Reporter Phone Records Being Used to Find Leaks
jackbird writes "Brian Ross, Chief Investigative Correspondent for ABC news says a confidential source informed him that reporter's phone records are being used by the administration to track down leaks. Apparently reporters for the New York Times, ABC News, and the Washington Post are being scrutinized. The fact that ABC News journalists are even seriously wondering about whether the warning is connected to the NSA's domestic surveillance activities indicates just how anxious many people in Washington have become."
If you're talking to government officials, and there are leaks that potentially endanger lives of agents, and collaterally other agents in the field, you're going to get more than a sideways look from the governmet, as well you should.
If you are a reporter, and you're exchanging calls with anyone on the "list" suspected of leaks why shouldn't the government take a peek. As reported in the article, there is no evidence the government is tapping or listening in to the calls, merely looking at who's talking to whom.
This smacks of journalists pompously elevating their self-importance to levels higher than they deserve. There are many examples of inappropriate treatment of journalists. This doesn't feel like one of them.
(shudder, I suspect I'm going to get hammered on this one)
Send all these freedom-hating reporters who seek the so-called "truth" to Gitmo!
Trolling is a art,
The world is controlled by old men: ayatollahs, mullahs and rabbis, pedophile priests, warlike presidents, and spooky controllers tottering along the corridors of power held up by their mental zimmer frames. If you want to get up the ladder there is always a committee of stuffy bankers or fundamentalists up ahead of you ready to make sure you'll not be offering any contradictory ideas. The world of old men is a curse upon us. It is so stale and violent and dogmatic; elitism and hate are old-fashioned.
Without reading the article, it's not obvious at first glance which country the summary's referring to...
Investigative techniques being used to investigate?
Why is this even a story, save for the fact that it's yet another leak?
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
Those who have nothing to hide have nothing to fear.
Of course, having an inside contact at the government is something to hide.
Hmmm, need to update that a little bit. "Those who have no criticism of the government have nothing to fear."
You mean how Bush outed Plame and thus caused the undercover company that watched Iran's nukes to fold? That kind of leak?
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable" - JFK
I thought the u.s. government was only supposed to be looking at calls to/from al-queda persons. At least that is what they keep repeating in defending their nsa spying on u.s. citizens fiasco. I guess it's just another lie.
"Brian Ross, Chief Investigative Correspondent for ABC news says a confidential source informed him that reporter's phone records are being used by the administration to track down leaks."
The administration would have better luck tapping the plumbers of America.
---
The "are you a script" word for today is victims.
Is there any oversight of this program whatsoever?
Obliteracy: Words with explosions
[searing sarcasm]
If leakers are allowed to reveal to reporters how incompetent, corrupt, and dishonest our leaders are, the terrorists have won.
[/searing sarcasm]
If it wasn't for leaks, out government would have been capturd by corruption many more times than it has. Remember deepthroat? He helped get rid of the Nixon administration, which was responsible for one of the most embarrasing scandals of all time.
This is no different; leakers leak based on moral obligations to their people.
Viable Slashdot alternatives: https://pipedot.org/ and http://soylentnews.org/
I'm calling BS - name one story broken by any media organization that precipitated a terrorist attack.
Plain and simple, this is a way for the powers-that-be to clamp down on news that makes them look bad.
'ARRGH! Pirate Designers of the Internet, we be!'
Looks like the commies are going to get owned.
Every time the New York Times or the Washington Post leaks about some secret program that is used in the war on terror, therefor invalidating it, I wonder to myself if they will take responsibility for the next terrorist attack.
God Forbid the terrorists be blamed for the attacks. Much better to use the fear of terrorism to fight against whatever political beliefs you disagree with, right?
Man, they've sure taught you well haven't they...
Looks like the commies are going to get owned.
Yeah, because media that's critical of the government is a cornerstone of communist regimes.
Every time a Marine babykiller is wasted in Iraq, Allah's cock goes just a little deeper up Jesus' ass.
Trolling is a art,
Dead wrong. The reason we have journalistst and freedom of the press is because we can't trust the government. 99% of the time, the leak is someone who can't take whistleblower status but wants to tell the public about wrongdoing in the government. Should gool ol' dubya have been allowed to keep the leak about the secret CIA prisons from escaping? Absolutely not. But it's okay for him to out an active CIA agent, Mrs. Plame?
Read the fucking constitution and look up some judicial records before you open your big, dumb mouth please. The law is very specific about protecting journalistic sources, there is supposed to be no way around it.
Ex nihilo nihil fit.
Leaking classified information is a crime. Obviously, the FBI is going to investigate a (potentially criminal) leak of classified inforomation, because it is part of the FBI counter-intelligence and law enforcement missions to do so. It is standard police procedure in a criminal investigation to subpoena or to get a search warrant for telephone records. Nothing new or sensational to see here, move along.
Every time America angers the Middle East with its hypocrisy by torturing terror suspects or by denying them human rights at Gitmo, I wonder if the Bush administration will take responsibility for the next attack they provoked.
Bonsai Kitten: TNG
That was the first line of the first college lecture I ever had. Although the absolute veracity of the statement is likely untrue, the blunt assertion was given to make one point: Give up your rights, have more "security".
The point is this: leaks, crime, terrorism, etc. are a REQUIRED side effect of freedom. Americans will never get that, and will be happy to toss liberty away in order to prevent nebulous bad things from happening.
The United States is truly starting to resemble the old Soviet Union in so many ways. The Soviets had official state media; we have totally co-opted media outlets. The Soviets had strong controls on copy machines; we have DRM'd/watermarked copy machines (and output devices). The Soviets had one party rule; we have outright one party rule right now, which stemmed from effective one-party rule of the past (seems that the Democratic-Republican party has split, and one side came out on top). The Soviets had no expectation of privacy... and soon, neither will we.
The big difference is that the Soviets used an iron fist, as opposed to the USA's velvet glove, to smother freedom. The net result is the same.
There is not reply to this other than 'we don't think the president would do this'
Well... "conservatives"... this wasn't the point of founding this country What about the next president, or the one after that... still trust them?
Other sources have told us that phone calls and contacts by reporters for ABC News, along with the New York Times and the Washington Post, are being examined as part of a widespread CIA leak investigation.
Come on. Brian Ross, big time investigative journalist for ABC News, didn't realize that this was an issue until now? Even before the revelations about the NSA it would have been prudent to avoid using the samephone to contact informants or have them contact you. Pay phones, throwaway cell phones, heck even courtesy phones in hotel lobbies -- I could see them using all sorts of phones to get in touch with people, so as not to leave a visible trail. After all, phone records are accessible legally by the cops, and they could certainly pull phone records for a reporter if they thought the reporter was involved in something nefarious, though I believe they require a warrant (IANAL).
And for those of you naive enough to believe that because all the NSA is getting is phone numbers, perhaps the phrase "reverse lookup" has not passed your ear recently, but nowadays you can even do it through Google. Privacy is tissue-paper compared to what it used to be. I suspect an unlisted number isn't even really unlisted anymore.
GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
"A senior federal law enforcement official tells ABC News the government is tracking the phone numbers we (Brian Ross and Richard Esposito) call in an effort to root out confidential sources."
That should make a chill go up your spine! So much for the 1st Amendment.
This has NOTHING to do with protecting undercover agents as someone put it. If it was, then why isn't Robert Novak behind bars! Why hasn't Robert Novak's phone records been confiscated!! He was the one that outed Valerie Plame-Wislon. Oh and the Scooter Libbey case clearly shows the Bush Whitehouse passed along her information so she can be exposed to the public. Thus why are you pretending that this is anything more than trying to prevent the people from finding out about illegal spying activities of the Bush Administration.
Nice job comrade!
Remember deepthroat?
Yes I do remember. Watergate had nothing to do with classified information/national security. It was about election-year dirty tricks which embarrassed the administration so they tried to cover it up.
This case is about national security. Don't confuse the two.
The part of you that's shuddering is your conscience, which is doing its best to protect you.
The only way Americans have to get important info from our government that officials don't want to release because it reveals their wrongdoing (eg. negligence, crimes or both) is from leaks to the press. We've got entirely too little government disclosure to the press, and press publication.
Where's the evidence for these leaks endangering lives of agents, or any other real security problem, that overbalances the security gained from publishing stories of inside government problems? The best-known one is the Plame leak, by the Cheney, Rove, Libby crew, to attack an ambassador whose investigation showed Bush was lying in the State of the Union about fake Niger uranium going to Iraq. We need more disclosure of how those officials leaked their attack to the press, not less. If more Bush administration people who knew Bush was determined to go to war in Iraq, even at the expense of stopping the Qaeda and bin Laden (where is bin Laden?), leaked the truth to the press, we might not be down thousands of killed Americans, tens of thousands of gravely wounded Americans, and even more killed and wounded Iraqis. Or facing the prospect of many times that amount of deaths, if the Iraq catastrophe even stays at the current unacceptable scale of killing.
--
make install -not war
We study history to prevent the same mistakes of the past
First they came for the Jews
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for the Communists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Communist.
Then they came for the trade unionists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for me
and there was no one left
to speak out for me.
Like, the fact that there's oil there, as well as people who aren't eating McDonalds or drinking Coke? Information like that tends to prove fatal to lots of our troops.
. . . we supposedly had no worries over calls being tracked inside the country? That it was only suspected terrorists. Apparently that was, no surprise, a lie.
Though leaking classified information is obviously somehting to be concerned about, this sounds more like someone's casting a wide net to try and catch a few fish. It's the kind of thing that's ripe for abuse, and smells like an unwarranted search and siezure (of data).
So, what will next week bring? All our phones are tapped? It seems every week or so things get worse . . .
"The Sage treasures Unity and measures all things by it" - Lao Tzu
Any how exactly are top secret, illegal activities supposed to be exposed? Whistle blowers are the only way.
some secret program that is used in the war on terror
Oh shut up. It's not like all these phone taps are going to save anyone's life. You want my phone records? I called pizzahut and ordered a pizza. How many thousands of my tax dollars were spent so that the government could find out I like pepperoni?
Maybe if the government focused their money on a working border control policy rather than admitting that they have no fucking clue who the terrorists are (if there are any) in the country and are instead simply spying on everyone in hopes that they get lucky, then Bush might have kept his 51% approval rating.
If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
nt
You are kidding, right? The NSA collecting call data (and maybe monitoring traffic) without a warrent is a violation of federal law. Seeing that this is domestic, how could it be putting our troops in danger?!?
Honestly, if you are worried about the troops and their safety, work to bring them home. The madman who was selected (not elected) has put more of them in harms way out of some sense of Dr. Evil-esque vision than any reporter asking the questions that need to be asked in a democracy.
wonder if they're reconsidering their uncritical coverage of the Bush agenda? maybe they're finally catching up to where most of us have been since 2 years before Bush was selected president the first time around, ie. that their agenda portends nothing good for the future of the American republic and human rights generally?
republican majority delenda est...
Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.
Over in Europe, another agency's hands have allegedly just been caught in a very similar kind of cookie jar indeed.
It is standard police procedure in a criminal investigation to subpoena or to get a search warrant for telephone records.
Somehow, I doubt the administration bothered with technicalities like "warrants".
+10000, Funny!
Er, and when the CIA has been using our tax dollars to violate international treaties and laws, as with the secret torture prisons, what then?
Does any agency just get blanket permission to do whatever the fuck it wants by calling what it does classified information?
The CIA needs to be held to a greater degree of oversight, but it isn't. Leaks are important to keep them from going hog wild. Who gives a flying fuck if we know that they used some CIA bullshit "predator missiles" in pakistan? You know that's not the real reason why the FBI is investigating. The FBI is trying to scare any would-be whistleblowers from leaking information that could severely damage (further) the reputation of the agency and/or the administration.
Ex nihilo nihil fit.
You're talking about the leak from the White House that outed a covert CIA agent endangering both her, her contacts, and possibly her husband, right?
"Mission Accomplished" -- George W. Bush May 1, 2003
The parent post is most certainly NOT a troll.
Get out while you can.
STOP . AMERICA . NOW
Leaking classified information is a crime. Obviously, the FBI is going to investigate a (potentially criminal) leak of classified inforomation, because it is part of the FBI counter-intelligence and law enforcement missions to do so.
And the president has clearly decreed that leaking information about the government listening to domestic phone calls and trolling through telephone Call Detail Records is illegal. In other words, illegal search and seizure is A OK but, disclosing such activities is a crime against the state?
It is standard police procedure in a criminal investigation to subpoena or to get a search warrant for telephone records.
Since the NSA is not a police organization I suppose that you excuse their total disregard for warrants, subpoenas and constitutional due process?
Call me unAmerican. Call me a traitor. Call me whatever you like but, I am still unwilling to give up the Constitution of the United States and the Bill of Rights. I'm sorry that you are so eager.
If these taps are important for national security, then GET A COURT order for them! This is not an issue of the media being sour pusses.. this is a matter of the country self-destructing in the name of protecting ourselves from supposed terrorists.
I mean, I'm sure that there are a lot of calls made to "reporters" at Fox News. But I'll bet $20 that we're not going to hear about any phone records of Fox News "reporters" being checked.
Makes you wonder, eh?That's why I put in the "Those who have no criticism of the government have nothing to fear."
If you're "reporting" a "leak" that hurts Bush and Co's political opponents
If you're "reporting" a "leak" that says Bush and Co are doing good
If you're reporting a leak that says Bush and Co are doing something that may be illegal
Boy, I never saw this one coming. The government using their phone number records to investigate things that aren't related to terrorists. I sure thought they were going to stick to protecting us from terrorists with this data.
I have no problem with the government obtaining a warrant to get this information. But that's not what they've done. What they've done is about as good as tapping phones. Anyone who sees it differently has WAY too much trust of the U.S. government.
And I know that they'll argue that these leaks somehow put us in danger of a terrorist attack. I mean, if the subject had been something as mundane as outting a CIA operative, then of course, they'd be sure to overlook it, particularly if the leak came out of the offices of the President and Vice President.
It amazes me that people aren't yelling and screaming about this and marching in front of the White House. People in this country have become too complacent and they're going to lose the freedoms that so many people have died to protect over the years. And when it comes to that, we'll have nobody to blame but ourselves.
We can blame Bush and his administration, but when it comes down to it, they're not to blame. Because we know what they're doing and we're not kicking their asses out on the street.
I mean, he only spied on ONE HOTEL ROOM.
How awfully nice to have the technology to spy on everyone in the country at once, and sufficiently rabid supporters to shout down anyone who questions the practice.
That's "Mr. Soulless Automaton" to you, Bub.
Who ever controls the present controls the past. - Orwell
If we don't know the past, it is like we were born yesterday. - Zinn
Who ever controls the past controls the future. - Orwell
1 voice in a sea of voices
Remember kids:
War is peace
Freedom is slavery
Ignorance is strength
Coding with assembly is like playing with Legos. Coding an application in assembly is like building a car with Legos.
There's no excuse or explantion otherwise - yes, I'm dogmatic about the Constitution. When we start restricting people's righs - for whatever reason - we reatrict ALL of our rights!
In other words - mod PARENT UP!
This seems like a non-story to me, timed to fan the flames of the NSA phone record debate.
If I was running some classified program and information was leaked to the press, you can bet I'd check my department's phone records to see if there were any calls placed to the reporters in question. Hell, if I was running a business and a competitor started turning up my trade secrets, the first place I'd look so espionage would be my phone bills and caller ID records to see if my guys had been in communication with them.
TFA only hints at the actual methodology (on purpose, no doubt, because readers will assume that it's part of some massive data-mining operation) but it's very likely that this was exactly what I just described: Government agencies looking for correlations in their own phone records between their employees and the journalists reporting the leaks.
Can you not understand that well-paid, highly-cleared NSA employees do not scuttle their careers without good reason? The people doing the leaking are being asked to do something really evil, and they are not happy about it.
They're also taking a good-sized risk of winding up in an unmarked jail cell, or grave.
They're good people, they are saying "this is out of control and the citizenry must not take it any more".
Posts like this are so mind boggling, it's hard to tell if it's just sarcasm/trolling, but my gut tells me you're actually serious.
Calling them traitors and claiming they are putting troops at danger is flat out intentional ignorance. Mainly, because none of this has anything to do with our troops in Iraq. So, while it makes a great sound bite to the folks too lazy to take a moment to use their own brains to come to a conclusion, it simply makes you look like an idiot to the rest of us who bother to figure things out for ourselves.
Your "traitors" are truly hero's who are literally putting their lives on the line for the real greater good of the country, exposing massive government corruption and widespread illegal activies of those in charge.
The true traitors are those folks in power supressing the truth about their own illegal activities.
Oh, but this is the "Permanent Republican Majority", right? AKA, the Thousand Year Right? Therefore there will never again be a non-Republican president, and therefore we can trust them all.
And I'm sure the fine and honorable Senator from Diebold will be pleased to provide any necessary oversight.
Selective enforcement of the law is one of the hallmarks of corruption.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
yeah, much better to bend over and take it up the ass like a nice little politically correct, weak minded sheep.
We have forsaken liberty and our right to privacy for security.
.
.
.
.
.
but now we need security from ourselves.
Surely if you are high enough up in the government that you want to leak information to the press without revealing your identity then you'll be smart enough to make sure that those calls don't appear on your employers phone bill.
Does that mean those on the Mexico/Texas boarder can blame George Bush to the increase in crime caused by illegals?
Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country.-- Hermann Goering
Whaddya mean the Dubya never said that?
Did they get a warrant? If so, then no problem.
But what a shame that we can't be certain they did get a warrant.
former Soviet Russia misses you too.
While I don't think anything you're suggesting has ever happened, we did find out from Al Qaeda records that they had never seriously considered using chemical & biological weapons in terrorist strikes until the American press detailed how easy they are to obtain and how devestating the effect would be.
Now, that wasn't classified information; but it does show, at least, that when the American media publishes information useful to terrorists, it doesn't go unnoticied.
"With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine. However, this is not necessarily a good idea...."
RFC 1925
I work for the US Government. I have a job to protect the American people from terrorists! The Constitution and your rights are meaningless! I have a job to do! I mean, if it were'nt for the Constitutoin of the United States there would be No AMerica - right?!? I have to protect the country! You are in my way!!!! If you're not surrenduring your rights; you're for them!!!! I'm a Gubbment oofficial!!! I hafve powber!!!
Dumb ass citizens!
Remember that slippery slope people have been talking about?
Well, we're on it and we're accelerating!
If "disco" means "I learn" in Latin, does "discothèque" mean "I learn technology"?
When did we as Americans become scared of everything that might happen? Those aren't the ideals this country was founded on. Liberty had a price, and it was in blood. It still does. So why should we mistakenly trade away our freedoms earned with blood in order to avoid future blood? This cost won't go away. When did most Americans become sheep afraid to speak out and protect what they care about? This is an obvious abuse of power that should be checked, and if the other branches of our government won't do their jobs, then it's our job as people to address it.
- Kal`Goblez
Well who's this federal source? I trust the media as much as I trust the government. To say "in-person interview" means nothing. We need names and people not hiding in dark alleys to come forward.
Sure you could argue what they (the government) are doing with this (if they are) is illegal but the leaks to start with were illegal. Regardless of how you feel about what was leaked.
That call database should be gathered. It should be maintained by a seperate entity where queries to the database are approved by a panel of judges with the sole purpose of fighting terrorism. That ends the problem.
Anyone that thought the Bush administration would not abuse their power, wake the fuck up. If anyone has doubts about whether or not those taps were illegal or would be mis-used. the evidence is right in your moronic face. wake the fuck up, because the ones who trust unconditionally are the first to get locked away.
Time for the Fourth Estate to pick up the challenge. Its passivity and timidity post 9/11 and the run-up to the war in Iraq fed this kind of arrogance. If we want to ensure Orwell's tale is only cautionary and not prescient, the press will need to act quickly and deliberately, challenging these bullies instead of simply being their mouthpieces. Quit worrying about ratings; start worrying about credibility and the truth.
>> to/from al-queda persons. At least that is what they keep repeating in
>> defending their nsa spying on u.s. citizens fiasco. I guess it's just
>> another lie.
1) This article is about the call records (number, duration) - not the contents of the calls was the case in the NSA monitoring calls between U.S. citizens and Al Queda members (where one party was outside of the U.S).
2) Then ABC revealed the use of CIA predator missiles inside Pakistan, it certainly does touch on Al Queda.
The Afgnanistan/Pakistan border area is reportedly a site of Al Queda activity. Pakistan does aid the U.S. in this area, but also has an internal situation that makes it difficult for them when Pakistan's government is revealed as aiding the U.S. in this area. So, revealing information about such aid makes it more difficult to secure future aid because the Pakistan leaders will be worried that the U.S. will be unable to keep their assistance secret.
So, if ABC news used leakers inside the CIA as the source of their story on the predator missiles inside of Pakistan they are directly interfering with the Al Queda situation.
The friendly article touches (very lightly) on this: http://blogs.abcnews.com/theblotter/2006/05/federa l_source_.html
It amazes me how many of the comments on the ABC News blog say, "the government should put leakers away for life!" and "treasonous journalists should be shot!"
Don't they realize that those are the attitudes that allowed Hitler and Stalin to operate? (And don't give me any lip about Goodwin's Law. This is serious.) I'm absolutely floored by folks who would like nothing better than to live in a police state coocoon when it's "their people in charge," but then scream bloody murder if "the wrong people" hold power. They just can't see that this attitude makes ABSOLUTELY NO SENSE. Give the government an inch and they will take a mile, always. There is ALWAYS someone out there who wants more power, and it is our duty to ensure they cannot take it, whether we agree with them ideologically or not.
just what is Jeff Gannon's phonenumber?
goddamnit, why can't I post annonymously?!!!
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Read the fucking constitution and look up some judicial records before you open your big, dumb mouth please. The law is very specific about protecting journalistic sources, there is supposed to be no way around it.
No it is not. While most (if not all) states have "shield laws" to protect journalists and their sources, there is not federal equivalent. This is why NY Times reporter Judith Miller went to jail for refusing to disclose her sources. Here is a NY Times editorial advocating a shield law, but there still is not one yet. Perhaps you should do some research before slinging terms like "big, dumb mouth".
are also being used to correlate with databases on your credit purchases, credit reports, banking records, passport applications (and travel), airline travel, and gas fuel records to try to find linkages, all without your permission.
Trust the computer. The computer is your friend, citizen.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
I get so tired of people running out the old saw about putting people's lives in danger...I'm one of those people...and I signed on to protect and defend the constitution. You either have to be a right-wing nutcase or have your head in the sand not to realize that the current administration is vastly expanding its role in relationship to the other branches.
Bottom line: if guaranteeing the 1st and 4th amendments (free press and unreasonable searches, for those of you who slept through Civics class) means we lose a few good guys, then that's the cost of doing business. Cold, but true.
And, for all the chickenhawks out there who use soldiers as shields for illegal acts-- to quote my favorite actor, "Pick up a rifle and stand a post."
It's about time we recognize who the phone-tappers, surveillance-freaks, torture-defenders, and black-box voting stooges really are:
They are a threat to Americans, our way of life, and our democracy.
They are a national security threat.
So are their defenders.
Man. I hope they didn't talk over the phone, or that confidential source is getting his door kicked in tonight
beware the jabberwock, my son! the jaws that bite, the claws that catch!
Leaking classified information is a crime. Obviously, the FBI is going to investigate a (potentially criminal) leak of classified inforomation, because it is part of the FBI counter-intelligence and law enforcement missions to do so. It is standard police procedure in a criminal investigation to subpoena or to get a search warrant for telephone records. Nothing new or sensational to see here, move along.
I've declassified material from Secret, Confidential and Restricted to lower levels. I can attest, as a fact, that two-thirds of all material classified to a level higher than Restricted, is in fact classified too high.
And as a former Acting Security Officer, Records Supervisor, and Chief Clerk - in addition to other military duties as a combat field engineer before that - I disagree strongly with your incorrect interpretation of our Constitution and rules of intelligence.
You're entitled to your opinion, but we can disagree as to your interpretation.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Every time the White House leaks the name of a CIA Secret Agent, I wonder if they will take responsibility for that Agent's very life.
It is difficult enough for the media to keep itself from chewing on its cheeks at the moment. A constant inundation of information is possible these days, and as a result, many television news channels find themselves reporting for hours on meaningless stories, navel-gazing media-on-media coverage, and the latest celebrity items. The quality and necessary work is still being done by reputable mainstream and blogging outlets, but these almost universally require subterfuge, lying, and secrecy to be successful.
The media, when it's good, is underhanded. The media are the original hackers. Woodward and Bernstein hacked Nixon through a backdoor. This backdoor just happened to smoke and hang out in parking structures.
Stories come out much better when the subjects don't initially know they are being observed and written about. It's that hidden observation that lies at the heart of any good story, and it's where those dangerous questions that the media must ask come from. Nixon had no idea that his crimes had been discovered until the Washington Post printed the W&B piece.
A good writer digs through stinking shit-piles to pull out juicy bits of information just as a hacker dumpster-dives to find passwords and old hardware.
But being hidden will be quite hard if the government skirts privacy laws to spy on journalists. It's perfectly, 100% reasonable for the government to check its own records to look for leaks. If these ABC journalists' numbers show up as being called from internal NSA phone lines, then the NSA are perfectly able to track down the leakers internally.
But once they cross the line out into the real world by checking these journalists' personal phone records, a giant leap is made across the gray area that exists between legal and illegal, ethical and unethical, freedom and tyranny.
Speaking as a journalist, I must say that this is probably the single most outrageous thing I've head of this administration doing. Freedom of the press is one of our most dear and treasured rights, and attempts made to quash this freedom undermine not only the media as a whole, but the American people at large.
So, I say unto you, the media and bloggers and pundits and speakers and writers and photographers, stand up for the media's rights. The government is already afraid of the media. It's not afraid of the people as a whole. It's not afraid of a revolution: it has all the guns. But it is certainly afraid of bad publicity.
Fight this injustice, if true, and attack it's creators. They deserve the harshest of punishments for these deeds.
Don't Crease the Weasel!
Since when is it ethical to take the law into your own hands? We live in a democratic republic of laws. There are both legal and democratic ways (congressional oversight, elections, reports to IG) of approaching things. Deciding that you are above the law is neither lawful, democratic, or ethical.
As an aside, I find your statement to be curious
Sorry, but when neither is doing their job and people are being tortured and possibly killed without fair trial, it's time to start leaking to the press. That's the bottom line, and you don't get to hide behind "classified information" when you do something that unethical. Period.
Since when have we expected the CIA to be Boy Scouts? I always expected them to be rather low-down and willing to do dirty tricks and willing to kill people as a necessary part of their job. It is what they are hired to do.
Information shall not be classified for the purpose of circumventing the laws of the United States. Since you do not necessarily need to divulge the actual classified information to inform the public that an unlawful act has occured, a breach of the classified material must be material which has been classified to keep the unlawful act from becoming public.
I agree that leaking classified info to reporters is not SOP, but there are times when the proper chain of command is not sufficient.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
that's too easy. how about when the press told bin laden that we are tapping his satellite phone? i'd say that little bit of treason by a journalist contributed to a massacre on our soil, and precipitated the whole war on terrorism. whoever keeps feeding al queda with sensitive information that helps the baddies keep out of harms way, needs to be fucking fried.
I, as an IT nerd, am applying to business school for an MBA because, frankly, modern IT bores me. We're on the cusp of machines engineering machines (10 years), making diversification an essential pursuit. When I got into IT, it was like the Wild West and today central administration has taken much of the fun out of the field.
As I started studying economics, I came across a startling paradigm: "if it can exist, then it must." I had heard "if it can exist, it will"; the difference is the probable to the imperative. I'd never considered the imperative of entity existence yet the examples are limitless. If something can exist, then it does and it packaged and sold and someone makes money off it. Witness Japanese 7-11s selling air and the giant bottled water industry. That's all marketing. Do you really believe a two minute shot of pure oxygen does you any long term good? Is the solution for water-borne pollution to consume water in hydrocarbon bottles versus more stringent environmental regulations? It's fucking madness.
Back to IT. Look around you, people, you're nerds and you're smart. The first thing any IT person worth their salt will do is build a database of problems and start tracking needs, for you need to build a history in order to predict how much money you will need next year; it's about tracking resources.
Those resources can be anything, toner, ink cartridges, gigabit fiber ethernet transceivers, SCSI cables, Exchange licenses, web queries. Let's not fuck with the definition of resources.
Instead let's fuck with the concept that we have micro-databases and macro-databases. Micro-databases track the number of bits flowing over port 24 of router XYZ. Macro-databases aggregate all of your micro-databases into "our backbone is 39% utilized and we should plan for capital investment in 2007 of $xx based on 12% traffic growth per year."
Now, replace toner cartridge with New York Times reporter and bandwidth capacity with voter sentiment.
You think 1984 is scary? Open your mind and start changing up the nouns in your daily work. Imagine applying web metrics to health care premiums. Compare intellectual dissent to bugs in program code. We can dance with whatever metaphor you like but while you pussy sissy's debate monolithic kernels and the cost of the PlayStation 3, someone is making sure to build a database that will prohibit your children from having any social mobility and terminate your gene line in a coal mine somewhere.
As I write, I get more vitriolic because the IT and software people I know are among the smartest, most well-educated and most selfish people I know. You think Linux is a project borne of love? Naw look at the psychology behind it all. You have a bunch of pasty nerds who were never cool and always felt excluded by the mainstream social community at different levels of compulsory education and escaped their angst by climbing into a computer screen and fabricating a virtual world.
Unfortunately, they didn't watch Real Genius closely enough for the software code that eventually made them cool is now going to enslave them because they care more about putting an MP3 player in their toilet that their fucking freedom.
Surprise hat. Welcome to hive brain nerd. I'm a marketer with degrees in sociology and psychology. I'll keep telling you linux will get you pussy and you'll keep trading your civil liberties for new Playstations.
nuckcl@yahoo.com
Just like the "National Security" issue with the illegal wiretapping mentioned before, this is yet another example of the US government overstepping its bounds. The reason (I hope, ideally at least) that people even become informants is because they see something wrong, where an official or entity has illegally or immorally done something that violates ours or anothers freedoms, whether it be life, privacy, or whatever. This will further stifle the ability of informants to help provide the checks and balances needed to make sure that our government entities, whether it be the CIA, FBI, NSA, or worse, have the discipline needed to keep them in check. If "deepthroat" would not have come forward, what else would nixon have done. What about the illegal wiretapping? I'm not a conspiracy theorist, but there is probably a lot that we do not know currently that we should.
Informants provide the leash around the dogs that are out of control, lets keep it that way.
He who controls the mail, controls ... Information! - Newman
> About time they figure out who is leaking top secret information to the press! I hope they find the traitors and put them in jail for disclosing secret information that could put our troops in danger.
If you want to enjail people for putting our troops in danger, you should start with Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, and their cronies. They've gotten 2400 of our troops killed and about ten times that many maimed by starting an unnecessary war on false pretexts.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
If I give someone an order to rape some little girl and then I get that order classified they would be wrong to follow the order OR to obey the classification.Yes there are.
So? When the corruption goes to the top then there is nothing wrong with going to the public.People who have security clearances know that if they do go public, they will face the consequences.
Going public is always an option.
It is the final option.No one is saying that they shouldn't expect that.
What you're saying is that they should NEVER go public.
I'm saying that going public with an illegal order is the LAST resort and does NOT violate any oath.Again, you are wrong.
When they go public with information about an ILLEGAL operation / order, they have broken no oaths.
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The part I find incredibly frightening is that it seems so many citizens of this country do see a problem with this. Sure, they are coming for the communists first, but then what? I am afraid of the hysterical masses that are willing to hand over MY rights to the government. I grew up thinking that the whole purpose of the Bill of Rights was to protect me and others like me from the wacko majority?
You know, we spend a lot of time teaching our children about the men that founded this country, however flawed personally they were, and the ideals they believed in. Maybe it's time we actually stood by those words.
"Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."
Benjamin Franklin
Quotes from ABC News Blog by members of the public:
"Good! I hope they do find out who is leaking national security info to the press. I'm tired of the press helping our enemies. Maybe you guys should start trying to "FOR the USA" instead of "AGAINST the USA" ALL THE TIME. I hope the FBI nails lots of idiots who are out to destroy the intelligence agencies and cost us more soldiers and spys!"
"'Bout time you guys are roped in."
"Excellent the Media needs looking after, Traitors most of them......."
"good, you seditionist creeps deserve what you get. who knows how many serviceman have died because of your "right to know""
"I hope the information they gain allows them to catch the scum that leak information, and helps them arrest the communist scum who publish it."
"Well maybe ABC news better stop leaking classified information. This only helps our enemies and right now I believe ABC news is an enemy of the US."
"You didn't inconvenience someone, you broke the law. It's called a criminal investigation!!!!"
"I believe that it is a great idea to maintain telephone surveilance over news organizations who disclose classified and sensitive secret information. Lets nail the government employees who knowingly break their oath to not divulge classified information."
"GOOD! I hope they find out who is reporting all of these leaks. And I hope you are tried and perhaps spend some time in jail for it. KEEP CALLING and I hope they track your every word!"
The Constitution specifically states that there can be no laws which abridge (i.e., curtail) the freedom of the press. In plain English that means that The Constitution specifially withholds from the government any authority to even investigate the activities of the people when they are about the business of publishing information.
There are no exceptions to this - not even 'national security'.
Of course if The Constitution is considered merely to be a 'Goddamned Piece of Paper', as Bush has described it, and if the people who are involved in violating The Constitution don't care about adhering to it, then all bets are off, which is pretty much where we in the US are at these days.
Violating oaths of secrecy .... violating the constitution - you may want to take a look into which one is worse?
IANAL but, no oath of secrecy should take precedence over the responsibilty to uphold/protect the constitution.
Well, here's something. Of course, nobody would ever misuse a government agency for political goals.
Never give in--never, never, never, never, in nothing great or small, large or petty, never give in except to conviction
Did the leaker(s) sign the same Standard Form 312 I and every other government employee with access to classified information did?
Please take note of Paragraph 3:
Also, please note paragraph 4:
It's high time the people who have taken it upon themselves to sabotage this administration be brought to justice.
What?
By revealing the government's conspiracy to infringe on our freedoms you are leaking sensitive information and are obstructing the government's ability to protect the freedoms of ours that we now no longer have. Shame on you liberal elitist Slashdot.
It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
Flavor Aid. Really, let's get our Jonestown references right.
I don't see the Internet connection in this story. If there is one that isn't indicated in the summary or in TFA, I apologize.
Otherwise, how about we use the Political section for Political stories?
"nebulous bad things"?
Umm, there are some craters in NYC and PA and a lot of relatives of dead people that differ with you on your opinion of "nebulous". One of them is a firefighter cousin of mine.
There is a substantive threat out there, and all the naysaying you put forth doesnt change it. Please start dealing with reality, not fantasy.
Whats important is that we do recoginize that there is a threat and as a nation PUBLICLY decide what we are going to do about it. Pretending its not there and we can go back to 1996 isn't going to work (thats your mistkae). Neither is hiding all our efforts under blanket secrecy to prevent such a thing from happening (thats Bush's mistake).
As for this article, please go read it - and other related articles for more detail. The FBI is investigating a crime - the unlawful disclosure of classified information to those not authorized to recieve it USC 18 700-something (you can look it up - its on the books online someplace). Its also a crime to recieve such information and not notify the proper authority, so the reporters may be culpable as well (but may be exempt under Freedom of the Press - thats for the court to decide).
As a result the FBI have gotten court orders to get the call detail records of those suspected of being complicit in this crime. From my time in telecom, I can tell you that this is a routine occurance, and most telcos even have an office that deals with these things, one that is in weekly contact with the local FBI field offices. The surprising thing is that they dont even need a warrant - a simple "Section 2701" court order suffices - and the law even orders that the judge "Shall Issue" such an order when it comes to these kinds of records (in other words the judge doesn't have much choice if the FBI says the need it for investigation into a possible criminal offense - they show up, tell them what they want and walk out with a court order for the telco). There is very little legal protection for this sort of record when a crime is being investigated.
Just though a few facts might counter the hysteria. The sky isnt falling - at least in this instance - the laws are working as they are written to do. And those of you who cite "Secret Prison Camps" - go back and re-research that. They apparently never existed and were a story planted in order to catch leakers (which is what this may be all about).
[And mods, please remember an opposing point of view is not flamebait nor is it a troll. Funny that I oppose both sides, so Im probably going to get modded into oblivion by both sides]
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"People should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people."
Bonsai Kitten: TNG
The Press should be the ally of the People.
When the Government considers the Press to be the Enemy, that means that the Government considers an ally of the People to be the Enemy.
That's one step away from considering the People to be the Enemy of the Government.
Please.
If you wanted security, you'd pick up an untraceable prepaid cell phone and use that to call the press. Getting a journalist's phone records would be useless for backtracking to the person who made the call in that instance. But I'm willing to stipulate that a pay phone might have been used - then, you've got a situation where the journalist's phone records are useful for catching the subset of leakers who are A) smart/paranoid enough to avoid the phone at their desk, but B) not smart/paranoid enough to not use the same pay phone twice.
That puts us back to where we started - in order to be useful for catching the leaker, the phone records have to show a call between the journalist and a phone number that is linked directly to someone with the information, which in practice means a government phone or the "real" cell or home phone of a government employee. In the case of the former, the government's own records will suffice. In the case of the latter, you've got someone who pretty much doesn't care how much of an evidence trail they leave, since they can't even defend themselves by saying that somebody else used the phone on their desk at work to make the call.
Granted, it sounds like using this technique alone, they'll only identify the dumbest and most foolhardy leakers, but I don't see how it requires anything extralegal to accomplish.
In the US are in the CIA.
/ 002721.html
e x.php?showtopic=285&view=getnewpost
I'll probably get more Troll mods for this one. It's not.
http://www.orlingrabbe.com/binladin_timosman.htm
http://www.pnionline.com/dnblog/attytood/archives
http://invisionfree.com/forums/4th_Space_Cafe/ind
"Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
In this country it is illegal to witness a crime and not report it. When an employee sees the government violating the law, even if it is the CIA, they are obligated to report it. If the employee realizes that the proper channels for investigating such crimes are corrupt and illegally ignorning illegal acts by others, then should it still illegal for them to report crimes to reporters who can embarass the government into following the will of the people?
I'm glad Clinton was not allowed to use his executive privilege to prevent him from being put to trial for lying about a relationship. Surely the trial made us look weak and possibly compromised our national security, but it was necessary. Should this administration be allowed to do anything it wants without similar restrictions?
What is Abramoff's phone number?
Never give in--never, never, never, never, in nothing great or small, large or petty, never give in except to conviction
Dumping the offending journalists from a helicopter into the ocean would be justified as well?
Here's an example of one of the software 'solutions', out there, to help those poor, overworked, employees of the No-Such-Administration dig through that huge DB of phone-calls. This stuff doesn't look all that sophisticated, but it aught to be sufficient to help bring the average law-enforcement employee up to the performance of an individual with an IQ>75 [I'm assuming that NSA employees average higher than US Republicans, but...]c a/default.asp
http://www.i2.co.uk/Products/AnalystsWorkstationt
.
Yeah no shit.
Dear sir:
Explain to me how the fuck prisons work any better if they're "secret"?
Explain to me again why you need to be tried and convicted in our triple-party judicial system in public by a jury of citizens with guaranteed access to legal representation, the right to cross-examine your accusers and see and challenge the evidence against you - all under the laws of the land, BUT why "your enemies" need to be tortured and tried in secret without knowing the evidence against them without access to a lawer and held indefinitely based on the arbitrary whim of who again?
WHERE THE FUCK AM I????
.
Seriously i mean ? All i hear that loose organisations with small representative base among population trying to do something.
Arent these YOUR rights ? Why arent you fighting back ? Isnt being ripped off your rights by your government similar to being ripped off your rights by a foreign power, like in 1774 ?
Read radical news here
Shirer (1959) has this translation:
If the government were operating within the law, citizens would not need to resort to illegal actions to check their power. The leaking of information about corruption and abuse is the last resort of non-violent persons. Without this measure, the only remaining recourse is to overthrow the government by force. That's an even bigger mess, because then people have to trust someone (either the government, or the revolutionaries) without any real facts or information. Being both violent and ignorant, that is far from a civilized solution.
We should not let the government have this power (legal or illegal) to prevent leaks. It is not a noble cause, and the result is a more barbaric society because people have fewer avenues of recourse to address injustice.
In Soviet America the banks rob you!
I think freedom in the US is pretty much gone for good at this point. Time to stock up on weapons, ammo and supplies.
Who gets to be the Jews this time around?
Ironic how close this situation is to modeling Al Jazeera, now isn't it?
With all of this "Sorry, we suspended the Constitution in the name of national security", and "We can't tell you what illegal activities we're using, because that would be a violation of national security" rhetoric, we're getting closer and closer to exactly where they are with their extreme regime.
Nice.
"If you haven't been doing anything wrong, then you have nothing to worry about." Isn't that the line we've been fed for decades?
Seems like over and over, the government blocks legal recourse against government activity under the guise of national security. The courts system is now broken since they cannot access the information they need to take action. Congress and the Senate have the same troubles. That's two critical parts of the US government being held back by the executive.
IMPEACH NOW and let's get some real truth.
If they are approaching this as a criminal matter with intent to prosecute, they have a warrant because the evidence would otherwise be inadmissible. So you can bet your bottom dollar that they have a warrant.
The other matters that you refer to involve the NSA, which is not an law enformence agency. So those have been approached as intelligence operations. In those cases, they apparantly have no intent of prosecuting anybody, but appear to be more interested in the security aspects. Indeed, posse commitatus would prevent NSA from gathering information to be used in criminal prosecutiongs since NSA is part of DoD.
Given what little we've been able to glean about these programs (which increasingly appear part of a broad, focused initiative to enable domestic information gathering without *wiretapping*) and that thousands of false leads seem decidedly counter-productive, their primary utility appears to be the extortion of political opponents and intimidation of the press.
And no, there is no oversight. That is the statutory role of the FISA court, whose creation was in direct response to the preceived need for warrantless surveillance. This court was avoided precisely because the true scope of this fishing expedition is in direct violation of the 4th Amendment, as the court would have informed Cheney, Hayden, Gonzalez, et. al. directly and in no uncertain terms.
Dubya makes Tricky Dick look like a patsy. These actions have threatened the foundation of the Republic and as they have sown, so shall they reap. Far from strengthening authority, they are challenging American's respect for it; this will not be without consequences for the health of our political system. Let's not forget that the *malaise* of the Carter years was largely a consequence of the betrayal of America's trust in civil institutions by a sitting President.
illegitimii non ingravare
I don't know which is worse, the bordering on idiocy anti-Bush fanaticism here or the Bush-is-God on the other sites.
Fact is, the NSA program still is for US to offshore calls. Fact is, the FBI doesn't need the NSA or even the bogus interpetation many have of its program, to get the numbers. Fact is, your local police department can do the same as what is being claimed here.
Hell I would not put it past another reporter being able to get the numbers used by someone. It just takes connections.
Now, the blog entry is obviously written to inspire anxiety, its very light on facts and loaded with fear mongering. It doesn't even reveal whether or not warrant's were used to obtain the numbers.
Yet I find not one other news site covering this, actually nothing other than this blog entry which is found on the abcnews webpage. Sure its sensational and it feeds on the misconceptions many have because most people don't want to read more than a few lines of what their local paper doles out to them.
Hey, if they are doing this without the cover of law I think they should be locked up (anyone in the government). I just find it depressing at how stark raving stupid some people here act.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
This post makes a good point. Let me add to it.
Who elected the reporters and gave them this authority? No one? Are they a law unto themselves?
If you do this, looking at your phone calls is mild.
Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
"I called pizzahut and ordered a pizza. How many thousands of my tax dollars were spent so that the government could find out I like pepperoni?"
Oh, really? Terrorists communicate between cells with messages encoded by the position of pepperoni on pizzas. And you like pepperoni...Hmmm!
We'll be sending a car over for you momentarily.
The use of a warrent to get Call Detail Records (CDR) information for a subscruber's line is nothing new. Telephone companies typically keep this data for long peroids of time, In the case of where I work we have at least two years of CDR data. This CDR data is retained because it is directly mapped to our billing of customers for line use. Even though local telephone calls are 'free' they are also kept, because they have a cost of 0.00 per minute.
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?c ourt=us&vol=442&invol=735
U.S. Supreme Court
SMITH v. MARYLAND,
442 U.S. 735 (1979)
No. 78-5374.
Argued March 28, 1979.
Decided June 20, 1979.
The telephone company, at police request, installed at its central offices a pen register to record the numbers dialed from the telephone at petitioner's home.
Held: The installation and use of the pen register was not a "search" within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment, and hence no warrant was required. Pp. 739-746.
Who else believe that G W Bush studied for the Presidency? He just stopped reading the Constitution afer The President shall have power. . .
There is nothing "illegal" about dis-obeying an illegal order. FUCK!!! Didn't we go through that sufficiently back at the Nurnberg Trials?
There is nothing "illegal" about telling someone that you were given an illegal order.
If the order / operation is ILLEGAL then refusing it or revealing it cannot be illegal.Get a fucking clue you ass-sucking moron!
Look up the "Witness Protection Program". We have a long history of protecting people who broke illegal oaths to reveal the facts and who didn't want to "face the consequences" that criminals would like to bring down upon them.
Why do you want them to suffer just because the CRIMINALS are part of the GOVERNMENT?
Oh, it's because you don't want them to reveal the lies in the first place, isn't it?
Anyone know how to get that coffee taste out of your sinuses after you blow it through your nose? Damn, I'm writing that one down. No, I'm memorizing it.
To paraphrase Crocadile Dundee, "You call that a troll? This is a troll!"
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
Wonder how f'ed up the G.O.P. has become?
Nixon couldn't make today--he'd be way too liberal! The guy set up the EPA, visited Moscow and China, negotiated SALT I...
Don't get me wrong, I'm a big Nixon fan. But here we have one of the most power-hungry, fascist, paranoid figures in the history of American politics, and there's no way he'd get within a mile of the White House today. He wasn't power-hungry, fascist, or paranoid enough!
When it is the government that breaks the law, a citizen has the obligation to expose it. Maybe the leaker (in government or not) should go to jail, but it is even more important that the government officials responsible for original crime do too -- they are more dangerous because they have more power.
As for reporters who refuse to identify leakers of classified information - Jail the lawbreaking reporters! I support the role of law. But I trust their reporting more than I trust the reporting of law-abiding reporters without principles.
"law-breaker" does not equal "untrustworthy"
Don't mess with The Phone Company. Piss them off and you'll be using two tin cans and a piece of string.
Am I the only one who keeps hearing,
"But my lord?! Is the Legal?!"
"...I will MAKE it legal!"
Bush is starting to resemble Palpatine more and more each passing day. (I can only make this statement on Slashdot)
Man, that's some awesome gut feeling you have, to be able to tell so easily when people are actually stupider than you, and not just pulling your leg, trying to get you to act superior!
>God Forbid the terrorists be blamed for the attacks. Much better to use the fear of terrorism to fight against whatever political beliefs you disagree with, right?
No way! Terrorists can't be more than 50% responsible for their actions!
On Oct. 26, unanimously, the jury said the guys who carried out the [93 WTC] bombing were only 32 percent responsible for the damages. PointOfLaw
We traded it in for the right to watch "The Apprentice" free of married homosexual neighbors and other terrorists.
There is no doubt about it, Republicans ARE traitors.
They tend to give medals to people they should be prosecuting.
Never give in--never, never, never, never, in nothing great or small, large or petty, never give in except to conviction
I wonder if those same people would be so cavalier about bringing treason charges against the Plame leakers in the Bush Administration...
...the NSA monitors you!
Wait a minute... holy f**k!
I suspect that you would bend over, spread your cheeks and say, "come and get it, Mr. Bush." I mean really, where do you draw the line? How far is too far? And what do you do when the government has gone too far, and then tried to make it illegal to say, "you've gone too far?" There comes a point when you have to say, "fuck it, this is not right, and I'm going to do somethign about it, even if it means (at the least) my job."
I have the upmost respect for people like that, and the upmost contempt for apologists for the abuse of power.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
I now live in a country where I am more afraid of the president then any terrorist. One of the differences is the terrorists don't have nuclear arms. Bush does... (shudder)
How does anyone know if this is a real story or not? What we have so far is just hearsay, trumped up by a bunch of reporters who want to believe it, or want you to believe it based on last weeks story. This confidential source may in fact be made up. Who believes a single confidential source cited in a news story anyway? Apparently most slashdot readers do. I don't necessarily believe it's true, nor do I believe it's beyond the realm of possibility. The point is I won't believe it until my own personal burden of proof has been met. What is your personal acceptable burden of truth? Right now all I can do is rule it a possibility, which is what it was last week without the story, which means this is not news... yet. What amazes me is that there can be so much emotion and/or vitreol based on "No Provable Facts". Why comment on a story, until you know (yes actually know) whether its primary point is true? So many people leap to conclusions these days that it may soon be considered as a new Olympic event.
Yep, that kind of leak. Funny how that one seemed to have slipped by. Personally, when I got my clearance I signed a letter to the effect that at any time for the rest of my life if I disclose classified information I am subject to X thousands of dollars in fines and Y number of year in a federal prison.
Apparently if you are important enough you can skip that signing part when you get a clearance.
"Get a bicycle. You will not regret it, if you live." - Mark Twain, "Taming the Bicycle"
when we can just be done with Bushes reign of criminality.
Am I the only one who remembers Watergate? When Nixon wiretapped it was illegal, the law HAS NOT CHANGED.
...or Devil's Advocate, a cabinet position. The opposing party (or parties) in Congress should be able to choose one person who has complete access to the President, including top-secret meetings, so they can A) Tell him he's acting like a moron (Caesar, you too are mortal), and B) Let people know if he continues to act like a moron.
For those that claim this would simply feed the 24-hour scandal cycle on news programs, if the President can't act like some guy upstairs is scrutinizing his every move -- despite claiming to be a Christian -- then he can darned well tolerate it when some guy from downstairs does the same thing. The Democrats would certainly broadcast every little misstep of a Republican President (and vice versa), but they would go to great pains to at least pretend they are being fair and patriotic. As it is, decisions that affect everyone are done in total secrecy, and checks and balances is being tossed by the wayside.
This tagline is copyrighted material. Please send $10 for an affordable replacement.
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
I don't care what crimes are alleged, using NSA surveillance to "finger" leakers very clearly violates this portion of the US constitution.
...I'd grab a government phone list and start calling high ranking officials and administrative assistants; like every day... "Hi how are you? Good. So, how what did you have for lunch today? Really. Ok; well, been good talking to you. Have a nice day."
Just wanted to note that there was a typo in the first line... instead of "citizens of this country do see a problem ", it should be "citizens of this country don't see a problem". Sorry if there was any confusion.
a l_source_.html
/. posting on a nuclear waste repository in New Mexico, and the plans on how to warn future generations of its dangers. In the article they mention that the NRC expects to have administrative control of the land for only the next 200 years. The presumption being that at some point in the relatively near future the country may not exist.
For those interested, the link to the ABC blog is: http://blogs.abcnews.com/theblotter/2006/05/feder
The BF quote is from Wikiquote: http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Benjamin_Franklin
You know, I can't help but wonder if/when this country will ever fall from its current global position. I am reminded of a previous
Sometimes I wonder how that fall will occur. If it will start with the slow erosion of our rights and freedoms, and transition into a some sort of repressive iron fisted govt. that falls from grace. But above all I am amazed that people don't seem to care all that much about the current situation. Where is the outrage? Where is the Press? If we did nuke Iran, would a majority in this country care? Would a majority in this country care if the govt. keeps track of and a central database listing who EVERYONE talks to and is associated with? Would a majority care if the govt. kept recordings of all our phone conversations? What about emails? Would a majority care if the government made a profile of every citizen in this country and assessed them a threat rating based off of who they talk to, their financial info, travel info, and their personal associations? What happens when a red flag goes up? Do they get renditioned by intelligence officers? Where is the line in the sand? Where is this all heading?
You don't have anything to fear if you don't have anything to hide. I guess thats how it starts.
Howard Dean's position is head of the DNC. Nixon went down because of Watergate, which was a breakin at DNC headquarters to tap phones. Bush doesn't need breakins to do this, as the NSA has had 34 years to improve the bugging technology. George Bush is Richard Nixon without the brains. We've seen this all before.
... and could mod you up. Thanks.
Using phone records provided to the NSA, they've confirmed that ABC News has no verifiable source for their article.
"I have an odd craving to whisper about those few frightful hours in that ill-rumored and evilly shadowed seaport of dea
If you are a Republican you are not an American, you are a traitor.
illegal and immoral:
The wiretapping is illegal.
Not using the FISA courts is illegal.
Blowing a CIA operative's cover is illegal.
Taking bribes from Big Oil and other corporations? illegal.
Stealing elections via a corrupt system? I guess that's just immoral.
It really does. You don't know the issues, you don't read the article, you don't know the laws and yet you speak up. Amazing!
[sarcasm]
Clearly no one has heard of situational ethics.
[/sarcasm]
Please start dealing with reality, not fantasy.
You first.
Here's a fantasy: There was a substantive threat to the United States in Iraq.
Here's another: There was anybody in Iraq that had anything to do with your craters, either directly or indirectly.
Here's yet another: Iraq's WMD program was far enough advanced to represent a clear and present danger to the United States, either from Iraq itself or from nuclear-weapon-wielding terrorists.
Here's a new one: Iran's nuclear ambitions represent enough of a substantive threat to the United States to necessitate military action.
Apparently you haven't been paying attention.
Quick question time. I really do want a rational answer to this one, and not some snarky shit just because I don't happen to share your worldview:
Why is so much angst being spent over this database that the NSA is collecting, but no one says anything at all about the database that the IRS is collecting? Why are phone records a privacy issue but financial records are not? When I filed my taxes last month I had to reveal the following information: my occupation, my employer, my salary, my age, the social security numbers of my children, whether my wife or I are blind, what charities I give to, what funds I invest in, how big my mortgate is, what my medical expenses were, etc. If someone rummaged through my garbage and found my phone bill, it would be no big deal. If someone found my tax returns, however, I could be the victim of some serious identity theft.
What's the difference?
A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
More firefighters died from traffic accidents, smoking, and drinking EVERY WEEK then 9/11. If you love and honor firefighters and want to avenge their deaths I suggest you declare a jihad against tobacco companies, beer manufacturers and automobile makers.
I am sick of people using the firefighters to make political points. Oddly enough those same people will damn the firefighters when talking about unions. Shows how much of a weasel they are.
evil is as evil does
(how it should be)say what u want, 2 who u want, were u want. (How it is in the us) say what the man approves of to whom and were it is approved. and step out of line and enjoy your cuban vacation. (how it should be) worship, or dont, whatever or whoever you want. as long as your not hurting anyone else that doesnt want to be hurt. (How it is in the us) worship from this group of identified religions. if the government finds this to be offensive, mutanis, or oppistionist enjoy your cuban vacation or worse. (how it should be)the press should have free reign to print or say what the want without revieling any enforments. they should have no crimanal laws bearing down on them, civil law as oversight. (how it is in the us) print what will scare everyone into submission or we will cut off your access. if we dont like what you print we will send you to jail. (how it should be) protest what you dont like and the government will listen. (how it is in the us) protest were we tell you, about what we tell you to, when we tell you or we will call it a riot and kick your ass. (how it is in the us) you can have a firearm that is at least 100 years inferior in technology to what the millitary uses. (How it should be) everyone should be able to have an intercontinental bolistic missle in their back yard[ok that might be a little overboard, but you catch my drift] remember Waco and Ruby Ridge? is it only a war crime when Sahdam does it.
God Bless America. No, I mean my god not yours.
Every time America angers the Middle East with its hypocrisy by torturing terror suspects or by denying them human rights at Gitmo, I wonder if the Bush administration will take responsibility for the next attack they provoked.
... Especially to a society that stones women for leaving the house without being completely covered and escorted by a man, and institutes gang-rape of teen-aged daughters as punishment to a family.
OK, last time I'm gonna tell you, so listen up.
AIR CONDITIONING AND SLEEP DEPREVATION DOES NOT CONSTITUTE TORTURE
So, that is not what is pissing off the young mid-eastern male. However, you, and the press constantly saying that we are torturing prisoners at Gitmo, even though they are provided a Koran, told which direction to pray, and given the opportunity to five times a day, is what is pissing everyone off.
By the way, what did the Bush administration do in the nine months in office to warrant 9-11?
There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
Scooter will be cleared when the public finds out that Joe Wilson did everything but put a "MY WIFE WORKS THE CIA" bumper sticker on his car. The Left smelled Rove's blood in the water, so they pushed hard for an independent counsel and then they cried like babies when they got exactly what they asked for: Fitzgerald putting the heat on reporters. Who on the Right would give a shit about a New York Times reporter? The ones that defended Judy Miller are still supporting the free press with legislation like the media shield laws. Scooter was investigated for doing something that was legal: disclosing that Valerie Wilson worked at the CIA. And Fitzgerald to this day hasn't presented any good evidence that he committed that 'crime.' She was not undercover and had not been for years. Newer leak cases are being investigated because actual classified information is being published. If law enforcement knows that crimes are being committed they have a responsibility to investigate. The actual phone call content would be protected by most courts under the 4th, but the billing records are a grey area. The gov't would argue that they are the phone companies records and the 4th wouldn't apply unless the phone companies challenged the request.
This is the letter I sent to my senators and rep today:
I joined the ACLU, and my wife joined the EFF. What did you do?
-Esme
Remember who these people are:
In the 80's, many of the folks in the current Bush Administration were defending right-wing, paramilitary death squads in Latin America.
Not exactly a strong track record of defending democracy.
Just because some Republicans LOVE to use this tactic does not make it right to use it back against them. The Bush administration? Traitors. Hang the lot of 'em. Republicans? Misguided (I jest, I jest) but basically decent people with the country's best interest at heart.
The older I get, the less irrational hatred for "the other side" I have, and the more I can understand their position. Might not agree with it, but I no longer see all Republicans as greedy bastards out to rape the country.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
So, it's ok for Bellsouth, Qwest, SBC, Verizon, and Comcast or any phone company to actually record some phone conversations and phone number for legal reasons and demographics but, if the government agency like the NSA records only phone numbers for pattern matching and it is done for the benefit of national security it is not.
I am not young enough to know everything.
-Oscar Wilde
But if you're reading this and you have NOT written to your Congress Critter, take 5 minutes and do so right now.
The way I look at it, if you haven't made your voice heard loud enough to get your name on one of the government's "lists", you aren't doing enough to protect your Freedom.
The people signing our Declaration of Independence were knowingly and publicly signing their death warrant if we lost that war.
Stand up and show the government what a real patriot is.
> In this country it is illegal to witness a crime and not report it.
In the United States? It is most definitely not. There is case law to that effect.
It's illegal to lie about it, but it is absolutely positively not illegal in the slightest to say or do nothing at all.
Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
i was telling people that this is what the data would be used for ever since i heard they were collecting it.
bush is like a child who can't say no to candy - except his candy is the sweetness of control.
he can't say no.
i hope a judge throws this crap out of court if and when it gets there.
the republican congress is spineless. hopefully the judiciary will stand up to bush.
I'd be able to dismiss that if I did not know people who actually think that way.
It's scary. Information gained this way can only be used for retribution because courts will throw it out. If any real laws were broken, they could get warrants. Secret jails, warantless searches, torture all with such perfect sang-froid. The people we are allowing to abuse foreigners in secret jails might develop domestic tastes.
The rot may be top down, but the fix must be bottom up. The same ugly attitudes will be ridden by whatever party is in power. The only thing that can stop such abuse is a national revulsion and attitude change. Given government control of broadcast and such underhanded tactics like this, it will be hard to effect that attitude change any other way than face to face.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
Billy went through the legal process (look up FISA). Bully does not.
Nice "talking points", Mr. Shill.
Anything open to public participation is subject to potential abuse. If these people are real, they are in dire need of a history lesson or two. If they are PR shills for Wush & Co. (which I suspect some are), they are, in the truest sense of the word, idiots.
The police only need a warrant for involuntary searches. If they ask, and you say "OK", then they can search without a warrant.
In the NSA case, the NSA (notice I said "NSA" and not "police") asked as they are free to do and most companies said "OK". Quest was free to say "no". In that instance, Quest said "No", so no search was conducted. Nothing was seized or searched from Quest without its permission and without a warrant.
Now I differentiated between police and NSA. NSA is a DoD agency. They are restricted from law enforcement by posse commitatus. Normally, nothing that NSA collects can be used in a criminal case.
They're paid GOP astroturfers.
It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
If the president and his lackeys are so committed to the notion that collection of these records doesn't constitute an invasion of privacy and doesn't require a warrant, then they naturally wouldn't care if someone published THEIR private AND professional phone call logs.
What that's they say, they don't want to? Why? Do they have something to hide?
This all makes me sick.
DiscDividers tabbed plastic CD dividers: divider cards f
Imagine the sound and fury from Fox and the neocons if this was being done by President Hilary Clinton. They'd be screaming for impeachment, followed by hanging, drawing, and quartering.
Some mornings it's hardly worth chewing through the restraints to get out of bed.
Everyone knows that facts can be used to prove anything that's even remotely true.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
Maybe it's time to organize large numbers of people to mass-visit the offices of every member of the US Congress, and get inside, simply to spraypaint (with stencils) the above quote on one or more of their inside walls, and then leave. On an outside too, for that matter.
I have to put my affairs in order before being ready for jail, as I'm sure that if it's not "disturbing the peace" it could be construed as the more serious charge of "disturbing the war" or something. When summer is over, and elections draw closer, is anyone with me on this one?
"Support our Oops."
What with these developments, it might be a good idea to start practicing for the soon-to-come rallies.
1) Remember, use your right arm. Palm flat, pointing towards the ground, with the edge of your hand over your heart. Salute by swinging your arm out stiffly until pointing forwards. "Sieg Heil!" has been deprecated in favor of the English translation, "Hail Victory!"
2) Back rigid and straight. Legs as stiff and straight as possible. Raise one leg until it is at a 45-degree angle to the other (which is vertical). Step forward.
3) Nucular, not nuclear.
This
I used to work for an "ultraliberal gun nut" when I was in Dallas. I have never had to fire my gun in selfdefense but I know those who have (shotgun with scattershot) and in every case simply firing in the air drove the people away. Now, this was out in the country and I would not recommend such a tactic in the cities.
Republican Nazis are at it again!!!!!
What would I do? I've been there before. If I thought something illegal was going on, I would inform the agency Inspector General, Office of Special Counsel (www.osc.gov) or inform the appropriate Congressional Committee. I actually have been a whistleblower before (about corruption, theft, and contract fraud, but nothing classified) and I was reprised against for making protected disclosures and for refusing to follow an illegal order , so I filed a greiveance both with the Agency and with the Office of Special Counsel under 5 USC 2302 (look it up on google - its the federal employee whistleblower protection program). The law was a little different back then (1998-99), it was also covered under 5 USC 2303 (which now only applies to the FBI it looks). My Agency greiveance was upheld but my OSC greivance was dismissed.
There are procedures for these types of things. Leaking classified information is just wrong and illegal.
Unlike most of the un-informed people spouting off here, I actually have been through this myself and I know from first hand experience what I am talking about. It was not pleasant to go through (hostile work enviromnent, constant professional and physical threats), but there are channels beside breaking the law. (BTW.. my corrupt boss evenually was fired)
Who said anything about laws? I wasn't under the impression such archaic things applied any longer... You can do anything as long as it's in the name of national security.
(haven't we had enough of this crap yet?)
I've never read 1984, but it's feeling like I should read up on how my life will be soon.
I'd also like to send a copy to my reps in congress. Let them know how I feel about things over the past couple years. Maybe even send a copy to our buddies Dubya and Cheney. Anyone else like to join the project?
Bash Bush +1
/. is now? Home of the moonbats?
/. ever came up with a political section, it only tilts one way. Then again, what else should we expect? Most of those doing the bashing are the same chickenshits that will never march, never write a Congressman, and never do anything but flame away on a message board. You know why? Because it takes no effort. Hell I bet the bulk can't name their Senators and only a few could name their Congressman without searching Google.
Bash Fox +1
I guess I found two of your points (automatic scoring)
Honestly, how is this comment of yours rated so highly? It provides us with nothing except the typical moonbat accusations. Is this what
Its apparent the only way to generate good karma on this thread is to join in the innuendo brigade. There is nothing being discussed anymore, its just pull out every coincidence, true or imagined, and go after Bush and Co.
There is so much other crap to jump on that this Adminstration is doing yet people recycle the same tired old innuendo in attempt to score cheap points. Its too bad
Uninformed and spouting nonsense does not help the discussion of the problem at hand. Doing some real research and presenting facts does. I would love to find other sources other than this "blog entry". That speaks of deniability and no need of accountability. ABC is not running this as a story but as a blog entry. I guess this is their "escape clause".
Wait a few days, lets see what the real story is. Sensational reporting is nothing new, its great bait for forum trolls and people who react out of emotion instead of intelligence.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
Durring a time of war, releasing classified information is an act of treason last I heard. So ya, it's serious shit that DOES rank up there with terrorism.
Hey, don't look at me, I didn't write the rules.
Life is not for the lazy.
Check out this link:
http://www.epic.org/privacy/cpni/
I think some of the confusion about this call record thing is that CPNI information is (used to be?) telco owned data. That means we (the customer) don't own the data. We only "own" the contents of the call. The page linked above talks about how telco's used to tell this data. You can't sell something you don't own. They did own it and they did sell it. There are newer laws that try to control the discloser of this information, but I'm not sure it's all been worked out yet. Maybe some one else around here has more information on this.
That's why CPNI data is treated differently than a phone tap. Even if the government gets this:
"call-identifying information effected within its switching premises can be activated only in accordance with a court order or other lawful authorization."
They have to go through further hoops to tap (listen in) a call. So far what has come out of the newspaper articles is that the NSA is tapping (getting contents) international calls. They've always had this capibility. They are also getting CNPI data from the phone companies. Two different things. Two different ways of handling the information.
Good god, its like reading /. Do you ever get the feeling that the U.S. government has really f**ked something up, like selling a nuke to Al-Qa'ida or something, and all this is is them trying to cover their ass's. It would explain a lot.
/. bug #926803 - Why I can post.
Look, I used to be a subject matter expert for a lot of military information, held a SECRET clearance, handled various SECRET and lower message traffic (in person), had a combo safe, and declassified a lot of SECRET, CONFIDENTIAL, and RESTRICTED information.
The reality is that, yes, the President can declassify it, but he has to officially do so. It's just a notation, but everything we've heard indicates he declassified it two weeks after he had Cheney and Rove leak it.
You can't declare the barn door closed after you illegally opened it.
There are no do-overs in law. Especially in regards to secrets.
And, for that matter, the VP (Cheney) doesn't have that authority, and he acted without that express authority by his own and Rove's and Libby's admission.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Bill Clinton's penis is the root of all evil!
The only reason the media ignored this before was because they were enthralled to it - since Bush needs a codpiece for his Mission Accomplished photo-ops the media has realized his just doesn't compare. Ever since then they do nothing but go after him about EVERYTHING. If only they would ignore the torture, secret prisons, and unconstitutional spying like they ignored Monica Lewinsky! Fucking librul traitors!
You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
Yeah, remember when Clinton was being impeached and none of the newspapers would cover it because of their "liberal bias"?
Actually they covered it but did a pretty good job of publicising the liberal spin, that the BJ was a marital issue, and successfully buried the conservative argument that the offense was lying to the court under oath, not the BJ itself.
Gimme a break. Whoever is in power has a big target on their ass.
Agreed, but with a caveat. The predominantly liberal press will take a shot at a fellow liberal when they are hungry, but they will take shots at a conservative simply for the sport of it. Conservatives are at a greater risk.
You said it brother.
n/t
That's the escape hatch. That's the oversight. You report to congress, and congress investigates. You are protected from prosecution.
You leak to the press if you care more about elections than justice. And that's exactly what's been happening. Leaks from the CIA have all been aimed at the president.
I mean, that should worry you, because if the US President is now no longer allowed to make his own foreign policy -- without first getting the approval of every lowly bureaucrat at the CIA, we are all truly fucked.
I say, fire the lot of them, and disband State on the way home. The US people do not elect bureaucrats, and they should not get veto power over the president we do elect.
The NSA explicitly told Qwest that they didn't have warrants. Qwest figured the whole scheme was illegal and said no. From the original USA Today article:
It's called Guantanamo Bay Cuba. Where at least one Australian citizen has been held, by the US, without trial for 4 years. If he's guilty of something, hold a fair trial and send him to prison. If you can't convict him of anything, then let him go. It's as simple as that.
09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
There is a substantive threat out there.
No, there is not. There is an utterly statistically insignificant threat created in the first place only by American votes and American foreign policy, a mistake that conservatives seem to want to compound endlessly until they can build it into a substantive threat.
Well congratulations, given the current stories on NSA spying and the potential for a nuclear war with Iran, I'd say you may have managed to create the substantive threat that you want.
But don't for a moment make the stupid mistake of thinking that it's "terrorism" which is, and will remain, both nebulous and statistically insignificant.
I'm sorry your relatives were stuck by lightning. But contrary to what the American culture of the denial of mortality may tell you, that does not make anti-lighning a good cause to throw your weight behind, in particular when the lightning is your fault in the first place.
STOP . AMERICA . NOW
You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
Slashdot reader over-reaction meter is off scale.
1) No other news source has confirmed this (CNN/NBC/BBC etc).
2) Which ever Washington post reporter that submitted the story that we were listening to Osama's phone calls needs to be prosecuted.
3) The NSA is getting a copy of the connection numbers, not the conversations. Can you be prosecuted for mis-dialing an AQ member? Not. The phone companies have been storing this information since 1992.
4) This was all public record back in December. Don't slashdot users read anything besides blogs?
5) The IRS knows more about you.
6) I would guess that the NSA is also monitoring money transfers from overseas. My $600 (300UK) ATM withdrawal in the UK in stored somewhere.
7) Gore/Kerry would have done the same damn thing.
There is an excellent write-up on the legal battlefield for turning over phone records etc by Mark Rasch over at SecurityFocus News http://www.securityfocus.com/columnists/403?ref=rs s in case anyone wants to brush up on the corresponding laws.
The President of the United States is elected as the Executive of the US. Like Every Other President, He is empowered to release whatever the hell classified information he wants.
That's a nifty special power the President and (recently) the VP have. Also, elected officials (meaning the pres, VP, and members of congress) don't have to get investigated for security clearances, unlike all their staff. Even Condi and Rummy have to get insulted by Polygraphers.
There's a good reason he has this power : do you remember, before the Iraq War? Everyone was clamoring for more information? Even the democrats? (Especially the Democrats.) How do you think Bush was going to provide this information? Google? Of course he had to declassify stuff, and I can't imagine that anybody would not understand that.
Anyway, the "bad leakers" were not empowered to leak anything. They were not elected as president or VP. They were not authorized to leak by the president or the VP. In fact, they did what they did to undermine the elected representative of the people. What they did is illegal and they should go to jail.
And, as I've described above, the administration is not "deciding" who is legally leaking and who isn't. Prosecutors do. In fact, you can play the home game. If you aren't (A) the Pres or VP, or (B) authorized by the same, you go to jail if you leak to the press.And every time this comes up, YOU equate accidents with premeditated mass murder.
This story is unsubstantiated. ABC will generally report anything to grab some ratings, but this one only made it so far as a blog...
Nontheless, people in DC who are leaking info about classified programs to people who then go and make headlines out of it damn well should be nervous. Treason warrants severe penalties.
If this were whistleblowing, the programs would be being 'leaked' to members of Congress. Last I checked, mass media is not part of the checks and balances system of government.
When I last checked the truth wasn't wrong.
Being Canadian, I don't always see eye to eye with some of the posters here but I worry lately when I look down south. I remember looking at the US being this amazing forward-thinking state that was really influencing the world to look twice on issues like equality and fairness. Then something happened and Americans are scared and that fear allows them to give up their freedoms in ways that scare me!
Democracy is a difficult, slippery thing for it to work you have to participate and be willing to listen to everyone involved. It's slow and cumbersome and hard and sometimes bureaucratic but when all is said and done you as a citizen felt empowered because you had your say and you participated and you influenced the outcome.
That's why I agree with you. If you're not willing to participate in Democracy then why live in one? Voter turnout in Canada has been pretty pathetic and now it gives us our own version of George W. This shouldn't have happened in the Canada I know but it did because people don't care. I sometimes think that democratic countries would be different if people who didn't vote were revoked their citizenship and kicked out of the country.
Anyways, I didn't intend to rant but what you said struck a cord and you're right.
And to all those who think all this wiretapping, big brother and pseudo-fascist alignment in the US is a good thing... There are plenty of fascist regime's out there already. Move and try it out for awhile!
Oops, how did this get here?
09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
This guy wasn't warned about civil liberties being violated, he's a leaker worried about his own ass. If he wasn't guilty of a crime, there would be no reason to be worried about the feds now, would there?
I beg to differ. I was in Baghdad and in Kabul and Uzbekistan over the past few years (post invasion for both), and there *are* people that want nothing more than our destruction and subjugation. They may be few in number, but they are quite fanatical, and well funded by our stupid addiction to oil. I've seen their literature, heard the captives talk, seend them blow their fellow citizens to bits along with themselves to further the cause of Jihad and the Caliphate.
Try reading up on Wahabbism and the Salafists and Tahwidists. They "declared war" onn us back inthe 1990's, when we didnt bother to pay attention to them. 9/11 was a result of doing what you want to do: nothing. Get out of your cublice farm or dorm room, and learn that not everythign fed to you by the media or blogs is true, and a good deal of it is simply trash designed to inflame rather than inform.
And stuff your false pity for the deaths in NY. "Statistically Insignificant" is for jackasses liek you. Suppose a terrorist were to sniper shoot you in the head. Thats "Statistically insignificant" but very important to you and anyoen that values life and freedom - so do you value life so little that you dont care even about your own, that you are completely unreasonable when viewing and assessing risks? These risks probability are low, but very consequential and high impact if allowed to occur. Aside form the economic dislocations, the security backlash, military actions, etc - there is the simple fact of the large life of human life. I am unwilling to throw those people under the bus as "statistically insignificant" like you are. Collectivists like you are disgusting to individualists.
Your false positioning belies your purpose and your willingness to blind yourself for a political cause. You and yours are just a different kind of scum from the ones on the other side of the political coin from you.
And you might want to inform yoruself if you can get those idealogical blinders off. Not everythign is the propaganda that you have manged to ingest and regurgitate on command. In that way, you and the left are no better than the Right and its Rush Limbots. You refuse to see all the facts in your rage against your enemy, George Bush. You're as stupidly blind as the Republicans were against Clinton.
The problem is the Republicans could be dealt with - if they were "wrong" on thier impeachment we had a "liar" as president - nothign new there,they all lie, I think its congential. However, now, if you and yours are wrong, thousands more innocents will die, and many more will suffer.
Consider the cost. Carefully and fully. And value the individual, however "statistically insignificant" they are.
Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo! http://goo.gl/J9bkO
"If those in charge of our society - politicians, corporate executives, and owners of press and television - can dominate our ideas, they will be secure in their power. They will not need soldiers patrolling the streets. We will control ourselves."
~ Howard Zinn, 'Declarations of Independence'
hmm, so some Bush loving mod gave me a flamebait. Sheesh If you cannot stand reading bad things about Bush, the easiest way it to pluck thine own eye out.
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable" - JFK
I'm sorry for the loss of your cousin.
At the same time, don't assume that I have no experience with this - I lived three blocks north of the WTC that day. I've had relatives die in the towers. I was evacuated. I'll probably suffer from some exotic respiratory illness in the future, thanks to the EPA's lies. I think that I can safely say that I've had my life touched by terrorism. I only mention it because you infer that somehow being a victim makes your arguement more relevant. It doesn't.
That being said: We live in a country where roughly 20,000 citizens are murdered, mostly by their fellow citizens, yearly. I'm sure that I can come up with many other salient figures, but let's stay with good old murder. So, 20k died in 2001, and every year since then. 100k dead because of the murderers.
Imagine if Bush had declared a War on Murder. We're going to do the following:
* Spend a trillion dollars, to rebuild lots and lots of stuff in major cities.
* Monitor the phones of all Americans. Without warrants.
* Have forced, unpaid overtime for all law-enforcement officials. Oh, and they cannot retire, either.
* Have private security forces, on the government payroll, also doing stuff. Except that they're unaccountable to anyone, so they do a lot of bad stuff.
* Put "known murderer associates" in prison, no trial, no representation.
* Torture said "known murderer associates" for information regarding the murderers.
This is a pretty direct analogy.
But, remember - we're going to end murder, right? We're going to Win the War on Murder! Mission Accomplished!
Yeah. Americans would never, ever allow this. It'd never happen. *You* probably wouldn't want it to happen.
Of course, the average American is much more likely to be murdered "normally" than as a result of terrorism. Hell, they're much more likely to be killed by their husband, wife, parent, friend, lover, neighbor - really, anyone BESIDES a "terrorist". So, what rights should we give up to stop these killers?
Please don't tell me about substantive threats. There are many threats to the safety and security of American citizens, but terrorism doesn't merit the supposed cure that this administration wants to foist on the people.
jh
I may not agree with him, but he knows whereof he speaks. Like the other poster responding to him, I think it depends on the information being leaked, and the possibilities of achieving justice going through normal channels weighed against the risk of same.
But I give the man credit, he put his money where his mouth is. That's a rare and valuable trait these days.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
Did you notice how a number of races had a rove connection?
Have you (or anybody here) paid attention to the coast-to-coast gangs that have been picked up lately? The news hits conservative rags all the time.
Have you noticed a number of mafia being picked up?
Have you noticed the reports of IRS busts going up?
Now, what bothers me, is why is bush, the repubublicans, and most democrats shutting up Sibel Edmunds?
It's comical, actually. I read DKos sometimes, and it's painfully obvious he never reads anything that the right produces.
One time he came up with a beaut : he said that conservatives thought liberals were in bed with terrorists, but that couldn't be, because liberals hate the mean right-wing authoritarian societies that the terrorists want!
Which would be great, except that if he'd ever read any conservative publication, just once, he would read about how frustrated conservatives were that liberals were weak on terror, since, you know, terrorists are mean right-wing authoritarians and the left shouldn't like that. It could be a nice lesson about how both sides believe what they say, but that would be touchy-feely and uncynical, so we should avoid it.
Likewise, the right thought that the leak records would exonerate the administration (just as the left thought it would condemn them). So, actually, both sides wanted the information released, and condemned the reporters that wouldn't release it.
This or this were typical of the conservative criticisms of Judith Miller and Matt Cooper for not talking to prosecutors.
Indeed, my oath when I got my TS clearance specifically included "defending The Constitution". Even the oath itself recognizes that a higher cause trumps strict secrecy. That being said, I was never in contact with information that put me in that position. I do not envy people who are asked to decide between their oaths.
If the left would stop cheering on the terrorists maybe our troops could come home sooner. After all the left are the best cheer leaders the terrorists have. And as long as the terrorists see that they are splitting this country down the middle, they will continue.
There have not been as many problems with this in Afghanistan but the country was not divided about going into afghanistan, and the terrorists were not getting the reaction from the left that they are getting in Iraq.
As far as bush not being elected, that is just false. If you don't like him fine, but he still received more votes than Bill Clinton ever received. If you want to talk about voting scandals we can talk about Clinton selling nuclear secrets China for money to buy the election and then he pardoned everyone he could when he left office.(I like bush better than the alternatives but I still don't like about 50% of what he does which is down from about 90% of what Clinton did.)
Highest popular vote received by President:
62,040,610 Bush - 2004
54,455,472 Reagan - 1984
50,460,110 Bush - 2000
48,886,597 GWH Bush - 1988
47,400,125 Clinton - 1996
47,168,710 Nixon - 1972
44,909,806 Clinton - 1996
43,903,230 Reagan - 1980
43,127,041 Johnson - 1964
40,831,881 Carter - 1976
There is a substantive threat out there, and all the naysaying you put forth doesnt change it.
And? You're going to tell me that spending my tax money so the government can learn that I like pepperoni (wait.. scratch that, they "claim" they're just recording who I called, so supposedly they just know I phone in for pizza often) is going to... what exactly? Outline just one terrorism scenario where knowing who calls who makes the difference between the bomb going off (or insert other attack here) and saving the day. While we're playing 24, if news gets out that the administration already knew who the terrorist was, it goes down in flames for not arresting him immediately, and their party loses every election for the next 50 years. 100 if your plan fails to stop the bomb.
The money would be better spent on real border control, improving security of high-profile and high-risk structures (like oil refineries), and developing real security for airplane flights (such as swapping stupid rules like "no fingernail clippers" for air marshalls). And arresting the terrorists, instead of letting them run around thinking they're going to get away with their misdeeds, because once the terrorist gets the bomb on the bus/train/plane/whatever, no police, soldier, or NSA agent will save your life, no matter how much of it is on their harddrive.
If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
I was in Baghdad and in Kabul and Uzbekistan over the past few years (post invasion for both), and there *are* people that want nothing more than our destruction and subjugation.
So what? You gonna kill anyone who wants to kill you. They gonna kill anyone who they think wants to kill them. You're both gonna go at each other with tanks and guns and die inefficiently over time. Nobody will win, but you'll all manage to increase your likelihood of dying young nicely. The more you fight back, the higher the death rate. You're driving the statistics upward with every gunshot. Kill a terrorist, make two. Kill a terrorist-hating American, make two. It's a simple calculation that some people seem unable to get.
Someone has told you you can win. They're wrong. It's not any "different" this time, it's not any more "moral" this time, it's not any more "winnable" this time, it just goes on until old generations die out and new generations choose new enemies.
No need to tell me to read about the Middle East, my thesis was about the role of women in Palestinian terrorism and their socialization into ranks. I have done the fieldwork and I am very familiar. You might do better to listen to the blogs. Many of them are on the ground, as opposed to the mainstream media, who are in the hotels.
All your mentality does is create statistically significant forms of death from forms of death that began as statistically insignificant and could have been largely eliminated altogether with better policy administration and strategic and economic concessions. Yes, I know that conservatives hate concessions; the goal is to rule the world, naturally, and once you have gained a patch of ground, heaven forbid you should cede it to anyone else.
Some of this is a biblical mentality, some of it is a consumerist mentality, some of it is just postcolonial "protect the noble savage."
And stuff your false pity for the deaths in NY. "Statistically Insignificant" is for jackasses liek you. Suppose a terrorist were to sniper shoot you in the head. Thats "Statistically insignificant" but very important to you and anyoen that values life and freedom.
This is where you lose me. Someone shoots me in the head, the last thing I'm going to want to do is destroy all of society in the interest of getting revenge or trying to create a perfectly safe police state that won't manage to stop death anyway. If that's what I wanted, *I'd* be the jackass. I'm just one guy. It's not worth it. Is it worth destroying all of American society over three thousand American deaths? How many Americans die each year as the result of gun crimes? Poor health care? Are we prepared to dismantle a nation over those as well? Is that what the victims would want?
That's precisely what is going on here. Many, many more people are being made to suffer, and not just Americans. Entire ways of life are in danger of ending simply because a statistically insignificant number of people and their families are unable to cope with the fact that life is dangerous, murderers have always been around, helmets are required, and you may die young. Sure, get the murderers. But don't become so focused on that task that you are willing to destroy everyone and everything else in the process.
So you manage to wipe out all of "international terrorism" (which is laughable--terrorism is nothing less than a euphemism for "opposition to the status quo," it's a methodology and a location, not a person or people), and you manage to do it at the expense of all freedom, all multiculturalism, all understanding.
You create the perfect, homogenized dictatorship of safety. Guess what? Some people are still gonna die. Some people are still gonna die young. And more people will still die young by falling off their ladders than ever would have died thanks to some brown, foriegn boogeyman that terrifies the white post-colonialists.
Current American policy is racism, it's isolationism, its overreaction, its self-destructive policy, its a concession to Old Testament proto-messianism, but what it is not is any kind of assurance of safety, now or later, no matter how "successful" anyone is at it.
STOP . AMERICA . NOW
Last sentence of the fourth paragraph should be the last sentence of the fifth paragraph. How much do I love every forum outside k5 and slashdot, where you can edit your posts :[ .
with whom, and since when? Just because Bush said so, cause he's "the decider"? Last I heard, it was for the Congress to declare war.
You are not at war just because Bush said so. Otherwise, the US has been waging the "war on drugs" for decades, so you could say leaking classified information was treason 10 years ago as well, because then too you were "at war".
You have confused a metaphor with the law. Thanks for playing.
"Only the small secrets need to be protected. The big ones are kept secret by public incredulity." - Marshall McLuhan
I actually dont really object to having a place like gitmo, where people are stripped of their rights and summarily tortured, if we can send the people who implimented it there too, if/when they are deemed a 'threat to national security'.
HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
You may not have noticed that grandparent is responsible for 17 comments out of 627--nearly 3% of everything that's been said--in this story. Yet somehow you think that I'm the Troll? I'm at a loss.
...and by all means, mod this one down, too--I've enough Karma to burn. I prefer "Offtopic," since "Troll" seems unnecessarily racist. Trolls, after all, have feelings, too. I'll even forgo the bonus, to give you a head start!
Asswipe.
If you as an individual permit a search of your person or property, then no warrant is needed and any evidence is likely admissible.
That does not apply to the cases involving the phone companies giving out call information voluntarily. The release of that information without a warrant--which they clearly couldn't get or else they would have gotten one for Qwest--violates US Law.
I think we should help the NSA correlate the data they're gathering by mailing in our phone books.
Imagine 214 million phone books showing up on the same day.
Given enough time (say 6 weeks to get the word out) it would send a strong message I think. In order to ensure that the phone books get recieved and open all we would need to do is mail them to the FOIA address and enclose a letter requesting access to any information they're gathering on us. This way they would have 20 days to respond and they're legally obliged to do so. Don't put your name on the package, only your address so that they MUST open it and read your letter.
I'm dead serious. It would be a great starting point and it's better than just complaining and worrying about it.
Let's pick a day and Mail them here:
National Security Agency
Attn: FOIA/PA Office (DC34)
9800 Savage Road, Suite 6248
Ft. George G. Meade, MD 20755-6248
"And those of you who cite 'Secret Prison Camps' - go back and re-research that. They apparently never existed and were a story planted in order to catch leakers (which is what this may be all about)."
Isn't that convenient. Nope--we have no secret prison camps. Forget the various people tracking CIA flights, testimony from people who have been involved, etc. It was all just an elaborate hoax.
Yeah, right.
People questioned by the FBI about leaks of intelligence information say the CIA was also disturbed by ABC News reports that revealed the use of CIA predator missiles inside Pakistan.
I got it, and in your defense, you were quoting TFA. I just thought I'd be a smart-ass and jab more of the article than you. No offence meant.
I just find it funny when either the editors or authors have no idea what the difference is between a Hell Fire Missile and Predator Drone.
There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
I think we should help the NSA correlate the data they're gathering by mailing in our phone books.
Imagine 214 million phone books showing up on the same day.
Given enough time (say 6 weeks to get the word out) it would send a strong message I think. In order to ensure that the phone books get recieved and open all we would need to do is mail them to the FOIA address and enclose a letter requesting access to any information they're gathering on you. This way they would have 20 days to respond and they're legally obliged. Don't put your name on the package, only your address so that they MUST open it and read your letter.
I'm dead serious. Someone set up a site for this. freethephone.org or something. Get the word out.
No, its not public domain. Its between you, the phone company, and the person you called. The person you called does not recieve the list of previous calls. Only the phone company does, so no, its not public domain.
These people defending Libby make me sick. It's one thing to minimize the nature of his crime, or to claim that the CIA wasn't doing a very good job of protecting VPW's cover, but it is quite another to act like Scooter is some kind of hero for this. Who knew that the Republican party would have a wing that is openly pro-treason.
Umm, there are some craters in NYC and PA and a lot of relatives of dead people that differ with you on your opinion of "nebulous". One of them is a firefighter cousin of mine.
There is a substantive threat out there, and all the naysaying you put forth doesnt change it. Please start dealing with reality, not fantasy.
Whats important is that we do recoginize that there is a threat and as a nation PUBLICLY decide what we are going to do about it. Pretending its not there and we can go back to 1996 isn't going to work (thats your mistkae). Neither is hiding all our efforts under blanket secrecy to prevent such a thing from happening (thats Bush's mistake).
For starters, you're jumping to one hell of a conclusion by conflating my opposition to how our government is handling the terror threat with me somehow sticking my head in the sand and pretending that the whole wide world simply wuvs us and wouldn't hurt a hair on our heads. I don't think we should "go back" to ignoring terrorism. I also don't think that we're tackling the problem in the right fashion, either--and I get rather exercised by people who suggest that my failure to support the battle as it is currently being waged is, by extension, a failure to grasp the gravity of the situation.
I do take terrorism seriously, and frankly, I think the administration is making us far, far more enemies than allies in this regard. Nearly five years after 9/11, most of the world harbors dislike for our nation and our policies; startlingly large chunks of certain regions absolutely, vehemently abhor us, and actively wish to cause us harm. Tough talk about evil regimes and no negotiating with rogue nations looks good for the cameras, but it is simply unsustainable in the long term. Our military has been running at capacity with stop-loss orders for several years now, we're "meeting" reduced recruiting goals, and the crown jewel of our global offensive on terror is in an active civil war that we are pretty much powerless to stop--all we can do is supress it somewhat. On the international front, we've engaged in so much saber-rattling, "don't-fuck-with-us-we're-crazy"-style foreign relations that our allies are distancing themselves from us, and our enemies are starting to call our bluff. Our hands are pretty much tied when it comes to Iran, with our choices being largely restricted to "hope the EU 3 make a breakthrough" and "full war". We recently taught the Palestineans a valuable lesson about democracy in this brave new world: if you don't elect who we want you to elect, you'll pay dearly for it. North Korea is off the diplomatic radar again, since we're spending most of our diplomatic energy on keeping Iraq's civil war from erupting completely. Our president's staunchest ally is absolutely loathed by his populace and is on his way out. Our alliance with Pakistan will last only so long as the US-friendly military junta remains in power; a popular uprising would be all too happy to cut ties with America. Good 'ol "Pootie Poot" is finally showing his colors, which look something different from when he was chumming it with our president those years ago. Venezuela, should have been a fairly minor diplomatic thorn in our side, has turned into a full-scale pissing match between two men too proud to have anything short of their way. Even Afghanistan is still in limbo, with the Taliban making a limited resurgence and various warlords cum politicos jockeying for power.
How, exactly, is this the profile of a nation that is winning a struggle against international terrorism?
I care about national security. I care about combating terrorism. I also get a little ticked when people accuse me of living in a fantasy land simply because I think we're not going about things the right way. Since 9/11, I've lived in DC and Baltimore. I lived smack in the middle of the DC Sniper. If you think I spent those da
Obliteracy: Words with explosions
(at least!)
Mod me down -1, Obvious...
Is Capitalism Good for the Poor?
Umm, there are some craters in NYC and PA and a lot of relatives of dead people that differ with you on your opinion of "nebulous". One of them is a firefighter cousin of mine.
While 9/11 was certainly tragic, you and the rest of the populous need a little perspective:
Number of people killed in 9/11: 2,819
Number of people killed by heart attacks (2002): 696,947
Number of people killed by malignant neoplasms (cancer?) (2002): 557,271
Number of people killed by cerebrovascular disease (stroke) (2002): 162,672
I apologize for not finding 2001 figures, but there you have it. 9/11 was tragic, but by no means a large or even relatively significant cause of death in this country. There are bigger fish to fry if we're hell-bent on "protecting" citizens.
There's no hard evidence to suggest that we're going to be attacked anytime in the near future, either, and all indications were that some tweaking to the existing 2001 system could have and would have prevented 9/11.
Do we tweak things slightly as indicated? Of course not. We listen to stories about ghosts and goblins who will attack us if we don't spy on our neighbors, submit to invasive searches every time we fly, allow the government to sidestep warrants and due process, and a whole host of other normally heinous things that seem reasonable if it will keep us safe.
While we should certainly shore up holes in the system, begging our benevolent rulers to take away our freedoms to protect us from the boogeyman only leads to the same kind of oppressive government we like to brag about toppling and replacing with democracies in other countries.
No, no... you just get to set X and Y equal to "0".
I'm surprised no one has called you on this yet.
u sc_sup_01_18_10_I_20_121.html
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode18/
I read Section 2701 and all the Sections it references: 2703, 2704, 2518
For good measure, I read 2702.
None of those sections ever state that the FBI/Police can get any information without a warrant or subpoena signed by a judge.
Your statement that: "The surprising thing is that they dont even need a warrant - a simple "Section 2701" court order suffices - and the law even orders that the judge "Shall Issue" such an order when it comes to these kinds of records," is only partially correct. I say partially, because instead of a warrant, they can get a subpoena.
The law says nothing about 'the judge "Shall Issue"'
If you had read the law you referenced, you would have learned that the police/FBI must detail with specificity who/what/when/where/why in their application for a subpoena or warrant.
Possibly you meant Section 2709?
Counterintelligence access to telephone toll and transactional records
To get any information that way, "The Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, or his designee in a position not lower than Deputy Assistant Director at Bureau headquarters or a Special Agent in Charge in a Bureau field office designated by the Director" must certify that their request(s) "are relevant to an authorized investigation to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities"
And that section of the law requires that the FBI inform Committees in both the House and Senate on a semi-annual basis.
[Fuck Beta]
o0t!
It has nothing to do with the issue of leaking. But what it does show us is that when our fear of terrorism gets the better of us, it creates a self-fulfilling prophesy.
I'll take your $20 and here's why:
1) There is no additional risk.
2) A quick (yet fairly deep) check on a single number should be about as hard and expensive to use as Google.
2) The time and money being spent by their Security Agency is not coming out of Neocon pockets anyways.
4) It would be a pain in the butt to keep them separate.
5) Reporters talk to interesting people.
You can donate it to the EFF.
Government is a gigantic criminal enterprise, much like the Mafia.
Is Capitalism Good for the Poor?
With a WARRANT as part of a criminal investigation.
I personnally feel "safe" in my annonimity, but am still concerned that our country is letting our liberty erode so quickly. Our country is already responsible for whisking away a German citizen, beating the crap out of him in some thrid world hole and dropping him off in the middle of nowhere Albania. Is blowing the whistle on this kind of mistake treason? If you think so it will be a shame if your lost cell phone is found by a group of young college students with family in Pakistan, Iraq and Indonesia...The black helicopter boys would have you flown off to "Kaz-beat-you-ek-like-pinata-stan" before their wife has dinner on the table.
Please take a look at the constitution sometime! Particularly Amendments 1,4,5,6 and 8.
If vigorous defense of my freedom is the act of a liberal count me as one! When Bush and Rove talk of a complete victory in the war on terror ask these questions:
When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
4) We went through the long, painful public process of amending the constitution before the IRS in its present form was created. In effect, We The People agreed, beforehand, to the IRS. 5) The IRS applies to everyone equally. -- MarkusQ
How do you 'out' a CIA agent who pushes a pencil and drives to Langely every day?
Collectivists like you are disgusting to individualists.
So are you basically saying here that scale is not important when considering how to deal with something? If the individual is all that matters, why does 9/11 matter more than the odd American here or there getting killed by terrorists abroad? You seem to think things have changed substantially since 1996, so I'd like to know how that fits into your "individualist" philosophy.
GP's point is that it's absurd to ask us to compromise as citizens (i.e., give up our rights and pay for ridiculous wars) over something like 9/11. That's like your local police department asserting new rights for itself because of a serial killing in another state.
However, now, if you and yours are wrong, thousands more innocents will die, and many more will suffer.
Huh? Thousands more innocents will die if... ? That's a pretty powerful consequence to invoke without really coming clear about what you're saying. If Bush gets impeached? If it turns out that there were WMDs in Iraq? I'm also really confused as to how wrongfully removing Bush would cost so many lives, considering how much he's accomplished as far inciting the next generation of terrorists, and how studiously he ignored the threat of terrorism in the pre-9/11 days.
We know already that over 30,000 innocents have died in Iraq as a result of the war. Some might even go so far as to say the administration mislead us into that war, or that some members of the administration wanted to invade Iraq all along. I think, given their existing track record, it's far more dangerous to assume the administration is at all on the level.
If other reasons we do lack, we swear no one will die when we attack
Dear god! It's al Qaeda or al Qaida, not al-queda.
Using 'Al Qaida' (with 'al' capitalized) in the middle of a sentence is also bad--you don't say, for instance, 'I just saw The President walk by'; you say 'I just saw the President walk by'. Likewise, it's 'I saw al Qaeda walk by' rather than 'I saw Al Qaeda walk by'.
Watergate, anyone? Is resignation so old fashioned, that even Republicans won't do it?
Fine... then impeach them...
Republicans hate our way of life, they hate the constitution, and they hate the bill of rights. Republicans are traitors.
The underlying issue here is that too few people know what is actually going on. Compartmentalization is the practice of requiring only those with "need to know" into certain Top Secret programs (being "read on"). As long as these alphabet soup agencies have control over who is privvy to their dirty laundry, this will continue.
We need to make clear that many people NEED access to EVERYTHING our government does. Members of each body, member of each party, and neither party - Majority Leaders, Minority Leaders, Judges, GAO, IG, Secretaries of State, Defense, AG, Homeland Security, Joint Chiefs, Chairs of Foreign Relations, Intelligence Committees. Not just a few people who might never bother to look into the laundry basket - but enough people that bureaucrats can be assured that SOMEONE will be looking in theirs if something is amiss.
Accountability begins with knowing the accounts.
Why doesn't that constitute torture? It's certainly the type of coercion used by the Nazi's to gain intelligence when they "interviewed" my great grandmother for 12 continuous hours.
It's also the type of thing which is frowned upon by our prison system when used against our *legal* prisoners. It's also not the limit of the tactics used against these prisoners, you might recall the phrase "water boarding" used pretty frequently.
You may also recall that Abu Ghraib was under our control at the time of the openly admitted action there. The supposedly rogue agents were trained by our military and intelligence agencies to perform such actions, supposedly that would be for them to *use* such tactics. Whether they did so under direction of our government or not makes little material difference when you consider the fact we trained them to do it under precisely the circumstances they were presented.
You might also consider the US government's insistence that the Red Cross and various other humanitarian groups *not* be allowed to conduct any extensive audit of our facilities at Gitmo and perhaps draw the conclusion that the government is afraid of what might be found there. This is obviously conjecture *but* why do we have to resort to conjecture in a supposedly free and democratic society where transparency is the only guarantee of continued freedom from tyranny? Isn't this precisely the kind of dodgy behavior which supposedly justfied "regime change" in Iraq?
We agreed to the Geneva Accords, can we not restrain ourselves from violating treaties we had a hand in drafting and forcing on other nations? Are these not the "crimes against humanity" which we are now prosecuting Saddam Hussein for having committed and now we prefer to opt out when it's our turn to show our cards?
The republic has only one true enemy right now and that is the willfull ignorance and tacit approval of its citizenry. I'm with "V" here, the people should not fear their government, the government should fear the people.
I just found out there's no such thing as the real world. It's just a lie you've got to rise above. - John Mayer
Wow, that is quiet a post. It is very well written and takes apart all of the grandparents flawed arguments. If only I had mod points now. How long did it take to write all that?
At last! Finally we found some terrorists ... at an address on Pennsylvania Avenue.
... but then ...
Let's check the historical precedent -- when Nixon resigned to avoid impeachment, it was due to using the CIA to spy on the Democrats.
While there aren't many Democrats around anymore, messing with the folks who buy ink by the barrel is not terribly bright
Dubya's got a stubborn streak a mile wide and a mile deep -- he won't go quietly. And with his approval ratings, I could see a number of Republicans deciding they might be better off without him. So we might actually get to see what happens when a President is removed from the protections of the Executive Office.
Even if President Cheney would be inclined to pardon him (as I'm sure he would be), I suspect that he has his own skeletons in the closet to be wary of, and we might just get to see what kind of subsequent criminal charges could be brought against a President impeached and then removed from office by means of a trial for "High Crimes and Misdemeanors".
We definitely live in interesting times.
You get your chief of staff to call a good lackey reporter and setup a meeting. Duh. I thought we knew this already.
Your musings may seem over the top, but they bring to mind a recent analysis of a roadside bomb that was intercepted while being smuggled into Iraq from Iran.
The bomb was of British design, later sold to the IRA.
The British government is frequently Olympian in its stupidty and corruption, but anything they can do we can do better.
Play Command HQ online
One word of about the legal defination of "shall." "Shall" doesn't always mean "will" or "must." It can also mean "may." As they say, "If you can't argue the facts, argue the law."
Now, on to the wiretaps.
Are the wiretaps being conducted by the FBI? The article doesn't say. Now they should be conducted by the FBI, since the FBI has sole jurisdiction within the United States, but as we've seen recently, the adminstration has little regard for that as seen with the NSA operating within the borders of the United States, which is explictly forbidden to do so. Was the required warrant issued? That's the question. If government did get a court order, then everything is cool. They showed probable cause to an independent judiciary. That's the way the system works, and how it should work. Unfortunately, there's real doubt these days that actually happened.
Currently there's a program, in violation of the 4th Amendment by the NSA. It's conducting surveillance on American cititzens without any judical oversight. Why is that? The FISA court was setup to issue secret warrants, and it only rejected only a handfull of requests in 30 years. Speed? The government could start wiretaps immediately and get a retroactive wiretap within 72 hours. That's plenty of time to fill out paper work.
The president has argued that he (through the executive) doesn't require court orders in manners of national security. Revealing state secrets would definately fall under the national security umbrella. So by this logic, no court order is required, so why would one be sought?
Just to recap what this adminstration has publically argued:
This is distrurbing. This is too much power for one man. That's why the founding fathers created a system of checks and balances on the executive. What does the adminstration say to a lay my fears? "Trust us." No. No I don't, and more importantly, I live in a country with a form a government where I don't have to.
Just though a few facts might counter the hysteria. The sky isnt falling - at least in this instance - the laws are working as they are written to do. And those of you who cite "Secret Prison Camps" - go back and re-research that. They apparently never existed and were a
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
Someone may argue some legal mumbo jumbo that purports to show that the constitution doesn't really say what you just read above, but that just sophistry. What is meant is eminently clear:
1. Government officials get to trespass on the privacy of citizens only when they have a warrant.
2. A warrant shall only be issued when there is probable cause.
The NSA have grabbed the records of tens of millions of American citizens without a warrant. That's all you need to know.
Before someone shouts: "But the PATRIOT ACT!":
All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
The PATRIOT act. That name is one sick piece of propaganda. It goes against everything the constitution stands for. Speaking of the constitution: Anyone remember this quote?
I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.
That's what Bush swore. Remember?
How about these quotes? Remember them?
They that can give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
Without Freedom of Thought there can be no such Thing as Wisdom; and no such Thing as Public Liberty, without Freedom of Speech.
Every government degenerates when trusted to the rulers of the people alone. The people themselves, therefore, are its only safe depositories.
A free people claim their rights as derived from the laws of nature, and not as the gift of their chief magistrate.
I have sworn upon the altar of God, eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man.
I thought that was what Americans were supposed to stand for!
I just scanned the level five posts. Every one of them are rampantly anti-Bush. Most lack one iota of actual fact. All operate under hyperbole.
The point is this: somebody leaked classified information. It does not matter what information was leaked. The fact that it was leaked is absolutely criminal. When you think the information leaked helps your side, you don't care. Screw you all. Based on an adult life protecting this country and having a clearance, I understand the importance of protecting classified information--even if I don't agree with what that classification protects.
What you do not realize is that information kept secure is kept that way for a reason. The people who leaked decided that they were above the law. They decided that what could be short-term political gain was more important that your personal security. This is not civil disobedience any more than flying a passenger liner into a tall building a protected speach.
You guys need to get over your petty political opinions and accept that a crime that affects you has been committed. The fact that certain reporters were complicit in the prepetration of the crime gives sufficient cause to investigate them.
If Bush were really trying to silence opposition via an investigation, you can bet your sweet bippy that he will see to it that the Justice Department will dot all the Ies and cross all the Ts to ensure that those who need to go down do.
What those who want activist courts fear is rule by the people.
--Toy Matinee, 1990
I move Your Rights Online be renamed Your Rights Dismantled.
And perhaps a new category could be created entitled Restoring Your Rights.
My dear American AC in Paris,
I do not often use the vernacular of our times; having grown up on books like The Federalist Papers and The Prince, I generally prefer more intelligent discourse.
Every once in awhile however, someone so completely blows my mind with a position so clearly and powerfully written that I am forced to say...
Holy fucking shit that was a good post!
My hat's off to you. I'm keeping this one for posterity's sake, should I ever need these words again.
We are the fire that lights our world.. and we are the fire that consumes it.
"I don't know of anyone in my administration who has leaked," Mr. Bush told reporters in Chicago. But, he added, "If somebody did leak classified information, I'd like to know it, and we'll take the appropriate action. And this investigation is a good thing."
Presumably if Bush was the one who leaked the classified information, then he lied about it to the american people. If Bush did not know about it, then it was illegal. Either way, there are serious ethical problems with this administration.
It seems that the deluded blinkered right wing bigots (BRB)are campaigning for Bush And the rest of the Blair/Howard Axis of evil at various places on the net, but they are outnumbered 10 to 1 at least.
There WAS a time when The US was a symbol of freedom and democracy to the rest of the world, now it is a symbol of corruption and Govenment lies, without a claim to democracy.
Voting in Bush makes each American responsible for his actions.
Only a BRB would believe less than 100k have died in Iraq.
These same people defended the reason for going to war in Iraq when it started (WMD), despite the truth being repeatedly told to them by people like myself at the time that there were obviously none present on the publicly available evidence at the time. Of course this is conveniently forgotten. To justify this they have invented the lie that Iraq is better off under US rule to salve their tiny little consciences.
Only an idiot would believe the Bush admins figures on casualties-thats why Bush believes them!
IMO the current leaders are nothing but corrupt war criminals and their supporters are just as responsible.
The only way to change this situation is to get a Democratic majority in Congress. Sorry, Republicans and Independents, the Republican majority has already substantially demonstrated they have no interest in protecting and upholding the Constitution. They must out. A Democratic majority will investigate and impeach, and the Republic will be safe once again. Conservatives have an edge in SCOTUS; fine, they can stay for a while so we have balance again. But the administration and corrupt members of Congress must be impeached and imprisoned.
How do you make this happen? Work for a Democratic candidate where you live and help elect them. If you're in New York, there's a great organization called New Democratic Majority (newdemmajority.org) that has been working since 2003 on the grassroots level to win seats back from Republicans. Elsewhere there are lots of organizations working on the same thing. Pick one and pitch in. Personally, I like grassroots because you can do more interesting things than stuff envelopes, but pick whatever suits your fancy. Just do something. Heck, even if you're a disaffected Republican, it's really important to the future of the country that you put your shoulder to the wheel too. There are lots of groups that aren't loosie-goosie hippy-cum-bleeding hearts, in fact. Most are eminently reasonable and pragmatic.
Just do it!
Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.
With all due respect to your grandmother, no, 12 hrs of talk does not constitute torture. I'm sorry, but when compared to say, 12 hrs of bamboo splints up the fingernails, or 12 hrs of having some guy named Hanz beat you with a sock full of coins, even 12 hrs of seeing your wife, daughter or mother raped is toruture... but no, sorry, 12 hrs of questioning is not turture.
Under your rules, is 6 hrs of questioning torture? How about 2 hrs. What if I ask a single question or look inquisitive? Is that torture? Where do you draw the line?
From Gitmo, the torture that has been reported has been having the AC too cold, sleep deprivation, having to hear a female and male prisoner talk to each other, and having a fellow inmate flush a Koran.
The comment I was referring to mentioned the torture at Gitmo. I have heard of nothing coming out of Gitmo that I would call torture. As to the torture at Abu Ghraib, I'd call that abuse, but still does not qualify as torture in my book. Those responsibe for that are now in a military stockade. I've been to a military stockade. Trust me, they would much rather be in Abu Ghraib.
Sorry, but your're wrong. According to the Red Cross it is our very own government that requested the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to visit with the detainees. Stop drinking the Kool-Aid.
Maybe you are thinking of Amnesty International (or AmNasty Intl). They invited, but insisted they be left alone with prisoners. Of course, this was denied for their own security as well as the US's. The last thing the US needs is some anti-American Socialist from AI coaching prisoners or telling them information they are not supposed to have. Even worse, it would be a PR nightmare if a few AI reps were assaulted held hostage by a prisoner. Besides, AI has an agenda. From CNN: The chief of Amnesty International USA alleged Sunday that the Guantanamo Bay detention camp is part of a worldwide network of U.S. jails, some of them secret, where prisoners are mistreated and even killed. They also labeled the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay as "the gulag of our times." Of course, all this without actually going there. Yeah, they have no agenda. I had no idea that Gulag prisoners were fed three hot meals a day and given an opportunity to practice their faith.
Geneva Accords refers to uniformed soldiers, not trained terrorists who dress as civilians and hide among and behind women and children.
There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
1). This is the same press that has been nailed with scandal after scandal of lying to create sensationalism. I mean, what's the downside of lying here? They fcking hate the administration so a little lie gets them lots of attention and spins the haters even more.
2). You simply can't have a security policy where nutjobs working on secure projects figure their right to blab overrides everyone else's right to use technological advantages to catch the bad guys. This thing is self feeding because the press always tells half the truth and obscures the facts. Fck, most of the population now thinks the only reason we invaded Iraq was either because of WMD or Oil and that the government is listening in on everyone's phone conversations. LIES! LIES! LIES! LIES! Saddest of all, a bunch of you are happy to hear the lies and turn off your brains.
"God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
For the record, I've opposed Bush since the 2000 election. I was a McCain man ...
So does that mean you voted for McCain in the general election in 2000?
This just goes to show how selfish the common american is, they will tolerate a illegal war, tolerate torture of enemies of the state. Then when they realize the very rights of others that are being trampled are their own, then they wise up.
Wake Up People... The US is turning into a fascist state.
--
Heh... yeah... good luck with that...
I am the man with no sig!
There are many things to bash the Bush Administration for. This is not one of them (GWB has been extraordinarily blessed by the stupidity of his opponents).
1. This is a criminal referral by the NSA to the Justice Dept. to find out who leaked National Security secrets (like, duh, how we find terrorist communications). Just like every other criminal investigation phone records are subpoenaed. Recall Patrick Fitzgerald and the indictment of Scooter Libby (done in part by getting phone records to find out who he talked to).
2. The NSA program to listen in on Al Qaeda phone calls is limited. By if nothing else having people review the recordings. It takes people (who speak foreign languages) to review this stuff ("Abu let's blow up the Metro Station! Kill the Infidel Americans! Yes Khalid we shall do it next Tuesday!") This stuff is good to have, don't pretend it could save your life of that of someone you know.
3. Qwest refused to hand over it's phone records but will sell them willingly (check out their home page) to anyone it has a business relationship to. The Dems have a gigantic database of personal info (if you ever gave to them) same with NARAL, NRA, ACLU, Sierra Club, NAACP, etc. So for that matter do marketers who will buy in bulk or Russian scammers who can buy in bulk not just your phone records but Credit Records and Credit Card transactions.
You're more at risk from fraud and identity theft by Qwest and Visa selling your info to the Russian Mob than GWB "fascists."
Slashdotters seem to have the mental age of 12. They're akin to seeing a risk of slipping and falling during exercise so never leaving the couch (and dying of Obesity).
Bottom line: NSA program leakers (probably Dem Congressional staffers, Leahy in particular got his clearance pulled after one too many leak) broke the law, and are getting investigated. This includes pulling phone records to see who dimed to Ross.
The real risk is private stuff; not lame Duck GWB who if anything is too PC and mushy to take real actions.
Choose one: listen in to who's calling Osama, protect methods and sources of intel; OR mondo profiling of Muslims in all walks of life (Abdul gets a full body cavity search while flying, and Al Gore gets a pass, not the other way around). It's an either/or proposition; you can't have both.
I think the Clinton fiscal responsibility was largely an illusion created by the fact that congress hated his guts and wouldn't support any spending, and he vetoed down everything congress threw at him. Also, I hear the 'balanced budget' was due to slick bookkeeping.
We have sown the financial wind, we will reap the financial whirlwind.
I cried real tears when Li Mu Bai died.
I think you're defining torture arbitrarily narrowly.
The 12 hours of interrogation my great grandmother endured was designed to make her contradict herself in any small detail in order to wholly give over control of the local bank to the Nazi party. The fact that she came out of it at all, even with lost esteem, was a credit to her ability to BS with the best of them. Does the threat of death or "disappearance" of oneself and one's family constitute torture?
What degree of coercion do you believe is allowable? Obviously the AC doesn't fit your notion of "unbearable" but that line is incredibly arbitrary. How far do we stray from the straight and narrow before we consider a course correction?
If too-cold AC is okay, what about too-cold water? What about too-hot? How long can a given prisoner hold their breath? Is holding them underwater uncomfortably long but well within their survivability torture? Is holding them underwater until they have to be rescusitated torture? What if the water was hot? Or cold? Or dirty?
What, specifically, is torture?
And why aren't our uniformed soldiers bound by the Geneva Accords? You claim it's because the enemy combatants aren't uniformed members of a specific fighting force. Allowing for the peculiar anachronism, does this mean the Confederate conscripts in the American Civil War could be tortured but their officers could not? And why, pray tell, do we believe that these crimes against *humanity* can only be committed against soldiers? Is it truly our aim to abide by the letter of the law only, abandoning the spirit of a humanitarian attempt to enforce some kind of decency in a world where destructive capacities are measured in megatons?
I don't for a minute believe we get to have it both ways on this Geneva Accords issue. Our soldiers are protected by the accords when fighting Al Qaeda or Iraqis but Iraqis and Al Qaeda are *not* protected by the same? We can hold them incommunicado indefinitely under conditions which we cite in other nations as human rights abuses? Even convicted prisoners who have had actual trials and been proven to have committed actual crimes receive better treatment under our law. These men whom our own government has admitted were mostly conscripts with no material or intelligence value are being held in limbo.
And you use cultural relativism to your advantage when it comes to defining our torture methods, to paraphrase "This doesn't constitute torture to them" presumably because Saddam set the standard so high? So it's not torture unless Saddam did it? So we can do anything up to, but not including, public beheadings, rape, cutting, electrocution, etc.?
I just found out there's no such thing as the real world. It's just a lie you've got to rise above. - John Mayer
he agreed to testify for immunity, that's why.
If keeping a list of phone_num to phone_num calls is not considered eavesdropping, so they can also keep track of IP to IP connections. Watch out what websites you visit then.
If you voted for this asshat supreme, shame on you. MARS BITCHES
What astounds me is that Bush has done more under his watch to compromise Americans' civil liberties -- on all fronts -- than Nixon ever did. Why the hell aren't we impeaching him? Is it just that we know Cheney's worse? Or what? IMPEACH this president before we're the farm animals in Animal Farm.
"If you've done nothing wrong, you have nothing to hide" sentence is strictly equivalent to "if you have something to hide, you've done something wrong", so if a governement want to use the first one against the population, it can't logically deny the second one about itself.
Forget BND, the British BNP (fascist party) has far better things to hide given their hatred of all things different :)
s tory=690481
:(
http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/story.jsp?
Appologies for wandering off topic
I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
Why not just secede from the Union? After all, Republicans couldn't really complain given that most of them think that Lincoln was a tyrant for stopping the south from seceding. Of course, given that the blue states are paying for the red states (farming and empty oil wells not being particularly profitable these days), it would result in total economic collapse of the remaining portions of the Union, but it's not like those states aren't already perilously close to third-world conditions anyway.
Perhaps the ABC could now go back through that page and post the IP address that every comment was made from next to each comment. Surely no-one would have a problem with that. Losing a little privacy/anonimity is a small price to pay in the War on Terror right?
This little discussion reminds me of a common scene in movies. It goes more or less like this:
- The hero of the story comes running into somebody's house, grabs some unexpected (and usually valued) object (say a valuable antique statue) and takes it way/throws it into the swimingpool/gets rid of it in some way
- Everybody is surprised and shocked, maybe somebody even says "what the hell do you think you are doing?", and maybe even try to stop him.
- Then that object explodes! (but thanks to our hero nobody gets hurt)
The thing is, in movies the audience knows beforehand WHY the hero is doing what he is doing, we've followed him through it and saw how he found out about the imminent danger. To us (audience), the shock, surprise and even attempts to stop the hero from getting rid of the dangerous object look stupid and misguided.
In a way AC/Paris is the hero here. By having a deeper understanding of how the world works he can beter see how a chain of events started by the actions of the current US administration risks going around the world and ending up making things worse for the american people instead of beter.
By comparisson, those who cannot see further than their bellybuttons, who lack the mental ability to follow a chain of events further than 2 steps (action - reaction) and whose understanding of the world beyond their country can be summoned by "If you say something in english really loud to a non-english speaking foreigner they'll understand what you mean" just seem stupid and misguied.
Why do Republicans and their apologists hate America?
Windows Media Player 11! Genius!
Could you be more specific? I don't think I'm doing that here.
Speak softly and carry a big stick; which in this case would be credible (read: not left-leaning blogs) citations.
You're implying that my sources are no good without actually making a specific accusation.
My three links were:
1) A video and transcript of the opening of the Senate Judiciary Committee session. A factual record, not an opinion piece.
2) A Washington Post news story. Not an opinion piece. Not a left-leaning blog.
3) Remarks concerning the PATRIOT act by President George W. Bush, which included links to the official transcripts.
None of these items are matters of "strong opinion," and I frankly think that would be clear from even a cursory examination of the actual linked pages rather than just the domain names. The sources in these cases are ultimately 1) The Senate 2) The Attorney General 3) The President.
It is public knowledge that Valerie was an analyst, not covert, when she was "outed." The public should know that people at the CIA are spending more time on politics than getting useful or accurate intelligence information. They should know that Joe Wilson and his wife have been bitter partisans for a long time. They should know that Iraq did have millions of pounds of yellow cake and that they were trying to get more. The CIA asked for a leak investigation because of politics, not sincere concern for Valerie's safety. She was on the cover of a freaking magazine!! She let her husband write a letter in the New York Times about the trip that she got for him. So much for tradecraft.
If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face - for ever.
Wow, what a great post!
It must have taken alot of time to respond this clearly on so many points. What is amazing is how much education you need in a post to clarify things. Or else, you end up with a hopeless argument back and forth, which just doesn't end anywhere.
Hope you don't mind if I decide to re-use this in other discussions, with proper attributions.
Kudos and thanks for bring to light alot that needs to be addressed now..
Bush's folks are running full throttle to shut down our civil liberties. When they tap a reporter's phone or snag phone call data from a news room they are effectively putting a shutdown on your right to information. The press is a key component in keeping us free. Just ask anyone who lives in a country that does not have a free press. Obviously Dubya and company are getting some consulting help from Vladimir Putin.
Purchase prepaid cell phones!
A completely anonymous cell phone loaded with a few hundred minutes can be had for under $50. I've seen some for as little as $29. Some companies like TracFone specialize in this market, but many leading cell phone companies are now into the game. For instance, one can walk up to any T-Mobile outlet and purchase any of their prepaid phones. They may ask for a name and contact info, but for cash transactions no ID is necessary, any name given will be accepted.
Purchasing a phone at a retail outlet or convenience store is even easier and more anonymous; they'll never even ask for contact information. Some phones purchased at retail are packaged with only a very small number of minutes. Additional minutes can often be purchased online, but that would defeat the purpose of this exercise. Typically, the retailers that sell these phones also sell phone cards specific to the phone.
Some other keys to staying anonymous with a prepaid cell phone:
ONLY purchase with cash. This should be obvious, but both the cell phone and any prepaid cards should be purchased with cash.
ONLY use the phone to call your contact. If the phone is EVER used to call your home, your work, or any of the people you typically call, then an investigation of the Local Usage Details (LUDs) from those other phones could tip investigators to the presence of the prepaid cell phone.
Regarding the recently revealed NSA phone number database. Reports suggest the NSA has developed a "spider" technology allowing suspect numbers to be easily associated and identified. One might gather that the phone numbers of prepaid, anonymous cell phones would be of particular interest to the NSA. These phones may even be automatically red-flagged by the system. One can see how the use of this anonymous phone to make even a single call to the phone owner's home or office could completely compromise the phone's anonymity.
Keep the phone OFF except when using it for a call. Better yet, take out the battery.
Don't ever turn the prepaid phone on while at or near your work or home, not even to simply verfiy that it is working. When a cell phone is on, the physical location of the phone can be determined by triangulating the phone's signal between any 3 cell phone towers. No, this isn't GPS, but it may as well be.
Location triangulation has been possible as long as cell phone networks have been around, even in the analog days. No mater the age or design of the phone, this triangulation is technically feasible. (Many if not most of the "GPS trackers" used by law enforcement and other investigators don't use GPS at all, they use the triangulation capability of the cellular network to follow suspects. So if one were worried that such a tracker had been attached to their vehicle, one may wish to invest in a cell phone jammer...)
While there is no evidence that this triangulated location information is being stored or shared with the government, one must remember that modern cell phone switches are just computers. And as computers, these switches are certainly "capable" of storing the location history of any cell phone, as long as that phone is turned on.
Don't forget, the location of your every-day personal cell phone can be triangulated as well. So if you plan to keep your personal cell phone or Blackberry (Blackberry uses cellular networks) with you while making the illicit call, turn them off well before activating the anonymous prepaid phone. For these protections to be complete, one would turn them off in another location. Even better, leave any personal cellular devices at home or at work, then relocate yourself before activating the prepaid phone.
Use one phone per contact. If you have multiple contacts, purchase multiple phones.
When done with the phone, wipe the memory, wipe the phone for prints and leave the working phone (with charger) at a bus stop or ot
Ah yes. The idea of habeus corpus. I've heard of that. A quaint, pre-21st century idea that everybody knows does not apply to people dubbed "enemy combatants" by the Bush regime. I suggest you don't worry about it. Unless you have something to hide, or want to compromise "national security", of course.
Besides, that guy is one of the lucky ones. The unlucky ones get "rendered" to other countries, including ones that practice unambiguous torture.
That crushing sound you hear is a few centuries of judicial precident being steamrollered in the name of the Bush regime's idea of "national security". I respect those reporters who are willing to stand in front for the sake of all of us. I wish I had that kind of guts.
Leaking confidential documents is a federal crime.
Even though you all seem to support the crime that has been committed, that doesn't change the fact that it's a crime. Criminals should be brought to justice.
Dissent is legal, propogating your dissent by leaking confidential documents is a crime.
THERE IS A DIFFERENCE!!!
Prevent linux based DDOS's!
http://linux.denialofservice.org/
The way I see it is that people "in the know" have two means by which to draw attention to corruption:
1. Resigning
2. Leak the information to the free press
We are seeing both.
Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
Perhaps the ABC could now go back through that page and post the IP address that every comment was made from next to each comment. Surely no-one would have a problem with that. Losing a little privacy/anonimity is a small price to pay in the War on Terror right?
Why stop there? I'm sure their ISPs would be happy to turn over the information if asked. Tell them it's for national security and they'll roll right over. You could publish their IP addresses with their names, home addresses, phone numbers, etc.
The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
Bravo, well said. This is one of the most articulate, well-reasoned responses I've read on Slashdot in a very long time. I'm adding you to my "friends" list so that I don't miss your future posts. Kudos.
Apparantly, the records were obtained by subpoena. A subpoena may be issued administratively (no court involved) to compel a witness to produce certain evidence for purposes of discovery.
ABC News explained that a National Security Letter (NSL) is "a version of an administrative subpoena and are not signed by a judge. Under the law, a phone company receiving a NSL for phone records must provide them and may not divulge to the customer that the records have been given to the government."
Regards,
Jtheletter
-- I'm not a pessimist, I'm a realist. It's not my fault that life sucks so much. --
Apparantly, the records were obtained by a type of subpoena called a "National Security Letter". The targets of the investigation are the federal employees who leaked the classified info, which is a crime. A subpoena may be issued administratively (no court involved) to compel a witness to produce certain evidence for purposes of discovery.
At the ABC news site they explain that a National Security Letter (NSL) is "a version of an administrative subpoena and are not signed by a judge. Under the law, a phone company receiving a NSL for phone records must provide them and may not divulge to the customer that the records have been given to the government."
My original post is entirely factual, but was modded "troll" by people who obviously can't tell a troll from things they simply disagree with. This entirely shows just how skewed the slashdot orthodoxy is.
It amazes me how many people who berate others for not "doing something", are too lazy, chicken, busy, or whatever to actually themselves "do something".
So go for it. But just so you know, you won't be able to get very close, and you'll get arrested because it is illegal to yell and scream in front of the White House, but that's ok.
"Avoid employing unlucky people - throw half of the pile of CVs in the bin without reading them." -- David Brent
I think I'm going to start correcting people - when they say "war on terror", I'll say "No, you mean the war on freedom.".
Rob, et al - please have a "emergency /. backup site" somewhere. I expect all icons on your site, that day, to be the guy with the gag in his mouth.
You're a moron - read the thread and see the number of Republicans who are truly concerned about the way the country is going.
And *never* assume that Democrats are incapable of the same thing - that paves the way for the same assholes who took over the Republican party to do the same to the Dems 10 years from now.
Last post!
Yeah, yeah, way too late for that.
You do realize that phone records of reporters could be legally subpoenaed as part of a leak investigation being performed by the DoJ instead of some nefarious link to the NSA program don't you?
I could also point out that pen register information (phone numbers dialed) is not considerred protected by the Fourth Ammendment either. There are other laws that may or may not protect these records depending on the circumstances but it's not a Fourth Ammendment issue.
--- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
The linked article said nothing about this being a Justice Department investigation. It referenced "the government" as tracking phone calls. And they were not subpoenaed. That is the critical issue here, and the one that those making your arguement consistently ignore: THERE IS NO OVERSIGHT. No courts, FISA or otherwise; no warrants issued; no subpoenas issued. This is a case of the Executive branch, which is what the NSA is under, collecting information in a sweeping fashion on private citizens who are not the suspects or targets of any criminal investigation. This is not a criminal investigation. It is naked intimidation.
"The NSA program to listen in on Al Qaeda phone calls is limited. By if nothing else having people review the recordings."
How do you know? Because they told you? You know what else they told you? They told you that whenever the government talks about wire tapping, it is always under a court order. But that has been demonstrated to be false. So they have lied to you at least once about this. They have told us a lot of other stuff that is also not true, but that is outside the scope of this post. The point is, they have shown that they are willing to lie to you. Again, the issue is oversight, or the lack thereof. I think I would rather have a court ruling on the scope of this program rather than having it limited solely by a lack of resources.
"Qwest refused to hand over it's phone records but will sell them willingly (check out their home page) to anyone it has a business relationship to."
This is true. And I don't like it any more than I like the rest of this crap.
"The Dems have a gigantic database of personal info (if you ever gave to them) same with NARAL, NRA, ACLU, Sierra Club, NAACP, etc. So for that matter do marketers who will buy in bulk or Russian scammers who can buy in bulk not just your phone records but Credit Records and Credit Card transactions."
This is also true, but so what? The Dems have that for political action and fundraising. So do the Republicans. No one is taking issue with that here. Are they using those databases in conjunction with data from major telecom carriers to cross reference with your calling habits to establish patterns of who you call and why? No, they are not. Why? Because it's illegal.
What the Russian scammers and the like do is also illegal. If you were a victim of theirs, you would have legal recourse (such as it is) to do something about it and have the perpetrators brought to justice. However, with the NSA trolling you have no legal recourse. Don't like it? Tough. NSA invading your personal life? We can neither confirm nor deny that at this time. Your spouse was brought in for questioning and is now being tracked because his/her calling habits fit a pattern? We have no comment. Want to have the FBI investigate? They don't have enough security clearance, sorry.
"Bottom line: NSA program leakers ... broke the law, and are getting investigated."
Ok, this shows that your argument has the mental age of 12. The leakers leaked because they had no legal recourse to government law breaking! I love the double standard. If I see a person breaking the law, I have a duty to report them to the authorities. But according to you, if I see a government agency breaking the law I am supposed to accept it and get with the program, because it's all for my own good. Somehow, I don't buy it. Honestly, why do you trust the government so much?
"Choose one: listen in to who's calling Osama, protect methods and sources of intel; OR mondo profiling of Muslims in all walks of life (Abdul gets a full body cavity search while flying, and Al Gore gets a pass, not the other way around
"What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
All you really need is the reporter's phone numbers. Then you can do a search against outgoing call records from government phones. That might let calls by gov't officials from private phones get by (however, I'm not sure if high-security-clearance folks essentially sign away their rights to privacy in return for their clearances; if so, even calls from their private phones might be subject to this).
Care to elucidate? Or are you just ranting?
"What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
If that were so, why did this "fake" company have to close its doors? And why did the CIA ask for this investigation if that was all Plame was doing?
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable" - JFK
Mind that leaping to conclusions, you may strain something.
Why would the NSA even be involved in an investigation of leaks of classified information? That is completely outside their purview. Instead all we have right now is another "leak" that claims this is happening.
Shouldn't we demand that the leak be confirmed before we jump up and down and yell about "where are the warrants?!?" before we even know if there is any bloody investigation being carried out?
--- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
I love Slashdot, but for the love of God don't spend more than 5 minutes here on this subject unless you've already sent correspondence to Congress demanding action on this issue. They have ability to impact this situation, and impacting their re-election chances will provide the necessary impetus. Thank you.