they would have said "being necessary to the security of a free state from foriegn nations" or something similiar. I

    --
    Be better in bed. Wikiafterdark!
  92. Treason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This administration is guilty of treason.

    They have done far more to harm this country than any terroist could hope for.

  93. Agreed and furthermore by einhverfr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The government's argument here is a very dangerous one. They seem to argue (in the actual filing) that national security is a greater interest than constitutionality-- i.e. that they can continue such a program indefinitely without judicial oversight simply because they can argue that national security information would be compromised in such a lawsuit.

    This is part of a larger pattern, unfortunately. In defending this program, AG Gonzalez has stated that the AUMF of 2001 allows such a program because, in its words, it allows the president to take action against all "states, persons, or organizations that he determines" were involved in the 2001 attacks. Such an interpretation would essentially mean the official end of the American republic and the rise of an imperial military dictatorship. At the risk of invoking Godwin's law, this is not fundamentally different to *how* the Nazis took power after the Reichstag was burned. Our system is designed to protect against this exact danger.

    The problem is not the spying per se. It is instead the way the program is run without adequate safeguards to the system of government of our democratic republic. I certainly hope that the court in this case does not give the Executive a free pass in this area. Allowing the State Secrets privilege to be invoked as a way to quash judicial oversight of such a program would be such a free pass.

    All most of us are asking is for judicial oversight.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  94. Re:EFF Loss = New Precedents against our Civil Rig by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    Whether or not the executive branch believes it can ignore the Fourth Amendment is beside the point. The State Secrets Privilege is all about dismissing lawsuits before they even get to a point at which such a thing can be discovered.

    But you have just hit on the real problem-- the case is fundamentally about the Executive failing to execute appropriate Constitutional safeguards, and due to those 11th Amendment (Sovereign Immunity), the action is being initially taken against those who have aided and abetted in this crime against our system of government. For the Executive to quash this suit via State Secrets would likely send a message that this principle is more important than the 4th Amendment.

    The issue at hand is whether State Secrets are more important than the underlying questions of Constitutional law. So, no, it is *not* beside the point. It *is* the point.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  95. Re:EFF Loss = New Precedents against our Civil Rig by einhverfr · · Score: 1


    Incidentally, you also mustn't forget that precedent is a guide, not an iron clad rule. Judges are free to rule differently; precedent just gives them something to use as guidance, and to point at in the event of their ruling being questioned.


    IANAL, but I think that vertical stare decisis is an iron clad rule. I.e. the appellate court is *not* free to rule in a way inconsistant with the Supreme Court, nor is the trial judge free to rule in a way inconsistant with the appellate court.

    I think that in most if not all circuits, apellate panel decisions can only be overturned by the appellate circuit sitting en banc or by the Supreme Court.

    Of course this doesn't prevent a judge from looking at a precident and ruling differnetly from it *if* he can make a case that there is no inconsistancy here (for example, if he can make a case that the previous precident doesn't apply because the cases are sufficiently different).

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  96. Re:EFF Loss = New Precedents against our Civil Rig by Bogtha · · Score: 1

    For the Executive to quash this suit via State Secrets would likely send a message that this principle is more important than the 4th Amendment.

    I agree. But there is a world of difference between "sending a message" and setting legal precedent. I was specifically replying to somebody claiming that the EFF would be setting bad legal precedent with this case. I quote:

    With their ill-conceived, poorly planned and poorly executed lawsuit, the EFF will permanently establish that the President and the Executive Branch is above the law and can violate the Bill of Rights at their whim, and that citizens have no redress. Thanks a lot, EFF!

    I'm not arguing that the power to quash this lawsuit is right for the executive branch to have, I'm saying that this isn't setting precedent. The State Secrets Privilege is already well established.

    --
    Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
  97. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by pembo13 · · Score: 1

    Very true. If one were to apply the current definition of terrorism to events in the past, I suspect many would consider the US government of past to be a terrorist organisation.

    --
    "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
  98. Re:EFF Loss = New Precedents against our Civil Rig by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    IANAL....

    I agree. But there is a world of difference between "sending a message" and setting legal precedent.

    Correct, though I often wonder how fine the line really is (at least in the short term) when court cases are involved. In the long term, however, it is clear that there is a substantial difference between the two.

    I was specifically replying to somebody claiming that the EFF would be setting bad legal precedent with this case.

    You are correct. The EFF can't set precident. Only a judge can do that. There are of course readers who will likely suggest that this is a fine line, but it is not. Judges write opinions for a reason and the opinion substantially informs the precident. Thus if the EFF or another party launches a similar suit against, say, Verizon, then they may be able to get around the objection of the first precident. THis is one reason why precidents are as narrow as possible.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  99. LOL by No+Such+Agency · · Score: 2, Funny

    And I thought I might have the best username-related gag for this one...

    --
    Freedom: "I won't!"
  100. Re:legal system beond repair... Time for a reinsta by Alsee · · Score: 1

    Show me where in that there amendment it says anything about the purpose of the populace having guns being to overthrow the government

    Their other writings make that general mindset pertty clear. Hell, just look at the Declaration of Independance.

    On the other hand I don't think the Founding Fathers exactly anticipated or intended shoulder launched tac-nukes and the various other developments in arms, so I don't think that clause should be accepted as denying any regulations or limitations on arms at all.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  101. well-regulated militia by ExMember · · Score: 1
    The militia of the United States consists of all able-bodied males at least 17 years of age and, except as provided in section 313 of title 32 (ie the Armed Services), under 45 years of age who are, or who have made a declaration of intention to become, citizens of the United States and of female citizens of the United States who are members of the National Guard. - U.S. Code : Title 10 : Section 311(a)

    The miltia is (and always has been) that portion of the population able (and hence expected) to take up arms and defend their country.

    "Whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it." -- Declaration of Independence
    "America is at that awkward stage. It's too late to work within the system, but too early to shoot the bastards." -- Claire Wolfe 101 Things to Do 'Til the Revolution
  102. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
    In reality your approach could have led to extreme hardline overthrows of all of the Middle East, Turkey, Pakistan, extreme military hostilities with India, more violent wars between the secular Iraq and her neighbours, endless assaults on Israel, and so on.
    Hey stupid, you don't know that! Your argument applies to you too:
    ...it's completely baseless to boot -- you have no idea how the world would have turned out under alternate scenarios...
    If you're going to disagree with me (and call me "defeatist" and "ridiculous" to boot), at least don't contradict yourself!

    Besides, doesn't Bush claim to be Christian? He must be lying, because if he were actually Christian he'd be "turning the other cheek" like Jesus preached about!
    Given that most Westerner's live a life that would earn them a stoning to death, I think it's a bit ridiculous to think that letting them in peace would make them good neighbours.
    Bullshit. Bin Laden is not stupid; he just has a different ideology. From his perspective he's fighting for freedom from foreign control, similar to how the Americans fought against the British during the American Revolution and War of 1812. The only difference is his choice of tactics, and though I certainly don't condone them I can see why he picked them -- George Washington was much less outgunned in 1776. And make no mistake: if it were happening today, the British would be calling Washington a "terrorist" too.

    Similarly, other Muslim leaders aren't stupid either. Just as we have no real hope of changing their ideology and way of life by force, they have no real hope of changing ours. And our military is certainly capable of defending us, whether Iran or Pakistan have nukes or not. Therefore, if they didn't see us as a threat (and we are a threat, with Bush's warmongering ass in thw White House) they wouldn't feel the need to attack us.

    Finally, it is not our job to police the world! If the Muslims don't have the right to impose their ideology on us, how can we possibly claim that right over them?! I say if they want to let themselves be overthrown by hardline extremists, then that's their problem, not ours.

    Look, I'm not an isolationist. In cases where we justly should intervene, I don't have a problem with that. However, this is not such a situation because we are in the wrong. We were in the wrong when we helped Bin Laden 20 years ago, we were wrong when we helped Saddam Hussein come to power, and we were wrong to invade Iraq this time, too. (We weren't wrong all the time, though -- stopping Saddam's invasion of Kuwait was justified.)
    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  103. Have you been asleep for the past 20 years? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    No law supercedes the Constitution, which guarantees every citizen's right to privacy and the right to a due process warrant for search and seizure. It doesn't say "unless the President thinks it's a national security matter". The national security clause would have to be in the Constitution to be able to override this kind of suspension of Civil Rights.

    Where have you been for the last 20 years? The entire Bill of Rights has been gutted - every single element in it, except for the 3rd Amendment (AFAIK). The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that the provisions in the Bill of Rights are not absolute, but can be outweighed by what the government "needs" to do. For example, if you're searched at an airport and found to be carrying $4000 in cash, it very probably will be seized and confiscated in apparent violation of the 4th Amendment.

    The "War On Drugs" was the excuse for most government violations of the Constitution in the last 20 years, but there is a longer history here.

  104. Liberalism and Conservatism by Veteran · · Score: 1

    I see a very common mistake occurring in these posts: the mistaken idea that because liberals and conservatives have different views on things that one side is correct and the other side is wrong. Both conservatives and liberals have this view; that the other side if filled with gullible idiots who will destroy the country if given the chance. Because slashdot is predominately a site for young people, the liberal viewpoint is the main one expressed here.

    If I hold up a coin between us and say "This coin is 'heads'" and you look at it and say "No, you're wrong the coin is tails" NEITHER one of us has incorrectly described what he sees. Arguments between the conservative viewpoint and the liberal viewpoint are just as pointless as arguing over whether the coin is heads or tails - both sides are right and wrong equally - neither is "seeing things" or delusional. Both sides have massive blind spots in back of them - neither sees that the people at the head of "their" party are up to no good - although that is obvious to those with the opposite viewpoint.

    Are the liberals correct that the people at the head of the Republican party are Rich - would be kings - who wish to turn the U.S. into a second coming of Rome? Yes - that is not a delusional viewpoint.

    Are the conservatives correct that the people at the head of the Democratic party are Rich malignant narcissists who will - given the chance - destroy everything the founding fathers worked to create by turning the United States into a second coming of the Soviet Union? Yes - that is not a delusional viewpoint.

    Since most people here at Slashdot have the liberal perspective it is not necessary to show you that Liberals have correctly seen what the leaders of the Republican Party are about.

    What is necessary is to show you that the conservative view of the Democratic leadership is just as accurate, and that conservatives are no more delusional than you are.

    Did you know that John Kerry is a Communist Traitor? That is not conservative rhetoric or anybody's opinion - it is the official position of the Communist Government of Vietnam who in 1983 while Kerry was Lt. Governor of Massachusetts awarded him as a "Hero of Communist Victory" for his actions on their behalf during the Vietnam War. You won't be able to find confirmation of that fact on the Internet - except at some conservative sites which you naturally won't believe - but if you scan the newspaper archives from 1983 you will find that the story is absolutely true.

    The conservatives are no more deluded than you are: they simply see things which are actually there that you are missing.

    The problem is not Liberal vs Conservative the problem is 'the Republicans and the Democrats' VS all the rest of us. The antidote for the Imperialistic Rich is not the Narcissistic Rich.

  105. Re:legal system beond repair... Time for a reinsta by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Amendment II
    A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

    Show me where in that there amendment it says anything about the purpose of the populace having guns being to overthrow the government if things start getting dicey.


    It is in the preamble: "...in order to prevent misconstruction or abuse of [the Government's] powers..."

  106. Re:The only thing putting national security at ris by ergo98 · · Score: 1

    Bullshit. Bin Laden is not stupid; he just has a different ideology. From his perspective he's fighting for freedom from foreign control, similar to how the Americans fought against the British during the American Revolution and War of 1812.

    Right. So that's why this Saudi went in and was a major participant of the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan. That's why he was attacking the US back in the early 90s, long before the current adventures. That's why his troops are trying for the overthrow of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan (to kick out governments he doesn't like, to replace them with hardliners).

    Yeah, he just wants to fight the foreigners, just like the war of 1812!

    My god -- do you really believe this crap? You're spewing moral equivalism, imagining that he must be just like "us", only with different motives. That's like saying Jeffrey Dahmer was just like other guys, only he liked human flesh instead of chicken: If you really think it's all the same, then you need to rethink things.

  107. And the little kid in me says by spun · · Score: 1

    Stop touching me there! That's my danger zone!

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  108. What the fuck is wrong with you people? by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

    "Once it starts to unravel, we're going to find out more about the vast conspiracy that is the neo-con movement, from rigging the ballot to treason to war profiteering and on and on. It will shake the republic to its very roots. But once we excise them from the body politic and expunge their backers (the ultra-wealthy who are behind it all), we'll be a much stronger country."

    You modded THAT garbage up.

    What the fuck? A rant about one conspiracy theory after another, a rant about "excising" people from the politicl process EVEN THOUGH IT'S THEIR POLITICAL PROCESS TOO, and a blind assertion get +5?

    You should all be ahsamed of how you've let slashtdot fall. Instead of REAL insight we get kooks who have already decided what the rpoblem is, how to deal with it, who is at fault, who's rights to take away, and who to blame.

    THAT is the problem with American politics. Reason is discarded in favor of whomever screams the loudest.

    And you idiots fell for it.

    --
    "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
  109. Lots of stuff happens daily... by milette · · Score: 1

    The Government already has the "Patriot Act" which opened the pandora's box to lies, deceit and whatever crimes the government decides to perpetrate in the name of "your protection" AKA "national security".

    Even posting here could get you declared as an 'enemy combattant' -- or certainly someone worth spying on. Just watch your step or you may be hussled off to Cuba so fast you'll think you're on the Concorde.

    And don't worry about any pesky lawyers -- you won't have access to one for many years to come. In fact, you'll be lucky to see ANYONE you know for many years to come.

    Of course, it's all for your convenience and safety. ;)

    1. Re:Lots of stuff happens daily... by einhverfr · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately the USAPATRIOT Act was not as much of a radical departure from trends in law enforcement powers as many would like to think. The trend started at least as far back as the Banking Secrecy Act of the 1970's which provided similar financial provisions against organized crime, and even the library and pharmaceutical provisions of the USAPATRIOT Act I and II are only further developments on this idea. In a very prescient dissent from a case where the majority found the BSA constitutional, William O Douglass, wrote (1974):

      One's reading habits furnish telltale clues to those who are bent on bending us to one point of view. What one buys at the hardware and retail stores may furnish clues to potential uses of wires, soap powders, and the like used by criminals. A mandatory recording of all telephone conversations would be better than the recording of checks under the Bank Secrecy Act, if Big Brother is to have his way. The records of checks - now available to the investigators - are highly useful. In a sense a person is defined by the checks he writes. By examining them the agents get to know his doctors, lawyers, creditors, political allies, social connections, religious affiliation, educational interests, the papers and magazines he reads, and so on ad infinitum. These are all tied to one's social security number; and now that we have the data banks, these other items will enrich that storehouse and make it possible for a bureaucrat - by pushing one button - to get in an instant the names of the 190 million Americans who are subversives or potential and likely candidates.


      You can read the entire opinion at http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?c ourt=US&vol=416&invol=21
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      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP