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U.S. Secretly Tapping Bank Databases

The Washington Post and New York Times are reporting on a Bush administration initiative that has tapped into a vast global database of confidential financial transactions for nearly five years. Relying on a presidential emergency declaration made under the International Emergency Economic Powers, the administration has been surveilling the data from the SWIFT database, which links about 7,800 banks and brokerages and handles billions of transactions a year. From the article:
Together with a hundredfold expansion of the FBI's use of "national security letters" to obtain communications and banking records, the secret NSA and Treasury programs have built unprecedented government databases of private transactions, most of them involving people who prove irrelevant to terrorism investigators.
The NYTimes goes on to say that the joint CIA-Treasury program has played a hidden role in domestic and foreign terrorism investigations since 2001 and helped in the capture of the most wanted Qaeda figure in Southeast Asia. Still, the access to large amounts of confidential data was highly unusual, and concerns were raised about legal and privacy issues.

537 comments

  1. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Folks -- if they don't have enough intelligence to invade the right country then I doubt they have enough intelligence to monitor bank records. They can't even manage to look after their own federal spending, why do they need to look after mine?

    1. Re: Wow by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Informative

      > Folks -- if they don't have enough intelligence to invade the right country then I doubt they have enough intelligence to monitor bank records.

      One of the sad ironies in all this is that they probably would have seen 911 coming if they didn't have to filter out so many details as the reports of the field officers work their way up the organizational tree.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re: Wow by cluckshot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They are not fools. (Mods if you don't like the truth just comment against it or get a life) The guys who are doing this monitoring have a full plan to monitor all data that can be collected on every person on the earth. I know this because I have read the Requests for Proposals from the various agencies involved. There can be only one logical conclusion of this effort. These guys want to establish a world wide Gestapo or SS. They intend to do so with impunity. They will do just as the NAZI's did, and cover their mafactor status as being "anti-terrorist".

      For those who don't believe this just test a few facts. These people know full well that Al Qaeda doesn't use the modern banking system. These people know full well that their efforts have little or no effect on Al Qaeda. At the same time these people refuse to do border enforcement or any of the requested security measures already law in the USA which would protect the people from real terrorism. Where for example is the phone number where a US Citizen may call and have an illegal or undesirable alien (One who is acting badly for those who don't understand) promptly and properly dealt with under law. Where I live, if I call the Sheriff I may see an officer in 1 hour or so depending on the time of day. If I called about a real live Al Qaeda member to the US Border Patrol or ICE the call would never be responded to. There are only 65 ICE agents actually empowered to make arrests in the USA as a whole. Surely this tells the truth about the real intent here. It is pretty undeniable.

      What is developing is obvious in another arena. George Bush has not issued a single Veto since he became president. This is because his treasure trove of info arrived at by this nefarious means that he couches as "Anti-Terrorist Efforts" actually is used as extortion against US Senators and Representatives who dare vote against his plans. This is why all measures always pass with at least a minimal margin no matter what. He doesn't care to eliminate the Congress as he controls it by this means.

      My US Senator Jeff Sessions has come under serious pressure trying to destroy his career as a US Senator because he spoke up against the Immigration lies that were being spread. The cost he has paid has been very high. In an election he will face the Republican Party Machine trying to destroy his reputation and take away the money from contributors. Supposing you dare contribute a significant amount of money, you may find your business contracts with the government suspended if you have any. You may find your reputation destroyed by the data they developed in this mass spying effort. The senator himself will find every detail of his life made public to try to ruin him.

      This is a direct threat to the very existence of a free people and a freely elected government. It makes the President of the United States of America and his team the chief terrorists in the world. It makes without doubt the danger very high. This is why we in the USA live in a continual state of "Terrorist Alerts" and other mechanisms designed to keep us sturred up and always afraid. This paranoid state they have us living in is making the whole world think we are insane. The fact of our sanity being in question because of this is becoming all of the discussion around the world. These people are up to no good in the White House. DO NOT MARK me as part of those who oppose the Republican Party generally. I support and go to meetings. I am a long standing life long Republican. These men in the White House only claim to be Republicans. I know most decent Republicans oppose what is going on.

      What for example have they done to Preserve Protect or Defend the Constitution of the United States of America? (Their oath of office) I am a supporter of a strong America and I definitely support the efforts to put down Islamic Radical Terrorism. The efforts of these people are giving aid and comfort to the enemies of America at time of war. Yes their actions are TREASONA

      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
    3. Re: Wow by Ash+Vince · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The CIA and NSA did see 911 coming.

      It's just that if it had not happened then the US public wouldn't have been so tolerant of their own sons and daughters dieing in countries like Afganistan and Iraq while trying to secure the rest of the worlds oil reserves.

      In Afganistan they wanted to build a pipeline that the taliban never would have agreed to. In Iraq, well the largest oil field in the world speaks for itself.

      Just look at what was happening to US defense expenditure before 911. It was going down as the majority of the population realised that there was no big bad communist Russia to fight anymore so there was no need for aircraft carriers and nuclear subs.

      Now we have terrorists, an enemy who can never go bust like Russia did. And if you kill a terrorist, 10 more just spring up their place. It is a war the US can never win. Which obviously suits the people who make from money from war by selling defense equipment to the US govt.

      The NSA and CIA let planes crash into the twin towers and that conveniently empty (for redecoration apparantly) wing of the pentagon. They did this as they knew it would result in massive increase in their budgets.

      And before you dismiss this as a troll, just think what you might ignore if you were looking at redundancy from somewhere you had worked for 20 years. From a career you enjoyed, possibly with no other hope of employment in the same field. After all, who hires people with a 20 year gap on their CV which they are not allowed to discuss for reasons of national security.

      If all I had to do to protect it was look the other way briefly, I might just do it if I had a wife and 3 kids to support.

      But herein lies the problem, the people on the other side are more desperate the we are. Most of Iraq has a much lower standard of living than the US, the population is on the edge of starvation, disease is rife and on top of that the country is a war zone where you might just catch a stray bullet or bit of shrapnel and die. Now on top of that only thing your country has of value to trade with (oil) is in the hands of foriegn companies (the only ones with the expertise to extract it) who are allied with the foriegn invaders. Try putting yourself in this position and think of how determined you might be to throw those foriegn invaders out.

      But my final point is more disturbing than all of this. We now NEED the CIA and NSA. We need them to stop some super pissed of terrorist obtaining a nuclear device from Pakistan (Definately have nukes unlike Iran) or Iran (Maybe have nukes but definately dont like us) and blowing us up with it. All they have to do is smuggle the nuke onto a plane bound for the US from some third world country.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    4. Re: Wow by HardCase · · Score: 0, Troll

      And before you dismiss this as a troll...

      I don't dismiss it as a troll, but rather as the ravings of a paranoid wingnut.

      -h-

    5. Re: Wow by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 5, Informative

      First of all, I do agree about the danger you are warning against, but I also think you are not entirely appreciating that you fell into the trap yourself as well.

      For those who don't believe this just test a few facts. These people know full well that Al Qaeda doesn't use the modern banking system. These people know full well that their efforts have little or no effect on Al Qaeda. At the same time these people refuse to do border enforcement or any of the requested security measures already law in the USA which would protect the people from real terrorism. Where for example is the phone number where a US Citizen may call and have an illegal or undesirable alien (One who is acting badly for those who don't understand) promptly and properly dealt with under law. Where I live, if I call the Sheriff I may see an officer in 1 hour or so depending on the time of day. If I called about a real live Al Qaeda member to the US Border Patrol or ICE the call would never be responded to. There are only 65 ICE agents actually empowered to make arrests in the USA as a whole. Surely this tells the truth about the real intent here. It is pretty undeniable.

      If you actually look at the 9/11 attacks as well as to other similar situations, you'll find that the only terrorists you are going to catch at the border are those trying to flee the country afterward, and even that is extremely unlikely. You'd also see that those who planned and executed the attacks were not illegal foreigners. Hence, similar to the situation you pointed out yourself, such actions would have virtually zero effect on terrorism.

      All the screaming and arguing about illegal immigrants is really yet another way to divert attention away from what is really happening.

    6. Re: Wow by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't dismiss it as a troll, but rather as the ravings of a paranoid wingnut.

      I'm not going to say that the gp is right, nor that he is wrong. Rather, I'd like to ask you to dismiss his arguments as impossible or at least extremely improbable and provide some reasoning for it, just like the gp made some arguments as to why he might be right and why it is not that unlikely at all that what he says happened.

      In short, come with an argument instead of name calling, or live with not being taken seriously.

    7. Re: Wow by HardCase · · Score: 0

      Nope, I'm sticking with paranoid wingnut. Being taken seriously by the /. crowd isn't really high on my list anyway. Besides, I suspect that I'm not in the minority with my viewpoint. I'm just not afraid to post non-AC.

      -h-

    8. Re: Wow by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Being taken seriously by the /. crowd isn't really high on my list anyway.

      If you don't come up with anything usefull, then indeed you won't be taken seriously, not just by the slashdot crowd, but by anyone who has some capacity of independent thought.

      That said, I am not the slashdot crowd, I am an individual slashdot reader putting up a question to you. Why the fuck are you posting here if you don't want to debate anything to begin with?

      Besides, I suspect that I'm not in the minority with my viewpoint. I'm just not afraid to post non-AC.

      I suspect you are indeed part of the majority which dismisses arguments based on who is making the argument and not based on the merrits of that argument. At least, your posts are strongly suggesting this.

      So, are you capable of independent thought and making an argument or are you just one of the mindless sheep.

    9. Re: Wow by rolfwind · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I used to have Republican tendencies too until I recognized the neocons in office have no financially conservative (read: responsible) goals in mind but are spenders at heart. I'm not democrat either because they are the flip side of the coin and are 98% the same, now I only support Independents who aren't career politicians. Like Jesse Ventura. That guy showed Independents can win.

      But I agree with you, it's sad how this administration uses 9/11 and "terrah" as the excuse for everything that has nothing to do with it.

    10. Re: Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I don't dismiss it as a troll, but rather as the ravings of a paranoid wingnut.

      Praise be to you for supporting the cause, brother. You have learned well that ad hominem attacks are the only reasonable response to those who do not think as the current government demands, and who dare question the truth the government speaks. It is thanks to the unflinching loyalty of people like you that the iron grip of fascism can so quickly be affixed upon a once-free and once-great land.

      Be at ease, for the state shall continue to provide your thoughts for you. And take comfort, for although UNSPEAKABEL EVIL IS ALL AROUND YOU, if you remain loyal to the state, it will protect you.

      Remember: your will is ours; your thoughts are ours; we are your protectors.

    11. Re:Wow by John+Gagon · · Score: 0

      Ho hum, what else is NEW

    12. Re: Wow by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You need to publicly insist that the poster is crazy to reinforce your own denial. You need to keep shouting down your own little voice whispering that what they say might be true. If you weren't so insecure, you'd just keep your smug willful ignorance to yourself.

      You're an even bigger coward than the silent deniers: you're scared of your own shadow, and you're bullying it into submission.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    13. Re: Wow by vishbar · · Score: 2, Funny
      ...but by anyone who has some capacity of independent thought.
      Yes. BOTH of those Americans will taunt you nonstop.
      --
      Ride the skies
    14. Re: Wow by QRDeNameland · · Score: 1

      I suspect you are indeed part of the majority which dismisses arguments based on who is making the argument and not based on the merrits of that argument.

      ...and, in circular fashion, bases the dismissal of the person making the argument on that argument alone, again without any critical thought applied to the argument itself.

      --
      Momentarily, the need for the construction of new light will no longer exist.
    15. Re: Wow by ResidntGeek · · Score: 1

      But my final point is more disturbing than all of this. We now NEED the CIA and NSA. We need them to stop some super pissed of terrorist obtaining a nuclear device from Pakistan (Definately have nukes unlike Iran) or Iran (Maybe have nukes but definately dont like us) and blowing us up with it. All they have to do is smuggle the nuke onto a plane bound for the US from some third world country.

      I liked your post, but take issue with that part. The CIA and NSA aren't necessary to stop a pissed-off terrorist with a nuke - just a few people with Geiger counters screening international flights at each airport is all.

      --
      ResidntGeek
    16. Re: Wow by joschm0 · · Score: 0

      Those bastards.

      --
      01/20/09
    17. Re: Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Al Qaeda may not but others use the system. (it was used to catch the Bali bomber)

      Oh well, not to worry, the US hasn't suffered a major attack since 9/11. If we keep giving our secrets away I'm sure we can count on that record to hold.

      How the hell would you suggest that we "put down Islamic Radical Terrorism"? We can't tap their phones. We can't watch who they call. We can't watch their bank records. We can't torture them (or put panties on their heads".

      Please tell me.

    18. Re: Wow by uarch · · Score: 1
      They are not fools. (Mods if you don't like the truth just comment against it or get a life)
      Good, sounds like someone is about to make a good point.

      There can be only one logical conclusion of this effort. These guys want to establish a world wide Gestapo or SS. They intend to do so with impunity.
      lol. Maybe not.

      I definitely agree that we need to maintain checks on government but why do so many people fight to believe every half-baked conspiracy theory they hear?
    19. Re:Wow by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They had the intelligence, and the power to cherrypick, to invade the country, Iraq, that was right for them. The Bush administration is the Iran/Contra administration . All these people made their bones in the 1980s CIA/NSA cocaine and guns conspiracy. That hijacked American foreign policy to wage secret wars in Central America. To raise money for secret wars elsewhere, like in Africa, and Osama bin Laden's Afghanistan. With secret Saudi funding and Iranian funding. As seed money for robbing the Savings and Loans of over a $TRILLION (in 1980s dollars: our GDP was 1/4 what it is today).

      These same people, like Poindexter, Negroponte, Bolton and so many others, wrench our country into invading Iraq to the benefit of Saudi Arabia and Iran, giving the NSA and CIA powers previously forbidden by our constititional democratic republic. While spying on all Americans for the political power that ensures their corporate backers will make all the money they want, forever.

      They're pulling it off. As measured by $TRILLIONS in profits and unlimited power, killing thousands around the world and leaving our country to rot. How can we possibly deny that they're smart, that they're doing it all on purpose, that it's malice, even evil, that is driving all their actions? Because the truth is too much to admit, especially since we like to believe what we see in the media: the Republican government works for us, not themselves and their corporate masters.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    20. Re: Wow by Memnos · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The parent comment brings up some salient points. I unfortunately believe that his/her points only tangentially address the real problems we face now. Our nation and most importantly our government is showing all of the signs of age, as in biological age. It no longer functions effectively, but that is among the least of our problems, because the intent of Adams and Jefferson was that it would not. However, the problem is that is does not function effectively in representing the body politic. That was never intended. Our government was intended by those who wrote the Constitution ("Oh God, not that pain in the ass document again" as many in the Legislative and Executive branches say) to be inefficient in imposing its will on the populace. Back to aging, our society and culture seems to have bought into the idea that everything will be fine if only someone ELSE can take care of it for us. We are far too risk-averse, and on our way to proving Ben Franklin's quote about trading liberty for security true in the worst way. It is us, as a people, who bear the burden of responsibility for this. And it can bring us to our collective knees if it does not do us worse. My family came to this country long ago (about 175 years) and I cannot imagine my Grandparents, to say nothing of my Great-Grandparents, standing by and letting our rights be chivvied away as they are now. But the fact is that we do. More specifically, in the future we are going to face increasing encroachments on our right to be left alone, because of a fundamental flaw in jurisprudence. We can only expect privacy if it is "reasonable" in the current societal context, and with technology marching on, reasonable privacy is an ever shrinking circle. Could you imagine in the last century that you could not expect privacy in your own back yard. Well now Predator drones are flying overhead, so you cannot. It will go much farther than this. My bitch about this is done for now. I would only quote from one more free than I: "Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their quick brown foxes running over lazy dogs and jumping away to the aid of their party." If we do not wake up and take the phrase "by the people and for the people" seriously, then we deserve what we get. I can find work anywhere, so what I'll do, if all is lost, is get away from this national and cultural self-destruction. Best of luck to the rest of you.

      --
      I don't trust atoms -- they make up stuff.
    21. Re: Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      So if you disagree your a puppet of the guberment. But then again, if you drink the koolaid that's offered by the wingnuts...........

    22. Re: Wow by heinousjay · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm not speaking to the original point, but

      I suspect you are indeed part of the majority which dismisses arguments based on who is making the argument and not based on the merrits of that argument. At least, your posts are strongly suggesting this.

      When ranting and raving on the internet without presenting any sort of corroboration, indeed with not even leads toward information that may serve as a basis of evidence, dismissal is pretty much the only option. Anyone can post anything, and chasing down the rainbows of paranoia isn't a productive activity. After all, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

      This whole situation is kind of like the OJ defense: claim the administration is so incompetent as to be unable to conduct the normal business of the country, while at the same time masterfully organizing the biggest conspiracy in history completely successfully? Something doesn't fit.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    23. Re: Wow by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      ...and, in circular fashion, bases the dismissal of the person making the argument on that argument alone, again without any critical thought applied to the argument itself.

      Except for the fact that despite repeatedly asking for an argument, I did not get any, so it is not possible to judge it on its merrits.

    24. Re: Wow by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      This is all nice except for the fact that the original post that this is all about did make an argument based on reasoning. It is not too difficult to point out the flaw in that reasoning (as I did in another post btw). It is indeed more difficult then attacking something on facts that you can dismiss as flawed or sources that can be called biassed...

    25. Re: Wow by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      The CIA and NSA aren't necessary to stop a pissed-off terrorist with a nuke - just a few people with Geiger counters screening international flights at each airport is all.

      No, that won't work. Nukes are most efffective when set off above the target. So the odds are that the nuke would go off before the aircraft landed. That takes care of the geiger counter at the receiving end. At the take-off end, there are any number of countries that would look the other way in order to see a terrorist effort go forward, so that's not an issue at all.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    26. Re: Wow by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      They killed America! Those bastards!

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    27. Re: Wow by SimplyI · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You are absolutely correct. But, consider how they have such power. It is the people of the United States who have given it to them. An interesting way that the government gains power is by assumption and acquiescence. If the government begins acting with power it does not have and the people acquiesce, the government has a new power as nothing is stopping it from acting so. And, if it did it in the first place, it is corrupt enough to do it if no one keeps it from doing it. If a thief goes about stealing and no one stops the thief, the thief now has the power to steal, that is, until such time as something is done. And, that is the same with the government. Something can be done. More work becomes necessary the for each moment that nothing is done, however.

      Also, you should reconsider your position on political parties. You say that you are a Republican and those "in the White House" are not. But, what, precisely, is a Republican? What it means to be a Republican has changed a great many times over the years. The meaning of Republican is simply a function of the beliefs of those who label themselves Republican. To determine if you are a Republican or not, you must look at what those who claim to be Republicans think. It is quite obvious that you do not agree with the "party line," so you are not a Republican. But, when you say you are a Republican, you don't mean it in the sense that I have laid out. I understand that. You rather have a static set of beliefs that you think of as Republican beliefs and they are yours. So, in your own definition, you are a Republican.

      But, that is a flawed definition, as that is not how Republican is defined. If you look at the wikipedia article for the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republican_Party_(Uni ted_States)Republican Party of the United States, there is no set of beliefs that are Republican. (Of course, we must not lose sight of the fact that, not speaking of beliefs, you are a Republican if that is what you're registered as. That is obvious, but, you speak of beliefs. Thus, do I.) Though, the article does speak of historic beliefs, actions, etc. up to the present. Rather than trying to identify with a party in order to speak of what you believe, why do you not merely state what it is you believe? Of course, you can use peoples' understanding of the belief of various political parties as a shortcut, but that is different than identifying yourself as a member, as that says that you follow the party. To quickly give people the gist of my beliefs, I say that I generally agree with the beliefs of the Libertarian party. And, if elaboration is necessary, I will elaborate. But, what I do not say, is that I'm a Libertarian.

      There is a difference between sharing the beliefs of a party and following the beliefs of the party. That is, there is a difference between a party's beliefs happening to describe yours, and a party's beliefs defining yours. You quite obviously do not follow the latter, as you have a set of beliefs and are sticking to them. But, though that is true, you still attempt to have the party define yours by making the party beliefs be your own. All this party business is ridiculous. What is the point of a party? I am not of a party.

      I'm not bashing you, by the way. I'm just trying to help you sort out the party nonsense. From your comments on the current situation, you seem a rational person, which is somewhat rare.

    28. Re: Wow by QRDeNameland · · Score: 1

      I think you misunderstood me, I was agreeing with you. I was merely further pointing out the absurd circular logic of that type of ad hominem. The guy didn't address the argument other than to make an ad hominem, which was solely based upon the argument he didn't address.

      --
      Momentarily, the need for the construction of new light will no longer exist.
    29. Re: Wow by heinousjay · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Now I'll speak to the original point, since you seem to have missed the chance I provided you for critical thought.

      I guess I missed the part where the evidence of the CIA and the NSA allowing 9/11 was posted. Maybe it's in your super special edition of Slashdot that I don't get?

      From here it looked like the unfounded assumption upon which the entire rest of the post is based.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    30. Re: Wow by mrraven · · Score: 1

      How about we worry about the real killer of Americans heart attacks that kill 1 in 5 Americans that die every year. Time for a war (of words) against big macs. We need to get over allowing the neo-cons to implement a literal police over the statically for all intents and purposes no existent threat of "terror." The only person actually producing terror is Bush.

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
    31. Re: Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "For those who don't believe this just test a few facts. These people know full well that Al Qaeda doesn't use the modern banking system."

      Yeah, we all know that every time Osama needs a new RPG, he digs under his matress for his secret stash of money. I'm as disgusted with the Hitleresque preludes our government is throwing at us as the next guy, but come on. It's impossible for Al Qaeda *not* to use the 'modern banking system'.

    32. Re: Wow by SimplyI · · Score: 1

      You first hit... and missed. But, the second time you struck the heart of it but didn't know it. You say that "the problem is that is does not function effectively in representing the body politic." It is true to an extent, but it isn't the heart of the matter, more on that in a second. You then say that "our society and culture seems to have bought into the idea that everything will be fine if only someone ELSE can take care of it for us." Are the beliefs of "our society and culture" not those of the body politic? The heart of the matter is that the government *is* fairly effectively representing the body politic and the absurd beliefs of the body politic are the real problem.

      On another note, the fact that people, in general, have assumed the belief that someone ELSE will take care of things is indicative of deeper, more serious logical faults which allowed the people to believe such a ridiculous thing. And, those faults lead to other illogical behaviors besides the "someone ELSE" one.

    33. Re:Wow by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      the Republican government works for us, not themselves and their corporate masters.

      As if the Democrats are any different. Both parties work for the rich, the powerful, and those ultimately interested in stasis and status quo. It doesn't matter which party you vote for, because neither has worked for you, the prole in the street, for decades. At least.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    34. Re: Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are not seriously asking people to put money and time towards finding a "cure" for heart attacks are you? Because if you are, then you are asking everyone to believe in the fountain of youth.



      For the most part, heart attacks are natural and are the way that most elders pass away. This isn't a bad thing, necessarily, as it keeps the world from overpopulating. The same could be said about cancer, except cancer is probably the result of man. We can do something about cancer, but heart attacks are largely the result of your body reaching the end of its useful life.

    35. Re: Wow by mrraven · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No I'm asking for an education campaign so people will stop eating fatty unhealthy food dumbass.

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
    36. Re: Wow by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      I guess I missed the part where the evidence of the CIA and the NSA allowing 9/11 was posted. Maybe it's in your super special edition of Slashdot that I don't get?

      The poster asserted that the information to prevent it was in fact there. This was confirmed even by the official report on 9/11, so there is very little reason to doubt it.

      Going from there to 'the CIA and NSA allowed it to happen' isn't such a stretch either but it does not in itself explain why they 'allowed this to happen'.

      What was asserted is that this was allowed to happen in order to control the population. Well, simply not having found the relevant information in time due to the huge amount that is there and insufficient communications and coordinmation sounds like a much simpler explanation indeed.

      That said, allowing such an incident in order to control the population is far from unheard of, rather, it is a very well documented 'trick' that has seen a lot of use throughout history. With that in mind, suspecting a government of doing the same might be wrong in this case, but isn't exactly a matter of paranoia.

      If you read back the conversation as well as my original reply to this supposed 'paranoid poster', you'd see that I first of all pointed out a problem with his reasoning, and second, asked others to do the same. Hence I don't see where you are comming from with your comments about critical thought.

    37. Re: Wow by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      I think you misunderstood me

      I'm sure I misunderstood you, sorry :)

    38. Re: Wow by why-did-I-wakeup · · Score: 1

      I really REALLY *REALLY* hope this guy is wrong... But the more I hear the harder it becomes to doubt him. And how the hell has G.W. gotten away with so much? I still can't figure that out... Should this not be enough to at least get the republicans a *really* bad rep? I guess with the way so many americans just dont care about what their government does it probably wont. Oh, well; hopefully the current america will collapse under it's own weight before it does anymore damage to the world... sigh...

      --
      Most people would rather be certain they're miserable than risk being happy.
    39. Re: Wow by HardCase · · Score: 1

      Not at all. The original post suggested that I might dismiss him as a troll. I simply corrected his misunderstanding of my position. He's free to shout to the rooftops whatever is on his mind. It doesn't scare me, nor do I feel the need to deny what he says. It seems to me that he unwittingly makes his own case for the absurdity of his statement.

      I'm just as sure that nothing that I say will change his mind - thus, I can hardly bully him into submission. He said his piece, I said mine. I wasn't debating the issue - if I was debating, you'd know it.

      But thanks for trying to psychoanalyze me. Alas, you've missed the mark.

      -h-

    40. Re: Wow by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      I wasn't debating the issue - if I was debating, you'd know it.

      Rather, you seem to be refusing to debate it, also with people who are actively trying to hear your argument.

      But thanks for trying to psychoanalyze me. Alas, you've missed the mark.

      Yes, your behavior really suggests that.

    41. Re: Wow by HardCase · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The poster asserted that the information to prevent it was in fact there. This was confirmed even by the official report on 9/11, so there is very little reason to doubt it.

      Going from there to 'the CIA and NSA allowed it to happen' isn't such a stretch either but it does not in itself explain why they 'allowed this to happen'.


      Nothing happens in a vacuum. He mistakes bureaucratic incompetence for intention. Going from incompetence to intention is a huge stretch and implies a serious misunderstanding of how the career employees of the federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies do their jobs. I leave to you the exercise of determining how such a thing could be covered up, given the number of people that would have been involved.

      That said, allowing such an incident in order to control the population is far from unheard of, rather, it is a very well documented 'trick' that has seen a lot of use throughout history. With that in mind, suspecting a government of doing the same might be wrong in this case, but isn't exactly a matter of paranoia.

      Whose history? US history? You're saying that the US government has allowed something like the 9/11 attacks to occur in the past just to inflame the populace? Now I'll admit that our government isn't run by a bunch of boy scouts, but I think that you're pulling something out of thin air here.

      Incidentally, at some point, you claimed that I was dismissing the OP's comments by saying that he was paranoid. On the contrary, as I've already mentioned, he did the job himself. I was just challenging his own assertion that I might consider him a troll. I don't think that he's a troll at all. I never addressed his comments, though, because I really didn't think that they were worthy of discussion - at least on my part. Perhaps I was wrong.

      -h-

    42. Re: Wow by HardCase · · Score: 1

      Rather, you seem to be refusing to debate it, also with people who are actively trying to hear your argument.

      Huh? What argument? He said I might think he's a troll. I said that I thought that he was something else. No argument, no debate. As I said earlier, I didn't address his manifesto, only what he suggested that I might think of his state of mind.

      Yes, your behavior really suggests that.

      I guess I struck a nerve.

      -h-

    43. Re: Wow by chromozone · · Score: 1

      You project ther resentment you have for your Dad into Bush. Let it go.

    44. Re: Wow by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Huh? What argument? He said I might think he's a troll. I said that I thought that he was something else.

      You judged him on the argument he made, but refuse to debate that argument even when asked to repeatedly.

    45. Re: Wow by HardCase · · Score: 1

      You judged him on the argument he made, but refuse to debate that argument even when asked to repeatedly.

      Ah, I see your misunderstanding. He suggested that I would think that he was a troll, but didn't give any reason why I would think that. I told him that I thought that I thought that he was something else, also giving no reason why I thought that.

      Fair's fair. My opinion is my own and I don't owe it to anyone to offer justification for it, particularly when my comments were not addressed to anyone else.

      Now, I think that the OP knew that his position was extreme or else he wouldn't have prefaced it with the "troll" statement. That really precludes an honest debate. Besides, I'm not particularly interested in presenting a case for moderation when the OP's position is so extreme that common sense ought to suggest to a rational person that what he suggests is so unlikely as to not really be worth my time.

      As it is, I think that I've spent far more time on a nice Saturday afternoon discussing this topic than it's really worth. Clearly you're just looking for an argument and I'm not interested in arguing, so let me take the opportunity to thank everyone for their input, such as it is. It hasn't changed my mind, but, then again, I wasn't trying to change anybody else's mind, either.

      By the way, another opinion that I have is that you've tried to make a mountain out of a molehill. My advice, free, so take it for what it's worth, is to get over it and move on. That's what I'm doing - it's nice and sunny today, so I'm heading outside.

      -h-

    46. Re: Wow by Carewolf · · Score: 1

      They did see 911 coming, and wrote reports about it. They just didn't do anything about it. Probably expecting the president to take action, but he didn't care at the time.

    47. Re: Wow by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Fair's fair. My opinion is my own and I don't owe it to anyone to offer justification for it, particularly when my comments were not addressed to anyone else. ...

      By the way, another opinion that I have is that you've tried to make a mountain out of a molehill.

      And my opinion is that if you don't have anything to contribute to a discussion, it is a good idea to just stay out of it. If you don't then you better be prepared to motivate what you are saying.

    48. Re: Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great truck, but it will go back to looking like it did in the first picture when the worlds oil runs out in a few years

    49. Re: Wow by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      Didnt the US have one of its own presidents shot under dubious circumstances on US soil back in the 60's. I think that any CIA involvment in that conspiracy may hold up some of my arguments about 911.

      For fuck sake, if the US cant even protect its own head of state who the fuck expects us in the rest of the world to take them seriously. And if they can protect them then the CIA was involved. Your screwed either way.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    50. Re: Wow by bar-agent · · Score: 2, Interesting

      On another note, the fact that people, in general, have assumed the belief that someone ELSE will take care of things is indicative of deeper, more serious logical faults which allowed the people to believe such a ridiculous thing.

      This is not a logical fault. People would take it upon themselves to fix things, to oversee the government, and all that. People do -- retirees and college students do.

      But they are the only ones who can take the time. Everyone else is too busy working to have any attention or energy left over to deal with things. Everyone has to assume that someone else will take care of it, or else assume that it just won't be taken care of.

      That is what is allowing our government to become corrupt. Over-work.

      --
      i'd hit it so hard, if you pulled me out you'd be the king of britain [bash.org]
    51. Re:Wow by gamlidek · · Score: 1

      This might be true to a degree, but the executive branch administration has done more to weaken our country, economy, and ecology than many other administrations that came before it. So, the question should be, which is worse: Republicans or Democrats or this administration? Personally, I don't think this country has had many "leaders" in charge for a looong time, and this administration's leadership is one of the worst. /gam/

      --
      "In theory, theory and practice are the same; in practice, they are not."
    52. Re: Wow by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Nothing happens in a vacuum. He mistakes bureaucratic incompetence for intention. Going from incompetence to intention is a huge stretch and implies a serious misunderstanding of how the career employees of the federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies do their jobs. I leave to you the exercise of determining how such a thing could be covered up, given the number of people that would have been involved.

      Actually, the flaws in his argument are many, attributing to malice what can easily be explained by incompetence is just one.

      That said, the basic issue he is raising is real and quite serious. Regardless of if the US government was in any way involved or allowed the 9/11 attacks, they have used them for a very serious power grab.

      To suspect malice is not entirely strange when you look at the congress report on 9/11, suggesting as you also say that burocratic incompetence, and more specifically, having the information, but having failed to actually spot it and communicate it in time were why the attacks were not prevented. To respond to that with increased survailance makes absolutely no sense whatsoever, rather, it just increases the problem. Yet this is exactly what is being done. This gives sufficient reason to believe that the motivation for this survailance is in fact not the one that is being given, from there to concluding that fear is being used to let people agree to things they normally wouldn't agree to is not far fetched, and is confirmed by the actions and words of the current administration.

      This leaves it open to debate what the real motivation is but the alternative to attributing this to malice seems to be believing in collective stupidity of the administration.

      Whose history? US history? You're saying that the US government has allowed something like the 9/11 attacks to occur in the past just to inflame the populace? Now I'll admit that our government isn't run by a bunch of boy scouts, but I think that you're pulling something out of thin air here.

      The history of about any nation on this planet. While there is no serious past incident in US history that I am aware of, that is no reason to ignore the signs that are there now, and assume the USA is inmune to this.

      Wether those in power actually caused or helped the incident or not is of course important, but in no way changes how this incident is being abused. Whenever such abuse happens, there are of course going to be people arguing that the incident was on purpose, in this particular case I don't believe that to be very likely (first of all because there simply was no need to do so, it would have happened anyway, tho maybe in a slightly different form at a slightly different moment) but I wouldn't dismiss it out of hand.

      Last but not least, I believe that while his argument was flawed, it did need being addressed because the underlying issue is real and pretty important.

      Incidentally, at some point, you claimed that I was dismissing the OP's comments by saying that he was paranoid. On the contrary, as I've already mentioned, he did the job himself. I was just challenging his own assertion that I might consider him a troll. I don't think that he's a troll at all. I never addressed his comments, though, because I really didn't think that they were worthy of discussion - at least on my part. Perhaps I was wrong.

      Thanks for the explanation. I may not agree with you, but when you explain where you are comming from, I can at least try to understand your point of view.

    53. Re: Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am not sure how to respond. The question was about radical Islam and you talk of Big Macs. Last time I looked a Big Mac didnt force me to eat it. They certainly dont fly aircraft or carry AK47s.

      So unless we solve every other threat we dont address terrorist threats? Please tell me what other queues I have missed. Cancer then space flight?

      Good lord, what you eat is a personal choice and I dont see how this is the federal governments responsibility to baby sit adults.

      I guess we need a really large attack to take place and then maybe, maybe people like you will wake up. Unfortunately I doubt the NY Times, LA Times etc will suffer any consequences for enabling the next attack.

    54. Re: Wow by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      Loot the treasury? There's nothing in there but IOUs.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    55. Re: Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to just say I'm glad I'm in Ireland, not the US. But lets face it, everyone in the world is affected by the state of things in the US.

      Still, I like being in Ireland. It can be iffy if you don't know many people (it's *all* who you know here). But in a country of only 4 million or so, a couple of links lie between you and just about anyone, including the politicians, police, etc. Mind you, it's kind of different now with the immigrants. Outside of Dublin and the city centres though (and that's most of Ireland), even recent arrivals are pretty integrated.

      Knowing so many people, and the connections of them knowing people who know people, does give one a sense of security here though, regardless of the nonsense going on in the rest of the world (or American troops going through Shannon - hey, it makes us a quick buck). The thought of being a single person in the USA is scary.

      If you're American, you'd love it here. It's like the US but with more bits of stuff from Europe, and without some of the more crazy things from the US. And it's all set in leprechaun land (rolling hills, green pastures, etc.) And we're finally rich here now. If you get bored, there's cheap flights to the rest of Europe. Where can you go wrong? (shhh... don't mention the r word, or weather)

    56. Re:Wow by gogoGodzilla · · Score: 1

      Folks -- if they don't have enough intelligence to invade the right country then I doubt they have enough intelligence to monitor bank records. They can't even manage to look after their own federal spending, why do they need to look after mine?

      Rats, I was hoping for some tips...my account is in shambles.

    57. Re:Wow by burningion · · Score: 1

      One word you may want to Google in the future... "democrakey"

    58. Re:Wow by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Tell me about the Iran/Contra Democrats.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    59. Re: Wow by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      I said
      "you're an even bigger coward than the silent deniers: you're scared of your own shadow, and you're bullying it into submission. "

      You said
      "I'm just as sure that nothing that I say will change his mind - thus, I can hardly bully him into submission. He said his piece, I said mine. I wasn't debating the issue - if I was debating, you'd know it."

      You're denying that you're debating and bullying your own shadow. You don't need psychoanalysis: you're crazier than a scene from _Fight Club_. Add projection to your list of major malfunctions.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    60. Re: Wow by ksheff · · Score: 1

      ThinkGeek would make a fortune selling tinfoil hats.

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
    61. Re:Wow by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Moderation +3
          40% Insightful
          20% Redundant
          20% Interesting

      Just because there's so much evidence of the same criminals screwing us so many times, that's not "Redundant". TrollMods doing the unnecessary coverup jobs are redundant.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    62. Re: Wow by mrraven · · Score: 1

      I'm quite confident that my chance of dying from an in essence unpreventable terrorist attack is just about zero, i.e. I'm totally not afraid. What do you think your chances are of dying of a preventable heart attack? Why wouldn't we attack the bigger more preventable problem pg heart attacks before we attack the smaller more intractable and more expensive (both in terms of money and civil liberties) problem of terrorism? That's just basic logic in the zero sum game of spending tax dollars.

      And no I have no great love for the New York Times. Judith Miller of the Times was one of the biggest rah rah for the war mouthpieces for that LIAR Chalabi out there. To the extent that the Times had to apologize for just how wrong they got it. Fortunately the rats like William Buckley and the people in general are starting jump the ship of fake terror based fear mongering. Can you say 35% approval rating for Bush? I knew you could... When will you join them asshat "coward?"

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
    63. Re:Wow by aDSF762 · · Score: 1

      i'm sadly sure they picked the right country, sell your bank reconds to the highest bidder, and can manage the ferderal spending to benfit their personal spending...

      --
      sense of security, like pockets jingling...
    64. Re: Wow by overbaud · · Score: 1

      Ummm... like... can you... ummm... tell me who your dealer is... cause ummm... I want what your smoking... --- "Don't winge to me, its your fault you voted for him, or at the very least you didn't kill the people who did."

      --
      Users... the only thing keeping 1st level support from being the bottom feeders.
    65. Re: Wow by veritee · · Score: 1

      Finally - someone with the intestinal fortitude (read: guts!) to tell it (mostly) as it is. The only two things you did not mention are: IMF and Trilateralists - combine those and you have the Nazi-ism you referred to AND why don't the American people seem to care? As I see it they are so busy trying to put food on the table, and shoes on their children and, of course, pay their taxes, that they haven't any idea of what's 'really' going on right in front of them. But when the day comes (and it's closer than one thinks!)and they wake up to find themselves as nothing more than serfs, they will ask themselves one question: How 'did' this happen? And it is right here, right now to be seen - and finally, you stated it pretty well. As for Republican, Democrat, Leprechaun whatever....couldn't you shake them up in a bag and they would all come out the same end??

    66. Re: Wow by cluckshot · · Score: 1

      Just keep in mind one more thing. These people who are tapping our phone calls, reading our emails and filing through all our bank records.... Well they are the ones who refuse at every turn to do anything about fixing the laws to prevent Identity Theft. Just another paranoid moment according to my detractors.... But just for the record, I think it might be significant... (Well just maybe....)

      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
    67. Re: Wow by Azuma+Hazuki · · Score: 1

      We are at war with Eastasia. We have always been at war with Eastasia. Minitruth crimethink doubleplus ungood.

      --
      ~Eien no Inori wo Sasagete~ Searching for my Hatsumi...
    68. Re: Wow by cluckshot · · Score: 1

      15 of Hijackers on 911 were here either illegally or had overstayed their visa's. Of those who had visa's 4 had obtained them fraudulently and the INS agents even questioned them about it on entry but did nothing because of the pressure of the Bush Administration to end border enforcement. If you continue, all of the hijackers came to the attention of the FBI. (That takes work folks!) The FBI! Imagine that! They did enough to have the feds looking into their affairs and they were guests in the USA! Wait a minute, had the USA a policy which is the law(!!!!!!!) to actually deport guests who abuse their visitation circumstances promptly at least 20 different times these guys would have been shipped out. We even had them under observation and knew where they were! If we had a system to check people in and out, we would have known they had over stayed. It just goes on and on. Don't for one minute discount the issue of the Illegal Aliens being a problem.

      In 2005 the last year for which data is available, approximately 40% of all murders in the USA were committed by Illegal Aliens. This is the death of over 4000 US Citizens! Wake your head up form the rhetoric a minute and look and see if the facts are there! Frankly this situation with Illegal Aliens may have many issues involved but it definitely involved the 911 situation and it involves much more serious business.

      M. Atta was arrested in Alabama the Sunday before 911 and released on a signature bond (Ticket) because the Shelby County, Alabama Sheriff's Department knew as an alien the INS would not take him in and the Sheriff was forbidden by the Feds to do it! He was Arrested in Jackson County Ms the day before same situation. In both cases M. Atta had NCIC outstanding warrant data for Broward County Florida to have him picked up. This is a case where the law was not enforced and it resulted only 2 days later in the 911 events. GET REAL. This isn't a theory or an opinion. The facts are that the Bush team is off the reservation.

      With the Bush team off the reservation, get real, they are up to something for sure.

      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
    69. Re: Wow by Memnos · · Score: 1

      I was going off the cuff. If you think I hit and then missed, tell me more about how. Unlike the fine fools in control I would like to discuss it. Who knows? It might even make a difference to someone -- somewhere.

      --
      I don't trust atoms -- they make up stuff.
    70. Re: Wow by gebbeth · · Score: 1

      With regards to your tag line, you should see the movie "Brazil" if you haven't already. Its a Terry Gilliam flick with social commentary on police state governments with freedom fighting terrorists/criminals.

      --
      A closed mouth gathers no foot.
    71. Re: Wow by twkrimm · · Score: 1

      An excerpt from
      They Thought They Were Free
      The Germans, 1933-45
      Milton Mayer ...

      "You see," my colleague went on, "one doesn't see exactly where or how to move. Believe me, this is true. Each act, each occasion, is worse than the last, but only a little worse. You wait for the next and the next. You wait for one great shocking occasion, thinking that others, when such a shock comes, will join with you in resisting somehow. You don't want to act, or even talk, alone; you don't want to 'go out of your way to make trouble.' Why not?--Well, you are not in the habit of doing it. And it is not just fear, fear of standing alone, that restrains you; it is also genuine uncertainty.

      "Uncertainty is a very important factor, and, instead of decreasing as time goes on, it grows. Outside, in the streets, in the general community, 'everyone' is happy. One hears no protest, and certainly sees none. You know, in France or Italy there would be slogans against the government painted on walls and fences; in Germany, outside the great cities, perhaps, there is not even this. In the university community, in your own community, you speak privately to your colleagues, some of whom certainly feel as you do; but what do they say? They say, 'It's not so bad' or 'You're seeing things' or 'You're an alarmist.' ...

      "But the one great shocking occasion, when tens or hundreds or thousands will join with you, never comes. That's the difficulty. If the last and worst act of the whole regime had come immediately after the first and smallest, thousands, yes, millions would have been sufficiently shocked--if, let us say, the gassing of the Jews in '43 had come immediately after the 'German Firm' stickers on the windows of non-Jewish shops in '33. But of course this isn't the way it happens. In between come all the hundreds of little steps, some of them imperceptible, each of them preparing you not to be shocked by the next. Step C is not so much worse than Step B, and, if you did not make a stand at Step B, why should you at Step C? And so on to Step D. ...

    72. Re: Wow by Walter+Carver · · Score: 1

      I can find work anywhere, so what I'll do, if all is lost, is get away from this national and cultural self-destruction.

      If the borders are still open.

    73. Re: Wow by veritee · · Score: 1

      The perfect explanation. And so it goes. And as the steps progress, we all just continue on our merry little road without one clue about what comes next. I just read the news of all these mergers, banks, etc. World wide happenings...how many understand the significance of this, as well as, the many mergers or 'bought-outs' that have already taken place and will continue to occur? As I said, I'll just go plant some flowers and enjoy my 'freedom' until April 15th and then I'll air my opinions to deaf ears, but at least I tried.

    74. Re: Wow by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "These people know full well that Al Qaeda doesn't use the modern banking system. "

      I stopped right there. Clearly you are incredibly ignorant on this issue, and should stop posting about it lest you cause yourself even more embarrassment.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    75. Re: Wow by jmccay · · Score: 1

      What's even funnier is that the NYT called for the government to do something like this back in 2001, and then they spill the beans on it ruining the chances of further catching more terrorists. This technique was working, and it thwarted a few plots. The NYT should be brought up on charges for this. They just decreased the effectiveness of this weapon.

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
  2. Corporate advantage? by Manip · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Does anyone else worry that the USA might use its intelligent services to give its corporate entities an advantage over foreign ones?

    If they use the information purely to look for money laundering or terrorism then that's cool, it would be 99% automated anyway... Looking for patterns and the like... But what if the security services use that information to give helpful hints to US companies over the international counterparts? Is that fair?

    We are talking about large amounts of money, and most of us know that money can lead people to act less than morally, so it isn't a far stretch to believe that they might do that... Even be authorised to do that.

    1. Re:Corporate advantage? by houghi · · Score: 5, Informative
      Does anyone else worry that the USA might use its intelligent services to give its corporate entities an advantage over foreign ones?


      It already happend. Echelon was used to get Boeing an advatage over Airbus.

      http://www.converge.org.nz/pma/sislock.htm
      http://www.meta-religion.com/Secret_societies/Cons piracies/Echelon/echelon.htm
      http://www.fas.org/irp/news/2000/07/irp-000724-ech elon.htm
      http://tinyurl.com/zuxan (google link)
      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    2. Re:Corporate advantage? by bwd · · Score: 3, Informative

      Scared that the US might do it? That is standard practice in countries like France who use their intelligence services to pass information directly to French corporations.

    3. Re:Corporate advantage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's interesting.

      So, out of curiosity, is that worse or better than subsidizing the company so it can artificially price itself into the market to try to steal contracts? You know.... like Airbus and the European Union does?

    4. Re:Corporate advantage? by Puls4r · · Score: 2, Interesting

      OH, you're so right. After a little researh....

      ""In one," the article stated, "Airbus Industrie, the jet-liner consortium, lost out on a six billion dollar sale to Saudi Arabia after U.S authorities alerted Saudi authorities that Airbus was offering bribes." America's Boeing got the job. "

      FOR SHAME. BAD US. BAD BAD BAD....

      Errr, or not.

    5. Re:Corporate advantage? by Salgak1 · · Score: 1

      So what ? EVERY nation spies on every other nation, be it for national security or economic advantage. The French and Chinese govenments make no bones about it, they OPENLY ADMIT IT. . . As a tool for national industrial advantage, no big deal. . .

    6. Re:Corporate advantage? by Tx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Oh, come on. We all know that the US government subsidizes Boeing and the like through military contracts and the like, so get off your frigging high horse. At least in Europe we're up front about subsidies, rather than the hypocritical US position of paying lip service to free market principles, while being protectionist as hell in reality.

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    7. Re:Corporate advantage? by HangingChad · · Score: 1
      Does anyone else worry that the USA might use its intelligent services to give its corporate entities an advantage over foreign ones?

      If we did we wouldn't be the first country to ever do that. In business trips to France we'd routinely have to practice security awareness at our hotels. It wasn't unusual for the French government to be spying on us, and it wasn't personal. Information they would use to gain commercial advantage.

      The Israelis, Russians and Italians have all done similar things. One sort of expects it from the Russians. I'm not suggesting it's okay, no matter who is doing it. Just that we're not alone if we're doing it and, with it being nearly impossible to tell where corporate interests leave off and government begins, it would be naive to think none of that data is ending up in the hands of private industry.

      I guess in our idealized view of ourselves the US previously prided itself on being different. But the last six years we've pretty much bulldozed the high road we used to travel. In its place we've substituted arrogance and ignorant dogma stemming from a philosophy of life whose most visible supporters are a neurotic shrew, a pervert with anger management issues and a drug addict.

      --
      That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    8. Re:Corporate advantage? by DerProfi · · Score: 1

      Could be... But based on what I've seen in the past week with the A380, these days it seems that all Boeing needs to do to get an advantage over Airbus is to sit back and wait for EADS incompetence, overconfidence and corruption to bollocks things up for them. No corporate espionage required.

      Airbus executive exercises millions in stock options weeks before A380 delays announced
      Airbus May Lose $3 Billion A380 Order After Delays
      Crisis talks on Airbus focus on production

      --

      3000+ comments meta-modded. 0 mod points awarded.
      Lesson for other meta-suckers: Don't believe the hype!
    9. Re:Corporate advantage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Citing a bunch of nutcase websites hardly proves your point.

      But just for giggles, let's say it's true. Does it measure up to the government subsidies that EU govs are going AirBus?

      And I bet none the Boeing workers really give a shit about this anyway, if true, since their jobs are more secure as a result.

    10. Re:Corporate advantage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah, the only thing left here are the investors and owners so they can be protected from the worlds masses by our military and the service industry that caters to their every whim. The corporations have already shifted the majority of research, development, and production overseas.

    11. Re:Corporate advantage? by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      Read the articles you posted. American intelligence is not being used (in those situations) to better American business but instead to level the playing field. American companies and their foreign subsidiaries are not allowed to bribe officials abroad, even if it is consonant with foreign law. The US has the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act which criminally punishes those parties who engage in corrupt practices such as bribery abroad. Having passed this law that is heartbreakingly idealistic, the US Government has decided to use its intelligence forces to turn in foreign companies which have bribed foreign officials so US Companies will have a fair shot at the deal. Of course, this entire thing looks disgusting, but upon inspection, it's a much closer call. Airbus obtained the bid by BRIBING officials. Do we turn a blind eye to Boeing bribing or do we turn in the lawbreaking foreign company?

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    12. Re:Corporate advantage? by houghi · · Score: 1

      That is irrelevant. Just because Airbus does something bad does not make using Echelon for companies suddenly good.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    13. Re:Corporate advantage? by ultranova · · Score: 2, Funny

      American companies and their foreign subsidiaries are not allowed to bribe officials abroad, even if it is consonant with foreign law.

      Instead, they bribe politicians back home.

      I guess US politicians don't want to share their bribes.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    14. Re:Corporate advantage? by Nutria · · Score: 1

      That is irrelevant. Just because Airbus does something bad does not make using Echelon for companies suddenly good.

      Everyone does it. French, PRC, Brits, PRC, Japanese, PRC, Koreans, PRC, USA, PRC, Germany, PRC.

      I wouldn't be surprised if the US does less of it than the French and Brits, as a consequence of the anti-bribery laws passed in the 1970s.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    15. Re:Corporate advantage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Cite any references? Not that knee-jerk American moderators require any.

    16. Re:Corporate advantage? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      That's actually two different economic approaches, both with the goal of propping up the economy: In one the govt directly throws money at the economy, in the other the govt buys stuff they don't really need in order to increase demand and indirectly having money go from the govt to the economy. One difference is for example that a direct injection can remain still while creating demand also forces the affected companies to buy more from their suppliers which makes the money cycle faster.

      We've had that in school, our teachers attributed those approaches to Keynes and Friedman IIRC.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    17. Re:Corporate advantage? by wkitchen · · Score: 1
      Does anyone else worry that the USA might use its intelligent services to give its corporate entities an advantage over foreign ones?
      No, I don't worry about that. I'm sure our elected officials will be glad to lend a helping hand to any company that funnels adequate money into their pockets, regardless of nationality.
    18. Re:Corporate advantage? by Thangodin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Which would be great if American companies like Haliburton didn't maintain shell subsidiaries in places like the Caiman Islands. These subsidiaries are apparently not bound by American law, even though they amount to a post office box whose contents are forwarded to the States. This is how Haliburton got away with dealing with Iran while it was illegal to do so, even selling them centrifuges used in their nuclear project.

      In any case, the cozy relationship between the Saudi Royal family and American business and government amounts to bribe of a different type--information and contacts. George Bush Sr. worked for the Saudis while still receiving intelligence briefings, a right that all former presidents have but which has always been waived. Bush Sr. was the first former president to insist on getting them. You can bet that Bush Jr. will be getting them too--the President who walked hand in hand with Prince Bandar. And now those intelligence reports will include the banking information of competing companies. The money to be made here makes simple bribes miniscule by comparison. Not even Airbus is in the position to offer the kind of money that can be made by investing a billion dollars in a small company that is about to win a massive government contract.

      Which means that even after Bush is out of office, he will still have his hand in the federal pie, and will be able to sell a piece of that pie to the highest bidder. Not bad for a spoiled dilletante with no talent for business. We're stuck with the bastard till the day he dies.

    19. Re:Corporate advantage? by bwd · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sure, but google isn't very hard to use. Citing something that is common knowledge and readily acknowledged is rather redundant. But see here and here:

      About half these resources were devoted to political and diplomatic intelligence, with the remainder equally divided between military and economic intelligence.

    20. Re:Corporate advantage? by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      The US has the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act which criminally punishes those parties who engage in corrupt practices such as bribery abroad. Having passed this law that is heartbreakingly idealistic, the US Government has decided to use its intelligence forces to turn in foreign companies which have bribed foreign officials so US Companies will have a fair shot at the deal.

      Ok, that caused some 5 minutes of uncontrollable laughter here., the Having passed this law that is heartbreakingly idealistic part is really priceless.

      Now, just to se things straight a little bit..

      1. US companies not involved in corruption? this is merely a matter of your definition of corruption, but in quite a few cases corruption in an easy to recognize form is not needed. Why buy an official when you can as easily threaten to throw him out of his own country. Don't believe it? You really should take a closer look at the USA involvement in the central and southern Americas.

      2. Have you ever considered that legal payments to officials are not considered bribary in the USA and that they happen a lot? Just take a look at lobbying and campeign finance to see some beautifull examples.

      3. Have you ever considered that corruption schandals in Europe are news exactly because what happens is illegal in Europe?

      Of course, this entire thing looks disgusting,

      If you cannot defend a measure on its own merrits, it is m,ost likely a bad measure.

      but upon inspection, it's a much closer call. Airbus obtained the bid by BRIBING officials. Do we turn a blind eye to Boeing bribing or do we turn in the lawbreaking foreign company?

      Now, show us how Airbus obtained the bid by bribing officials. When you are at it however, also take a look at how Boeing and a few related companies manage to absorb a large chunk from both the NASA and military budgets.

      There is a good reason why both the USA and the EU decided to not push the issue, they realized both have been about as wrong.

    21. Re:Corporate advantage? by Salgak1 · · Score: 1

      Let me get this straight: buying jets from Boeing Military Aircraft Corp susbsidizes production at Boeing Commercial Aircraft Corporation ?? At least we get jets and missiles from BMAC... what does the EU get for its' subsidy of Airbus ??

    22. Re:Corporate advantage? by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1
      I wouldn't be surprised if the US does less of it than the French and Brits, as a consequence of the anti-bribery laws passed in the 1970s.

      yes. Because laws have such a grand effect upon preventing tapping into bank databases and telephone conversations.

    23. Re:Corporate advantage? by Stradivarius · · Score: 1

      Regardless of the truth of the Echelon-Boeing story (which I'll assume for the sake of argument is true)...

      Realize that the U.S. wouldn't be the only one playing that game. The French are notorious for doing it (and Airbus would be a likely beneficiary). And because of America's technological leadership at present, it's also the primary target for many economic espionage operations.

      Quite frankly, I'd be surprised if there were many countries who were not using their intelligence capabilities this way (at least, those nations with the resources to do it, e.g. the U.S., most of Europe, Japan, China, Russia, Australia, etc). The FBI reports that there are 23 nations who do this systematically against the U.S. (source)

    24. Re:Corporate advantage? by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 3, Insightful
      in the other the govt buys stuff they don't really need in order to increase demand and indirectly having money go from the govt to the economy

      I suspect that the more likely reason is to be able to "redistribute wealth" from the taxpayers to cronies & big campaign contributors. The "it's good for the economy" reason is just a rationalisation to divert peoples' attention from who is benefiting the most from those handouts.

      If the people in the government _really_ wanted to help the economy, they'd just train & hire more infrastructure grunts (teachers, police officers, fireman, health care workers, etc).

      This be a more effective way of injecting cash into the economy (since folks like these are much more likely to spend the extra cash immediately) without supporting welfare. It would encourage upward economic mobility and provide a much better educated & productive labor force.

      The stronger infrastructure would also make it easier to do business, and having more people with money to spend would provide more business opportunities.

      Of course, given past history, most people are going to rightfully suspect that allocating funds to hire more low-level employees will probably end up expanding the bureaucracy than it would actually hiring actual workers, but instead of making proposals to try and restrict the growth of the bureacracy, the kneejerk reaction is to reduce spending by _cutting_ low-level employees, which has _no_ benefits to the economy and often makes the infrastructure look bad (since it's under increased strain to provide services with less people).

    25. Re:Corporate advantage? by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1
      American intelligence is not being used (in those situations) to better American business but instead to level the playing field.

      Oh, come one. You cannot be that naive. You simply cannot be.

    26. Re:Corporate advantage? by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      US corporate welfare isn't just "hypocritical", it's antidemocratic. Covering up our subsidies of our corporations prevents voters from voting for politicians who would do it differently. European voters know about their subsidies, so are responsible for them. That's a democratic republic, that American invention we've abandoned to others more interested in liberty than in pretending to trade it off for money.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    27. Re:Corporate advantage? by Tx · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's not buying jets that you need, that would be fine. You need to do a search, and read up on all the pork-barrel projects used to funnel money into companies like boeing. For example, congress having the USAF lease 100 767 tankers from Boeing at a price billions of dollars above what it would have cost to buy them outright, and actually leaving the USAF with less tankers at the end of the day.

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    28. Re:Corporate advantage? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      I suspect that the more likely reason is to be able to "redistribute wealth" from the taxpayers to cronies & big campaign contributors. The "it's good for the economy" reason is just a rationalisation to divert peoples' attention from who is benefiting the most from those handouts.

      The people who came up with that weren't in a position where they'd profit from that. Keynes's idea was to keep govt spending low when the economy is good and increase spending in case of a depression to end it faster (which could also allow lower taxes during depressions so people have more money to spend). In the end the money ends in the hands of humans and by increasing economic activity the govt forces the companies to spend the money rather than keep it in the bank. The money flows around and at some point ends in the hands of humans who then have money to put into the economy again. Usually in a depression the demand would decrease so companies would reduce capacities which would involve firing people which means fewer people with money to put back into the economy. That would deepen the depression and has to be avoided.

      It doesn't matter where the money flows, as long as it continues to flow instead of leaving the system. Lining the pockets of the rich wouldn't hurt the economy if the rich also spent all that money pretty quickly rather than tying up large amounts of money in their bank accounts. After all, as long as the money flows everyone will be able to get his share of the flow.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    29. Re:Corporate advantage? by mr_death · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. Your silly equivalence of a multi billion euro non-recourse loan (which may not be paid back) to a military contract with a typical 8% profit margin (and in which Boeing provides something of value) doesn't stand.

      Even if you see a military contract as a subsidy, Airbus has the same problem -- EADS, the parent company of Airbus, gets buttloads of military contracts from EU countries and elsewhere. So the real dispute is about launch aid to Airbus, and the market distortions it produces.

      So, Airbus should stand up and act like a real company, or admit that it can't compete with Boeing without massive subsidies.

      --
      It's Linux, damnit! Pay no attention to renaming attempts by self-aggrandizing blowhards.
    30. Re:Corporate advantage? by mr_death · · Score: 1

      Another poor attempt to obfuscate and smear Boeing. Head down to your local auto dealership, and ask about buying a particular car in two ways -- cash or lease. You'll find that the sum of the lease payments is significantly more than the cash cost of the car.

      The US Air Force _wanted_ a lease on the tankers to reduce its upfront outlay. In most of the free world when massive subsidies do not distort the market, paying less now means paying more in the long term.

      A 767 lists for around $200m a copy; 100 of them costs $20billion. Figure in a 5% interest rate and 30 years gives a monthly payment of $107m, and a sum of the payments of roughly $38b. So your complaint about "billions of dollars above what it would have cost to buy them outright" is invalid, and demonstrates your financial illiteracy.

      If you halve the cost of the 767s, cash upfront ($10b) vs. lease total ($19b) is still multi billions of dollars apart.

      --
      It's Linux, damnit! Pay no attention to renaming attempts by self-aggrandizing blowhards.
    31. Re:Corporate advantage? by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      That's a democratic republic, that American invention we've abandoned to others more interested in liberty than in pretending to trade it off for money.

      Ah, yes. Europe, the home of inalienable rights - so long as those rights are stamped with the approval of the electorate. God forbid you should exercise your right to free speech, especially if it involves something that might upset someone, somewhere. And as for the actual right to protect yourself or others - well, forget that one! That would REALLY upset your neighbors, who'd much rather Daddy Government came by and cleaned up your stinking corpse after the fact. God forbid that they should be forced to live on the same street with someone who actually has a set of balls....

      Yeah, Europe's a real shining beacon of hope when it comes to liberty. One might say they're well on their way to a 'brave new world'.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    32. Re:Corporate advantage? by Salgak1 · · Score: 1
      You seem to be confusing corporate subsidies with political pork. In the case of the Boeing deal, you'll also find that is was being pushed (at the time) by former South Dakota Senator Tom Daschle (D-SD). Whose WIFE was a lobbyist for Boeing.

      Gee, Hubby pushes pork, wifey gets BIG bonus, roll credits, cut to commercial. As I said elsewhere. . .greed and stupidity are the players here, not subsidies. . . .

    33. Re:Corporate advantage? by CommieOverlord · · Score: 1

      So your complaint about "billions of dollars above what it would have cost to buy them outright" is invalid, and demonstrates your financial illiteracy.

      Ummm...using your figures of $20B for cash payment and $38B for the leasing, then cash payments would indeed save the government billions of dollars.

    34. Re:Corporate advantage? by themusicgod1 · · Score: 1

      We're stuck with the bastard till the day he dies.

      That could be today if you americans worked hard enough.

      --
      GENERATION 26: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
    35. Re:Corporate advantage? by mr_death · · Score: 1

      Ummm...using your figures of $20B for cash payment and $38B for the leasing, then cash payments would indeed save the government billions of dollars.

      True if the government has the budget to buy the tankers outright, but they didn't.

      My point was to demonstrate that the parent poster's hyperventalating about a massive pork barrel project was silly. The price difference between outright purchase and leasing of the tankers was several billion dollars, and was a direct result of the desire of the US Air Force to lease rather than buy, and not some sinister desire to give Boeing money under the table.

      If someone thinks that their mortgage payment is a pork barrel subsidy of their banker, well, that's their business. In reality, their house price is significantly less than the sum of their mortgage payments, and comes from the homeowner's desire to pay over time. That's basic finance, not evil action.

      --
      It's Linux, damnit! Pay no attention to renaming attempts by self-aggrandizing blowhards.
    36. Re:Corporate advantage? by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      Lining the pockets of the rich wouldn't hurt the economy if the rich also spent all that money pretty quickly rather than tying up large amounts of money in their bank accounts.

      That's a big IF, and not necessarily true. You also have to depend on rich people having the desire, and being able to determine where the best place to spend that money is, in order to stimulate the economy. That's coming dangerously close to the type of reasoning that says that a central command-and-control economic bureaucracy will do better at allocating resources than a free market.

      It's _much_ more effective for a government to stimulate the economy by paying for low-level infrastructure labor. As I stated previously, not only are such people much more likely to spend every extra dollar they get, but the extra infrastructure will help _everyone_ (and make people happier about paying taxes since they'll see more evidence that the taxes are being spent on them), make lots of business opportunities (because of the lots of people with more money to spend), and will help reduce the economic-class-stratification-effect that a completely free-market has a tendency to encourage.

      I have a great deal of skepticism about any government policy that caters to the rich. In my mind, the rich don't need any help - as long as the government isn't actively trying to crush them, they have plenty of resources to help themselves. Anybody who actually seriously cares about the health of the society should be concentrating on policies which help the lower & middle economic classes.

      It's actually a useful principle when trying to decide which politicians I can stand to vote for - if their rhetoric AND their actions indicate they are primarily trying to help the lower & middle economic classes, but they're not really being demagogues trying to incite a class war against the rich, then I figure they're probably reasonable people who are trying to think about what's best for society. Unfortunately, such figures seem to be pretty few & far between.

    37. Re:Corporate advantage? by KitesWorld · · Score: 1

      Grandparent was incomplete in his/her argument. It's not the contracts that even it out, but rather the (b)millions that the US government gives to Boeing in research grants. In any case, I'm just going to sit back and let the WTO take care of the claim/counterclaims. funny thing is, if it wasn't for the WTO it would be a non-issue anyway.

    38. Re:Corporate advantage? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      You also have to depend on rich people having the desire, and being able to determine where the best place to spend that money is, in order to stimulate the economy.

      That's not important. As long as the money goes out of their pockets just as fast as it goes in there the economy doesn't suffer (and on its way out there it'll surely touch a few lower income people), no matter what they throw it at. Unfortunately it has a tendency to stay there for a long time, which is why I think the govt should make sure that storing large amounts of money is discouraged.

      It's _much_ more effective for a government to stimulate the economy by paying for low-level infrastructure labor. As I stated previously, not only are such people much more likely to spend every extra dollar they get, but the extra infrastructure will help _everyone_ (and make people happier about paying taxes since they'll see more evidence that the taxes are being spent on them), make lots of business opportunities (because of the lots of people with more money to spend), and will help reduce the economic-class-stratification-effect that a completely free-market has a tendency to encourage.

      That depends. There's only so much need for infrastructure and not a lot of it influences the economy. There's also the problem that these spendings would be permanent as opposed to on-demand. Keynes wanted intervention to work as a reaction towards a depression, increasing employment for the govt doesn' work for that.

      I have a great deal of skepticism about any government policy that caters to the rich. In my mind, the rich don't need any help - as long as the government isn't actively trying to crush them, they have plenty of resources to help themselves. Anybody who actually seriously cares about the health of the society should be concentrating on policies which help the lower & middle economic classes.

      Inded but I don't see how increasing economic activity aims more at the rich than the poor. The rich take the same share as they usually do (through insanely high salaries), the poor get the same they always get (as opposed to getting nothing because the company lowers capacities and fires them, the rich don't get laid of, at least not without insanely huge severance packages). While the rich might increase their salaries during such a period of influx they would have done the same during the depression, perhaps even moreso in preparation for the imminent destruction of the company (Enron anyone?). In an ideal case the intervention would simply make sure that business continues as usual despite the depression.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    39. Re:Corporate advantage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please Ignore Parent Post - Not Pro Republican Bullshit like all the rest.

    40. Re:Corporate advantage? by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      Lets just get this straight, Airbus is partially owned by France.

      To learn more about who owns Airbus just follow this link:

      http://www.eads.com/web/lang/en/1024/content/OF000 00000400004/6/03/31000036.html

      EADS are one of Airbus parent companies owning 75%. They are then in turn partially owned by the french state( 29% joint share with Legardiere(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagard%C3% A8re_Group)).

      The other 25% is owned by BAE systems who, as far as I can tell in 5 mins rudimentary research, are entirely owned by other commercial interests. None of whom have a controlling share.

      http://www.corporatewatch.org/?lid=183#significant %20shareholders

      If anyone finds any of this to be incorrect please post some links so I may learn more.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    41. Re:Corporate advantage? by gronofer · · Score: 1
      ...forces the companies to spend the money rather than keep it in the bank.

      The argument doesn't make any sense at this point. A bank isn't some sort of vault, the money that's taken in is loaned out to somebody else.

    42. Re:Corporate advantage? by AoT · · Score: 1

      I can't stand the "you can google it yourself" argument.

      Why have any number of people going to google wasting time to verify someone else's statement when the person making an assertion can search one and link to the evidence.

      Not to disagree with your original point, just a quibble.

    43. Re:Corporate advantage? by Unlikely_Hero · · Score: 1

      um....
      have you been READING slashdot?
      we had that argument eons ago.
      Not trying to be an asshole here, but isn't that kind of like saying
      "hmmm...I know the gestapo are here to help us against the jew and the inferior races, but what if they're bad people?!"
      only saying it in 1975.

      --
      Happiness does not come from having much, but from being attached to little.
    44. Re:Corporate advantage? by TubeSteak · · Score: 2, Informative
      You can bet that Bush Jr. will be getting them too--the President who walked hand in hand with Prince Bandar.
      Umm... Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah (not Bandar) was about 80 years old when that happened.

      He doesn't use a cane because his movements are orchestrated so that he always has someone nearby to hang onto, usually an aide.

      There's a pic in his wikipedia entry showing him hanging onto Cheney & Bush Sr in 2005.

      Heads of state don't want to appear weak. It's not a big deal.
      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    45. Re:Corporate advantage? by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      'so long as those rights are stamped with the approval of the electorate.'
       
      The US constitution also involved an electorate.

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
  3. I don't know what's worse... by Lobo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The fact that this is happening or the fact that this does not surprise me anymore. Every election year I tell myself I'll vote with my conscious and vote Libertarian. Screw that, I just want these f***ers OUT now.

    --

    -------
    Bite Me Fanboy!!
    1. Re:I don't know what's worse... by FudRucker · · Score: 2, Informative

      considering the vulnerabilities of those Dibold voting machines do you think voting does any good anymore? i sure dont...

      http://www.blackboxvoting.org/ http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/11/15/154 5222

      --
      Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
    2. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the election system in the USA was not broken and resulted in a two-party rule, it would be a good idea to vote the party you like. But now one has to choose the least evil of two choices if one does not want the Republican culture of corruption to continue.

    3. Re:I don't know what's worse... by maxume · · Score: 1

      Libertarian the word has some nice ideas attached to it. The active political party identified as the Libertarian party is full of crazies, or at least, really extreme viewpoints.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    4. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Libertarian the word has some nice ideas attached to it. The active political party identified as the Libertarian party is full of crazies, or at least, really extreme viewpoints."

      in total contrast to what exactly? sound like every political party out there.

    5. Re:I don't know what's worse... by wonkobeeblebrox · · Score: 1

      So now we know exactly how much it takes for Libertarian-thinking-Republicans to toss in the towel....
      Careful though, if those Democrats get in power they're only going to want to do evil things like make sure kids have healthcare... ;-)

    6. Re:I don't know what's worse... by I+am+Jack's+username · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The fact that this is happening or the fact that this does not surprise me anymore. Every election year I tell myself I'll vote with my conscious and vote Libertarian. Screw that, I just want these f***ers OUT now.
      - Lobo (10944)

      I can understand how people who agree with the Democratic/Republican platforms can vote for them - I fundamentally disagree with their platforms, but I know lots of folk think it's a-okay.

      I can understand people who who've never even compared the platforms of the other parties voting Democrat/Republican:

      "On its world, the people are people. The leaders are lizards. The people hate the lizards and the lizards rule the people."

      "Odd," said Arthur, "I thought you said it was a democracy."

      "I did," said ford. "It is."

      "So," said Arthur, hoping he wasn't sounding ridiculously obtuse, "why don't the people get rid of the lizards?"

      "It honestly doesn't occur to them," said Ford. "They've all got the vote, so they all pretty much assume that the government they've voted in more or less approximates to the government they want."

      "You mean they actually vote for the lizards?"

      "Oh yes," said Ford with a shrug, "of course."

      "But," said Arthur, going for the big one again, "why?"

      "Because if they didn't vote for a lizard," said Ford, "the wrong lizard might get in."
      - So long, and thanks for all the fish - Douglas Adams

      What I don't understand is how people can choose the lesser evil to try to just slow the downward spiral. It's still a downward spiral even if it's a bit slower - the result is the same. Sure, if you're old you might not have to deal with the end result, but even then, do you really not care about the people coming after you?

      Don't you want to do the right thing? Even if the party you vote for looses, doing the right thing is surely better than actually voting for the Democrats/Republicans?:

      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - Eugene Victor Debs
    7. Re:I don't know what's worse... by frostoftheblack · · Score: 1

      Which is why I consider myself a "conservative libertarian". Wait, does that make sense?

      --
      Do not mark in this space. For official office use only.
    8. Re:I don't know what's worse... by NormalVisual · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The active political party identified as the Libertarian party is full of crazies, or at least, really extreme viewpoints.

      I think I'd still prefer "crazy" to "calculating evil".

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    9. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Salgak1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm not sure about "calculating" evil. Greed and stupidity are sufficient to explain the situation: I've seen exactly ZERO bald men in grey Nehru jackets controlling things behind the scenes. . . .

    10. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Sure, if you're old you might not have to deal with the end result, but even then, do you really
      > not care about the people coming after you?

      No. They can bend over backwards and shit up their nostrils for all I care.

      What have the future generations done for us that we should care for them? Fuck'em.

    11. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Greyfox · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I do that at the state and local level. At the Felderal level it's a little too much like throwing my vote away for my taste. I usually just vote against the incumbant unless they've done something to give me a warm fuzzy. It's still throwing your vote away (98% of the time the incumbant will win) and if they lose because of my vote the Senate is losing all that experience and possibly seats on comittees will have to change, but I don't think any one person should remain too long in the corrupting influence of Congresss anyway. If I had my way, 1 or 2 terms would be the limit.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    12. Re:I don't know what's worse... by DarkIcon · · Score: 1

      Do you really think the Democrats would be better?
      Take some time, think about it, and give yourself a totally honest answer. DO you think it would be better? Your answer is your own, but mine is a big fat "No".

      We'd have different types of tyranny for an ostensibly different reason, but you'd still have blanket restrictions of freedoms and wholesale government monitoring of your activities. Only it would be "for the children," which is somehow supposed to make everything all right. It doesn't. The Democrats are more fascist (yes, I know what the word means) and inept than the Republicans will ever be.

      So you want to vote for one evil just to put the brakes on another evil? Your choice, your vote. But you still end up with evil. A different evil, yes... but not quite as different as you think and hope.

      And who's to say that the Libertarians (capital "L") will be any better? We don't know. We DO know that, at their core, they hold to a philosophy of government that is vastly different than the R's or the D's, a philosophy that a lot of people would agree with if the actually knew what it was. My personal opinion is that the Libertarians would be better for this country to the extent that they remain libertarian (small "L") and can resist corruption.

      As for the flippant comment about the Democrats doing something "crazy" like make sure the children have healthcare:
      I don't want the children to have healthcare if it has to be paid for by non-voluntary contributions out of my wallet. The same goes for old people and drugs, and poor people and food. If you want to help people, let's get together and do it outside the realm of government so that people aren't forced to participate against their will. But I suppose I'm just one of those crazy extremists. Ummm... actually, I am.

      --
      Dark Icon
    13. Re:I don't know what's worse... by jusdisgi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Libertarian the word has some nice ideas attached to it. The active political party identified as the Libertarian party is full of crazies, or at least, really extreme viewpoints.

      No, you've got it backwards. Libertarian, the ideal, is an extreme viewpoint. Furthermore, its basic tenants (government is always inefficient, the unregulated free market will work smoothly and provide for everyone's best interest, individuals can provide for their own security) are demonstrably false. There are some Libertarian people out there that aren't insane...but I frequently question whether they've really thought through to the inevitabilities of what Libertarianism leads to when actually put into practice.

      --
      Given a choice between free speech and free beer, most people will take the beer.
    14. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Namronorman · · Score: 1
      What have the future generations done for us that we should care for them? Fuck'em.


      You don't remember John Titor? These future generations have done a lot for us! All "jokes" aside, I think you have a very selfish view.
      --
      $fortune
      Tomorrow has been canceled due to lack of interest.
    15. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Qzukk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What have the future generations done for us that we should care for them? Fuck'em.

      Decide which discount nursing home you'll spend the rest of your life in, for one.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    16. Re:I don't know what's worse... by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Yes, that's about what I consider myself.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    17. Re:I don't know what's worse... by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      So is socialism/marxism, communism, and just about every political or social "ideal".

      And I think you're giving libertarians a bad rap; Government is always inefficient when doing things private companies have been doing better for years, and most of us believe there are some market regulations that make the free market work in everyone's best interests (like laws against price fixing and collusion).

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    18. Re:I don't know what's worse... by darkmeridian · · Score: 0

      People like you who vote Libertarian are who got us into this mess. Let's get Bush out of office first by voting for the Democratic candidate, then move on from there.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    19. Re:I don't know what's worse... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      We need publicly financed elections and condorcet voting.

      Frankly, that's the only way we're going to get third parties worth voting for. Frankly, the Libertarians scare me. The Constitution Party should scare the hell out of anybody. I'm ideologically aligned with the Green party, but they strike me as a bunch of disorganized hippies who wouldn't know what to do with the country if we turned it over to them.

      Actually having a significant number of people governing would make third parties far more effective. Condorcet voting would allow people to vote for the candidate they thought best without helping the prospects of the candidate they like least.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    20. Re:I don't know what's worse... by mike_the_kid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Had I mod points, I'd mod you up. There needs to be an anti-incumbent movement. Sort of like MoveOn.org, but not a shill for the Democratic Party.

      I vote against incumbents at all levels. But, I do believe that a Libertarian vote at local level elections is a very positive thing.

      --
      Troll Like a Champion Today
    21. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Watson+Ladd · · Score: 1

      No Shit Sherlock. Goverment is inefficient iff it is inefficient. (That's not a misspelling). That can't support any argument as it is a tautology.

      --
      Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further development.-- Frontinus, 1st cent. AD
    22. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Wildclaw · · Score: 1

      I love that Hitchhiker's Guide quote. It perfectly demonstrates the problem of using a system where only those that get the majority gets elected positions.

      You get a state that is neither a Democracy (because it doesn't represent the people evenly) nor a Republic (because the people voted on doesn't get voted on to represent the voters, but instead to keep another person from getting voted on). Instead, the final result is an Aristocracy/Plutocracy, and if there is one thing history has taught us, it is that aristocracts never care about the common man.

      Look at the pirate party in Sweden. To get political influence in Sweden they have to get 4% of the total votes.
      A pirate party candidate in the US would need to get somewhere between 33-50% (assuming a three person race) of the votes to get elected. While these votes only need to be from a limited region of the US, it doesn't change the fact that it is a very high percentage. It becomes even more difficult, considering the ease that it is to convince someone that voting on a third party is a "lost" vote.

      There is of course also flaws in the proportional election system. A small party with only 4-5% of the votes can with luck get into a high influence position where its votes decides the outcome. This influence is however limited, because if the small party is to greedy, it will end up with nothing when the bigger parties compromises instead.

    23. Re:I don't know what's worse... by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      in total contrast to what exactly? sound like every political party out there.

      For all I can tell you are right, but that is also a very good reason why they aren't a real alternative.

    24. Re:I don't know what's worse... by quarterbrain · · Score: 1

      Are you serious? Bush is a non-issue in the next presidential election first of all. Secondly, we don't even KNOW who the new presidential candidates will be. So let's think about the betterment of the country rather than being all gung ho to replace one destructive idiot with another just because he or she rides under an opposing banner. I don't know about you, but the last election I saw, neither the Republican nor the Democratic candidates were worth my vote. I didn't like their issues, I didn't trust them, and I didn't vote for them.

      I "threw mine away" on Libertarian, because I thought they had my interests in mind, and that they would be the best thing for this country. I knew the odds of winning at least from historical evidence were slim to none, but in the end I am happy to have voted for someone I liked rather than against someone I didn't. I think if more people voted that way - we'd be in a better place.

    25. Re:I don't know what's worse... by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Which is why I consider myself a "conservative libertarian". Wait, does that make sense?

      It would make quite some sense if you were living in a libertarian society. As it is however, any libertarian ideas are progressive because they will cause substantial change to the current system if implemented.

      Note that conservative is not the opposite of liberal by definition, it just happens to be that way in a not so liberal society. It is a relative concept that has to do with trying to preserve the current situation (or at least those things that are considered desirable in the current situation).

    26. Re:I don't know what's worse... by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Government is always inefficient when doing things private companies have been doing better for years

      Government is always inefficient in a working republic or representative democracy, it is that way by design and for good reasons. I could explain it here, but it would be a bit lengthy. Instead of doing that, I challange you to think about why this is and why this is in fact a very good thing.

    27. Re:I don't know what's worse... by clem · · Score: 1

      Nursing home? I say we send him directly to the Soylent Green processing plant.

      --
      Your courageous and selfless spelling corrections have made me a better person.
    28. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you are doing is an excercise in futility. The election system needs to be repaired first. The current broken method results in a two-party hegemony.

    29. Re:I don't know what's worse... by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      It does, the original definitions of both ideologies are mostly compatible.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    30. Re:I don't know what's worse... by maxume · · Score: 1

      Hey look, a statement about politics that got pigeon-holed. I think maybe he means that some of the directions that libertarians take are good, but judgement needs to be exercised in how far the roads are traveled.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    31. Re:I don't know what's worse... by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      I think maybe he means that some of the directions that libertarians take are good, but judgement needs to be exercised in how far the roads are traveled.

      I believe that is a good idea regardless of what direction you think is best...

    32. Re:I don't know what's worse... by node+3 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The fundamental problem doesn't lie with the voters, it lies with the system. Our system is at equilibrium with two parties. When a third party grows in popularity, it acts as a "spoiler" against one of the two established parties (predominantly against the party that most closely matches that third-parties views, in fact). After a bit of turmoil, everything settles back down again with two parties.

      What I don't understand is how people can choose the lesser evil to try to just slow the downward spiral.
      The explanation is simple. Right now, our choices (our two parties) are between a fast downward spiral, or a slow downward spiral. That's it.

      If you choose (as many do) to pick one of the various "third" parties, you are giving up any say as for which downward spiral you'd prefer, which is another way of saying you are doing absolutely nothing to promote the slower over the faster. In the choice of downward spirals, you're abstaining.

      It's still a downward spiral even if it's a bit slower - the result is the same.
      No, the results are *not* the same. Had Bush never won the Presidency, we would *not* be at war with Iraq right now (for example). And it would *not* have simply been postponed for a later date. It is possible we'd still be at war with Iraq again, eventually, but it is not inevitable (as you imply), nor would we necessarily have done it so poorly (note: by "poorly", I'm not referring to the troops, they've performed as ordered spectacularly. The problem is their leaders have failed them).

      To simply think you're doing good by voting for a third-party at the national level is delusional. It's the "hail mary" of all "hail marys". While it's technically possible, the last time it worked was *150* years ago, and *that* was during a time of such great national division that it led up to a civil war!

      To accept the fast downward spiral is a spectacularly awful plan which will lead only to spectacularly awful results. While my party may not be perfect, that's no justification for allowing the other party take us as far down that spiral as fast as they can.
    33. Re:I don't know what's worse... by QCompson · · Score: 1

      Oh, lordy.

      The Democrats are more fascist (yes, I know what the word means) and inept than the Republicans will ever be.

      That's some funny sh*t. Say it again, it makes me laugh.

      I don't want the children to have healthcare

      Who does? Let those little brats fend for themselves.

    34. Re:I don't know what's worse... by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There are some Libertarian people out there that aren't insane...but I frequently question whether they've really thought through to the inevitabilities of what Libertarianism leads to when actually put into practice.

      Horseshit. Most libertarians (small 'l') aren't extremists or fanatics; they simply want the smallest, least powerful government possible because the alternative will almost certainly lead to de facto or actual dictatorship. In other words, they're looking for a government that fears the people it represents, and rightly so - rather than the reverse situation we live under now.

      Most real libertarians (as opposed to rabid slashdot posters, and their equally rabid detractors) actually think that government in small doses for specific tasks is a good thing. For example, it makes far more sense for a municipal government to build a single set of power lines and junction stations throughout the city, rather than let anyone who wants to try constructing a private infrastructure giving it a shot (putting up 18 sets of poles, lines, etc.). Where libertarians part from current practice is that they believe that after this is done the lines should be leased to any and all comers willing to pay the price and provide the power, rather than granting something that was built with tax money to a single monopolistic entity (corporate or government, it doesn't matter).

      Real libertarians generally don't make a lot of noise, just as most political moderates don't make a lot of noise. Their agenda primarily rests upon the "Leave Me The Fuck Alone And Tend To Your Own Pathetic Life" plank, which means you really have to piss them off to get them motivated enough to start kicking ass. Fanatics (pro- and anti-libertarian) don't need any such inspiration; they'll scream, yell, and throw a tantrum at the drop of a hat, spouting vacuous claptrap and claiming that all 'real' followers of the One True and Right Way believe as they do - and that anyone else is a traitor. The internet, like real life, is probably populated by 90% moderates and 10% scumbag fanatics, but the fanatics make 90% of the noise, skewing the perception of who stands where badly out of proportion with reality.

      And no, the Libertarian party doesn't speak for us. You can't be libertarian and be in favor of the slavery of women, for example, by supporting a ban on abortions - which the Libertarian party allows. They've chucked their principles in a bid to get actual third party standing, which means that in the end they'll only be Libertarian in name and nothing more. Fuck 'em and don't for a moment think they speak for everyone who claims to be libertarian.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    35. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      the unregulated free market will work smoothly and provide for everyone's best interest

      It sure is easy to knock down strawmen.

      Your statement is in no way a basic tenant of the Libertarian ideal. What Libertarians believe is that an unregulated free market is the least worst way to run an economy - not that it will work smoothly, nor that it will provide for everyone's best interest - only that it will provide for more people's best interest, over the long run, than any other system.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    36. Re:I don't know what's worse... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Just great. So long as things go to shit slowly, you're perfectly okay with that. It doesn't matter that we'll all end up in some neo-fascist nightmare at the end of that long slow slide no matter which party wins; it just needs to happen at a pace that won't ruffle your feathers. Preferably you'll be dead of old age before it's time to pay the piper.

      Boomer politics in a nutshell. Slow it down long enough to pass the real shitstorm to my children and grandchildren so that I'm not inconvenienced by it.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    37. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      What I don't understand is how people can choose the lesser evil to try to just slow the downward spiral. It's still a downward spiral even if it's a bit slower - the result is the same.


      It's pretty easy to understand: imagine you have terminal cancer. You can either take some drugs which will slow the growth of the cancer and let you live a bit longer, or not take them and die sooner. Most people will take the drugs, even if it is only forestalling the inevitable.


      The problem isn't that people aren't choosing the best option, the problem is that they don't aren't given any good options to choose. They can vote Republican, or they can vote Democrat, or they can vote Present (aka third-party, but since in a winner-take-all election voting third-party has either no effect or is actually counterproductive to your goals, it's the same thing). The only way to change this is through electoral reform, so that when people go to vote, they can vote outside the Demopublican duopoly and still have their vote do some good. Without that we'll always be stuck with just two significant parties, and we'll only get government that is as good as those two parties agree to make it. If they agree that mediocrity is good enough for them, then that's the best we'll get.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    38. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      I'm ideologically aligned with the Green party, but they strike me as a bunch of disorganized hippies who wouldn't know what to do with the country if we turned it over to them.


      Hm, you say that like it's a bad thing. :^) For contrast, it appears the Bush administration knows exactly what to do with the country, and they're doing it good and hard. Bend over America, here comes another war and another tax cut for the rich!

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    39. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      Don't you want to do the right thing? Even if the party you vote for looses, doing the right thing is surely better than actually voting for the Democrats/Republicans?

      But is it really the "right thing" at all? It feels good to vote your conscience, sure, but if the effect of voting for a third party is that the greater of two evils wins the election instead of the lesser, I'd say it's the wrong choice.

      The purpose of elections is to decide who will run the country, not just to give voters a place to speak their minds. Any proponent of third parties should be focusing first on reforming our electoral system, not just getting votes for his party, because thanks to the way out elections are run, voting for a third party instead of the lesser-evil major party is counterproductive unless a majority of voters are with you.

      Basically, the only way it isn't counterproductive is if you honestly don't care which major party gets to control the government. But if you really see no difference between them, then either you haven't looked closely enough at the parties' policies or behavior, or you're only interested in fringe issues that neither party is doing anything about.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    40. Re:I don't know what's worse... by MrCopilot · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I could explain it here, but it would be a bit lengthy. CopOut!

      "The Framers" wanted it to be hard/complicated/inefficient to enact legislation so as to put a check on the Mob mentality. You know, like suddenly removing civil liberties and increasing presidential powers.

      Almost worked too.

      --
      OSGGFG - Open Source Gamers Guide to Free Games
    41. Re:I don't know what's worse... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "Don't you want to do the right thing? Even if the party you vote for looses, doing the right thing is surely better than actually voting for the Democrats/Republicans?: "

      You are presuming that the liberterian party is better then the democrats or the republicans. I don't think so and neither do hundreds of millions of other Americans.

      Fact of the matter is that the republican and democrat parties are the best we have. I know that sounds horrid but it's true. The liberterians would not be a cure for this disease, they would make it worse. Liberterians disregard thousands of years of human history, never once in the history of human development and civilization has any govt large or small been run under liberterian principles. Not the smallest tribe, not the largest govt. Maybe that says something? It certainly does to billions of people on this planet who have overwhelmingly rejected liberterian ideals over and over again.

      Sorry to break the news to you but that's reality.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    42. Re:I don't know what's worse... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Why do they believe that? Have they looked at periods of history or places in the world where there existed weak governments and came to the conclusion that there was a measurable difference in the welfare of the public? Surely there have been periods in the history of mankind where people were governed little or none.

      My guess is that liberterians believe that in the same way that a hippie believes that crystals cure diabetes. They think it ought to be true. Neither one has a lick of evidence for it and both will ignore all evidence that contradicts their belief.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    43. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Anonymous+Freak · · Score: 1

      The person you're replying to isn't a boomer, so just saying he's espousing 'boomer politics' is ludicrous.

      While voting for having things go to shit slowly isn't GOOD, it's better than voting for someone who won't make any difference whatsoever. You might as well buy that lottery ticket, then throw it immediately away without waiting for the results, that's what your vote for a third party is doing. You're not going to affect the system at all.) You vote for the lesser of two evils, then you work from the inside to make the lesser of two evils into good.

      Unfortunately, I've tried this with both evils unsucessfully, and am disillusioned with both evils, so I'm officially separate from both evils now. But I do understand that I do have to vote for one of them to slow the spiral. I would LOVE it if various third-party candidates were elected to national office. But with elections as close as they are in my district between the major two, I'm not going to vote for the third-party candidates. I'm going to vote for the major party candidate that I hate the least. That's pragmatism.

      But, I DO write letters to my senators/representatives often. I make sure they know what my feelings on issues are, as their constituent, and someone who votes for (or against) them. I make sure to always send letters by postal mail, as they get more attention. (Of course, showing up at their office when they are there gets even better results, if you can get a meeting with them.)

      --
      Another non-functioning site was "uncertainty.microsoft.com."
      The purpose of that site was not known.
    44. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      My guess is that liberterians believe that in the same way that a hippie believes that crystals cure diabetes. They think it ought to be true. Neither one has a lick of evidence for it and both will ignore all evidence that contradicts their belief.

      Yeah... that's pretty much it. None of those Libertarians actually know how to read - Adam Smith was really a cover story given to a room full of monkies with typewriters.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    45. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      government is always inefficient

      Government tends to be inefficient. To say that government is always inefficient would be too strong of statement. We can, however, safely say that government is always immoral, since the state gathers its money through coercion.

      the unregulated free market will work smoothly and provide for everyone's best interest

      You are looking at the free market from a utilitarian perspective. In other words, you assign your own goal to the free market ("provide for everyone's best interest"), and then call the market a failure for not meeting your goal. The reason that Libertarians cling so dogmatically to the free market is because we (as in, all human beings) are the market. That is, the free market is every individual peacefully working towards his own goal. Thus, any system of trade other than the free market (e.g. "fair" trade) must be one group of people forcing their desires onto another group.

      That being said, there are many alternatives to regulation that are compatiable with the free market. If, for instance, you believe that investors would have no way of obtaining detailed information about companies on the stock market without the SEC, you have a severe lack of imagination.

      individuals can provide for their own security

      Libertarians don't have a problem with individuals organizing themselves into a private police force or army. The only thing Libertarians frown on is when the defense in question involves coercion against innocent people. For instance, funding the military through taxation. Why you seem to believe that people voluntarily working together to provide for their own security is "demonstrably false" is beyond me.

    46. Re:I don't know what's worse... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Adam Smith was a philosopher, he was not a scientist. As a philosopher he was a piss poor one at that. The fact that natural resources were finite and were being used up faster then they were being re-generated never occured to him. He never foresaw a period in the future where clean water would become a rare commodity. The had a few ideas that were accurate observations and he missed the boat on a lot more. In that regard he is no different then skinner, or even aristotle. We the 21st century americans have moved beyond the science of aristotle and we have moved beyond the philosphy of smith. We keep learning, we keep gathering evidence, we keep experimenting, we keep learning. Only idiots (and religious fundamentalists) think that some book written a long time ago is somehow omnicient.

      It's one thing to read a philosopher and say "this person thinks like me" and another to gather evidence. Surely in the past ten thousand years of human history there must have been one or two civilizations that governed by liberterian principles right? If so how come they are not around anymore? Maybe that says something about the feasability of liberterian systems.

      All around the world there are governments with various degrees of weakness and strength. According to the theories of liberterians the countries with the weakest governments ought to be the ones that are most properous and with the people who are the happiest. Is that right? Can you make such a correlation? If not then you are talking out of your ass and Adam Smith was full of shit like every other half baked philosopher throughout history.

      Never in the history of mankind has any group of human beings ever (not even once) been able to create and sustain a liberterian government. Ever. That tells me that liberians are stupid and deluded into thinking that libeterianism is possible. It's not. It's an interesting theory just like communism is. It doesn't work. If was possible for it to work then somebody would have done it. If it was sustainable somebody would still be doing it.

      Quote a dead philosopher all you want, it doesn't change reality.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    47. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      The fact that natural resources were finite and were being used up faster then they were being re-generated never occured to him.

      What a doof you are. The Wealth of Nations is all about the efficient utilization of limited resources. Everything else you've said is equally nonsensical -- There is no continuing 'civilization' that's been around for even 500 years, Libertarian or not and all these weak governments you think are somehow representative of Libertarianism are so far from the egalitarian ideal of Adam Smith that in citing them you've become just another don Quixote.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    48. Re:I don't know what's worse... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "he Wealth of Nations is all about the efficient utilization of limited resources."

      Really? So it was a treatise on how we should carefully manage natural resources and make sure we preserve the environment right? It was a book that talked about sustainable development right? No? It wasn't? Adam Smith never actually took the environment into account you say?

      "There is no continuing 'civilization' that's been around for even 500 years"

      Well the china has been around longer then that. The ottomans, indians, persians, arabs, iraqis and dozens of other nations have been around for more then five hundred years. Hell the english have been around more then five hundred years. No wonder you are a liberterian, you are completely ignorant of history.

      But hey I will play nice. Show me a country that was run by liberterian principles that existed for five years. Go ahead, I dare you. Then ask yourself "gee if in the thousands of years that people have been building societies there has never once been a liberterian society what makes me think it will ever work?"

      --
      evil is as evil does
    49. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Really? So it was a treatise on how we should carefully manage natural resources and make sure we preserve the environment right? It was a book that talked about sustainable development right? No? It wasn't? Adam Smith never actually took the environment into account you say?

      Silly doof, quit rubbing your head like that, it will grow hair. Natural resources are part of the set of limited resources. Economics being a study of human nature it doesn't simply lose all applicability when the word "natural" is spoken.

      Well the china has been around longer then that.

      The China had this little upheavel known as the cultural revolution less than 100 years ago, I guess that didn't really change their system of government and economic policies at all did it? Lol!

      The ottomans, indians, persians, arabs, iraqis and dozens of other nations have been around for more then five hundred years.

      Yep, the Ottoman Empire is a real force in modern geo-politics isn't it? Persia, what country is that? Oh yeah, Iran, that little revolution back in 1979 was no big deal, not a change from secularist to theocratic government. India's got such a long history as the world's largest democracy, doesn't it - going back all of 55 years! Iraq - the very model of a stable economic policy right. And don't forget those arabs, the house of Saud has dominated the pennisula for millenia!

      Hell the english have been around more then five hundred years.

      Feudalism and monarchy, England sure hasn't seen any change at all in her economic system has she? The Glorious Revolution was no big deal, really, trust me.

      No wonder you are a liberterian, you are completely ignorant of history.

      Why do you think I am a libertarian? Just because I understand a philosophy and its history doesn't mean I agree with it. But when I criticize it, I know enough to leave the strawmen behind and talk about facts. You, on the other hand, are damn good at demonstrating your ignorance of history, Libertarianism and just about everything else you've stroked out so far.

      But hey I will play nice. Show me a country that was run by liberterian principles that existed for five years. Go ahead, I dare you. Then ask yourself "gee if in the thousands of years that people have been building societies there has never once been a liberterian society what makes me think it will ever work?"

      Yeah, what the fuck were people like Jefferson and Franklin thinking listening to that whack-pack of crazy freaks like Voltaire, Kant, Locke and Hume. A democracy based on natural law? It had never been done before so obviously it could never work - if it ain't been done before, it ain't worth doing - that's what I always say.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    50. Re:I don't know what's worse... by femto · · Score: 1

      > Don't you want to do the right thing? Even if the party you vote for looses, doing the right thing is surely better than actually voting for the Democrats/Republicans?:

      Which the advantage of a preferential voting system (used here in Australia). You can vote for a minor third party as your first preference, and the lesser of two evils as your second preference. If the minor party gets knocked out your vote then gets counted for the lesser of two evils. Such a system allows a minor party to compete on an equal footing with a larger party. Now if only we can do away with "above the line" voting and preference deals...

    51. Re:I don't know what's worse... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "Silly doof, quit rubbing your head like that, it will grow hair. Natural resources are part of the set of limited resources. Economics being a study of human nature it doesn't simply lose all applicability when the word "natural" is spoken."

      So how much did Adam Smith write about sustainibility of natural resources? Yes the answer is none.

      "Yep, the Ottoman Empire is a real force in modern geo-politics isn't it? Persia, what country is that? Oh yeah, Iran, that little revolution back in 1979 was no big deal, not a change from secularist to theocratic government. India's got such a long history as the world's largest democracy, doesn't it - going back all of 55 years! Iraq - the very model of a stable economic policy right. And don't forget those arabs, the house of Saud has dominated the pennisula for millenia!"

      Ottoman empire is now Turkey again it pays to crack the history books once in a while. But anyway you have just proved my point. India, China, Japan, persia, ottoman empire, the british empire, the french, the germans, the scandanavians, and all other nations who have been around for more then five hundred years have never, ever, not once governed themselves by liberterian principles. Never. They have tried monarch, various degrees of theocracy, democracy, and have all settled on some sort of socialism.

      "if it ain't been done before, it ain't worth doing - that's what I always say."

      LOL. Yes try it and see how well it works. You can't even convince .5 percent of Americans that it's a good idea!

      "Yeah, what the fuck were people like Jefferson and Franklin thinking listening to that whack-pack of crazy freaks like Voltaire, Kant, Locke and Hume."

      They read philosphers, then they wrote a constitution based on reality and practicality. Liberterianism doesn't work, it never has, it never will. If anybody could have made it work it was those guys.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    52. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      So how much did Adam Smith write about sustainibility of natural resources? Yes the answer is none.

      Clearly you are not very wise, else the few words I've spared for you would have been enough. Here's a few more. Smith also didn't write a single word about automobile manufacturing, yet his observations are just applicable to that industry as they were to farming. Exactly what part of "Natural resources are part of the set of limited resources." do you fail to understand? Doof.

      Ottoman empire is now Turkey again it pays to crack the history books once in a while.

      Not even close. The Ottoman Empire was Islamic, Turkey is highly secular and far, far smaller. What you clearly fail to understand here is that just because people continue to live in the same physical location does not mean that their "civilization" as it applies to an example of a sustained economic system and governance which - your original use of the term in asking for examples of such - has continued uninterrupted.

      They have tried monarch, various degrees of theocracy, democracy, and have all settled on some sort of socialism.

      Oh, I get it, you are changing your definition because you had your face rubbed in how [i]stupid[/i] your first version was. Well, by your new definition, all of those countries have tried, and continue to try, varying degrees of Libertarian principles just as they've tried other systems too. [i]None[/i] of the systems at all have remained constant for very long. If, as you imply when you say 'settled,' you think the current socialism is a steady-state, you haven't been paying attention -- it too has been decaying due to inherent problems with sustainability and the countries are adopting more Libertarian, free-market principles. For example, utility privitization and deregulation is occuring more and more frequently -- sometimes it's done well, sometimes it is done poorly, but regardless it is happening and it definitely isn't socialist.

      LOL. Yes try it and see how well it works. You can't even convince .5 percent of Americans that it's a good idea!

      I can't even convince you to understand simple English, surely I am an idiot. I refer you back to my previous statement that, unlike yourself, I am actually capable of understanding a philosophy for better and for worse without necessarily buying in to it.

      I will admit, it is sure a lot easier to go tilting at windmills of your own creation, makes it a lot easier to win an argument when all you are doing is knocking down your own strawmen. See that part about mental masturbation again while you are reviewing things. As long as you feel good, what does it matter if all you are doing is flaunting your ignorance? Keep on fighting the good fight, or whatever the hell it is you think you are doing wasting your time on slashdot.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    53. Re:I don't know what's worse... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "Not even close. The Ottoman Empire was Islamic, Turkey is highly secular and far, far smaller. What you clearly fail to understand here is that just because people continue to live in the same physical location does not mean that their "civilization" as it applies to an example of a sustained economic system and governance which - your original use of the term in asking for examples of such - has continued uninterrupted."

      Go ask the Turks if they are the same civilization and they will say yes.

      Let's set that aside for now. Are the japanese the same civilization? The chinese? The english? The french? Have they been around longer then 500 years?

      Oh and I am still waiting for any civilization in history anywhere which actually instituted a liberterian govt and lasted for five years or more.

      I won't be holding my breath though. Idiological misfits and deluded zealots rarely form governments. You guys couldn't even get your act together enough to move to Montana where you were supposed to try and form a majority or an influencial minority. The least populated state and you failed miserably at that!.

      LOL.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    54. Re:I don't know what's worse... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1
      "civilization" as it applies to an example of a sustained economic system and governance which - your original use of the term in asking for examples

      Go ask the Turks if they are the same civilization and they will say yes.

      Go ask the Turks if baklava has sugar in it and they will say yes.

      Go ask the Turks if they are same economic system and system of government and they will say no.

      Keep setting up those strawmen. I asked the Turks and they said that you should at least avoid quoting what you are trying to weasel around.
      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    55. Re:I don't know what's worse... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      So let me get this straight. If a country changes a style of goverment then all their culture built up over hundreds if not thousands of years get wiped? They don't count as the same people anymore? So the English of the king george days is no longer the english of today? That was a whole different culture altogether, not the same govt? Same with the japanese? Their entire culture is moot because they went to a democracy relativel recently?

      What an absurd notion. Oddly enough a straw men thrown up trying to defend libeteriansims as a viable form of govt. Not surprising I am still waiting for some evidence of liberterianism practiced someplace on this planet successfully.

      --
      evil is as evil does
  4. Secretly? by MarkByers · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's not so secret any more!

    Anyway...

    Why don't companies announce immediately when they have been forced to do something by the government against their will (like Google)? As far as I was aware America is still a country where you can speak freely against the government without fear of punishment. Why not just admit it in public that you are being forced to hand over confidential information? If the banks are hiding it too, then they are as much to blame and should not be trusted.

    Or is the government using threats to keep the banks quiet? If so, what threats do they use? And can anything be done about it to make sure it doesn't happen again?

    --
    I'll probably be modded down for this...
    1. Re:Secretly? by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why don't companies announce immediately when they have been forced to do something by the government against their will (like Google)? As far as I was aware America is still a country where you can speak freely against the government without fear of punishment. Why not just admit it in public that you are being forced to hand over confidential information? If the banks are hiding it too, then they are as much to blame and should not be trusted.

      Or is the government using threats to keep the banks quiet? If so, what threats do they use? And can anything be done about it to make sure it doesn't happen again?


      In the case of the NSA tapping the phone switches, the threat was that of "future government contracts and renegotiations" which was/is CONSIDERABLE $$$. Since Google doesn't have the same business model (lots of $$ from lots of sources instead of lots of $$ from few sources), they had the flexibility (and dare I say it...freedom) to speak out loud.

    2. Re:Secretly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why don't companies announce immediately when they have been forced to do something by the government against their will

      Uhm, because they are often specifically forbidden to. That's the real prize of 9/11 for law enforcement - they HATE transparency and accountability, all this "national security" stuff pretty much means that they don't have to be bothered with all that hippie liberal nonsense.

    3. Re:Secretly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      As far as I was aware America is still a country where you can speak freely against the government without fear of punishment.
      True in principle, but not in practice. Sure, your company can go public with such info, and there won't be any official punishment... but you'll get to watch any govt. contracts slowly dry up, and business get a bit more difficult to do, maybe get smeared by talking heads on TV (who also have the right to free speech, remember) about how you're "helping the terrorists", maybe the IRS takes a closer look at your filings the next year, etc....
    4. Re:Secretly? by Broken+Bottle · · Score: 3, Insightful

      [blockquote] Why don't companies announce immediately when they have been forced to do something by the government against their will (like Google)?[/blockquote]

      Given the Bush administration's behavior regarding these sorts of activities, likely the companies are threatened with federal prosecution if they reveal the attempt because it would the "terrorists" hints about how we're trying to track them down. It's more than convenient that these hints to the "terrorists" are also hints to the public that the White House is trampling our civil rights and evading oversight YET AGAIN.

    5. Re:Secretly? by LindseyJ · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Do your reasearch and don't believe everything you read in the papers. This program DID have congretional oversight and is perfectly leagal as a practical extention of the Patriot Act. Whether you believe the in the Patriot Act or that this program is doing any good is a different story entirely. Also, who the fuck cares if the government is looking at Joe Sixpack's bank info? Oh no, he bought that Big Mac the other day, SEND IN THE AUTHORITIES. And don't start with bullshit slippery slope arguments, either. The fact is, that just like the alleged 'wiretapping' (which was nothing of the sort, and was an automated system designed to track international calls), this is not some insidious plot by the government to erode our civil liberties.

      Personally, I'm more worried about where this security leak came from. Nobody seems worried about that, but this is a top-secret program. The NYT didn't just walk into the NSA or the DHS and say "So boys, slow news day; you got any secret programs we can bust the lid off of?" Someone here is involved in a huge breach of security, and this should constitute a much bigger flag going up than some imagined privacy rights being eroded.

      And before you start with the Bush-bashing, I am a registered Libertarian and have voted 3rd party in every election in which I have voted.

    6. Re:Secretly? by Bheckleman · · Score: 1
      Or is the government using threats to keep the banks quiet? If so, what threats do they use?

      Just speculation, one would think the banks do not want to find themselves looking at conditions as they were in the 'full' regulation days.

    7. Re:Secretly? by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 1

      Since Google doesn't have the same business model (lots of $$ from lots of sources instead of lots of $$ from few sources), they had the flexibility (and dare I say it...freedom) to speak out loud.

      Except in China.

      Yeah, y'all are real brave scoring own-goals in the war with Islamic fascism, braving scary consequences like fawning writeups in the NYT. Maybe they'll give one of you the Walter Duranty award for journalistic excellence.

    8. Re:Secretly? by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      Uhm, because they are often specifically forbidden to.

      There are plenty of other things that companies do that are forbidden by law, and often the fine they'll receive for it is factored into the mix and simply considered a cost of doing business. Going public with this information could easily enough be done without incriminating any particular individual employee, and all the company would get would be a fine. Heaven forbid a big corporation will do something like that when it's something critically important like this, though. "Maximizing shareholder value" doesn't apply to anything except money, even though the loss of freedom will cost the non-institutional shareholders quite a bit more.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    9. Re:Secretly? by EasyTarget · · Score: 1

      Oh no, he bought that Big Mac the other day, SEND IN THE AUTHORITIES

      The way corporate states ar going these days, it will actually be;

      Oh no, he he cooked his own food and did not buy that Big Mac the other day, SEND IN THE AUTHORITIES

      --
      "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
    10. Re:Secretly? by Broken+Bottle · · Score: 5, Informative

      "Do your reasearch and don't believe everything you read in the papers. This program DID have congretional oversight and is perfectly leagal as a practical extention of the Patriot Act."

      Show me the article that verifies this claim. The interview I heard yesterday with Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Stuart Levy mentioned nothing of the sort. This program, like a startling number of Bush's post 9/11 "anti terrorist" intelligence initiatives, has NO court oversight. Levy described a situation in which SWIFT agents and "an outside auditing firm" could monitor database searches in real time and could halt the search if they felt it was suspect or needed further justification from the government. That's it. If your name is on a list of suspected terrorist / collaborators, correctly or incorrectly, the the White House has given itself the privledge of sifting through your financial data. And your phone calls. And god knows what else we don't know about. And it all happens without the courts being aware.

      Who puts a stop to programs like this if it's being abused? The "gang of 8" senators that had been informed about the domestic wiretapping program have admitted that the reports they get about that program don't go into any great detail. Are we just supposed to trust the Bush White House to say, "Gee, we've sepped over the line here, please shut us down?" These are the same people that selectively chose intellegence reports that supported their desire to invade Iraq. Once they got their, they retroactively changes their justifications for being there and then capped it all by saying "Well, is it a bad thing that Sahdam is gone? Would you prefer he be in power?"

      This is a democracy with explicit checks and ballances between the three branches of government setup to prevent precisely what is occuring. Why should we trust him to be the final arbitar of what programs are legal and which would be overstepping his bounds within the law when he and his team have shown such a knack for the creative justification of every questionable looking program they've enacted that has come to light?

    11. Re:Secretly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Somebody is going for more than just financial records. There have been over 100 major cases in the last two years involving loss by theft of SSNs and DOB information. That's two per week on average of incidents involving mass personal data. What all is being targeted here and by whom and why?

      "A number of computer security experts have said the recent rash of data thefts is unprecedented in scope, method, and frequency. Some claim that the thefts appear to be coordinated and targeted at specific data types." See http://www.waynemadsenreport.com/ under the June 17th heading with list of over 100 major data theft cases recently. That's an awful lot of merely sloppy guys carrying laptops home on trains, wouldn't you say?

      Is somebody putting together a database on American citizens that it perhaps could not obtain legally?

      Madsen, an ex-CIA analyst with history of credibility, identifies what's going on as: "part of a well-planned covert intelligence operation to obtain data on hundreds of millions of people in order to accomplish what former Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) official John Poindexter was not able to bring about through his defunct (but secretly restored) Total Information Awareness (TIA) system -- the population of intelligence and surveillance databases with files on the financial, medical, employment, telecommunications, and other sensitive data of Americans and foreigners."

      Gosh, if you've done nothing wrong, you have nothing to fear from an all-seeing all-powerful government... Good news! The chocolate ration has been increased to 5 grams this week! - Ministry of History Adjustment... - we are now at war with Oceania. Eastasia has always been our friend...

      Oh, there's NO possibility of the administration using this data to intimidate or harrass opposition, or to blackmail elected representatives. No chance there's any consolidation going on of control over the population by any means available. I believe this administration is honest and honorable, and I truly believe they mean every word of reassurance repeated on the official government TV station, FOX. It's not like anybody in the adminstration has any history of lying, or has shot anyone in the face while hunting drunk, or done cocaine or been an alcoholic. You can trust these guys. (cough Gitmo) (cough Diebold) (cough AT&T) (cough your personal data in the hands of government thugs and you can't do a thing about it so just bend over and enjoy it)

    12. Re:Secretly? by a4r6 · · Score: 1

      The real political game all happens outside the boundaries of law and of the constitution. It is all about favors and money. Here's an analogy I like. Think of the constitution and all of our laws and regulations as a set of rules for engagement (local and international) similar to the hardware on a computer. On top of that we put an 'abstraction layer' that allows us to get the results we want more directly, ignoring what is really happening at the low level. There is an 'abstraction layer' for the rich and powerful that consists of lobbyists, personal ties and favors (which you can't effectively outlaw,) and shady, less-than-legal happenings. Above this abstraction layer somewhere are the real intentions of the user. In the case of my analogy, the intentions of the user are ALWAYS to gain power, or to preserve power. That is just business. Morals are mostly nonexistant at the highest levels of power, because they are a restriction that would not allow such power, assuming the individual(s) are within the standard deviation of skill at manipulating the whole system, and are not abnormally predisposed to power.

    13. Re:Secretly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All they've done is take our system, that's been in place here since the war on drugs started, globally. US banks are required by law to report suspicious transactions or any transaction greater than $5000.00 to the federal government. I can see people from other nations complaining about this new development, however US citizens repeatedly vote into congress the very people who passed these laws. If your a US citizen your banking records haven't been a secret since the Nixon-Reagan era.

    14. Re:Secretly? by Watson+Ladd · · Score: 1

      We shouldn't. But rember the tale of Lorenzo the Kind from Terry Prachet. Even after everyone knew about his pedastry they still felt Sam Vimes to be a murderer when he choped off the kings head. People are in awe of power. They don't like to challenge it.

      --
      Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further development.-- Frontinus, 1st cent. AD
    15. Re:Secretly? by torgosan · · Score: 1

      Ignoring the same-old-party-line-anti-Bush meanderings, I'll say this: If you really believe that the terrorists are not aware of that old truism, "Follow the money", no tin-foil hat of any size will help very much.

      --
      "If you put the federal government in charge of the Sahara Desert, in 5 years there'd be a shortage of sand". -Milton F.
    16. Re:Secretly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      too bad someone won't just give him a blowjob so we can see him get impeached......

    17. Re:Secretly? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      There is potential for abuse. "This person donated a large sum of money to an opposition party. Shut him down." Or they could flag you for supporting "terrorist" organizations like Greenpeace. I wouldn't be surprised if some present or future law allows them to freeze your account if they think you are suspicious.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    18. Re:Secretly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And before you start with the Bush-bashing, I am a registered Libertarian and have voted 3rd party in every election in which I have voted.

      So, in other words, you're a Bush supporter.
    19. Re:Secretly? by nEoN+nOoDlE · · Score: 1

      I care if Joe Sixpack's big mac purchase is now known by the government. Because that also means that my big mac purchase is known by the government. And how is a slippery slope argument bullshit? There's an old nursery rhyme that goes
      "For want of a nail the shoe was lost.
      For want of a shoe the horse was lost.
      For want of a horse the rider was lost.
      For want of a rider the battle was lost.
      For want of a battle the kingdom was lost."

      or how about this old cliche:
      "Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely?"

      There are thousands of years of history of corrupt governments taking away liberties and controlling and destroying their people with the same tactics we're letting them use today, and all because of the "imagined" threat of terror.

      --
      Don't trust a bull's horn, a doberman's tooth, a runaway horse or me.
    20. Re:Secretly? by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

      Since Google doesn't have the same business model (lots of $$ from lots of sources instead of lots of $$ from few sources), they had the flexibility (and dare I say it...freedom) to speak out loud.

      Except in China.


      Yep, Google did evil in China...but that's a totallydifferent discussion.

    21. Re:Secretly? by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      is perfectly leagal as a practical extention of the Patriot Act

      So long as you ignore the Constitution, that is. But who really gives a shit about that stupid piece of paper anymore? After all, the people who wrote it were a bunch of fucking barbarians who didn't even have, like, TV!

      Also, who the fuck cares if the government is looking at Joe Sixpack's bank info?

      Perhaps Joe Sixpack - y'know, the guy the government supposedly works FOR. In case you've forgotten, the government, along with our elected representatives, were intended to be our SERVANTS, not our leaders. Their job is to get on their fucking knees and suck our dicks whenever we tell them to, and to thank us for the privilege after. The situation was NEVER supposed to be reversed.

      And don't start with bullshit slippery slope arguments

      'Cuz, like, they're far too difficult for you to follow. Sweet Jesus, if ever there were an argument against universal suffrage, you'd be the poster child for it.

      this is not some insidious plot by the government to erode our civil liberties.

      Apparently the study of history isn't something you've ever put your mind to. Governments are ALWAYS interested in eroding civil liberties, because the only way to get power is to take it from others. And in case you haven't noticed, the people who WANT power are the ones who work their way into government office in the first place.

      It's a flawed system. Anyone who wants the job is one of the last people in the world you actually want to give it to. But rather than come up with a different way of doing things, we get to choose between a list of scumbags, hoping that the person we're voting for is the least evil among the lot. On the rare occasions when a real idealist gets voted into office, they're either a) corrupted, or b) destroyed if they can't be corrupted.

      Someone here is involved in a huge breach of security

      And here's hoping for more such breaches in the future. Since the government thinks it apparently doesn't need to inform me, it's employer, about what it's up to, I have to rely on leaks to get that information.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    22. Re:Secretly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you not read anything about it? The courts have already said this kind of thing is LEGAL. The administration already had several checks and balances put in place. This is just a Bush bashing NYT leaking classified information when it should not. I hope the Bush administration hammers the NYT very hard and people go to jail. These stupid leaks need to stop now.

    23. Re:Secretly? by LindseyJ · · Score: 1

      I happen to support Bush in this particular case, yes, but I am by no means a Bush supporter. I support or oppose individual ideas, programs, and laws; not people or parties. Anyone who does otherwise is an idiot. In fact, I'm opposed to carreer politicians, but that's neither here nor there. I disagree with Bush on the majority of his issues, including the war in Iraq (but not the war on terror as a whole), imigration reform, taxes, and so on. If what you're trying to get at is that I 'support Bush' because I didn't vote Democrat to make sure he didn't get another term, then you're living in some other universe or something.

    24. Re:Secretly? by kcbnac · · Score: 1

      and is perfectly leagal as a practical extention of the Patriot Act.
      See...there's this little problem with the Patriot Act. Heard of the Constitution, and Bill of Rights? Yeah, that Patriot Act convieniently forgets they both exist...making just about ANYTHING legal in the 'War on Terror.' (Sidenote: To quote that other cliche, how do you go to war against a verb?)

    25. Re:Secretly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why don't companies announce immediately when they have been forced to do something by the government against their will (like Google)?
      Google 'National Security Letters'.
    26. Re:Secretly? by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 1

      Yep, Google did evil in China...but that's a totally different discussion.

      No, it's part of my point. Left-wingers act "bravely" when attacking entities that are extremely unlikely to do them harm (ie, the American federal government or America in general) and are sychophantic with entities that wouldn't think twice about murdering anyone who gets in their way (the terrorist-sponsoring, nuclear-bomb-building Iranian theocracy, Islamic terrorists in general, Castro's librarian-jailing dictatorship, the ChiCom dictatorship and its laogai but to a lesser extent now that their economics are going capitalist, the Soviets back in the day, etc).

      The irony is that if we right-wingers really were the bastards the Left makes us out to be we wouldn't have to listen to so much whining. If Rumsfeld really were a mass murderer, maybe trustafarians would wear trendy T-shirts glorifying him instead of Che.

      So Google "stands up" to the Bush administration and capitulates to the ChiComs, then in typical liberal fashion gives a useless apology for the latter afterwards.

    27. Re:Secretly? by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

      So Google "stands up" to the Bush administration and capitulates to the ChiComs, then in typical liberal fashion gives a useless apology for the latter afterwards.

      If your world is so cut-and-dried, why is BushCo selling us to the Chinese WITHOUT an apology?

    28. Re:Secretly? by Broken+Bottle · · Score: 1

      Yes, the courts have said that many kinds of evidence collection are legal, as long as warrants are obtained before or sometime after the collection of evidence has taken place. Geez, the FISA court will even grant warrants AFTER THE FACT as long as the search and collecton is carried out in a way that meets the criteria needed to obtain the warrant in the first place.

      In the end, like Mark Felt informing on Nixon, these leaks wouldn't occur and people would question these prorams if Bush was trusted and the programs were carried out in a fashion that was legally justifiable and above suspicion.

    29. Re:Secretly? by Mark+Hood · · Score: 1

      The 'threat' is that if you don't comply with the vital national security interest, you must therefore be a terrorist.

      Everyone on here who thinks Bush shouldn't be allowed to open your mail and copy your bank statements clearly has something to hide, and so by definition is a threat to national security. And if you're upset about it, then you might be dangerous... So therefore a terrorist.

      QED.

      --
      Liked this comment? Why not buy me something nice
  5. quick success by swissfondue · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So the US found a quick way to access international payment flows. I wonder about their "successes", which sound a lot like the "take our word for it, we know Saddam has chemical weapons". Also SWIFT, a seemingly international organization, has in fact confirmed it is controlled by the US by agreeing to pass all its data to the US. I wonder what its Arab clients are thinking. SWIFT can probably now close shop.

    --
    Rubies and Pearls are not what you think.
    1. Re:quick success by Haljo+Gemel · · Score: 3, Informative
      SWIFT can probably now close shop.

      I can assure you that that will not happen. I work for an Aussie bank and SWIFT is very tightly integrated into all our systems and the systems of our clients. Even if we wanted to leave we couldn't. I'm not even sure if there is a decent, viable alternative.

    2. Re:quick success by ScentCone · · Score: 2, Interesting

      take our word for it, we know Saddam has chemical weapons

      Why take the US's word for it? Take the gassed villages' word for it. Or take the UN inspectors' word for it, since they saw, and in some cases partly demolished enormous stockpiles. Or, you could consider the 500 sarin and mustard gas shells recently disclosed. Whether or not Saddam had (and used) such weapons was never in any doubt, by the US, the UN, or anyone else. It's what he did with them that remains hard to hammer out, and that's what he was spending so much time and energy trying to hide from everyone, despite signing an agreement allowing full inspection. So, we found some, continue to find more, and know that truckloads of that stuff went off to Syria when he knew his days in charge were numbered. You know all of this, though, but you're still reciting the mantra because you think it helps you, rhetorically. It doesn't.

      How do you suppose we track and clamp down on the international flow of cash between and for people like A-Q? By... tracking it. How do you think that bombers from Indonesia to Madrid to the US get their operating funds from the deeper pockets that provide it? Carrier pigeon?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    3. Re:quick success by mrogers · · Score: 1
    4. Re:quick success by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sad thing is, you actually believe all of that. Please try to watch something else besides Fox News.

      The US is in Iraq for one thing, and one thing only. Oil.

    5. Re:quick success by CaptainZapp · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I wonder what its Arab clients are thinking. SWIFT can probably now close shop.

      I'm more wondering what the honchos of UBS and Credit Suisse (who have representatives in the board of SWIFT) where thinking while this little scheme was going along.

      You see, breeching customer confidentiality is protected by federal law in Switzerland and violating this penal code may draw jail time.

      That doesn't mean that Swiss banks never provide foreign authorities with customer data, but such authorities must show that there's an ongoing investigation about a crime, or a felony. That's what actually pisses off a lot of foreign governments with stringent fiscal policies, since tax evasion is not a felony in Switzerland and is thus protected under the bank secrecy act.

      If wholesale supplying of customer data to the US authorities is not a breech of this code, I don't know what is.

      Mind you, that has nothing to do with the infamous Swiss number accounts so much beloved by bad authors. There are no anonymous bank accounts anymore in Switzerland and a numbered account only guarantees that your true identity is coded within the bank and only a few very high honchos know the true identity of the account owner.

      Of course Credit Suisse (CSFB) as well as UBS are major players in the US' financial markets and they wouldn't want to piss the US authorities off; now would they?

      --
      ich bin der musikant

      mit taschenrechner in der hand

      kraftwerk

    6. Re: quick success by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > The US is in Iraq for one thing, and one thing only. Oil.

      Nah, they also want to make the world safe for Israel.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    7. Re:quick success by ScentCone · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The sad thing is, you actually believe all of that. Please try to watch something else besides Fox News.

      Why bother watching Fox? Better perhaps to take advantage of the BBC's reporting. Take a moment and any of their coverage. It's hard not to notice the actual facts of chemical weapon use. Which, of course, rather requires the existence of the same. Saddam's years-long campaign of obfuscation revolved almost entirely around hiding the ultimate disposition of such weapons, and the (then) ongoing, parallel work in missile development and manufacturing.

      The US is in Iraq for one thing, and one thing only. Oil.

      Right, there's no interest at all in avoiding another Taliban-like haven for government-sponsored terrorism, as is found in Iran. That sort of retrograde, destabilizing influence on the entire middle east certainly does impact oil flow (for the entire world, in case you're not paying attention), and allowing it to thrive is unacceptable on a lot of levels, not just as it relates to oil. And before you start mentioning Saddam as some sort of not-so-bad alternative to the extremist jihaddi types, remember that he was busy shipping (along with press releases!) cash to organizations like Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and even to individual families of suicide bombers. To say nothing of lobbing scud missles across borders, trying to annex Kuwait, and so on. "For oil" is a tidy bit of sophistry, though, that must feel convenient. But the real issue with the oil is that it lies in a place where its value is being sought by medieval-minded theocratic crazies that use that single source of revenue to keep places like Iran running backwards from history. Putting those oil reserves in the hands of constitutional democracies is certainly acting "for the oil," but not in the way you so cravenly describe. That's like saying that when the US marched into Germany and liberated the concentration camps, that it was for the German beer.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    8. Re:quick success by FrankNputer · · Score: 5, Informative

      Or, you could consider the 500 sarin and mustard gas shells recently disclosed

      Um, don't you mean the pre-Gulf War shells that were found in 2003, reported on in 2004, and waved around last week in a poor attempt to justify the war in an election year? Just sayin'...

    9. Re:quick success by EasyTarget · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's what he did with them that remains hard to hammer out, and that's what he was spending so much time and energy trying to hide from everyone, despite signing an agreement allowing full inspection.

      Just a wild suggestion... Maybe he actually destroyed them?

      He didn't want a war because he knew he'd end up dead.. as will hopefully soon happen. Actually destroying these weapons, which he had no realistic prospect of using without instant obliteration now he was no longer a US ally against Iran, would certainly have been in his best interests.

      But I do not dispute his desire and willingness to make and use them.. nor his future intention to do so either! Just his practical ability.

      PS: The '500' mustard and sarin shells (disclosed in 1999, only wight ring prats call it recent, although the real figure is more like 650+) should be set against 50,000+ which the UN accepts were destroyed..

      --
      "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
    10. Re:quick success by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I always love that response: "We didn't find WMD's? Well then, he must have moved them." That's the perfect bulletproof argument. You can use it for unicorns too: "We haven't seen any? Well then, they must be hiding."

      Mod me down all you want. It's still true.

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    11. Re:quick success by EasyTarget · · Score: 2, Interesting

      SWIFT is also HQ'd in Belgium, and the Belgies do not like being pushed around by bigger countries (legacy of being piggie in the middle for 2 world wars and several european ones). SWIFT will find itself under investigation in Belgium for this too (which could be fun if they fight a warrant to protect the US, the Belgian police are basically a full military outfit run by the judiciary).
      Depends on how corrupt the current Belgian legislature is.

      --
      "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
    12. Re:quick success by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      I always love that response: "We didn't find WMD's? Well then, he must have moved them." That's the perfect bulletproof argument.

      Except, we don't have to make that argument, the facts make that argument. All Saddam had to do was demonstrate what he did with all of the stockpiles that we know where there because the UN inspectors saw them and recorded them. The biggest song and dance that Saddam went into wasn't about whether he had them, it was about where they went since he couldn't/wouldn't show sites where they had been destroyed, and couldn't even be bothered to fake up decent forged records about the process of destroying them (mind you, this in a regime that was fastidious about record keeping, including fantastic lists of weapons stashes, body counts, etc). Nope: it's a question of what became of large piles of VX, sarin, and other really nasty stuff. It's not sitting around anywhere obvious (yet, anyway), he wouldn't say how or whether he destroyed it, and we have all sorts of evidence of years and years of two-way weapons commerce with Syria. It's not like this is a mystery in broad terms, just at the serial-number and truckload level. But even so, some pieces of the stash are still turning up, or were some time back, and are just now being talked about again.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    13. Re:quick success by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why take the US's word for it?


      Oh, we take your word for it. You send him the bills in the 1980's...

    14. Re:quick success by hughk · · Score: 1

      International transactions are no longer bound by Swiss secrecy. The source and beneficiary of a payment must be disclosed. However there may not be full data there from the Swiss side. This only requires application at Cantonal level to unlock.

      --
      See my journal, I write things there
    15. Re:quick success by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Or, you could consider the 500 sarin and mustard gas shells recently disclosed.
      No, you couldn't, because there was no such recent disclosure. You, with your head firmly planted up your ass, would consider this minor story from a year a go a recent discolure, but you are an exception, being the inbred product of your mother and her brother.
      So, we found some, continue to find more, and know that truckloads of that stuff went off to Syria when he knew his days in charge were numbered.
      Sure, truckloads must have gone to Syria. Never mind that there is no credible evidence supporting that conjecture. It's a shame that the world has to put up with morons like yourself.
    16. Re:quick success by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do understand that thousands of innocent Iraqi and Afghan civilians, including women and children, have been slaughtered by the US government? You do understand that for each day the war continues and innocents are "accidentally" killed, the historical probability of "accidentally" killing more tomorrow gets closer and closer to 100%, right?

      The US government made a conscious decision to muder innocent human beings.

      Stop right there. I don't give a damn what the rationale is. The murder of innocent human beings is the absolute worst evil that can ever be committed, far beyond any chance of justification. If you don't believe that, then you'd better damn well hope that you're on their team, because we know what can happen to those who aren't.

    17. Re:quick success by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, there's no interest at all in avoiding another Taliban-like haven for government-sponsored terrorism, as is found in Iran.

      Avoiding? Have you been paying attention? The new Iraqi constitution enshrines Sharia as national law. That's right, stoning your wives and daughters and raping little girls because their father or brother shamed you and killing all the nonbelievers you can get your hands on is now the law of the land in Iraq. All thanks to Bush removing the last secular regime in the region.

      Sure, Saddam was a bad man and a dictator. So we gave Iraq democracy, and they might as well have elected the Hamas themselves.

    18. Re:quick success by ougouferay · · Score: 1

      I've always found it somewhat surprising that the US invaded Iraq because they would not comply with a UN request to independently inspect and verify their stockpile of WMD, after all, successive US administrations have themselves refused to allow UN inspectors to do precisely the same thing with their own biological weapons programme..."in the interest of national security" of course....no double standard there then :/

      More on topic though - I saw this reported in the UK today (I think via CNN). It was described as "not involving transactions between you and I" (by which I presume they mean between US citizens) - "just suspect transactions crossing international borders" (which could be read as "between a US citizen and...err...just about anyone else")....It makes me wonder exactly how isolationist the US can get - it also covers a pretty broad spectrum of transactions - but is specifically targeted at person to person rather than corporate transactions from what I gather.

    19. Re:quick success by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      murder of innocent human beings is the absolute worst evil that can ever be committed, far beyond any chance of justification

      Then I'm glad you're on board with the military action that removed from power a man that slaughtered hundreds of thousands of his own people and bulldozed them into mass graves, and caused millions to be killed in his war with Iran. You can't have it both ways: either you think murder is evil, and stop it, or you let it continue. When you are dealing with cowards that put innocent civilians in front of themselves as human shields, you either have to face that dilema and act, or walk away, tolerating the very evil you say is the most intolerable. Pick one.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    20. Re:quick success by Zemran · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Right, there's no interest at all in avoiding another Taliban-like haven for government-sponsored terrorism,

      This is more than a little revisionist as Saddam was a good ally of ours. There was no terrorist activity in Iraq until after we invaded.

      cash to organizations like Hamas, Islamic Jihad,

      bs

      and even to individual families of suicide bombers.

      You may support the idea of punishing the parents for the crimes of the children but I do not. I think that his actions in compensating the victims of Israel's terrorist actions was honourable. I wish that there were more people that would stand up for the people against the state sponsored terrorists.

      To say nothing of lobbing scud missles across borders,

      Is that somehow different from us lobbing cruise missiles at him? You really do have some issues.

      trying to annex Kuwait,

      And when he asked if he could the US said 'we have no interest in that area'.... Maybe if he had been told 'NO' by his main ally he would not have done it..

      Putting those oil reserves in the hands of constitutional democracies is certainly acting "for the oil,"

      This may be a tricky one for you but question number one - What political system was in place in Iraq in 1990? I'll give you a clue. they had just had an election. Yeah, they could only choose people that Saddam said were good enough but now they can only choose people that GW says are good enough, do you really think that the Iraqi people see that as different?

      That's like saying that when the US marched into Germany and liberated the concentration camps, that it was for the German beer.

      Your absurd rant went right off course at the end :D After Hitler declared war on the US it is understandable that the US defended itself by joining the allies when they invaded Germany. It is true that the US was the third largest force and therefore a main part in the invasion of Germany. That is a little different from attacking one of your main allies. We all knew that Saddam no longer had WMD and the intelligence forces made that fact clear.

      The US did turn up late in WWII with the beer and pizza but no one holds it against them because they were welcome along, but keep it in context. The only one there that was ultruistic was Britain as they declared war on Germany because what Germany was doing was wrong. Russia was the main force (they had also been attacked by Germany like the US) that went, Britain was the second force and yes the US did turn up for the party. Read the facts and don't learn history from Hollywood. Russia was the only one that did not avoid the concentration camps as we all knew the logistical problems that would be caused when we arrived at the gates. That is why the German officers had all left without being captured as it was days before we went back to the camps.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    21. Re:quick success by JavaLord · · Score: 0, Troll

      They did find 500 WMD's in Iraq and announced it just last week. CNN refused to cover the story along with other liberal outlets. It's pretty funny that someone in the senate could hold a press conference, annouce something like that, and it doesn't get covered by the US press.

      The weapons were a clear violation of the peace treaty Hussain signed in 1991. The war was justified.

      As you say, Mod me down all you want. It's still true.

    22. Re:quick success by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did Saddam float in water too? That's the sense I get reading your post, listening to a witch hunter. I read the first article, it contained not a single line supporting your argument. Yes, everyone knew Saddam used chemical weapons in 1986, he used them on the Kurds Bush the Elder rallied to revolt then turned away and left to die. It's the reason for establishing the sanctions you disengenuous fuck, not a valid reason for attacking 20 years later. And that second article, did you notice it doesn't support you contentions either? But none of this mattes to the mob, flash the words 'gas', 'Saddam', and 'missle' to relieve them of the effort of five minutes combined reading and thinking, hand them an opinion and let the mod points roll. Finally, Iraq is in greater danger of becoming a Taliban nation under the Americans than it ever was under Saddam, a reality borne out in your papers daily. Your post offers nothing to justify the American attack on Iraq save for the same cynical misdirection the current Administration employed with genius but it does illustrate why your nation continues to slide towards despotism.

    23. Re:quick success by Zigurd · · Score: 1
      Right, there's no interest at all in avoiding another Taliban-like haven for government-sponsored terrorism, as is found in Iran.


      So now, instead of a Baathist dictatorship, we have Iran's secret services running the Shia side of a civil war in Iraq, and a society that appears to be more Islamist than before. How's that workin' out for us?


      As bad as Iraq used to be, it is possible that it is worse now, and will get worse still. One very possible outcome is that part of a divided Iraq becomes a client-state of Iran, no matter what we do, or how much we continue to spend doing it.

    24. Re:quick success by elrous0 · · Score: 2, Informative
      What they found were a bunch of old chemical shells that pre-dated the first Gulf War. Whoopy-do. That was *NOT* the WMD's that Bush and Co. were arguing about in the build-up to this war.

      They didn't take us into this war with "Saddam might still have a scattering of chemical shells from the 1980's that probably don't even work anymore", they took us in with "Saddam has an active chemical, biological, and nuclear program right NOW (that is actively seeking to buy uranium from Niger, has mobile chemical weapons factories, and is buying tubing for uranium processing facilities), a program that threatens us with a Mushroom cloud wake-up call, etc."

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    25. Re:quick success by evilviper · · Score: 1
      Take the gassed villages' word for it. Or take the UN inspectors' word for it, since they saw, and in some cases partly demolished enormous stockpiles. Or, you could consider the 500 sarin and mustard gas shells recently disclosed.

      Nice straw man. You're only about 15 years off there. Chemical weapon don't have a long shelf-life, and it's been incontrovertably proven that Hussein didn't continue to produce it after the first Gulf War. All the stuff they've found has been far too old to be considered a weapon... You wouldn't want to eat it, but it's still less dangerous than, say, asbestos.

      The evidence the Bush administration used to "prove" their case was being disproven at every corner, by simple fact-checking (aluminum centerfuges too small for nuclear development, claims being made by well-know liars, etc.). The UN inspectors allowed in shortly before the US invasion didn't find anything at all, even when following the administration's "intelligence" directions on where they should be. etc.

      Even the administration has given up claiming Iraq had any WMDs, and stated so clearly. They would like, more than anyone, to find ANYTHING that they could point to for justification, or propose ANY hypothesis for why they couldn't find them. They don't do that, because they'd be torn to shreds. The evidence not only isn't there, but it overwhelmingly points to the opposite conclusion.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    26. Re:quick success by AhtirTano · · Score: 3, Informative
      From the article:
      Offering the official administration response to FOX News, a senior Defense Department official pointed out that the chemical weapons were not in useable conditions.

      "This does not reflect a capacity that was built up after 1991," the official said, adding the munitions "are not the WMDs this country and the rest of the world believed Iraq had, and not the WMDs for which this country went to war."

      Here's a quote from David Kay on the topic: "It is less toxic than most things that Americans have under their kitchen sink at this point."

      In other words, these finds do not vindicate the president---which is probably why he didn't make a big deal about them.

      Now, I agree with you the CNN should have covered it. The Los Angeles Times also appears not to have covered it. But your criticism of the entire "liberal media" is not realistic: NPR, CBS, MSNBC, and the New York Times all covered it. I could look for more, but what's the point?

    27. Re:quick success by Shining+Celebi · · Score: 1
      They did find 500 WMD's in Iraq [foxnews.com] and announced it just last week. CNN refused to cover the story along with other liberal outlets. It's pretty funny that someone in the senate could hold a press conference, annouce something like that, and it doesn't get covered by the US press.

      The weapons were a clear violation of the peace treaty Hussain signed in 1991. The war was justified.


      I know I shouldn't bite, but...

      Actually, CNN and other so-called "liberal outlets" did cover the story, along with the fact that it's a very old story and the old, unusable weapons had nothing to do with the justification for going to war. FOX News mentioned that too. Maybe you forgot to read the whole article?

      Here's what the FOX News article says, genius.

      Offering the official administration response to FOX News, a senior Defense Department official pointed out that the chemical weapons were not in useable conditions.

      "This does not reflect a capacity that was built up after 1991,"
      the official said, adding the munitions "are not the WMDs this country and the rest of the world believed Iraq had, and not the WMDs for which this country went to war."


      Yeah, so have a nice day.

    28. Re:quick success by Archtech · · Score: 1

      'That's the perfect bulletproof argument. You can use it for unicorns too: "We haven't seen any? Well then, they must be hiding."'

      I love those jokes. When I was at school we used to ask, "Why do elephants have red feet?" "Uh, I don't know, why do elephants have red feet?" "So you can't see them when they are hiding in cherry trees". "That's ridiculous, no one has ever seen an elephant in a cherry tree!" "Just goes to show how well it works, huh?"

      Great fun for 9-year-olds. Not so great coming from "statesmen" with nuclear, chemical, biological, and conventional weapons - and the determination to use them.

      By the way, what's the latest about the USA's own stock of chemical weapons? Last I heard, it was about 40,000 tons - and 40,000 tons of gas is a lot of gas. The only thing that is stopping some other country from invading the USA to force it to destroy its WMDs is that no other country has the sheer military power. Is that an uncomfortable thought?

      --
      I am sure that there are many other solipsists out there.
    29. Re:quick success by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Saddam had WMDs, and he didn't use them when the US invaded his country with the intent to run him to ground like a dog chasing a fox, then how can you say he was threatening the US with them?

      You Long War apologists need a course in rudimentary logic.

    30. Re:quick success by mrraven · · Score: 1

      Yeah we sure have made life better for the Iraqi people. You have to wonder why they aren't grateful we are there to steal their oil and leave their society in ruins:

      http://counterpunch.org/blum06222006.html

      " Loss of a functioning educational system. A 2005 UN study revealed that 84% of the higher education establishments have been "destroyed, damaged and robbed".

      The intellectual stock has been further depleted as many thousands of academics and other professionals have fled abroad or have been mysteriously kidnapped or assassinated in Iraq; hundreds of thousands, perhaps a million, other Iraqis, most of them from the vital, educated middle class, have left for Jordan, Syria or Egypt, many after receiving death threats.

      "Now I am isolated," said a middle-class Sunni Arab, who decided to leave. "I have no government. I have no protection from the government. Anyone can come to my house, take me, kill me and throw me in the trash."[1]

      Loss of a functioning health care system. And loss of the public's health. Deadly infections including typhoid and tuberculosis are rampaging through the country. Iraq's network of hospitals and health centers, once admired throughout the Middle East, has been severely damaged by the war and looting.

      The UN's World Food Program reported that 400,000 Iraqi children were suffering from "dangerous deficiencies of protein". Deaths from malnutrition and preventable diseases, particularly amongst children, already a problem because of the 12 years of US-imposed sanctions, have increased as poverty and disorder have made access to a proper diet and medicines ever more difficult.

      Thousands of Iraqis have lost an arm or a leg, frequently from unexploded US cluster bombs, which became land mines; cluster bombs are a class of weapons denounced by human rights groups as a cruelly random scourge on civilians, particularly children.

      Depleted uranium particles, from exploded US ordnance, float in the Iraqi air, to be breathed into human bodies and to radiate forever, and infect the water, the soil, the blood, the genes, producing malformed babies. During the few weeks of war in spring 2003, A10 "tankbuster" planes, which use munitions containing depleted uranium, fired 300,000 rounds.

      And the use of napalm as well. And white phosphorous.

      The American military has attacked hospitals to prevent them from giving out casualty figures of US attacks that contradicted official US figures, which the hospitals had been in the habit of doing.

      Numerous homes have been broken into by US forces, the men taken away, the women humiliated, the children traumatized; on many occasions, the family has said that the American soldiers helped themselves to some of the family's money. Iraq has had to submit to a degrading national strip search.

      Destruction and looting of the country's ancient heritage, perhaps the world's greatest archive of the human past, left unprotected by the US military, busy protecting oil facilities.

      A nearly lawless society: Iraq's legal system, outside of the political sphere, was once one of the most impressive and secular in the Middle East; it is now a shambles; religious law more and more prevails.

      Women's rights previously enjoyed are now in great and growing danger under harsh Islamic law, to one extent or another in various areas. There is today a Shiite religious ruling class in Iraq, which tolerates physical attacks on women for showing a bare arm or for picnicking with a male friend.

      Men can be harassed for wearing shorts in public, as can children playing outside in shorts.

      Sex trafficking, virtually nonexistent previously, has become a serious issue.

      Jews, Christians, and other non-Muslims have lost much of the security they had enjoyed in Saddam's secular society; many have emigrated.

      A gulag of prisons run by the US and the new Iraqi government feature a wide variety of torture and abuse -- physical, psycho

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
    31. Re:quick success by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a fucking idiot. Did you even read the article you linked to?

      P.S. This is one of the greatest examples of sheer stupidity I've ever seen on this site. It's almost frightening that you're dead serious.

    32. Re:quick success by elrous0 · · Score: 1
      Is that an uncomfortable thought?

      It's even more uncomfortable to think of those chemicals sitting in some warehouse somewhere in leaky barrels. I think we've all seen what can happen when military chemical stores leak out.

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    33. Re:quick success by themusicgod1 · · Score: 1

      The blood of all those kurds that saddam gassed with american weapons is on your hands, and the rest of the world is not going to simply forget this.

      --
      GENERATION 26: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
    34. Re:quick success by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The only one there that was ultruistic was Britain as they declared war on Germany because what Germany was doing was wrong.

      No, they set themselves up for a war with Germany because Germany challenged their failing hegemony. They refused to recognize the fucking writing on the wall, that the British Empire was shit decaying in the summer sun...until the point was driven home to them via tank, plane and sub. There was nothing whatsoever altruistic about Britain's stand against a European challenger, one that made them shit their pants for the very same reasons only a generation before.

      Russia was the main force (they had also been attacked by Germany like the US) that went, Britain was the second force

      You've got to be kidding. The Brits were practically inconsequential by the time we invaded France. Churchill himself said that they would've surrendered had the Americans not entered the war when they did...and would've done so much earlier if the Americans hadn't been supplying them with weapons, munitions, food, tools, spare parts, and so on since the start of the war.

      What the Brits did do, and well, was soak up a hell of a lot of Germany's time, attention and resources. That was the intended goal when Roosevelt decided to supply them 'under the table' and against the will of the majority of Congress - since Roosevelt intended to go to war with the Germans right from the get-go. This softened up the Germans considerably when the Americans finally did invade Europe. We did the same thing with the Russians (Lend-Lease, etc.) and for the exact same reasons.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    35. Re:quick success by joe545 · · Score: 1

      No, they set themselves up for a war with Germany because Germany challenged their failing hegemony. They refused to recognize the fucking writing on the wall, that the British Empire was shit decaying in the summer sun...until the point was driven home to them via tank, plane and sub. The UK declared war because an ally (Poland)was invaded. And since when did Germany use tanks to attack the UK? Only once Germany was on the back foot and the Allies had ivaded France did tanks comes into play. Churchill himself said that they would've surrendered had the Americans not entered the war when they did...and would've done so much earlier if the Americans hadn't been supplying them with weapons, munitions, food, tools, spare parts, and so on since the start of the war. The Battle of Britain was fucking over 6 months before Pearl Harbor was attacked. I've never heard a quote where Churchill claimed the UK was about to surrender. On the contrary I remember the quote "We shall never surrender". And as for the lend-lease programme, that only began 3 months before the end of the Battle of Britain. So when would the UK have surrendered? Perhaps an armistice but certainly not surrender.

    36. Re:quick success by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      The blood of all those kurds that saddam gassed with american weapons is on your hands, and the rest of the world is not going to simply forget this.

      So, let's get this straight: you're unhappy that the US government, after putting together a coalition to remove Saddam from Kuwait, couldn't continue to get wider UN support for more intervention in Iraq. Big mistake, not doing things more unilaterlly, and just taking him out entirely at the time. So, when the US does do the right thing (now), regardless of the pressure from many corners to just let Iraq stew, you don't like that, either?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    37. Re:quick success by Zemran · · Score: 1

      No, they set themselves up for a war with Germany because Germany challenged their failing hegemony.

      Germany offered no challenge to Britain and even made it clear that they wanted Britain as an ally.

      The Brits were practically inconsequential by the time we invaded France.

      I do not know where you get your history from but it is not from reality. The British put more soliers into France, and Italy than anyone else. They also had more soldiers already in mainland Europe than anyone else. It is only in the films that it is mainly US soldiers because there were many other countries as well that Hollywood forgets. It is an extreme dishonour to their effort when people like you denigrate the effort they made and try to take credit for the blood of others. Britain had no reason to surrender and would not have. The main difference that the US made was where the line between east and west was drawn. This was something that was already predicticted and being planed for. Even if the US had not helped and the British, French, Polish, Canadian, Australian, Kiwis etc, had all stayed at home, Hitler would have still lost to the Russians but the whole of Europe would have disapeared into Russia and no one wanted that except Stalin.

      It is also true that the British soldiers were battle hardened veterans (as were the Germans) and newly arrived GIs were green and quickly became famous for running away when they got shot at. The Dakotas (US pilots) that were towing gliders full of paratroopers kept dumping the gliders as soon as they saw a German fighter. It was not as if the extra speed even helped them given the speed of a German fighter compared to a Dakota. It was because of this lack of experience that the US troops got slaughtered on their beaches when the other teams went for it and lost fewer soldiers overall on the beach assaults.

      That was the intended goal when Roosevelt decided to supply them 'under the table'

      Nothing was under the table. The US supplied both sides and did it for profit. GWs family made a fortune supplying Hitler. It was not part of a war plan, it was a business plan. The Germans messed it up by attacking the US. The US got rich out of the war and was happy to do so.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    38. Re:quick success by wfberg · · Score: 1


      Russia was the main force (they had also been attacked by Germany like the US) that went, Britain was the second force

      You've got to be kidding. The Brits were practically inconsequential by the time we invaded France. Churchill himself said that they would've surrendered had the Americans not entered the war when they did...and would've done so much earlier if the Americans hadn't been supplying them with weapons, munitions, food, tools, spare parts, and so on since the start of the war.


      The allied forces suffered 17 million military dead. 10 million of which were Russian. 4 million were Chinese. That leaves only 3 million for the UK, the US, the Canadians, the European forces and sundry others (India, Australia, etc.) combined.

      The Russians were the dominant force in Europe, albeit an inefficient one; their advancements had a high toll in human lifes, where the Western allies relied on mechanized war fare, air support etc.

      There is a reason Germany was divided in a Western half and a Russian half post WOII. And a reason why the Western half was shared among the UK, USA and France.

      The reason the US is remembered so well, is because of Hollywood movies. In The Netherlands for example, people remember the US as a very involved force in our country, where in actuality most of The Netherlands was liberated by Canadian forces.

      --
      SCO employee? Check out the bounty
    39. Re:quick success by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      The UK declared war because an ally (Poland)was invaded

      Poland was the excuse, not the reason. The Brits were scared shitless of the Germans, who they saw as the primary threat to their own shoddy and rapidly failing empire. The Germans had put a bug up their shorts just a couple of decades back, and seeing them rise so quickly from the ashes of that last humiliating victory made the Brits quake in their boots - especially given how pissed off the Germans were over Versailles.

      Only once Germany was on the back foot and the Allies had ivaded France did tanks comes into play.

      You forgot about the British Expeditionary force, which was virtually destroyed when the Germans blitzed France. Y'know, those brave 'never surrender!' types who valiantly retreated as fast as they fucking could to Dunkirk, then got the hell off the continent.

      And as for the lend-lease programme, that only began 3 months before the end of the Battle of Britain.

      The Lend-Lease program was the Congressionally-approved version of what Roosevelt had been doing ever since the start of the war - supplying the Brits with needed goods and materials. There's a reason the Germans were sinking American merchantmen, and it wasn't just because they were bored and looking for target practice.

      Roosevelt had every intention of going to war with the Germans. Americans, however, were isolationists and most of 'em didn't give a rat's ass over the war in Europe. Congress adamantly refused to take sides, so Roosevelt usurped their power and did it for them. This rightly pissed off the Germans, who had no choice but to play into Roosevelt's hands.

      Roosevelt also supplied the Soviets and the Nationalist Chinese, all against the express will of Congress. He overstepped his bounds so badly that after his death Congress tripped all over themselves to sell an amendment to the Constitution limiting the President to two terms.

      The Brits didn't win the war. They helped to win it by grinding down the Germans, just as the Soviets did, but they weren't in any fucking position to actually do anything other than defend their own island - and even that wouldn't have been possible for long without massive American assistance. Something to do with U-boats, I'm told. The Americans *were* the Western Front, plain and simple.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    40. Re:quick success by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words, these finds do not vindicate the president---which is probably why he didn't make a big deal about them.

      Not to mention if too much attention was focused on these shells, it might be revealed that the United States, with the help of special envoy Donald Rumsfeld, was responsible for Iraq getting this weapons.

  6. seriously by scenestar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You americans can do whatever the fuck you want to your own citizens.

    But please keep us europeans out of it.

    --
    perpetually dwelling in the -1 pits
    1. Re:seriously by MrShaggy · · Score: 1

      Kind of like what how the US ignored the German occupation of everywhere else ? I don't get how the US seems to be the great liberator of WW2. How is it that a country that only shows up in the last year get to take all the credit?? Seems incredible that the us will look so far away when looking at how someone else lives, and not whats being done to them. Most people here said that if these measures were temporary, and that they only used them when they needed to, that is fine. Very few said that its too much of a slippery slope, and we should even bother.

      --
      I have mod points and I am not afraid to use them.
    2. Re:seriously by Oswald · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I sympathize completely with your view on this, but I can't help pointing out the irony in your post. Invading the privacy of non-U.S. citizens isn't even an issue here. So what you say, from a (U.S.) legal standpoint (and, sorry to confirm your suspicions, the point of view of much of the citizenry), is exactly backwards. We're NOT supposed to do this to ourselves, but are quite free to do it to anybody else.

      On the other hand, I hardly think this makes us unique. Stop for a second to ask yourself if the British or the French intelligence services would have any qualms about examining the financial records of American citizens (or each others' citizens). Laughable. Not even an issue. It's only makes news here because we have an article in our Constitution that theoretically protects us from our unjustified snooping, and Americans keep getting caught in the dragnet. Do Europeans have similar articles? I'm sorry to say I don't know, but I've been told they do not.

    3. Re:seriously by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      And you honestly dont believe your governments have been doing the same thing for years? Its just that now the governments have the 'excuse' of terrorism to justify it when they get caught. "its for the children' only goes so far..

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    4. Re:seriously by scenestar · · Score: 1

      European privacy laws are alot stricter than american ones.

      --
      perpetually dwelling in the -1 pits
    5. Re:seriously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you write "please"? Shouldn't that be "European accounts are none of your business, asshats"? The USA are the only country who sent their team to the Worldcup and doesn't name the country on the team bus. They know why. I'm glad they're out. Go home and take your snoops with you, fuckers.

    6. Re:seriously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting point of view of yours. There is little incentive for Europeans to clash with one another because the borders are wide open for trade and people already. It will be important to keep World Cowboys Americanos from influencing liberal European way of life, though.

    7. Re:seriously by ScentCone · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You americans can do whatever the fuck you want to your own citizens.

      But please keep us europeans out of it.


      Well then, how about we make a deal? You keep your universities and other institutions from being petri dishes full of festering militant Islamo-fascism that occasionally ships people like Mohammad Atta (who spent his time in Europe organizing, recruiting, meeting, and arranging finances in advance of killing several thousand US citizens and no small number or Europeans) right through your own financial and legal system and straight over here, or back into the frey of proto-democracies in the middle east. You obviously don't care if operators like that kill hundreds of Spaniards, so perhaps they're not European enough for you.

      Anyway, you stop that (from impacting US citizens), and stop being a haven for the very financial transactions that power that sort of thing, and then there's nothing to watch for. Out of curiosity, and do you really think the international banking operations in the EU don't monitor and report to your own law enforcement, intel, and counter-terrorism agencies on international money transfers, especially to and from known terrorist supporters? Are you that naive? No, I didn't think so. You're just grinding the usual blunt, directionless, anti-American axe. How about we transfer $10k back and forth between us, and you can speculate on whether or not your own government will know it happened, and attempt to correlate that transaction against all of your credit card purchases and travel?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    8. Re:seriously by fimbulvetr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The war started in September of 1939. We joined in on December 7, 1941. That is 27 months of no fighting. The war ended in September, 1945. So 45 months of fighting. That's hardly "The last year of the war". We played a non-trivial role in the war and we suffered many losses. We don't claim all of the credit, I don't know of any book that says that.

      The point is, we did help and we did join in. We could only hope you would do the same when it's time for us [CONNECTION TERMINATED]

    9. Re:seriously by Oswald · · Score: 1

      I'm in a hurry here, so I haven't been able to do more than scan a few articles on the subject, but in general it appears that European privacy laws are more explicit than American, but carry less weight (ie. standard laws, changeable by parliament, as opposed to Constitutional articles). (Wikipedia claims the French have privacy enshrined in a Constitutional-type document, but I didn't see in in a quick text search.) I would be most comfortable in a country that combined the two approaches, with a statement of basic rights in the Constitution and laws stating how the articles will be enforced on the books as well.

    10. Re:seriously by EasyTarget · · Score: 3, Informative

      Privacy is controlled on a national level here in yrp, with the EU 'human Rights' legislation as a sort of umbrella over that. Levels of legal protection vary and so do levels of compliance/enforcement. But in Theory every countries Spook squad looks harder at foreign threats than at domestic ones. In Practice the politicians and the spooks are totally paranoid about domestic threats to their power and spend huge resources spying on their own citizens (and I think the US is going the same way, the Homeland Security BrownHats are now the third largest US gvt. department.)

      The advantage the US has is it's constitution, which is something I admire a lot. I think it is interesting that your administration is trying to change it (gay marriage). Is this because they want to get people into the 'habit' of changing it in response to perceived 'threats to the American Way(tm)'; so that it can then be changed for 'the war on terror' (think more spooks with more powers, and probably stuff to buy off corporations).

      The beauty of your constitution (apart from being drafted on hemp paper :-) is that it is short and to-the-point. They tried to get a 'constitution' passed here, hungreds of pages of waffle designed to promote the intrests of beaurocrats. It was so bad that even the French voters rejected it. Personally I will never vote in favour of any constitution longer than 2 A4 pages of 12pt type. And even then only if it takes power -from- the state, as much as giving power -to- it.

      --
      "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
    11. Re:seriously by owlnation · · Score: 1
      You are correct, many countries in Europe are likely just as bad if not worse.

      For example:
      • Britons do not actually have the right to free speech, and speech has been publicly censored - Northern Ireland being one case in point.
      • France will do what is required to protect her interests regardless. Ask Greenpeace.
      • Germans are generally microcontrolled and over-regulated by their government. In addition, anything related to the Nazi's is censored (albeit that's understandable and sadly still necessary admittedly). Germany also has their "Minority Report" law which they are using freely and gleefully right now during the World Cup. With this law they can detain anyone who they think MIGHT be about to cause trouble.
      And so we could go on. The good thing about the US is that these things are coming out into the open. However, it's unfortunate that everyone seems to be powerless to prevent such things happening, or to bring their Government back into line.

      In theory in most EU countries it is possible for popular opinion to bring down a Government before the end of its term is up - even though that public power is seldom used. Is that even possible in the US where no actual "crime" has been committed?
    12. Re:seriously by nursegirl · · Score: 1

      I was thinking something similar. I'm a Canadian, and my back was merged with another, and sent all of their Mastercard clients to Citibank. I really have to cancel my account because I don't want to have any of my financial information in the U.S. at this point in time.

    13. Re:seriously by MrShaggy · · Score: 1

      The only reason that the US joined was because of Perl Harbor. There was NO intention before that. Churchill apparently knew that the Japanese were about to invade the US, and did nothing about it. So that the US would be dragged into it. Why did French-fries turn into freedom-fries ? Why was there a big push by the Americans to belittle France and their decision not to get involved with Iraq? If you were to get rid of all things that were French, you'd have to give them that statue that floats in NY Harbor.

      I'm from Canada, and all I can say is thank-god we hung up on you when you called for Iraq. We'd be up to our knees in it. The problem is that our current government is going to hand us over to you people. They seem to think that the sun shines outta bush's ass. That for some reason that no matter what the US does, we shouldn't do anything to go against them.

      >>The point is, we did help and we did join in. We could only hope you would do the same when it's time for us

      --
      I have mod points and I am not afraid to use them.
    14. Re:seriously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is the Arabs who really have something to complain about. You Europeans haven't been invaded by the US Army.

      Yet.

      (please type the word in this image: newscast)

    15. Re:seriously by jerlensla · · Score: 0

      Ha! Indeed.

    16. Re:seriously by elrous0 · · Score: 1
      it appears that European privacy laws are more explicit than American, but carry less weight (ie. standard laws, changeable by parliament, as opposed to Constitutional articles)

      What does it matter if it's written in the Constitution, if the Constitution is ignored? The U.S. President has basically asserted that his "wartime powers" give him the right to override the Constitution at will. This make the 4th Amendment much more hollow than any European privacy law.

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    17. Re:seriously by fimbulvetr · · Score: 1

      The only reason that the US joined was because of Perl Harbor. There was NO intention before that. Churchill apparently knew that the Japanese were about to invade the US, and did nothing about it. So that the US would be dragged into it. Why did French-fries turn into freedom-fries ? Why was there a big push by the Americans to belittle France and their decision not to get involved with Iraq? If you were to get rid of all things that were French, you'd have to give them that statue that floats in NY Harbor.

      This is how most arguments turn out here on /. Some one points out that only one action is the reason something happened. Like you saying the only reason we joined WWII was because of Pearl Harbor. What's more likely is that there would have been another inevitable circumstance down the line where we would have had to join in if Pearl Harbor were not attacked. The Axis countries were fighting to become world powers. They wouldn't have just left us alone. Anyway, outside of some basic knowledge on the subject, I'm don't know enough about WWII to offer more than I already have.

      About France - You're talking about the rednecks who think they french are some do nothing worthless sons of bitches. The truth is that France has played a vital role in our countries past and to ridicule them because they don't want to fight some stupid "war" of ours is inexcusable. Blame the uneducated masses, I don't care. There are some people in the states who recognize that France has historically been a major contributer to our past causes.

      As far as the current war, I'm glad that your country, France and most of the UN has given the chance to join this war some thought. This is little more than one of Bush's tantrums to protect his interests and the interests he percieves the american people have. Something had to be done, just not at this level.

    18. Re:seriously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you are talking about making deals: let's make the deal that the Americans keep their paws out of countries not in their jurisdiction. That they don't declare war based on fraudulous claims. That they don't torture people and don't keep them detained without indictment. That they don't interfere with the religous matters of other people. That they don't stamp their own flawed ideas about business moral upon others.

      Maybe if they obey that, they even have less trouble with terrorism. You never now.

    19. Re:seriously by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      I would be most comfortable in a country that combined the two approaches, with a statement of basic rights in the Constitution and laws stating how the articles will be enforced on the books as well.

      Welcome to Canuckistanbul, comrade.
      http://lois.justice.gc.ca/en/P-21/255104.html

      There's a loophole to the requirement to inform the person (5)(3)(b), and to use the information (8) (2) (b thru f, j, l, m) ...

      ... on second though ... YOU'RE NOT SAFE ANYWHEE !!!! :-(

    20. Re:seriously by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      When you are talking about making deals: let's make the deal that the Americans keep their paws out of countries not in their jurisdiction.

      Whew! It's a good thing that the UN issued so many resolutions about Saddam, then, making jurisdiction a non-issue.

      That they don't declare war based on fraudulous claims

      Which ones? I suppose you think that the Taliban wasn't sheltering the organization that killed thousands of our citizens? Or that Saddam's invasion of Kuwait wasn't a matter for other countries to worry about? You may also want to lecture the French, say, about Africa.

      That they don't torture people and don't keep them detained without indictment.

      Happily, torture's not a viable or sanctioned policy. But then, I don't consider keeping people like Kalid Sheik Mohammed uncomfortable until he starts singing like a bird to be torture, either. I do think that some reservist idiot who thinks it's funny to be a parody of an evil prison guard should go to jail himself... which is exactly what happened.

      As for indictments: those don't really apply to foreign nationals caught shooting at US soldiers or planting bombs, etc., in a combat zone overseas. But since those people aren't uniformed military, they don't conveniently fall into the tradional POW status, either. So, they can't be released (since they tend to show right back up tryin to kill people again), and that calls for a sort of handling that has little precedent. The ball is currently in the hands of the US Supreme Court.

      That they don't interfere with the religous matters of other people

      You mean the sort of religious matters that Al Queda specifically cites as their reason for attacking western targets? How can we leave idealogy out of the conversation when people who kill kids in restaurants or blow up train stations expressly cite their idealogy as the reason they do it?

      That they don't stamp their own flawed ideas about business moral upon others.

      Well, that's easy. Don't take US business if you don't like US business. Don't sell goods for US cash, and don't offer up people for US employment. And don't spend money on US goods, entertainment, or other services. That makes the problem go away, right?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    21. Re:seriously by Chowderbags · · Score: 1

      Roosevelt helped out the British first with the cash and carry policy, which allowed the British and French to buy war materials from us (which they originally weren't allowed to do, due to the Neutrality Acts). Later on, we gave very sweet deals or outright gave stuff away to the Allies, both before and after Pearl Harbor. I'm sure that if the Japanese didn't bomb us, the Germans would have.

    22. Re:seriously by Nexus+Seven · · Score: 1

      Britons do not actually have the right to free speech
      Err, yes they do.

      Northern Ireland being a case in point
      Huh? What case?

      I do know that the US government publicly censors broadcasters, on the vague pretext of "obscenity".

    23. Re:seriously by evilviper · · Score: 1, Informative
      I don't get how the US seems to be the great liberator of WW2.

      And I don't see why people who know next to nothing about history, are so very vocal about their ignorant views of it.

      How is it that a country that only shows up in the last year get to take all the credit??

      Besides the extensive ammount of ground American troops captured, there's the industrial angle. Supplies for Britan and Russia were largely comming from the US. That's primarily why Japan and Germany conspired to attack the US. The US immediately became a manufacturing giant that no other country could ever hope to match.

      Britan, despite years of war, didn't have a single victory to speak of until the US joined, and started fighting along with them. Russia was being absolutely slaughtered. How could anyone believe this would just have magically turned around, if the US had not gotten involved?

      And it definately wasn't anywhere near the "last year" of the war. Though, I suppose it could have been (with the opposite outcome), if not for the US.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    24. Re:seriously by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      I'm a Canadian, and my back was merged with another

      That's gotta hurt.

    25. Re:seriously by Oswald · · Score: 1
      I had to leave the house after posting, but this hit me after I left. I knew someone would bring this up, and you're right. I omitted the very important point of whether the laws are being followed/enforced. Of course, this all comes back to whether the populous is interested in standing up for itself. Here in the U.S. we seem to be willing to toss out the Constitution in support of whatever the latest so-called war is. The War on Drugs gave us RICO, but we are apparently ready to go that travesty one (or two or three) better in the name of the War on Terror.

      I don't know how many more times Americans will let themselves be pulled around by cynical politicians beating the "war" drum. It's all real depressing.

    26. Re:seriously by Baki · · Score: 1

      Most european countries have a constitution, just like the US. Great Brittain is a rare exception of a country without a constitution (very archaic).
      The EU constitution technically isn't a constitution at all, but a treaty. They just named it constitution to give it more appeal, the contrary was reached however.

    27. Re:seriously by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      AFAIK all EU member countries have a variant of the Universal Declaration Of Human Rights as a part of their constitution. Privacy is defined as one of these rights.

      These laws are less about preventing govt intrusion (if the govt has a subpoena they can do what they want AFAIK) and more about corporations violating your privacy by e.g. selling your customer data to others.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    28. Re:seriously by MADnificent · · Score: 1
      There is some sort of censorship. Here, in Belgium, I do not have the right to spread rascist speach... I really don't know anything else I mustn't do...

      BTW, I really support the fact that we respect different ethnic groups (I must say that this law is applied loosly, don't really know if there have been much problems with it).

      Laws are aggreements, that counts for every country! If the gouvernment makes laws that don't fit in your way of life, then break the aggreement... It's YOUR country, the EU isn't going mess with 'the american dream'.

      ---
      It's late, I know it's a messy post

    29. Re:seriously by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      One word: NORAID.

      What's the view like from that horse of yours?

  7. Not used to track individuals by glennrrr · · Score: 2, Informative

    Just passing along this comment I saw on Instapundit:
    What has not been stressed is that SWIFT is not used for individuals. It is used for processing money transfers, stock transfers and bond transfers from companies, governments, banks, insurance companies and NGO's. What we essentially had on file was the holdings for almost all our clients and the clearance data for these transactions dating back for years. We had to keep all this on file to satisfy all the governmental regulations on taxations, etc.

    1. Re:Not used to track individuals by swissfondue · · Score: 3, Informative

      No it works this way: An individual tells his bank to send data to another account cross-border. The bank uses Swift messages to transmit the payment order to the other bank. The data includes account details, name etc. So why it is not used by individuals, it often concerns transactions (payments, securities) by individuals.

      --
      Rubies and Pearls are not what you think.
    2. Re:Not used to track individuals by Oswald · · Score: 4, Informative
      Well, from TFA:

      After identifying a suspect, Levey said, "you can do a search, and you can determine whom he sent money to, and who sent money to him."

      "The way the SWIFT data works, you would have all kinds of concrete information -- addresses, phone numbers, real names, account numbers, a lot of stuff we can really work with, the kind of actionable information that government officials can really follow up on," Levey said.

      Doesn't sound like purely institution-related data. And this from the "undersecretary of the Treasury for terrorism and financial intelligence," whatever the hell that is.

    3. Re:Not used to track individuals by glennrrr · · Score: 5, Informative
      If you follow the links in the Instapundit posting you get to this description of the SWIFT system.
      A SWIFT consists of a one-page document containing the name and code of the originating bank, the date and time, the address and code of the receiving bank, the name and internal code of the officer initiating the transmission, the names and numbers of the accounts involved in the transfer, a description of the asset being transferred, the MT category of the transmission, and acceptable, standardized phrases as described above.
    4. Re:Not used to track individuals by Alsee · · Score: 3, Informative

      What has not been stressed is that SWIFT is not used for individuals. It is used for processing money transfers, stock transfers and bond transfers from companies, governments, banks, insurance companies and NGO's.

      WAAAAAHAHAHAHA! That's hysterical. Absolutely hysterical It's amazing just how far some people can warp their perception of reality when they so desperately need to perceive reality as supporting some political position.

      In related news, the also recently exposed federal phone wiretapping program is never used for individuals. Those wiretaps are used for the recording of audio communications between phone companies, and logging the associated source and destination phone numbers records on each voice communication.

      If someone argues that the current federal program is legal and that it is a a good and acceptable activitity in trying to persue terrorists... well that is a perfectly rational arguement with which one can argue the factual truth or falsity of the claim that it is a legal, and with which one can reasonably agree or dissagree with the oppinion of it being good and acceptable.

      However when someone tries to argue that this new program is only about companies and banks, and tries to suggest that it has no impact or relevance on individuals... well that is just plain DELUSIONAL reasoning.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    5. Re:Not used to track individuals by hughk · · Score: 1
      Swift messages may be transferred by any financial institution not just banks. They are nowadays in an XML format and they include identifying information for the source and beneficiary of any transfer. Howver only a few Swift messages relate to transfers. Any institution on being approached via a regulator is obliged to cooperate and provide full identification of account holders.

      Disclaimer: I work in banking for a living.

      --
      See my journal, I write things there
    6. Re:Not used to track individuals by HK+MP5-A3 · · Score: 1

      About 10 years ago I worked as a Computer tech in the international banking dept of a mid-large american bank. We were on the SWIFT system. It was definately not used at that time for personal transfers. Now I have no idea if they have changed thier business model since then but the smallest transfers I saw were in the mid 6 figures and the average was more like 10-20 million dollars per transfer. Along the lines of, "I would like to buy some oil, here is $50,000,000.00 Supertankers will be along to pick it up soon." Currency speculating was also real big at the time, so many of the transfers were just purchases of foriegn currency. If those were coming from big banks they could be huge I recall seeing more than one billion dollar trade.

      --
      There is more than one way to skin a cat.....I got up to 4,521 ways, but the batteries died in my electric belt sander
  8. When will Pandora's Box Open by Analogy+Man · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Setting aside all of the civil liberties / constitutinal powers arguements, when will access to all of this information become too tempting for the likes of Karl Rove et al keep their hands off?

    Ooops too late...actually they crossed the line in a petty way once (w/ Plame) which was just plain stupid. Being ones to learn from their mistakes (unlike the sheep on the other side of the aisle), further use dubiosly collected information for political gain will be much more subtle.

    --
    When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
    1. Re:When will Pandora's Box Open by jabster · · Score: 1

      Plame working for the CIA wasn't a secret, you fool!!

      sheesh.

      even the times admits this is a legal program. And SCOTUS has upheld this type of program numerous times.

      get over yourself.

      better yet....go educate yourself.

      -john

      --
      Slashdot: you'll not find a more wretched collection of villainy and disreputable types...
    2. Re:When will Pandora's Box Open by Analogy+Man · · Score: 1
      Plame working for the CIA wasn't a secret, you fool!!


      Nice that you elevate the debate.


      sheesh.


      My point was that the vice presidents chief of staff was indicted for for alleged illegal activity and dozens of news cycles have been spent on this series of events. Cheney, Rove, Bush would have rather not have that sort of thing happen. I think we can agree on that.


      even the times admits this is a legal program. And SCOTUS has upheld this type of program numerous times.


      Again, my point was not whether this investigation technique was legal. My concern is what a party and leadership willing to push the limits of the law, have think tanks propose convoluted interpretations of constitutional law to support their agenda. It is not the best initial intentions that concern me, but the steps likely to follow.

      get over yourself.

      I am a far humbler man now. I promise to watch Fox news daily, repeat whatever word of the day is on the blue banner behind the CIC at his daily speach to the hand picked 30% that still like him.


      better yet....go educate yourself.


      Actually I am a rocket scientist. That has left me ill prepared to understand our current administrations moral high ground. I am begining to understand though. Torture is OK as long as you don't kill people...but if you goof and do that is OK if you don't behead them. Stealing is OK if you don't steal as much as the other guy.

      --
      When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
  9. Don't kid yourself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is industrial espionage, not terrorism prevention.

  10. Re:A message from the right by EGSonikku · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Uh oh you caught me!

    You are right though, in reality I do not mind secret courts, phone tapping, bank tapping, warrantless searches, americans being held indefinatly without access to a lawyer or charges being filed, torture, secret prisons, war, CIA leaks, and our spending more money on defense than all other countries on the planet combined and doubled while our education and healthcare go down the toilet and we run up a defecit that cannot reasonably be paid in the next 5 generations.

    Yup, red handed. Was just trying to annoy you, my bad. :-(

    Can we go back to blaming communism?

    --
    - "Scientia non habet inimicum nisp ignorantem"
  11. NIMB (no Y). by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Together with a hundredfold expansion of the FBI's use of "national security letters" to obtain communications and banking records, the secret NSA and Treasury programs have built unprecedented government databases of private transactions, most of them involving people who prove irrelevant to terrorism investigators."

    So what would you suggest that wouldn't get "irrelevent" citizens involved? What "utopia" do you all live in were the "bad guys" only use their own financial institutions, and are nice enough to leave us out of their plans (let's ignore the fact that they would like nothing better than to kill all of us "irrelevent" citizens, let alone rob us blind).*

    *That goes for brits too, in case the bus bombings slipped your mind.

  12. Two things by TheConfusedOne · · Score: 1, Informative

    First off, bank transactions are not 4th ammendment protected. Just like phone number pen registers. The information has to travel through third parties so it has been ruled that there is no "reasonable expectation of privacy" for said data.

    More importantly, the SWIFT system is used to support massive international wire transfers, usually from one bank to another. We're not talking about Western Union transfers and we're not talking about your ATM records.

    The really amazing thing is that if you read the entire article you'll see that the Administration has been going to great lengths to protect privacy with additional audits and the requirement of preparing internal subpoenas (yes, they're not vetted by a court) before making any request for data. To date the program has already been responsible for some major terrorist captures and was apparently quite successful.

    --
    --- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
    1. Re:Two things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      USPS is a "third party"

      If the third party rule were true, warrants would not be required to open mail in transit. The fact of the matter is that a warrant is required.

      Let us be thankful that the third party rule is a myth.

    2. Re:Two things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      More importantly, the SWIFT system is used to support massive international wire transfers, usually from one bank to another.

      Yes, and it's also used for personal transfers between banks in different countries. I've used it myself (or, more accurately, I've asked my bank to use it on my behalf). The claim that this monitoring doesn't cover individuals is nonsense.

    3. Re:Two things by Guanix · · Score: 2, Informative

      I can echo that. I live in Denmark and almost every international transfer that Danes perform, apart from credit card purchases, use the SWIFT system. Western Union and similar companies have very little market share, mostly because they're quite expensive compared to using SWIFT. For example, I recently transferred $100 to one of my US bank accounts using SWIFT to cover the account charges. I think the smallest SWIFT I ever did was £30 to the UK for some miscellaneous fees.

    4. Re:Two things by oliderid · · Score: 1

      Swift is Belgian based. Nobody cares about the fourth US amendment.
      IMHO the Swift data centre is located in Brussels (Uccle suburb).

      I don't know how they found an agreement with the US intelligence...
      Normally your bank account is protected. A judge has to order the bank to give relevant information to the police (based on fraud evidences only). That's all I know. I don't know if SWIFT is legally considered as a bank. and Frankly I don't care. As a US official pointed out: they save lives. they could track some terrorists down to Pakistan.

      Back in 2001 everybody on the old continent was eager to help the USA and obscure laws were certainly not the biggest concern at that time (see CIA flights for examples).

    5. Re:Two things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      "More importantly, the SWIFT system is used to support massive international wire transfers, usually from one bank to another. We're not talking about Western Union transfers and we're not talking about your ATM records."

      Nonsense. As a Norwegian, all my non-VISA transactions to and from foreign countries have explicitly involved SWIFT. Payment for magazine articles, for example. Yes, down to 40 USD transactions for rare used books or ebay auctions.

      It's the only practical alternative when Visa payment isn't an option, since paypal is ... randomly hard to deal with. And international cheques are _slow_ and uncertain, since you can't be sure you'll get the money until some days after you try to cash it.

      I'm not at all happy about the US having access to, say, Norway-to-France transactions via Swift. And I would expect this to hurt Swift quite a bit.

    6. Re:Two things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thank god someone actually mentioned SWIFT, which doesn't even cover all transactions. these posts were so eager to thump there anti establishment drums they didn't even bother to get the facts.

      further, how did people think the US govrnment was tracking funds for terrorism? this isn't a surprise. it's details on something that was already known.

      ridiculous FUD. secretly tapping bank databases... how misleading, and done so deliberately.

      how embarassing.

    7. Re:Two things by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      The really amazing thing...

      The really amazing thing I see is the fact that you have to read the whole article to get to the part where they talk about privacy rights and how they are dealt with. The first part of all the articles and news stories I have listened to has to do with FUD, obfuscation, senationalization, and downright misinformation. Some one with intellectual honesty has to ask themselves when does this type of writing cease to be "pulp-pushing" in order to drive sales (still lamentable in a news publication) and start to be yelling "civil rights violation!" at an ACLU convention. Are they really trying to help the US, are they trying to sell papers are the expense of US safety, or are they trying to influence US government policy?

      In other words, the self stated reason that the news organizations ran the the story in spite of the government's protests is because they are concerned about the questions regarding privacy of the American public. Logically, the question on most responsible citizens minds is "are they looking at me?" However, the MO of the media seems to be: drag anyone involved through the mud first, sully their appearance, associate them with rights violations, question their motives and integrity, then *maybe* explain what they are actually doing on the back page. The disconnect in their stated motives and their actual practices makes me curious.

      I value the institutions of the fouth estate for the light that they posess to illuminate abuses and excesses, however, they have unilaterally made a decision with respect to the disposition of this program and its usefulness to the US. Consider: if this is a legal practice and the way that it is performed is consistent with the US Constitution and law, what can we do to recover from this?

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    8. Re:Two things by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

      >if you read the entire article you'll see that the Administration has been going to great lengths to protect privacy with additional audits

      The article reports that the Treasury undersecretary *said* there are controls.

      Which could be true but free citizens should use healthy skepticism about official announcements even from honest governments.

    9. Re:Two things by learn+fast · · Score: 1

      The really amazing thing is that if you read the entire article you'll see that the Administration has been going to great lengths to protect privacy with additional audits and the requirement of preparing internal subpoenas (yes, they're not vetted by a court) before making any request for data.

      And what are these additional audits? They've hired a commercial company to audit them. Which they've hired. This is certainly a novel approach to the protection of our rights. Why can a commercial firm review these requests for information when a judge can't?

      This incident shows again that the Bush administration has this weird obsession with prosecuting the war on terror entirely without any oversight from the other two branches of government. This administration wants to write its own laws, review its own conduct even in its own courts.

      When the president signs a law, he now adds a "signing statement" that basically says he will disregard or interpret it beyond the language that was actually written into the law. Existing laws are "reinterpretted." Warrants have been replaced by "administrative subpoenas" and "national security letters" -- totally controlled by that executive branch. And the natural place for terror suspects to be held is not in our existing court system but in special military prisons created especially for the task, and they should be tried in special military courts.

      Terror suspects, incidentally, are "unlawful combatants" which is a new legal status that the Bush administration has invented itself and which the Bush administation has the sole, arbitrary disgresion in deciding who is and isn't one. Jose Padilla was an American citizen, but the Bush administration had him held incommunicado on a Navy frigate because it, by itself, declared him an "unlawful combatant", once again, a legal status that the Bush administration invented.

      The phone tapping program is a case where the Bush adminstration rejected even the most minimal oversight. The law says that in order to conduct that kind of surveillance, the executive branch must consult the FISA court -- which is totally secret, which has virtually never rejected a request, and which can even, legally, be asked for a request up to 72 hours after the fact. Even this level of oversight was too onerous for the Bush administration, which merely conducted its program anyway.

      In this banking case, the law says that the executive branch can conduct this kind of surveillance in a temporary, emergency situation after which it must receive additional authorization from Congress. Helpfully, the president has "re-interpretted" the law. And, this program has been going on for almost five years now, and we're told that as oversight 8 congressmen were informed of its existence.

      Maybe these programs have helped capture terrorists. Maybe they are necessary. But why, why, why does the Bush insist on doing everything extra-legally? Within its own legal frameworks that it has no Constitutional power to create? Even when they could very easily act within existing Constitutional separation of powers?

      I've often heard the argument that, sure, maybe this program is illegal but I trust that the President is helping protect us from terrorists!

      My response is always: So, you trust this presient. Will you trust all future presidents? If your answer is no, maybe there should be some checks and balances so that this system can't be abused by future presidents that you don't trust?

      Apparently some people are willing to sail along only on the fact that they trust the government's word, but the whole point of our system of government is checks and balances so that power is not concentrated in any one place and we don't have to rely on mere assurances that our rights are being protected.

  13. And the worst is... by imsabbel · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Cheney doesnt even have the grace to be emberassed about it.
    Rather, he blames the media for hating freedom and supporting the terrorist by showing that banks are monitored.

    You know, if we dont keep secrets, oceania could win, right?

    --
    HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
    1. Re: And the worst is... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > Cheney doesnt even have the grace to be emberassed about it.

      If he's not embarassed to argue in favor of torture, why should a little thing like this faze him?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re:And the worst is... by jabster · · Score: 1

      and you don't have the decency/intelligence/grace to admit that this is a legal program.

      dammit...I'm sick of all the people on slashdot suffering from Bush Derangement Syndrome.
      http://drsanity.blogspot.com/2005/11/lets-discuss- bush-derangement-syndrome.html

      -john

      --
      Slashdot: you'll not find a more wretched collection of villainy and disreputable types...
    3. Re:And the worst is... by Tony · · Score: 1

      dammit...I'm sick of all the people on slashdot suffering from Bush Derangement Syndrome.

      Snappy name. Very nice.

      What do you expect when you come to a place where people who like to think for themselves hang out? That we'd be Bush-licking sychophants?

      The program itself is legal. The way in which it has been used is not legal. This is a typical Bush modus operandi-- take a legal program and abuse it, and then cry when the public finds out and is upset.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    4. Re:And the worst is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds a bit like Clinton Derangement Syndrome... who had that again?

      Jane's Law: The devotees of the party in power are smug and arrogant. The devotees of the party out of power are insane.

    5. Re:And the worst is... by TubeSteak · · Score: 1
      From the NY Times:
      While the banking program is a closely held secret, administration officials have conducted classified briefings to some members of Congress and the Sept. 11 Commission, the officials said. More lawmakers were briefed in recent weeks, after the administration learned The Times was making inquiries for this article. Swift's 25-member board of directors, made up of representatives from financial institutions around the world, was previously told of the program, but it is not clear if other participants know that American intelligence officials can examine their message traffic.
      Why is it that more lawmakers suddenly have to be told about secret programs right before it all goes public?

      Did those lawmakers not have any previous interest in knowing the facts?

      And I don't know why you're talking about Oceania.
      You might want to check out the map.
      Oceana has always been at war with Eurasia.
      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    6. Re:And the worst is... by TomRitchford · · Score: 1

      Most people understand that it's possible for things to be legal without being moral.

      As for "Bush Derangement Syndrome": we've had 9/11, Iraq, New Orleans, massive election fraud, wholesale looting of the Treasury, wiretapping, Enron, the "Patriot" act repealing half the Bill of Rights....

      We've pissed away thousands of American lives, a hundred thousand foreign ones, and a *trillion* dollars for nothing.

      Now two-thirds of us hate the man whose greed, dishonesty and incompetence caused this and hunger for change before yet another catastrophe occurs.

      There are more of us than you -- *you* are the ones with the syndrome -- Idiot Blindness Syndrome.

  14. Very facist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why don't americans do something about the lack of democracy in their own country, and stop their leaders installing puppet regimes, and nasty dictators in other parts of the world.
    America is one seriously fucked up country, with an unbelievably cynical, fascistic, and brutal foreign policy. All empires eventually fall, and the US one is in decline as a result of their own fiscal ineptitude, and free-market ideological insanity. The just shouldn't come crying to the rest of the world when lenders finally stop propping up the mountain of debt with more debt. Would I buy a US treasury bond with more than a duration of a few months? I think not.

    1. Re:Very facist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure a lot of people think that way, I often wondered why the USA needs to be the ones going around toppling dictatorships, why don't the people in that country do something if they have it so bad?

      And now I see the USA headed in that direction, and I wonder - what the hell can be done to stop this before it gets too bad? Who's going to come and save us when all our rights have been stripped away, and we have a dictatorship gov't?

      What can one person do? Where can you meet up with others and organize something w/o being portrayed and investigated as a terrorist now? Hell, I'm afraid that showing any interest in a new USA gov't will pop up flags all over the place and get me monitored and investigated already. Who knows what else they are monitoring, they already have my internet connection, phone, and bank account.

      Impeaching bush isn't the answer at all, when we have an election we really only have one choice to make - which of 2 people (who have been chosen by groups of rich bastards, or corporations to become the next president) is the lesser asshole?

      The differences are so slight because they were nominated by rich people because they will represent the rich who generally care nothing about rights because they are above the common BS we all have to put up with.

    2. Re:Very facist by fatman22 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Do something like what? Vote them out? We try that every four years but still end up with Politicians (capitalized because it's a distinct subclass of humanity) in power and after the 24-hour warranty runs out, they all turn into the same evil, self-serving, corrupt muck as the rest of their kind. Overthrow them by force of arms? We did that a couple hundred years ago and it worked well until the very intelligent and respectable gentlemen who created our nation stepped down and the Politicians took over. We seem to be lacking in intelligent and respectable gentlemen, or ladies, these days who would be willing to step in and clean house so a revolution would not produce a change. So we'll muddle along with what we have and try to work around it.

    3. Re: Very facist by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > Impeaching bush isn't the answer at all, when we have an election we really only have one choice to make - which of 2 people (who have been chosen by groups of rich bastards, or corporations to become the next president) is the lesser asshole?

      Personally, I think there was as huge difference in the assholiness of the two people we chose between in 2000 and in 2004.

      Unfortunately, we've been making the wrong choice.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    4. Re:Very facist by Wellington+Grey · · Score: 1

      The government is like windows: it needs to be rebooted from time to time.

      -Grey

    5. Re:Very facist by learn+fast · · Score: 1

      No, you're wrong. The problem is ultimately that the people don't know and don't care what the government is doing, and vote (if they vote) based on personal charisma, catchy slogans and appeals to fear.

      If the people collectively awarded power only to those that provided responsible policies, then the politicians would be tripping over each other to provide responsible policies. Instead the people vote for those whom, based on their television persona, they'd most like to have a beer with. So, we get used car salesman as leaders.

    6. Re:Very facist by nickmalthus · · Score: 1

      As Thomas Jefferson said in QUERY XVII: The different religions received into that state? Besides, the spirit of the times may alter, will alter. Our rulers will become corrupt, our people careless. A single zealot may commence persecuter, and better men be his victims. It can never be too often repeated, that the time for fixing every essential right on a legal basis is while our rulers are honest, and ourselves united. From the conclusion of this war we shall be going down hill. It will not then be necessary to resort every moment to the people for support. They will be forgotten therefore, and their rights disregarded. They will forget themselves, but in the sole faculty of making money, and will never think of uniting to effect a due respect for their rights. The shackles, therefore, which shall not be knocked off at the conclusion of this war, will remain on us long, will be made heavier and heavier, till our rights shall revive or expire in a convulsion.

      --
      If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be-T J
    7. Re:Very facist by fatman22 · · Score: 1

      "only to those that provided responsible policies"

      And who might that be? The responsible individuals who would make good leaders are smart enough not to even run for office much less get elected, so we get to chose from the leftovers. Every country with elected leaders is pretty much in the same boat on this one.

  15. Simple: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  16. Corporate advantage?-Planetary style. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "Does anyone else worry that the USA might use its intelligent services to give its corporate entities an advantage over foreign ones?"

    You mean like other governments do with us? Are you all really that naive about global politics?

  17. Re:A message from the right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would a tax break change your outlook? That's the "solution" to just about every other domestic problem this administration acknowledges.

  18. Hasn't this been known for ages? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Hasn't this information been used for years in the "war" on drugs and organized crime? US customs regulations require a declaration if $10,000 or more is brought in or out of the country. As I understood things, from what I was told and read when I made such transfers in the last six or so years, you don't have to do this for international bank transfers, since the banks automatically pass on the information.

  19. the worst aspect of this? by LewsTherinKinslayer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    i'm a lefty pinko who advocates the protection and expansion of civil rights: wanna know what the worst aspect of this (and the NSA phone call database, etc is?

    how much time is being wasted by the FBI when investigative man power could be directed more effectively at more pressing issues.

    1. Re:the worst aspect of this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what exactly would you leftist pinkos call "more pressing"? Its not like we can put our ears to the ground and listen to footsteps anymore. There arent tracks in the mud we can follow. The most obvious track to follow is money.

      Honestly, how would a civil liberties advocate suggest we investigate terrorists? I would love to know.

    2. Re:the worst aspect of this? by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1
      "Honestly, how would a civil liberties advocate suggest we investigate terrorists? I would love to know."

      The old way yielded a document entitled "Bin Laden determined to attack within the US", and it spelled out the plot pretty accurately. We didn't fail to stop 9/11 because we didn't have the intelligence available. It happened because the people in charge didn't make use of any intelligence. They claim that there was just too much data to sift through. Remember that from now on, because it is supremely important ...

      The big thing so many people seem to be missing is this: if we had the data available but it was overlooked because there was too much data available, how is gathering orders of magnitude more data going to help?

      Are the people "in charge" too stupid to ask that question, or could there be some other reason they want to gather all of this data? Do you think it might be useful to have this kind of information gathered regarding your future political opponents? Hmmm .... Now if they could just fix the elections in case it is still a close call even after the dirty politics ... err ,,, ah ... wait ....
      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    3. Re:the worst aspect of this? by halo8 · · Score: 1

      how much time is being wasted by the FBI when investigative man power could be directed more effectively at more pressing issues./i?

      some times.. at night, i like to close my eyes, i like to pretend that, say a few years ago, the FBI didnt waste an inordinate amount of man hours (thousands) trying to find a stain on this mythical blue dress.

      i like ti imagine that instead of wasting that time they tracked down a few very bad men who where learning to fly in florida.
      i dont think that would have been such a waste of time

      then i dream and imagine that the past 8 years never happened.

      *sigh*

      --
      The More Knowledge you have the Luckier you Get- J.R. Ewing
    4. Re:the worst aspect of this? by colmore · · Score: 1

      "Honestly, how would a civil liberties advocate suggest we investigate terrorists? I would love to know."

      Oh you know, warrants, due process, quaint little things like that.

      Frankly I'd rather be a little bit more scared of bus bombs than a lot less sure of my personal liberty. Our founding fathers didn't fight and die for their goddamn safety.

      --
      In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
  20. .....And purcashing habits... by nurb432 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not only do they know how much money you move, but by getting into the retail databases, they also know what ( and when, and where ) you are buying.

    Just hope that what you bought today legally doesnt become 'questionable' ( or down right illegal ) tomrrow. You might find a knock on your door.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:.....And purcashing habits... by yobtah · · Score: 1

      Actually, they probably wouldn't even knock. The Supreme Court recently ruled (5-4, I think) that if the police have a warrant, evidence collected during an unannounced search is still admissable in court.

    2. Re:.....And purcashing habits... by loraksus · · Score: 1

      Exactly, and the fact is that they have mounds of data from who knows how long ago.
      If, in the future, mandatory firearm registration is introduced, this data will be used, but that doesn't seem to scare any of the apologists on the right.

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
    3. Re:.....And purcashing habits... by CptNerd · · Score: 1

      Yeah, really, that 10 tons of ammonium nitrate and 500 barrels of fuel oil I wanted to buy is really none of the government's business! I mean, I have a lot of "stumps" to clear off my "farmland" you know!

      Al K. Aida

      --
      By the taping of my glasses, something geeky this way passes
    4. Re:.....And purcashing habits... by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      While you were just trying to be cute, it is true. Unless im under a legit investigation, what i buy is NOT anyone's business.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    5. Re:.....And purcashing habits... by bagsc · · Score: 1

      Ok, I try to be polite, but this is pure ignorance. When was the last time you did a wholesale money transaction? You didn't, and you've never used SWIFT. SWIFT is not like a credit card company. SWIFT is who credit card companies sell $150 million of receivebles through to their counterpary in securitization deals. Unless your net worth is in hundreds of millions, you almost certainly have never used SWIFT for personal transactions.

      Now, if you're a "charity" that just so happens to send money to other "charities" in Jordan that send that money to other "charities" in Syria who have no audit trail, then the Feds might reasonably be worried about your transactions. Did I mention that Hamas and Hezbollah are technically charities?

      --
      http://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
  21. within the system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting
    "You can't type in a random name of someone" and search his data, said one intelligence official who spoke on the condition of anonymity. "The program only works for names already within the intelligence system that were collected elsewhere and are identified as being part of an open investigation."

    And we know from their illegal phone tapping practices, bloated do-not-fly lists etc, etc, that by now they've collected the names of pretty much every other American (not to mention nearly all other humans; remember, this is an international system; very heavily used by European banks, for one), and that with six degrees of separation, they all have enough ties to be part of the open investigations.

    What isn't mentioned at all in this Washington Post article, which the New York Times does mention, are such snippets as:
    Several people familiar with the Swift program said they believed that they were exploiting a "gray area" in the law

    "There was always concern about this program," a former official said.

    "At first, they got everything -- the entire Swift database," one person close to the operation said.

    Swift executives became increasingly worried about their secret involvement with the American government, the officials said. By 2003, the cooperative's officials were discussing pulling out because of their concerns about legal and financial risks if the program were revealed, one government official said.
    "How long can this go on?" a Swift executive asked, according to the official.
    Even some American officials began to question the open-ended arrangement. "I thought there was a limited shelf life and that this was going to go away," the former senior official said.

    Read the entire New York Times article for more. Chilling.

    Given the impact this has on Europeans involved in international transfers as well, if you're European, have you already contacted your bank to urge them to use their influence with SWIFT to make this stop?! There's never much to be done when there's the need to call or write congress critters, but with European privacy laws actually being worth something (in theory), here's a chance to voice very strong displeasure and make this stop!

    1. Re:within the system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > well, if you're European, have you already contacted your bank to urge them to use their influence with SWIFT to make this stop?!

      I work in a SWIFT departement of a bank. SWIFT has multiple operating centers in different continents. Unfortunately, there is at least one operating center in the US. Thus, they have to follow the US legislation and if there's a subpoena demanding access to the date in the US center, then there is little else to do than to give it.

  22. and what of these "NGO's".. by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

    are they spying on the EFF?
    how about the political parties.. granted they are government related but they are still "NGO's"
    how many other "Left leaning" organizations is president clark.. i mean bush.. monitoring? (will he send the agrippa and roanoke against air america headquarters?)

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  23. Sorry to hear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Dang it must be hard being an American, knowing that you are being spied on by your government and its agencies from practically every angle possible. It's hard enough being a non-american knowing this, but I imagine it must be worse for you guys. I read posts all the time about how it's time to 'rise up', or 'complain to congress' or insert whatever cry for action you like. So far it seems though, and I say this as a foreign observer, that America is taking it all sitting down. There is very little action 'contra' going on. Sorry to hear it.

    Hah! - it's almost ironic that the security word/image that I have to type in to post is 'defraud'...

  24. Re:Good by MarkByers · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is exactly the sort of thing they should be doing.

    If they should be checking up on financial transactions, why do they need to try to keep it secret?

    Either make it a public policy and get it passed as a law or else don't do it. Same goes for illegal phone-tapping and other forms of spying on your own citizens.

    --
    I'll probably be modded down for this...
  25. echo $FREEDOM by delire · · Score: 5, Interesting


    It would be greatly appreciated by the Billions of us that don't live there if you Americans would do something about your current government.

    America increasingly represents the antithesis of 'freedom' and personal liberty especially for those in other countries. They are innovators in the strategic reduction of civil rights, at home and elsewhere. Freedom is not a brand, it's a right and you don't have to be American to have it FFS.

    1. Re:echo $FREEDOM by ErikZ · · Score: 1


      If you've got a better way to track the flow of money, for identifing and blocking terrorist funding, by all means, let us know.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    2. Re:echo $FREEDOM by Zaphod2016 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Good point!

      Now please excuse me while I go purchase drugs and weapons with CASH.

    3. Re:echo $FREEDOM by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      "It would be greatly appreciated by the Billions of us that don't live there if you Americans would do something about your current government. "

      Aside from voting, which has been useless anyway since they rig the elections, can you recommend another course of action? I mean, we have the right to bear arms which was intended to help us overthrow a corrupt government, but what use is a semi-automatic rifle against tanks, spec ops forces and anything else the armed forces can throw at us?

      PLease, if you have a solution to this, by ALL MEANS tell us, god knows there are plenty of us here who would LOVE to do something about this.

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    4. Re:echo $FREEDOM by mean+pun · · Score: 1
      PLease, if you have a solution to this, by ALL MEANS tell us, god knows there are plenty of us here who would LOVE to do something about this.

      Mass demonstrations have helped in the past, both in the USA (e.g. against the war in Vietnam), and in other countries (e.g. the coloured revolutions). They won't help instantly, but repeated or continuous mass demonstrations do get on the nerves of any governement. What was the name of that lady camping on Bush'es farm again? Mr. Bush didn't like that one bit. (Cue one Patriotic American doing character assasination on that lady, and completely missing the point of this post.)

    5. Re:echo $FREEDOM by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      But even demonstrations have been neutered thanks to "Free Speech Zones" and the like.

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    6. Re:echo $FREEDOM by mean+pun · · Score: 1
      But even demonstrations have been neutered thanks to "Free Speech Zones" and the like.

      As repugnant as these `free speech zones' are, they don't stop mass demonstrations. Many of the demonstrations I mentioned were illegal, but arresting thousands of protesters is difficult, particularly if they are peaceful and have the sympathy of public opinion. Ghandi has shown the way...

    7. Re:echo $FREEDOM by UpnAtom · · Score: 1

      And how much terrorist funding have we blocked for this loss of privacy?

      Any?

      Would it really help the terrorists if accesses to the database were based on intelligence rather than whim of some egotistical official?

    8. Re:echo $FREEDOM by UpnAtom · · Score: 1

      Demonstrations are pretty useless. Even when you get enough people to make the news, you get ignored. 5-10 million people demonstrated agains the invasion of Iraq.

      Lobbying to impeach Bush seems to be the way to go. Even if he stays, he'll be crippled. And sort your damn voting machines out.

      Either way you need to organise. The web is great for this. Find the right person to lead the organisation (egoless, experienced & committed) and learn to influence the media.

      This is my experience of campaigning against the British Govt who, trust me, are far worse and much less accountable.

    9. Re:echo $FREEDOM by ErikZ · · Score: 1

      Why that's easy to answer. I'll just pull out the info on secret government programs I have sitting in this folder here.

      Why would you ask that when you know the info isn't available without going to jail?

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    10. Re:echo $FREEDOM by UpnAtom · · Score: 1

      Dunno about your Govt but ours (British) crows every opportunity they get about fighting terrorism, even when they get it completely wrong and shoot innocent people.

  26. Cheney's response by mrogers · · Score: 4, Informative

    Cheney's predictable response: anyone who criticises mass surveillance is helping terrorists.

    1. Re:Cheney's response by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The senator [Arlen Specter, Republican of Pennsylvania and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee] said he was particularly troubled that the administration had expanded its Congressional briefings on the financial tracking program in recent weeks after having learned that The New York Times was making inquiries.

      "Why does it take a newspaper investigation to get them to comply with the law?" the senator asked. "That's a big, important point."
      Specter gets right down to the essentials.

      The question isn't "Why are they running a secret program?"
      It's "Why are they doind it without the proper oversight?"
      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    2. Re:Cheney's response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Specter is like an airbag, he's designed soften the blow not stop the crash. He never takes action or does anything meaningful. He sabre-rattles for about 24 hours to get headlines in the paper and when most folks have blown their steam, he sits down like he's told to.

      Stop giving him any credit. He's party to the problem.

    3. Re:Cheney's response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which is why bush is going to be impeached.
      sure, it will put cheney in, unless they impeach him too, then it would be...well, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_preside ntial_line_of_succession ...uh oh, TED STEVENS would only be one heartbeat away from the presidency.

      either way, they need to impeach him to send a message, no matter what (cheney or hastert) happens afterwards.
      i think as more is eeked out about these programs, it is going to piss congress off. i mean most of those people KNOW they could do a better job than george w, and it's going to outrage them that they were basically treated like tools, not equals.

  27. IRS? by kalel666 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Uh, hasn't the IRS had access to this information forever? And I also seem to recall GWB announcing they were tracking financial info immediately following 9/11, just not how.

    --
    I HAVE CUBIC WISDOM THAT TRANSCENDS AND CONTRADICTS ONE DAY GODS
    1. Re:IRS? by mogey · · Score: 1

      You are correct,

      Also the IRS can and will access your personal bank information if they feel the need. Hell we send the IRS the information each year on a form they provide.I don't see a point other than to give the BUSHMASTERS a chance to bash Bush.

    2. Re:IRS? by Watson+Ladd · · Score: 1

      Nope. IRS ask a Swiss bank for money, they get firmly shown the door. They don't even try anymore.

      --
      Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further development.-- Frontinus, 1st cent. AD
  28. A Good Initiative That Worked Well by chromozone · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The Washington Times had it right when it said in it's editorial of June 26 that what the New York Times and LA Times did was "an extraordinary commandeering of public policy from elected officials and the government they administer, committed ostensibly in the name of "the public interest" but more likely stemming from hostility to government as administered by George W. Bush. There is no other persuasive explanation...This is another unnecessary leak, six months after the New York Times revealed a secret National Security Agency terrorist surveillance program."

    It's clear this program worked and that it was legal. It was a primary source of knowledge about Islamo Fascism and was responsible for the capture of the terrorist known as "Hambali." Hambali, or Riduan Isamuddin, masterminded the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 innocent men and women.

    When I read many of the reactionary complaints (from inferior types addicted to being judgmental as a way of maintaining a false superiority)its easy to detect that many of the criticisms don't stem from any virtuous concerns but are the mutterings of people with a seething nature more sympathetic to criminal elements they share an identity with.

    Good editorial from The Washington Times - no conservative bastion:
      ( http://www.washtimes.com/op-ed/20060623-085054-654 2r.htm )

    1. Re: A Good Initiative That Worked Well by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > When I read many of the reactionary complaints (from inferior types addicted to being judgmental as a way of maintaining a false superiority)its easy to detect that many of the criticisms don't stem from any virtuous concerns but are the mutterings of people with a seething nature more sympathetic to criminal elements they share an identity with.

      So, are you saying we should eagerly give up our freedom for security?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re:A Good Initiative That Worked Well by ChronoFish · · Score: 1

      "...its easy to detect that many of the criticisms don't stem from any virtuous concerns but are the mutterings of people with a seething nature more sympathetic to criminal elements they share an identity with..."

      That is the argument. You are either with us or against us. Black or white.

      My world is more about color than that. It's easy for me to see how a seemingly "protective" program becomes one about Government control. No I don't want terrorist to rule my life - nor do I want the Government to be in a position to quiet decent, spy on political opponents, or dictate what is appropriate behavior.

      These new programs that have been in-acted by this administration go beyond hunting for Muslim Extremist-Terrorist. These programs are being used to monitor and attack far-left domestic extremest as well (such as ELF). No these are not a "good bunch of guys" - but where is the line. Will the spying be used to stop "right-wing nut jobs" as well? Or is it going to be used to "quiet" those who speak out against war-profiteering?

      It's a nice thought that we can be cozy and secure. But I would rather have a government that is kept in check so that a Vice President who has a cozy relationship with a government contractor can not get away with disclosing a CIA operatives in a retaliatory move against someone who speaks out against White House policy.

      So far the record has been pretty clear - those who have spoken out against the governments motives for going to war have been right - despite being branded as "un-patriotic" or "anti-American". This administration has proved time and time again that it can not be trusted to do the right thing as the sole-source of secret intelligence.

      -CF

    3. Re:A Good Initiative That Worked Well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "an extraordinary commandeering of public policy from elected officials and the government they administer,"

      You mean from Congress and the elected government. It's congress that didn't give him blanket power to spy on Americans, so it's Bush that's commandeering that power from them.

      Last I looked Congress was mostly Republicans, and the highest court in the land was also right wing, so it's them that he's grabbed power from. The right wingers.

      Republicans are small government, low spending, rule of law, Bush is the opposite, high spending, big government, rule of cronies. Republicans know they have to close ranks around him, even if he's rubbish because electors punish governments that are divided but that doesn't mean he's a good President, only that they close ranks around him.

    4. Re: A Good Initiative That Worked Well by BCW2 · · Score: 1

      If you check a bit further you will find that this has been done with warrants legally issued. Thats what the WSJ article said yesterday. Anytime they can show probable cause they can get a warrant, same as always. The big question is releasing this info to the public so the terrorists can find a different way to move money without getting caught. If you can track the money you can find the bad guys, cut off the money and the bad guys have to find more, slows down their plans. Makes me wonder who's side these papers are on, it's not the same one I'm on.

      --
      Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
    5. Re:A Good Initiative That Worked Well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "When I read many of the reactionary complaints (from inferior types addicted to being judgmental as a way of maintaining a false superiority)...."

      One has to admire your honesty, Ubermensch, taking time from your busy world-creating day to remind we who despise Bush because of his actions (and not the reverse as Bush and his acolytes would have it) of our inferiority. It's rare someone from on high uses a language near abandoned in the political arena since 1946. Right down to 'criminal types'. Absolutely frightening.

    6. Re: A Good Initiative That Worked Well by douceur · · Score: 1

      Hm.. So you're saying that these things can be done legally, but they're not doing it that way? Then it seems to me that the papers are on the side of the law. Which side are you on again?

      The fact of the matter is that there's a lot of things we could do to help stop terrorism. We could have a national curfew. We could implant GPS devices in our citizens so the government knew where everybody was all the time and arrest anybody who's found to no have the implant. After all, what do they have to hide?

      We could do a bunch of crazy shit that crosses the line, but we have laws that protect our privacy for a reason.

    7. Re: A Good Initiative That Worked Well by BCW2 · · Score: 1

      Law enforcement has had a way to get records from banks for many years, think "drug related money laundering". This is called removing the profit motive for a crime. They show probable cause to a judge who orders the records turned over. Just like trying to get a phone tap, same proceedure. The only thing newsworthy in this whole thing is that they are getting the records from a worldwide clearinghouse of this kind of information. The rest is just standard proceedure. Most European governments have fewer restrictions on this than the U. S. does.

      The side I'm on is the one that is always against terrorists. I am a veteran and I vote, deal with it.

      --
      Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
    8. Re: A Good Initiative That Worked Well by douceur · · Score: 1

      You really said nothing to refute my point. Yes, these things can and have been done legally. Yes, they help stop crime. Sure, maybe most European governments have fewer restrictions than the U.S.

      So what? If the government isn't doint it legally, they're doing it illegally. So, plain and simple, that means it's illegal. There's the problem. I don't care if it stops crime. It's illegal, and there's a reason it's illegal.

      Because European governments have fewer restrictions, that should convince me that it's ok for our government to capitalize on that? No, it doesn't work that way. I don't care where in the world our government is operating, our laws should still apply to them, especially when it comes to the freedoms of our citizens.

      As I sad before, and you failed entirely to respond to, there are a lot of things we could do to stop terrorism. Don't allow the populace out on the streets. Now anybody found outside is a prime terror suspect. That doesn't make it right.

      The side I'm on is the one that is always against terrorists. I am a veteran and I vote, deal with it.

      Your being a veteran has nothing to do with this debate. The only reason you'd mention it is because you obviously feel that makes your vote more important, which is utter bullshit. If that was the case, you'd think some of these retired generals would be taken a little more seriously, wouldn't you?

    9. Re: A Good Initiative That Worked Well by BCW2 · · Score: 1

      Nothing in the financial records was done illegaly. It has all been done correctly according to several Dem Senators (Warner VA) on the weekend news shows. Everything done by law. The only story is the treasonous reporting of sources and methods by the newspapers that broke the story.

      --
      Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  29. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why do they need to try to keep it secret?



    Are you kidding me? Did you really ask that? Hey, let's tell the enemy everything we are doing. Surely that is a good thing!

  30. Sad to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As an American I say this with a deep heart... we may be alive today but the terrorists have won in nearly every aspect of our lives. It didn't take a single bomb or airplane but law enforcement and government officials using the politics of fear to herd a complacent public into the American we live in today. If there really is a higher power, then I can only ask it that Bush, Cheney and all the people in and out of government that made this happen to burn in hell and I be there to see your eternal suffering from a distance.

  31. Re:mindphuking nazi hypenosys leads to fatal loop by LordKaT · · Score: 0, Troll

    What the fuck? Am I drunk again?

  32. Re:A message from the right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes- run with that agenda, please. Announce all of those concerns to your fellow voters, everywhere you can and as loudly as possible.

    See you in November!

  33. secret? by not+goods · · Score: 1

    "Stuart Levey, undersecretary of the Treasury for terrorism and financial intelligence, said in an interview last night that the newly disclosed program -- the existence of which the government sought to conceal..."
    "The White House complained last night that the disclosure could hurt anti-terrorism activities."
    does anyone else wonder about this? so the guy gives an interview in which he talks about this Secret Program (?!) and then his bosses get mad because the NYT prints it? does this seem suspicious to anyone else?

    1. Re:secret? by Class+Act+Dynamo · · Score: 1

      The NYT went to them saying they were going to print it. At that point, the administration decided to go ahead and comment in order to begin damage control rather than to wait like they did for NSA surveillance. I suppose they figure if they attack right out of the gate, they can make this seem like they are in the right much more easily.

      --
      My other computer is a Jacquard loom.
  34. quick success-Underdog. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " I'm not even sure if there is a decent, viable alternative."

    Don't worry. Open Source will save us. Just look at how it's saved us from Microsoft.

  35. Yessir....balls like BBs by DerProfi · · Score: 1

    I assume that the irony is lost on a obvious scholar such as yourself, but I find it hilarious when you bemoan the fact that Americans won't rise up and revolt, while at the same time being such a blubbering little pussy that you won't even out yourself among friendlies in the predictably left-leaning reactionary US-bashing circle jerk that is the comment section on Slashdot.

    Ah, yes... The spirit of Guy Fawkes lives on in you, AC. Keep fighting fascism, brave soldier!

    --

    3000+ comments meta-modded. 0 mod points awarded.
    Lesson for other meta-suckers: Don't believe the hype!
    1. Re:Yessir....balls like BBs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (snip anti-AC rant from parent)

      A strange name, "DerProfi." What ethnicity is that... Brungarian?

  36. Re:Good by Capt+James+McCarthy · · Score: 1

    Why is parent a troll for stating the obvious? And the child post who asks why it should be kept secret is modded up? I don't get it. (Actually, I do, I'm being facetious) These transactions are monitored for obvious reasons, none of which fall under the 4th Amendment. So if you are trying to track down terrorists, regardless if you believe it to be just or not, this would be a great way to find them. I think it was irresponsible for the press to place this information out there, just as it was as irresponsible for whomever leaked the information from the Govt. If you do your taxes, then the Govt has been given all the information they need. As for individual transactions, those are supposed to be reported anyway if there is a move of funds. So, if you fail to report that movement, you've violated a law. Like it or lump it.

    --
    There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
  37. More Butter ! by Chopo · · Score: 1

    Everyone knows, Let's through a blame-game and them add it to the archives (use-mode)

  38. Bush Derangement Syndrome strikes again by jabster · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    --
    Slashdot: you'll not find a more wretched collection of villainy and disreputable types...
    1. Re:Bush Derangement Syndrome strikes again by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're right, I *do* suffer from Bush Derangement Syndrome. Everything the man has done from the day he stepped into office has managed to make my life and my country worse.

      Nor does it help that his defenders gleefully try to malign anyone who criticizes this train wreck of an administration, calling them anti-Americans, armchair terrorists, and worse. They also try to prove our insanity by saying that (in the case of "Dr. Sanity") we blame Bush for acts of God, like Hurricane Katrina and the Tsunami. If anyone goes around blaming hurricanes on human beings, it's Pat Robertson.

      What we object to is our government's *reaction* to these events. The staffing of FEMA with incompetent ideological cronies was not an "act of God." The decision to redirect most government spending towards military pursuits, leaving us underfunded, undermanned, and underequipped at home, was not an "act of God." The ideology of "a government small enough to drown in the bathtub" didn't come from God, but from people who still have our President's attention and commitment.

      Nor do we ask for the appeasement of terrorists. What we ask for are foreign policies that don't hand them one PR victory after another, helping them to radicalize vast swaths of the Islamic population. From Guantanamo Bay to Abu Ghirab to rendition and torture, we are creating terrorists in the name of fighting terror. Frankly, it's not "appeasement" to recognize that had we spent the money squandered in Iraq on peaceful foreign aid, the true terrorists would find it much more difficult to get recruits. If we'd spent it on energy independence, our money wouldn't pour into the hands of people like the Saudi royalty, who use it to keep their people oppressed while using us as scapegoats to distract their own people. If we'd spent it on domestic programs, we would have saved more lives than were lost on September 11th. Had we not spent it at all, America would be on much more secure financial footing, and we'd have 100,000 soldiers home taking care of their families, rather than 2500 who never came home at all.

      But then we'd have a mad dictator in power. Instead of a civil war. I'm about ready to call that one a toss-up.

      So, yes, the man pisses me off to the point that it's hard to calm down when discussing him. Anyone who loves this country and can see where it's headed should be suffering from a severe case Bush Derangement Syndrome.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    2. Re:Bush Derangement Syndrome strikes again by Khammurabi · · Score: 1
      Let the BDS posts begin ... You guys really need to grow up and start thinking.

      Unquestioning loyalty and unmitigated hate are BOTH equally unhealthy behaviors. These behaviors indicate that the person expressing the emotion is beyond the reach of critical thought. (By critical thought, I expressly mean the ability of a person to examine a situation with an open mind.) This attitude formation prevents dialog or negotiation from resolving the situation, and often leads to arguments that devolve to name calling or (in extreme cases) violence.

      But it should be noted that there is a difference between hate and a complete lack of trust and credability. For example, I don't hate the president. He seems like he'd be a amicable enough guy to hang around with at a party, but I can't put my trust in the man. He's fooled me too many times:
      • Iraq has weapons of mass destruction? Nope.
      • Saddam has links to al Qaeda? Nope.
      • Katrina victims will receive the support they require in a timely fashion? Nope.
      • US citizens will only be spied on using a court order? Nope.
      Mr. Bush is a "C" student and a failed business man, and it's showing. So you'll understand that while he may be a great guy and an optimist, he can only only fool me (and other people) a limited number of times. No president should ever be this bereft of competence. Trust and respect must be earned, and while lies, ineptitude and patriotism may work for some people, he's fooled me too many times to be trustworthy. Good intentions are nice, but don't get the job done. Any sensible employer would have replaced him by now, so please don't begrudge me (or others) the opinion that he should be replaced, too.
  39. secretly by switchfutguy · · Score: 1

    "U.S. Secretly Tapping Bank Databases"

    well it was before you idiots put it on the front of slashdot...gee can't a guy get some privacy??

    --
    shanegrant.com
  40. European gouvernments failed to protect you. by kop · · Score: 1

    It looks like the Dutch national bank agreed on the CIA using this information without informing the public.
    If a puny Dutch national bank knows it the rest of our governments are probably aware as well.
    Please start putting blame on America only after blaming your own leadership please.

    Link in dutch Nu.nl "Dutch National Bank knew of CIA tapping bank data"
    http://www.nu.nl/news/763087/22/rss/DNB_wist_van_c ontrole_CIA_op_geldverkeer.html

    1. Re:European gouvernments failed to protect you. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's like saying it's the pretty girl's fault if she gets raped. The blame first and foremost goes to the USA, and after that you can ask why our governments don't protect us from these bullies. Seriously, they are not our friends.

  41. oh yeah and russia is so innocent? by cheekyboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Jeez dude get a clue.

    Russia isnt so nice and they hide things, they go the shit and 50megaton nukes.

    Oh but because they have 1000s of them and subs we cant invade em coz we're toast.

    Who sold the chemicals? That damn photo of RUmselfd shaking hands with Saddamn in the80s is so damn funny!!!

    Btw, Rumselfd also was a director of a company that allowed/helped north korea with reactors and now dont want iran to have any.

    Its a global scam, they just want all OIL resources.

    FACE it people, OIL is the reason for the last 150years of human achievements. He who has >50% of its resources wins.

    No matter how many lies, or deaths or billions or trillions spent, he who has it rules. Even if its part ownership or proxy.

    Get a clue people. With out oil there wouldnt be so much plastics/food/power and hence people!!!!!!!!!!

    Coal cant achieve that role.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    1. Re:oh yeah and russia is so innocent? by jscheelmtsu · · Score: 0

      Ignoring your almost complete inability to compose a coherent thought (probably from all of the pot you are smoking, if your homepage is to be believed), I will try to give you a little insight into Russia. One of the more prevalent buzz words in the international community is "transparency", or the openness of a government to show what it is doing and why it is doing it. That was the whole basis for the Iraq War, Saddam's regime was completely opaque. He told us that he got rid of the weapons, but he refused to show us. This is the same problem with North Korea and Iran. They tell us that their nuclear programs are merely civic, but they refuse to show us. Russia, on the other hand, has developed an open and transparent relationship with the international community. If they build a nuclear enrichment facility, they tell us what it is for, and they allow us to go in and inspect it. Also, the 50 megaton nukes that you are referring to do not exist. The only weapon of that magnitude ever created was the Tsar Bomba, which Russia detonated on October 30, 1961. After the test, Russia realized that a weapon of that size was inherently ineffective, and thus began focusing on smaller yield / higher accuracy nuclear weapons. Finally, your insistence that the Iraq War is merely over oil is a typical rally call of the left. Please show me any proof that this war is for oil. If you look at our involvement in Iraq, you will see that we have left the oil to the people of Iraq. The only suggestion we have made is to divide ownership of the country's oil resources among the different provinces.

  42. use gold coins like the 1600s dude by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    Real people under the radar use gold, why do you think its price has gone up.

    Its only gone done because of short selling by crude evil bankers who are working for Satan.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  43. Note by tonyr1988 · · Score: 1
    Together with a hundredfold expansion of the FBI's use of "national security letters"
    I think it's important to note that "hundredfold" deals just with the number of NSLs (national security letters) used.

    The government's use of NSLs is actually improved and the abusiveness of them decreased because of (fairly) recent changes. Section 505 of the USA PATRIOT Act made them pretty bad. But the Supreme Court said "nuh uh!!!", so now they have a lot more judicial and congressional oversight, including the requirement that they must report to Congress semi-annually.

    Wikipedia
  44. Not taking it sitting down by Tony · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So far it seems though, and I say this as a foreign observer, that America is taking it all sitting down.

    We're not taking it sitting down. We're taking it in the ass, bent over the lap of a bound lady liberty. And the funny thing is, there's a bunch of folks saying they absolutely love it, because George Bush said they love it.

    "C'mon, you know you love it!" he says. But still they don't squirm like he likes, so he says, "Terrorism! 9/11!"

    And then they orgasm. "Oooo, I just love you, Mr. President!" And they say, "Those other people who don't love getting raped in the ass by their government are nothing but liberal crybabies." Because it's easier for them to call names and ignore the waxing fascism than it is for them to admit the truth: they support a fascist regime that has not made us one iota safer.

    They, the party that once called for reduced government interference in our lives, are whining about how fucking great it is that the government is more involved in our lives to the point where they know how we spend our money and whom we call, and they are telling us how to think.

    So, no. We're not taking it sitting down. We can't sit down. Our asses are sore.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:Not taking it sitting down by FraterKork · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And what is even more depressing with your analled situation is that you have absolutely no way to vote yourselves out of this predicament. No matter what people want, this loved two party system is pretty far from a real democracy. So trying to vote for a new dynamic *free* platform is plain impossible since they would never make it through the Primary voting system, hence never get any people in congress. Enjoy your life as pawns.

  45. Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...I for one welcome our new American Overlords.

  46. "Liberty versus control" by bookbits · · Score: 1
    I can't say it any better than Bruce Schneier did at Wired.

    Too many wrongly characterize the debate as "security versus privacy." The real choice is liberty versus control. Tyranny, whether it arises under threat of foreign physical attack or under constant domestic authoritative scrutiny, is still tyranny. Liberty requires security without intrusion, security plus privacy. Widespread police surveillance is the very definition of a police state. And that's why we should champion privacy even when we have nothing to hide.

    --
    The real choice is liberty versus control. -- Bruce Schneier
  47. Get with the times by GeorgeH · · Score: 1
    Why don't companies announce immediately when they have been forced to do something by the government against their will (like Google)? As far as I was aware America is still a country where you can speak freely against the government without fear of punishment.
    Just a few stories down the page is this story: Library Chief Criticized for Requiring Subpoena. Or just look at the whole NSA/AT&T whistleblower case currently being fought in Detroit.
    --
    Why can't I moderate something "Wrong" or at least "Grossly Misinformed"?
  48. SWIFT's official position by deblau · · Score: 1

    Although I know it's bad form on /. to actually get both sides of any story, I thought I'd post SWIFT's official corporate position on the matter. See here.

    --
    This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    1. Re:SWIFT's official position by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1
      "Although I know it's bad form on /. to actually get both sides of any story, I thought I'd post SWIFT's official corporate position on the matter."

      WTF???? The article consists almost entirely of quotes from Government Officals defending the program and saying why it is GoodThing(tm) ... how, exactly, do I get both sides by reading SWIFT's official position? Wouldn't I actually have to read something from someone pointing out why it is literally impossible for this to be a GoodThing(tm) in order to get both sides? Perhaps a quote from someone who understands the U.S. Constitution, and the reason for checks and balances, as well as the need for public disclosure of such programs?
      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
  49. Too bad they aren't catching terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Billions of dollars and hundreds of civil rights later we've caught a handful of terrorists at best. Most of them weren't real threats or will never be charged with terrorism. The vasty majority let go, imprisonned without just cause or chaged with lesser non terrorist related crimes to help justify their arrest.

    These programs are all failures. We don't even need to consider the privacy concerns because the programs don't work anyway so the arguement to use them in invalid. There is just not that much terrorist activity in the country to catch. They will use this information to catch domestic criminals because they are far FAR more plentiful, but crime is a subjective term and it's only a matter of time until this information is stolen and abused. There is no IF it will be stolen or abused just. With the extremely immature level of computer security even in the most secure platforms like unix or BSD there is no guarantee of security. Exploits are there waiting to be found and this data is now compiled into a convenient quick reference for would be thieves and politicians. The true level of danger terrorism represents in no way validates this behaviour. 10 times more people die of the flu every year than they do of terrorism. The threat is not real.

  50. Oz has 'Austrack' doing this 24/7 for years by AHuxley · · Score: 1
    Australia has a nice fast network and a small room full for bright blinking computers.
    Its function is to monitor the transfer of funds around Australia.
    Australia is not moving too much around - so it gives full 24/7 coverage.

    Go back to 1996
    http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/8.30/lawrpt/lstorie s/lr270201.htm
    Note the quote from 2001
    http://www.abc.net.au/am/stories/s377915.htm
    "Anything suspect will come up."
    From 2000
    "..takes us back to Russia, of course, with money coming into different bank accounts."
    http://www.abc.net.au/am/stories/s161881.htm

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  51. "medieval-minded theocratic crazies" hmmm... by fantomas · · Score: 2, Insightful

    hmmm... ""medieval-minded theocratic crazies"" ....careful how you bandy round a phrase like that... some might argue that somes up the current management of the USA quite nicely :-)

    1. Re:"medieval-minded theocratic crazies" hmmm... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      hmmm... ""medieval-minded theocratic crazies"" ....careful how you bandy round a phrase like that... some might argue that somes up the current management of the USA quite nicely :-)

      Happily, the US is entirely built around the ability to regularly shift and change the people who deal with daily policies, budgets, etc. That's exactly the difference between (most of) the west and what the people we're talking about want for the world.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  52. Remember the big picture by tourvil · · Score: 1

    When looking at issues like this one and the wiretapping program, try to remember the big picture before you start arguing for or against these. Whether or not you believe the Bush administration can be trusted with these programs is largely irrelevant. If these programs are tacitly accepted for Bush, then they are accepted for whoever is elected in 2008. And in the years beyond. So to those of you defending these programs saying we can trust Bush, would you trust Hilary with them? If not, maybe you should think about why the framers of our constitution thought it was a good idea to limit the powers of the different branches of government.

  53. Europe should ditch American listening posts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What the fuck are we doing in Europe, having US listening and monitoring stations listening in on us from our own soil?

    If Americans want to elect Bush, thats there problem, but we should be protecting our interests, not theirs.

  54. Parent is a troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "keep your universities and other institutions from being petri dishes full of festering militant Islamo-fascism"

    Wow, just wow. Did you really write that with a straight face?

  55. It's me not you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not that Bush is a bad president that enriches himself and friends at our expense,
    runs up huge debts for our grandchildren to pay back,
    starts wars without gain that he can't get out of,
    undermines the fundamental concept of rights the US is based on - the constitution,
    let terrorists drive planes into buildings despite being warned by the CIA,
    undermined the CIA for getting it right,
    contributed to a voter fraud to get elected,
    is family friends with one of the terrorists,
    let the same terrorist escape, ... and countless other things, ....it's that we're mad.

  56. Truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Folks, this has nothing to do with anything except taxes. Revenue. Money.

  57. Re:A message from the right by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Uh oh you caught me!

    You are right though, in reality I do not mind secret courts, phone tapping, bank tapping, warrantless searches, americans being held indefinatly without access to a lawyer or charges being filed, torture, secret prisons, war, CIA leaks, and our spending more money on defense than all other countries on the planet combined and doubled while our education and healthcare go down the toilet and we run up a defecit that cannot reasonably be paid in the next 5 generations.

    Yup, red handed. Was just trying to annoy you, my bad. :-(

    Can we go back to blaming communism?


    You know what I'm curious about? Whether the chap that set up 9/11 imagined this kind of outcome, even in his wildest dreams. I guess one man can in fact change the world, all he needs is some guns, a few planes and a couple of well-indoctrinated morons.

    --

    People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
  58. This will help the pentagon's accounting by nickmalthus · · Score: 1

    Maybe now they can find the missing 2.3 trillion dollars and maybe the Defense Department's Office of the Inspector General will finally be able to improve the pentagons accounting standards

    --
    If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be-T J
    1. Re:This will help the pentagon's accounting by SubliminalVortex · · Score: 1
      Maybe now they can find the missing 2.3 trillion dollars... Actually it isn't missing, but an accidental faux pas. The 2.3 trillion dollars was converted to fourth-world currency, where each dollar equated to a grain of sand.

      After storming the beaches of Normandy, a modest amount of that was lost.

      In the present day, it is very easy for the U.S. to lose those grains of sand in areas where it is difficult to discern the existing grains from those dollars that were converted.

  59. For German beer? by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1
    That's like saying that when the US marched into Germany and liberated the concentration camps, that it was for the German beer.

    I didn't know Truman had investments in the beer industry.
    --
    :(){ :|:& };:
  60. To think that.... by SubliminalVortex · · Score: 1

    ...actually putting in things like "blackmail", "extortion" and "sexual favors" on the notes line of my checks are finally being tallied through the use of OCR on those bank check images.

    I'm going to have to start using "presidential donation", "educational subsidy" and "technological research". That way, I can not only stay off the radar, but perhaps get a tax deduction as well.

  61. Patriot Act, Section 314(a) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This sounds somewhat similar to the authority granted to the government under Section 314(a) of the USA Patriot Act, with one notable exception. It's authorized by an executive order rather than a specific law passed by Congress.

  62. You Might Be A TERRORIST!!!!!! by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 0

    Because you might be a terrorist. BTW, when we were looking at your expenses and we noticed an Anal butt plug on them. Now we know your girlfriend was just using your credit card, but unless you pay a fee I am sure we can convince your homophobic employer of... well you understand. Just leave your check for 3000 dollars on the night stand as you leave next morning, and make it out to cash, it will get to the right place.

    --
    If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
    1. Re:You Might Be A TERRORIST!!!!!! by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 2, Funny

      You might be a terrorist . . .

      . . . if your name is Osama Bin Foxworthy.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  63. Color me unsurprised by l5rfanboy · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Does it fail to surprise anyone else that CNN and other major media (I mean, 'news') outlets aren't reporting on this? Then again, they're so busy reporting on Kidman and Urban's desires for a normal wedding, Anna Nicole Smith's inheritance rival dying, and Reese Witherspoon suing someone over a false pregnancy story (all on CNN.com). Who has time for this kind of news when there's all that out there! Such decisions!

    I will be interested in seeing the BBC's take on the matter.

    1. Re:Color me unsurprised by SubliminalVortex · · Score: 1
      Then again, they're so busy reporting on Kidman and Urban's desires for a normal wedding, Anna Nicole Smith's inheritance rival dying, and Reese Witherspoon suing someone over a false pregnancy story...

      Sheesh... all of that stuff is "dirty laundry". This article tends to show less concern for that but more concerned over where the money made from 'dirty laundry' is 'laundered'.

      Rumor has it though, that the next issue of every competing tabloid will shed some light on that ruse.

    2. Re:Color me unsurprised by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Does it fail to surprise anyone else that CNN and other major media (I mean, 'news') outlets aren't reporting on this?

      I heard this on CNN a couple days ago actually. They didn't make such a big deal of it though. I guess it isn't as bad as the NSA wiretapping, and now it's not really getting any more coverage.

  64. Not news? by captaineo · · Score: 1

    I honestly don't get why this is causing so much ruckus. I thought everyone already knew that bank transactions are being monitored by the government, and have been for years.

    This is in contrast to the previous revelation about NSA wiretapping, which seemed genuinely new.

  65. Washington Times = Moonie funded right wing outlet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    from Wikipedia:

    The Times was founded in 1982 by Reverend Sun Myung Moon, leader of the Unification Church and the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification, to be a conservative alternative to the larger and mainstream Washington Post. To this day, it is widely perceived as maintaining a right-leaning editorial stance. By 2002, the Unification Church had spent about $1.7 billion in subsidies for the Times. [1]

    See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Times
  66. NPR Interview by HardCase · · Score: 5, Informative

    The news program All Things Considered interviewed the undersecretary responsible for the program yesterday (6/24/06). The interviewer didn't really pull any punches and the answers were pretty interesting. I highly recommend going to NPR's web site and listening to it.

    When asked what layers of security were in place to prevent misuse, the reply was that in order to perform a search, the analyst had to show that the individual or group being queried had been identified as having a potential terrorism link. That request had to be vetted by a supervisor, then by a representative from SWIFT. Then, when the query is performed, if no evidence is found, then the information is discarded at the analyst's level. A government auditing team reviews the information that is gleaned and a third party auditing team (from Booz Allen) audits the government.

    The undersecretary said that they did remove an analyst earlier this year for abusing the system. The auditing system caught him.

    The undersecretary also said that about 10% of the searches performed provided evidence of links to terrorist organizations. That, he said, was a very high rate compared to other intelligence methods.

    For me, personally, if that's the way that the government is using the SWIFT database, I don't have a problem with it. If the queries are targeted, as opposed to a broad sweep, it strikes me as a legitimate use of an intelligence asset.

    Interestingly enough, the general attitude of the security and privacy experts that ATC interviewed was fairly positive about the program.

    -h-

    1. Re:NPR Interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When asked what layers of security were in place to prevent misuse, the reply was that in order to perform a search, the analyst had to show that the individual or group being queried had been identified as having a potential terrorism link. That request had to be vetted by a supervisor, then by a representative from SWIFT.

      and how many requests were rejected by SWFT? oh, great. the old rubber stamp to enable a good PR "snippet." this is meaningless. there *is* no oversight unless you consider the fox in the hen house "oversight."

      The undersecretary said that they did remove an analyst earlier this year for abusing the system. The auditing system caught him.

      1. so the information *is* being abused. GREAT!
      2. vague terminology like "removed" means nothing. removed to a different position? fired? doubtful. if so, he would've said "fired." don't you love it when the govt manipulates words to mislead those it is supposed to represent?

      The undersecretary also said that about 10% of the searches performed provided evidence of links to terrorist organizations. That, he said, was a very high rate compared to other intelligence methods.

      let me be the first - BS!

      10%?

      that all depends on how one defines... "evidence of links to terrorist organizations." again, they manipulate to mislead. thsi is scary.

      *if* this was actually a meaningful statement, i don't think they'd be blasting news about a few homeless guys being arrested for terrorist plots. rather, they'd be telling us about useful advances in the "war on our citizenry." uh, i meant "terror." or did i?

      For me, personally, if that's the way that the government is using the SWIFT database, I don't have a problem with it. If the queries are targeted, as opposed to a broad sweep, it strikes me as a legitimate use of an intelligence asset.

      posting a guard inside everyone's bedroom is an "intelligence asset."

      Interestingly enough, the general attitude of the security and privacy experts that ATC interviewed was fairly positive about the program.

      turn up the heat on a frog slowly... he won't jump... until it is too late.

  67. And the French did it to the US... by ChePibe · · Score: 1

    Boeing has long been a target of the French DGSE intelligence service:

    In early 1993 the CIA obtained a long DGSE list of the most important intelligence targets in the United States, which included Boeing, among other companies. The DGSE agents were mainly interested in the navigation system of Boeing's new jumbojet to pass on to French companies, including the Airbus syndicate.

    http://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/world/france/ dgse.htm

    What's good for the goose...

  68. What happened to Congress and Senate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder how our congress and senate can let something like this happen. Aren't our "representatives" there to represent us and dont we have congressional oversight in this country? What's going on here and where is the democracy our government claims to bring to the world? These types of secretive spying resemble more the practices of a totalitarian state than anything else.

    1. Re:What happened to Congress and Senate? by praksys · · Score: 1

      There is nothing secretive about this program. First, Congress was kept informed. Second, the public has been told long loud and clear that the government is watching financial transactions with the aim of shuting down terrorist funding. Third, this program looks at institutional transactions, not private bank accounts. Fourth, the government already has complete access to *all* personal financial information as part of the tax system, and all transactions over US$10,000 are already reported to the government as part of the war on drugs. In other words this program has far fewer implications for privacy and civil liberties issues than the stuff that the IRS and law enforcement have been doing every day for a long time. Finally, the only new information in this story is detailed information about ways and means - or information about exactly what financial transations they are looking at and how. This is information that will be useful to terrorists who want to evade detection, but not information that will be useful to members of the public who want to know what their government is up to.

  69. And that was mod'ed +5? by khasim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why bother watching Fox? Better perhaps to take advantage of the BBC's reporting. Take a moment and any of their coverage. It's hard not to notice the actual facts of chemical weapon use. Which, of course, rather requires the existence of the same.

    Look at the YEAR in which they were used.

    If Saddam had them 20 years ago, that does NOT make him a threat TODAY.

    No one is saying that Saddam did not have chemical weapons at any time in the past. We know he did. We were the ones who were helping him develop them for use in the Iraq/Iran war.

    And your articles are rather long on descriptions of Saddam lounging by a pool in a speedo ... and rather short on facts about chemical weapons.

    Right, there's no interest at all in avoiding another Taliban-like haven for government-sponsored terrorism, as is found in Iran.

    Dude, Iraq fought Iran.

    Iraq was a secular totalitarian state.

    There was NO danger of them changing to a Theocracy while Saddam was alive.

    So just leaving Saddam and the sanctions in place would have achieved your stated goal without the loss of a single US soldier's life.

    That sort of retrograde, destabilizing influence on the entire middle east certainly does impact oil flow (for the entire world, in case you're not paying attention), and allowing it to thrive is unacceptable on a lot of levels, not just as it relates to oil.

    If it's not about oil, then make the case without mentioning oil.

    Because you cannot do so, without fantasy scenarios that Saddam's existance would have prevented, it is/was/will be about the oil.

    And before you start mentioning Saddam as some sort of not-so-bad alternative to the extremist jihaddi types, remember that he was busy shipping (along with press releases!) cash to organizations like Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and even to individual families of suicide bombers.

    So? No one is saying he was an angel. Just that he was not a threat to the United States of America or our allies.

    Do not confuse "bad person" with "threat to the US".

    To say nothing of lobbing scud missles across borders, trying to annex Kuwait, and so on.

    Do you have some kind of calendar-phobia?

    You keep bringing up actions from years before the last invasion. What he did in 1990 has no bearing on whether we should invade in 2003. There were THIRTEEN YEARS between those two events.

    "For oil" is a tidy bit of sophistry, though, that must feel convenient.

    I don't know about "feel convenient", but it certainly fits the established facts.

    But the real issue with the oil is that it lies in a place where its value is being sought by medieval-minded theocratic crazies that use that single source of revenue to keep places like Iran running backwards from history.

    And again you support the position that it was about the oil. Or, more exactly, about who controls the oil.

    So, be as sarcastic/flippant as you want to be about it. The fact remains that you do not have a justification that does NOT involve the oil.

    Putting those oil reserves in the hands of constitutional democracies is certainly acting "for the oil," but not in the way you so cravenly describe.

    Oil does not vote. Oil does not elect representatives. There is nothing noble about going to war for oil. Therefore, saying that the war was for oil cannot be "craven".

    That's like saying that when the US marched into Germany and liberated the concentration camps, that it was for the German beer.

    Only in your mind, only in your mind.

    Germany was actively invading other countries and attacking our ally England.

    Iraq had

    1. Re:And that was mod'ed +5? by Maelwryth · · Score: 1

      On the subject of Iran. If you look at it, you might just find that America overthrew the government of Iran, installed a madman who killed thousands of people until being overthrown in a bloody conflict and replaced by the theocracy. After 9/11 Americans asked, "Why do they hate us?". Well it turns out that they hate America because America killed their families and destroyed their homes.
      On the subject of Iraq. Don't get the idea America is leaving. If they were leaving they wouldn't be building all those bases.

      --
      I reserve the write to mangle english.
    2. Re:And that was mod'ed +5? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Oil does not vote. Oil does not elect representatives. There is nothing noble about going to war for oil. Therefore, saying that the war was for oil cannot be "craven".

      Oh just quit it. It's not about the oil, per se, and you know it. It's about the fact that the oil is the basis for the local economy, and an opportunity for the conrolling local government to pursue their agenda with that revenue. Saddam used it to build palaces and weapons programs, and keep the people from his own village brutally in power. You don't fight for the oil, you fight to make sure that the people generating revenue from the oil don't use it in the way that Saddam did, or that the A-Q types regularly proclaim that they want to use it (global caliphate, blah blah) and actually do use it - like pumping resources into further Islamifying the Sudan, etc.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  70. Public disclosure? Secrecy? Checks and balances? by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1
    Uh, hasn't the IRS had access to this information forever? And I also seem to recall GWB announcing they were tracking financial info immediately following 9/11, just not how."

    I forgot about the secret IRS wire tapping and gathering of financial data ... err .. uhhh ... wait ... if it was secret and they tried to hide it from the U.S. citizens I wouldn't know about it, so how could I have forgotten it??? There must be some fundamental difference here ... what could it be? What could it be??? ...

    OH!!! That's it! We have missed the whole point, entirely! If it is a perfectly kosher program, then where does the need to throw the U.S. constitution out the window come from? Why the lack of full disclosure, and why try to keep it quiet, speaking out only when it becomes clear that they have been found out, and the Times and the W. Post are going to let the cat out of the bag?

    And lest you say that it is because we don't want the terrorists to know we are watching them ... I'm pretty sure they already know that.
    --
    Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
  71. The really amazing thing... by YesIAmAScript · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Is when Bush does something like this, people come out of the woodwork to explain how the intentions are good.

    It doesn't matter if the administration's intentions are good. The point is we have a court system and separation of powers for a reason. And it is the law of the land.

    No matter how good one's intentions are, if they violate this (by not getting actual subpoenas), they're comminting a grave crime, and creating a situation where one branch (in this case the one headed by one man) can begin to take control of the actions of the entire government.

    It's a constitutional issue. And this is another egregious violation of it. This is beyond absurdity now. We the people created this government, we should have to put up with it not following the restrictions we set down upon it. These people should be ejected from office.

    --
    http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
  72. Only one type uses the phrase "Islamo-fascist". by khasim · · Score: 1
    You keep your universities and other institutions from being petri dishes full of festering militant Islamo-fascism that occasionally ships people like Mohammad Atta (who spent his time in Europe organizing, recruiting, meeting, and arranging finances in advance of killing several thousand US citizens and no small number or Europeans) right through your own financial and legal system and straight over here, or back into the frey of proto-democracies in the middle east.
    There's only one type of person who uses the phrase "Islamo-fascism" and it ain't Democrats or Libertarians or Greens.

    It's the far Right-wing nuts. They're the only ones who cannot get it through their heads that a Theocracy is not a Fascist state. So they repeat their Limbaugh-mantra hoping to sway more intelligent people with the repetition of "fascism".

    All you're doing is displaying your political ignorance. Iran is a Theocracy. Iraq was Fascist. They were at WAR with each other.
    Out of curiosity, and do you really think the international banking operations in the EU don't monitor and report to your own law enforcement, intel, and counter-terrorism agencies on international money transfers, especially to and from known terrorist supporters?
    The issue is not whether they report on "known terrorist supporters".

    The issue is whether people who have no terrorist connections at all are being monitored.

    In the US, you might want to take a look at a small group of Quakers that, somehow, ended upon the the government's "threat" list.
    http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/01/23/opinion/ main1228569.shtml

    Are you that naive? No, I didn't think so. You're just grinding the usual blunt, directionless, anti-American axe. How about we transfer $10k back and forth between us, and you can speculate on whether or not your own government will know it happened, and attempt to correlate that transaction against all of your credit card purchases and travel?
    Go for it. I bet the US government checks up on you before any European government does.
    1. Re:Only one type uses the phrase "Islamo-fascist". by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      There's only one type of person who uses the phrase "Islamo-fascism" and it ain't Democrats or Libertarians or Greens ... far Right-wing nuts

      There's only one kind of person that thinks the entire landscape of political perspective is divided up into those four groups. I love the irony of your relying on party-talking-point-fueled-labels attempt to describe someone as being some sort of specific partisan.

      Iran is a Theocracy. Iraq was Fascist. They were at WAR with each other.

      And I suppose your next proposition will be that the war was over the finer points of the one political system vs. the other? It was a witch's brew of tribalism, cultural sectarianism, territorialism, and cold war proxyism. And the term "islamo-fascism" is completely accurate, in that nicely sums up the toxic mix of backwards religious extremism, totalitarianism, and faux-populism that characterizes movements like the Taliban.

      I bet the US government checks up on you before any European government does.

      Ah, so it's not about whether the EU's entities do exactly the same thing, just whether or not they're as efficient about it.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  73. Re:Good by Bones3D_mac · · Score: 1

    It's kind of like how the NRA nuts defend their right to carry concealed weapons, because it will make criminals think twice about committing crimes against citizens, since potentially anyone *might* have a gun on them. Why not just wear the weapon openly and remove all doubt that you're armed?

    Maybe these guys just looking for an excuse to blow someone's head off, rather than actually achieving the goal of detering criminal activity.

    --


    8==8 Bones 8==8
  74. For everybody who thinks this guy is paranoid... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...I think he's paranoid too.

    But answer me this: what part of what he describes would be difficult for the USA government to do? Is it a good idea to simply let them have the power to do these things and assume they'll never exercise it?

  75. Happening for years, all over the world!!! by RexRhino · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Seriously, nearly every western government has had a sort of financial big-brother police state already in place, so that it can tax you! A total loss of privacy is the price you pay in order to have a powerful central government and welfare state. Why start complaining now when it comes to terrorism?

    Instead of going after terrorists for terrorism, they should go after them for some tiny insignificant infraction of the tax code. That way it would be politically correct and "progressive" to deny them their rights.

  76. Actual bulletproof argument for WMD ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

    Actually the bulletproof argument in favor of the WMD claim does not involve whether or not they actually existed. Existence is a hindsight issue. The real argument is that Saddam wanted people to *believe* he still had them. The belief that someone has WMD is a detterent, actually having them is not required. Remember, the UN mandate / peace treaty from the first Gulf War did not merely require Saddam to get rid of the WMD, he had to do it under UN supervision. When he destroyed the WMD all he had to do was invite a UN inspector to watch. He did not, he wanted people to believe he still had them. He was successful.

    1. Re:Actual bulletproof argument for WMD ... by elrous0 · · Score: 1
      And, like Fox Mulder, some people WANT to believe (especially when it suits their larger purposes).

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    2. Re:Actual bulletproof argument for WMD ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

      And, like Fox Mulder, some people WANT to believe (especially when it suits their larger purposes).

      Yes, but there are also some people who prefer to err on the side of caution; better to overestimate your enemy than underestimate. Now heap on the politics of the intelligence community underestimating some idiots who want to roll the clock back 1,300 years and getting reamed over that. Between caution and the sore backside over 9/11 are you really surprised that Saddam was overestimated?

  77. ALL our data belong to them. by lawpoop · · Score: 1

    I'm not surprised by *any* of the news I hear about any of our records being tracked. If you remember, shortly after 9/11, Admiral Poindexter proposed a Total Information Awareness, with this logo, which would be the aggregation of all commercial, financial, and medical data of everyone. A database of everything that everyone knows about you.

    It was shorly cancelled after criticism, but it turns out that the program is still up and running. So expect to hear more stories about the government having all of our records. Expect them to have *all* of our records.

    --
    Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
    -- Pablo Picasso
  78. Didn't they already do this with credit cards? by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 1

    I seem to remember somewhere a reference about credit card transactions getting into government hands. Something about someone wanting the extra balance on their card mailed to them. But the credit card companies stalling and delaying for a few days, allegedly to get permission from Homeland Security?

    Oh. Here's a related story. Two payments from two different sources on a credit card got Homeland Security involved, the second payment rejected, and a $140 overcharge.

    So they're in the telephone system...
    They're in the credit card system...
    They're in the banking system.

    I think at this point, we probably shouldn't be asking so much what they are into, but what they are not.

    1. Re:Didn't they already do this with credit cards? by SubliminalVortex · · Score: 1

      ...ever stop to think about that tag on your underpants? Oh, and the next time your doctor orders an endoscopy, tell him not to go for the "full excursion".

    2. Re:Didn't they already do this with credit cards? by ArtStone · · Score: 1

      Here are a few more to add to the list:

      - telling you how much water your toilet can use each flush
      - telling you that you can't build on the land you own because it is upstream from a wetland
      - telling your car company what its average fuel economy must be
      - telling you that you can't grow almonds without being part of the Blue Diamond co-op and paying mandatory marketing fees and stay within production limits
      - telling a restaurant owner that they cannot allow customers to smoke inside the building that they own

      The list is pretty endless actually...

      --
      Final 2006 "Proof of Global Warming" US Hurricane Count -> 0
  79. Sadly it's not true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They're spinning it like crazy now but the SWIFT spokesman didn't say any of this. Rather they gave them complete access without restrictions and specifically said that none of the data was destroyed, then they decided it wasn't legal and on threat of SWIFT pulling out of the agreement, they agreed to having a SWIFT man in the room while they did the searches.

    SWIFT are in violation of Belgium privacy laws (a criminal offence) so they're ass covering right now.

  80. Disclosure by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    >Or is the government using threats to keep the banks quiet?

    Banks are regulated heavily and pervasively. They have been since the Great Depression so it's burned deep into their corporate cultures. It would be a surprise if the government needed to go so far as to threaten them.

    "Heavily regulated" includes the power, which has been used in the case of insolvent banks that might have started a panic, to issue an order one day and have the bank not reopen the next day. (In practice it will reopen the next day but under a new owner).

  81. censorship ahead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the article:
    "We are disappointed that once again the New York Times has chosen to expose a classified program that is working to protect Americans," spokeswoman Dana Perino said. "We know that al-Qaeda watches for any clue as to how we are fighting the war on terrorism and then they adapt, which increases the challenge to our intelligence and law enforcement officials."

    There's only one solution. If you're not on our side...

  82. ...:P... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The great thing about this administration is to find all the pissed off americans, unhappy with there own lives so they bash a government they weren't happy with. I'm all up for free speach but please actually use facts and not the anti bush propaganda, in fact stop calling this the Bush white house, its the American Government, if you don't like it leave, or wait till the next election. There is a reason the Democrats and Republicans win. They bring multiple topics to the table, not just a handfull of little problems about our enviroment or economy, or forieng policy. They bring it all. Now they may not do everything they say, but thats not their fault. You see our government has 3 areas which all need to agree for certain things to go into effect and the President may try to get his stuff accross, but it can be shot down by one of the other 2 branches.

    Unless of course they water down bills and laws and whatever else, so that everyone is "happy". So all you Bush haters out ther, unfortuantly you have 2 choices to stick around for the next election or leave.

  83. Well according to "Loose Change" a billion dollar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That movie said on 9-11 over a billion dollars worth of gold disappeared from the world trade center. And all the insurance money made by the fresh owner of the complex was huge. If the Bush gang turn out to be the good guys, this could be them trying to find out the terrorism. You might be supprised that the terrorists will not be poor and living in a cave.

  84. Re:Good by Dark_MadMax666 · · Score: 1

    Bad logic here. According to you NRA defends right to carry concealed weapons precisely for the reason they are concealed and there is no way for criminal to know it. - Not everybody can /will carry weapon if law alowed it. So criminals would just pick those unarmed .

  85. There's an old saying... by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get you.

    1. Re:There's an old saying... by TubeSteak · · Score: 3, Interesting
      What is developing is obvious in another arena. George Bush has not issued a single Veto since he became president. This is because his treasure trove of info arrived at by this nefarious means that he couches as "Anti-Terrorist Efforts" actually is used as extortion against US Senators and Representatives who dare vote against his plans. This is why all measures always pass with at least a minimal margin no matter what. He doesn't care to eliminate the Congress as he controls it by this means.
      Ummm, there's paranoia and then there's accusing the President of using "his treasure trove of info arrived at by this nefarious means" to extort Senators and Congresspeople to vote his way.

      1. Bush has written stacks of signing statements that are even better than vetos, since Congress & Senate don't get to revote on signing statements.

      2. The Republicans have a slim (1 person) majority in the Senate, and a semi-slim (12 person) majority in the House. This may be why certain bills that do pass, pass by a slim majority.

      3. Not all of Bush's great ideas get turned into law. Constitutional Amendment on gay marriage, Harriet Miers for Supreme Court, Bush's immigration plans, and so on

      Maybe some of cluckshot's rambling is factual and relevant, but seriously, it's just riddled with crap.
      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    2. Re:There's an old saying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with your general point, but...

      The Republicans have a slim (1 person) majority in the Senate, and a semi-slim (12 person) majority in the House. This may be why certain bills that do pass, pass by a slim majority.

      Not all of Bush's great ideas get turned into law.

      These means nothing. If Bush were blackmailing people, then if every single action he took was mysteriously backup up by most senators, then everybody would know something was up. The only way to exercise power like that on a long-term basis is to pick and choose certain strategic wins and lose the ones you don't care about.

      For instance, do you really think Bush cares about gay marriage? Or do you think that is just something he talks about to keep his religious supporters on his side? Does he actually need to win that one? Don't you think it only vilifies left-wing people in the eyes of his supporters when he is seen to try and ban gay marriage, only to be thwarted by "the evil commies"? I'd say that he actually gains more by losing that one.

      Likewise with immigrants. Winning that one isn't important either. It's better to throw the match and be perceived as being beaten, because it lets him win all the important ones without suspicion.

      And the same goes for only passing certain bills by a slim majority. He still gets what he wants there, doesn't he? Better to coerce a few senators and win by a slim majority than to take a bigger risk by trying to coerce lots of senators, and win by a suspiciously large majority.

      Not that I actually think he's doing this, but I'm just pointing out that these specific criticisms only make sense on a superficial basis.

    3. Re:There's an old saying... by Intangion · · Score: 1

      WTF? signing statements are a good thing? are you kidding me? when i read that i thought your post was going to be sarcastic and satire but your serious arent you? ..... *shakes head*

      for one its unconstitutional (but i guess thats just a goddamned peice of paper anyway right?) you cant just say you think it means something else, or doesnt apply to you, or that you flat out refuse to obey it, and then sign it into law, thats illegal!

      thats like a judge saying well what i think this oath means is i can send anyone i dont like the looks of to the gas chamber, before taking their oath as a judge

      or like a doctor saying 'ya but i can let the people i dont like die' before swearing their oath as a doctor'

      or like george bush swearing to defend the constitution before taking office and then later calling it a god damned peice of paper .. oh wait its a little different than that last one... he wouldve had to have called it a god damned peice of paper BEFORE swearing to defend it..

    4. Re:There's an old saying... by stinerman · · Score: 1
      2. The Republicans have a slim (1 person) majority in the Senate, and a semi-slim (12 person) majority in the House.

      WTF are you talking about? In the Senate the split is 55-44 with 1 independent siding with the Democrats. Thus, 55-45 is 10. In the House it is currently 231-201 with 1 independent siding with the Democrats. That makes a 29 person advantage.

      Its late in the game, so I hope someone will see this ... but damn you were way off. Check your facts, sir.

  86. 4 points, 4 errors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Firstly Congress didn't give him any such power, and telling a few of his friends in Congress is not the same as Congress voting to give him the power.

    Secondly, Cheney claims that it was secret, so how could the public have been told loud and clear if it was secret?

    Thirdly this is SWIFT, it is not limited to institutional investors (since when has a terrorist been an institution), it's the normal bank to bank transfer system used extensively throughtout the world and USA.

    Fourthly, the government does NOT have all your financial data, that would be domestic spying which is illegal.

    This can, was and is completely illegal and well beyond any remit given to him.

    1. Re:4 points, 4 errors by praksys · · Score: 1

      1. The House and Senate intelligence committes were informed, which are the normal means of congressional oversight. 2. Read my first post. 3. Read my first post. 4. You apparently don't know anything about US law and have never filled out a tax return.

      BTW, domestic spying is not illegal and never has been. The 4th ammendment protects against unresonable search and seizure, but that just means that the government needs a good reason to spy on you, and they have to fill out the right paper-work. It doesn't mean that they can't spy on you at all.

  87. SWIFTboating by Ragica · · Score: 1

    Once again the US government is caught up in a SWIFTboating scheme...

  88. privacy by disturbedite · · Score: 2, Insightful

    to the people who say "i don't have anything to hide, so its ok with me", i say, this is another huge symptom of the government/certain people in the government wanting to take our rights away. theres something called the 4th amendment... some people keep saying its ok, but when are they gonna get that we are gonna have to stand up for our rights or they'll keep taking them away till there aren't any left.

    --
    http://www.ronpaul2008.com/ Ron Paul for President 2008 http://www.infowars.com/
    1. Re:privacy by SmurfButcher+Bob · · Score: 1

      To those people who say "Nothing to hide, nothing to fear"... the response is simple:

      "Nothing to hide, no reason to look."

      Period.

      --

      help me i've cloned myself and can't remember which one I am

  89. I'm Calling Bullshit by Memnos · · Score: 5, Informative

    I am a physicist and I consult on national vulnerability, and I can tell you that a terrorist will not come through an airport with any radionuclides. That is patently ridiculous. What is far more likely to happen is that someone with a bunch of money will find someone in Russia with little to no money (who formerly worked for the Strategic Rocket Forces) to provide them with a working (if decrepit) tactical nuke. Then, they would have some shipping company bring the container to New York or Miami and set it off. That's just to let you know about what OUR nightmares are -- and in the future, post about what you know.

    --
    I don't trust atoms -- they make up stuff.
    1. Re:I'm Calling Bullshit by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I have also studied enough Physics to know that getting nuclear fissile material through an airport in the US is ridiculous. But blowing a load of plutunium up (properly, so that a supercritical mass is created) above a city in the US without the plane ever landing is plausible and practical.

      The only place a geiger counter would be effective is in whatever airport that the plane took off from (Think Kotoka International Airport, Accra, Ghana for instance as it is currently being redeveloped).

      The plane would never have to land, just explode at 30 000 ft above a US city and cause massive nuclear fallout.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    2. Re:I'm Calling Bullshit by zerocool^ · · Score: 1


      Jack Ryan? Is that you?

      --
      sig?
    3. Re:I'm Calling Bullshit by TheLink · · Score: 1

      I am not a physicist nor a US citizen.

      If I were an evil terrorist (I'm not) and had only _one_ nuke and wanted to cause the most damage to the USA, I wouldn't nuke any place in the USA. After all you can blow away the east/west hand of the USA and it will do OK (it sure won't like it but it will do ok - not both hands though), you can blow away the rotting septic head of the USA and it might even do better!

      But that said, the people you have the most to fear from are already ruling/controlling your country. They were and are the greatest danger to the rest of the world too. And most of you dumbasses believed that "Saddam/Iraq is the enemy" crap.

      What could Saddam do to you, stuck in Iraq? What can Osama do to you stuck in hiding? What can your leaders do to you stuck in Power?

      This bank database thing is just an example of what your gov could and is doing. If you don't like it you better start doing something about it. They sure don't look like they are easily discouraged.

      --
    4. Re:I'm Calling Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe not an airport, but possibly a harbour.

    5. Re:I'm Calling Bullshit by Memnos · · Score: 1

      You replied to me, but I think your comments may have been for the parent poster, since we are in basic agreement, especially about the physics and concealability of active radeonulides such as (obviously) fissiles. And your right, a Geiger counter or neutron detector or any other such would be ineffective when even a primary fission device could do damage from the air. Oh and tritium is not at all well controlled on the world market, which vastly decreases the alpha time (reaction-doubling time) and makes weapons-grade fissiles that much more dangerous. It increases the imperative for good human intelligence all the more.

      --
      I don't trust atoms -- they make up stuff.
    6. Re:I'm Calling Bullshit by forgotten_my_nick · · Score: 1

      >That's just to let you know about what OUR nightmares are

      I always wondered what the fascination was about the "Most extreme way to go" senarios people are thrown at them.

      Nuclear... tosh. Could it happen? Yes it could. It is a likely senario for AQ? Probably to absolutly not. You are more likely to be hit by a metorite.

      Take a look at 9/11. The planes were taken with box cutter knives. A very low tech solution.

      Without listing (cause tbh I don't want a trip to gitmo) but I can easily think off 20 or so ways to incite terror which requires absolutly no access to nuclear material using normal household goods. If the person being alive afterwards wasn't an issue, then numerous more.

      Heck the CIA back during the Iran/Contra even created Pamplets on how to incite terror/overthrow a government and dumped them in other countries. Its not like they had to give them nukes then either.

      I think you need to scale down on your nightmares and just get on with your life.

    7. Re:I'm Calling Bullshit by Memnos · · Score: 1

      I get to scale down my nightmares when a) they are gone, or b) someone else is chosen to have them. Are you volunteering, Senior "Tosh"? {Hint: I volunteered, but not for this, so get a life yourself or shut the fuck up.)

      --
      I don't trust atoms -- they make up stuff.
    8. Re:I'm Calling Bullshit by forgotten_my_nick · · Score: 1

      > I get to scale down my nightmares when
      > a) they are gone, or
      > b) someone else is chosen to have them.

      Then your going to lead a frightning life.

      The fact of the matter is there are numerous ways terrorists can act, yet please feel free to find me one instance of any kind of nuclear attack by terrorists. Good luck with that.

      Meanwhile sales in Duct Tape are up everytime the US government goes "Boo!".

      Terrorists are made out to be the bug-a-boo of the US by the current government when truth be told the actual amount of people killed by terrorists is absolutly tiny in comparison to almost everything else.

      You are more likely to die due to obesity (Heart Disease). Heck more people died of aids in 2001 then due to a terrorist attack

      Yet if we were to listen to Bush there would be AQ hiding in your soup with nuclear launchers and dirty bombs. I guess you can't invade a country on the premise of combatting heart disease.

      So next time before engaging your mouth off, try looking at realistic fears and dealing with them.

    9. Re:I'm Calling Bullshit by Memnos · · Score: 1

      This a response from your post way back. I pretty much agree with your response and more. Bush seems to thinks he can launch a useless (well, worse than useless) war based upon the fact that he is pissed that Saddam tried to kill his father. He trumpets the "war on terror" as an excuse to chivvy away at what is left of our constitutional rights. In US history this has been done before. I believe Lincoln suspended habeus corpus. But that was for a war that at least had a likely end, soon. The "war on terrorism", like the "war on drugs" and the "war on crime" is open-ended. So, as long as my fellow apathetic Americans stand for it, we will gladly give away whatever is left of our privacy, citizenship, and right to simply be left alone. Just because I raised a possibility that is very unlikely (though BAD if it happens -- imagine the righteous anger and dissolution of American society if it did) does not mean that I'm not equally scared about the things I wrote of above, if not more. I try not to fit into a neat political or ideological slot, and I don't like labels. Nor, I suppose, do you.

      --
      I don't trust atoms -- they make up stuff.
  90. NSA + SWIFT + Scientology = ??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Didn't the Church of Scientology have its members infiltrate the IRS in 1978, the biggest infiltration of the IRS ever seen, to use its files against the Church's enemy list? If they infiltrate the NSA, what tools they'll have in their hands!

  91. Re:For everybody who thinks this guy is paranoid.. by HiThere · · Score: 3, Interesting

    AFAICT, he's understating the situation. The nazi link, e.g., is not merely by methodological similarity, but also because some very high level nazi's made deals at the time of the surrender...and some of them went to work on for the agnecy that later became the CIA. (Nazism was dead...and they were experienced anti-communists... over time they worked their way up in the ranks.)

    A "secret police" is a very dangerous (and necessary?) part of government. They are rather like an immune system that way. If the design isn't perfect, they are likely to attack the organism that produced them. (Well, that analogy is stretect further than it can stand. Unlike an immune system, secret police forces are capable of "owning" thier own resources out of sight of their controllers...and that can cause them to act quite independently, and without much concern for their putative parent body.)

    My personal preference would be to have a less powerful "secret police" even at the cost of allowing some "disease organisms" to slip in, but this is clearly a matter of degree. More careful oversight is another important consideration...but who will watch the watchers? Corruption is a historical habit of human organizations.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  92. Hah, that's a good one. by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1
    Where for example is the phone number where a US Citizen may call and have an illegal or undesirable alien (One who is acting badly for those who don't understand) promptly and properly dealt with under law. Where I live, if I call the Sheriff I may see an officer in 1 hour or so depending on the time of day.

    Hah, that's a good one: the idea that if your neighbor is playing the stereo too loudly, the government should respond quicker to it if he's Mexican. (And of course, Mexicans are illegal aliens--just look at them!)

  93. I have two words for you... by warrax_666 · · Score: 1

    ... and those two words are: False Dichotomy.

    --
    HAND.
    1. Re:I have two words for you... by mrraven · · Score: 1

      Except in a zero sum system like spending tax dollars this is not a false dichotomy. There is an opportunity cost to spending our money on a paranoid police stateeque spying apparatus. I'd rather my tax dollars were spent on something that won't infringe my civil liberties and would be guaranteed to save lives like a serious educational campaign about Americans poor dietary habits.

      A nation of people that according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention has a 20% obesity rate has FAR more serious problems to deal with FIRST besides the almost non existent threat of terrorism.

      http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa/obesity/trend/maps /

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
  94. p.s. by mrraven · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hint Ronald McDonald has killed quite literally thousands as times as many people as Osama Bin Laden,
    chew on that for a while.

    --
    Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
    1. Re:p.s. by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Another hint: The people that "bad eating habbits" (not Ronald) killed knew about nutrition and made their choice. There was free will (or lack therof) involved. Can you say the same about Osama? Did all the people he killed choose to die? That where the false dichotomy comment comes in, and is on target...

      I'm not saying that America doesn't need to wise up and get agressive on nutrition, but lets put the blame where the blame belongs. McDonalds didn't make America fat, poor education about nutrition did. The fact that 5 days of the week parents choose to bring home food from [fill in the fast food place] instead of preparing a balance meal themselves is what makes America fat. And also your attitude that [X] is responsible instead of ourselves is one of the biggest problems. It is much easier to blame something else than accept responsibility for our actions.

      You could close McDonalds tomorow and do you really think America would miraculously get health? Guess what - America would just start going to Burger King, Chipolte, and KFC more...

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    2. Re:p.s. by mrraven · · Score: 1

      Ronald McDonald was just an example obviously the education campaign has to be about all fatty unhealthy food. The Colonel and the Hamburgler also have the blood of millions on their hands.

      31% of adults seriously overweight is a SERIOUS crisis not to just be be blown off with some quasi Libertarian rhetoric. It is a FAR bigger threat to "national security" than terrorism. If the U.S. were actually invaded, you know by a real enemy with a real army (say China), a nation of fatties would be easy pickings. The founding fathers would be quite appalled I'm certain about how fat, and helpless we have become. And least you think this is just random lefty ramblings I think a real citizens militia similar to what Switzerland now has is part of the solution. What ever happened to rugged individualism which requires people to be gasp in shape?

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
    3. Re:p.s. by mrraven · · Score: 1

      p.s. 31% figure comes from this CBS report:

      http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/06/16/health/m ain623412.shtml

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
    4. Re:p.s. by mrraven · · Score: 1

      p.p.s. We are in the fat decadent stage of empire like Rome under Nero.

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
    5. Re:p.s. by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 1

      Whatever happened to taking personal responsibility for one's own actions?? You can't just blow it off with some quasi-bullshit rhetoric. IT IS NOT THE FAULT OF ANY FAST FOOD RESTAURANTS that Americans are fat. Haven't you heard of the basic pricinple of supply and demand?? If there is a demand for something, then someone will supply it. Cutting of the supplier doesn't work (see prohibition or the "War on Drugs" for proof)- cutting out the demand will.
      And please don't suggest class action lawsuits against all companies you think are "murdering" American citizens. Lawsuits are never the answer - they are playing the ultimate "pass the buck" blame game (and do nothing to stop the problem). As long as you keep trying to blame fast food suppliers as the root of the problem, you are attacking the wrong enemy. You were more on track when you were talking about education and not trying to point fingers. Who cares what trying to assign fault to the problem, let's concentrate on fixing it. If people knew more about nutrition, the McDonalds and Burger Kings will fall to the wayside naturally...

      And China invading the US?? (and because we are fat???) That would shoot them in the foot so bad economically that we wouldn't need to use any military force to beat them. Where do you think 80% of their exports are sold?? (Besides, the Walton family http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walmart would never allow that to happen...) The US and China economies are so dependent on each other's to keep going that neither could realisticlly invade the other. See here http://www.itulip.com/economicMAD.htm for a better explanation of this...

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    6. Re:p.s. by Ash+Vince · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Americans also need to wise up on what their government does with their blessing overseas. Like killing innocent civilians with agent orange (in Vietnam) or bunker busters (in Iraq).

      You (the nation as a whole) elected them, you deserve a measure of responsiblity for their actions, that is what democracy means. And the same applies to me as I am british and my Govt also invaded Iraq. If I or any my friends is killed, while we may not deserve that to happen to us (nobody deserves to die), I can understand what may motivate someone to kill us. Even if the person doing the killing is just as fucked up as Bush senior himself.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    7. Re:p.s. by mrraven · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Interesting that you are so outraged about the idea of the nanny state doing anything about a serious health crisis that has real consequences for 1/3rd of the U.S. population yet you are quite comfortable with the government become a huge authoritarian spying apparatus. How about taking individual responsibility for our own self defense? Hmmmmmm...

      It's OK for the government to abrogate our constitutionally guaranteed civil liberties but not to attempt to educate people about the obesity epidemic that is directly causing the deaths of 1 in 5 Americans that die every year? Is that really the way you want to go?

      Here's the real secret, many that call themselves "conservatives" are right wing authoritarians who actually believe in a strong centralized Federal police state. The founding fathers who were decentralists would be appalled at this type of thinking. Far from being conservative and respectful of tradition you people are in fact radical authoritarians in the same vein as fascists.

      Witnessing the decay of our Democratic Republic in real time is fucking depressing.

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
    8. Re:p.s. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That where the false dichotomy comment comes in, and is on target...

      Don't pretend to know the meaning of phrases you don't understand. It makes you look dumb.

      A false dichotomy is where somebody presents an either/or scenario when in actual fact the options are not mutually exclusive. The false dichotomy that warrax was pointing out was that you don't need to choose between fighting terrorism and fighting heart disease; you can fight both at once.

      He even linked to a definition, and apparently you didn't even bother to read it. How sad. Please educate yourself instead of pretending to know stuff you don't.

    9. Re:p.s. by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 1

      "Interesting that you are so outraged about the idea of the nanny state doing anything about a serious health crisis that has real consequences for 1/3rd of the U.S. population yet you are quite comfortable with the government become a huge authoritarian spying apparatus."

      Those are your words, not mine. I am not "outraged about the idea of the nanny state doing anything about a serious health crisis". I am outraged at the ignoramus attitutde that fast food is the cause of the problem, and the blame lies solely on them.
      Could you care to point out to me where I stated I was "quite comfortable with the government become a huge authoritarian spying apparatus" - because I don't recall ever stating anything even close to that. You are the one using false dichotmies, not me. I have never, ever even come close to implying I am confortable with government powers expanding. So please do us both a favor and stop trying to put wordw in my mouth. To put it simply, one issue has no bearing on the other. Realistically, I could condone or oppose govenment spying (I oppose) and also think that Americans getting fat is the fault of dumb American eating habits, and not fast food restaurants. Fast food is one of the symptoms of the problem, you think it is the root.

      And for the record, I am not - conservative, right wing, liberal, or even libritarian. I sir, am a Libertine.

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    10. Re:p.s. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please only use the word "literally" when you're not speaking out of your ass. If Ronald was there forcing the burgers down their throats with his own hands, I might believe you.

    11. Re:p.s. by mrraven · · Score: 1

      I didn't vote for Bush I voted for Leonard Peltier for prez in 2004. So Bush's marauding is most certainly not my responsibility he's not my president. And neither for that matter was starve a million Iraqis and bomb Serbia Clinton. A pox on both their parties.

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
  95. Re:A message from the right by j.+andrew+rogers · · Score: 1
    and our spending more money on defense than all other countries on the planet

    And spending less as a percentage of GDP than at any time during the previous administration. The US is currently spending half of its 20th century average on defense. Many other countries have let their militaries rot due to Pax Americana and have severely slashed funding -- the US has been cutting expenditure, but everyone else is cutting it faster (except for a few like China). And when you consider how much of the world GDP is the US, it should not be surprising that the historically paltry percentage makes up a big chunk of that. The historical rule of thumb for peacetime military expenditures required to maintain basic security was 5% of GDP. The US currently spends far less than 5% even with the cost of the current misadventures.

    combined and doubled while our education and healthcare go down the toilet

    The US spends a lot more on education (~$600B) than on defense. That it has been getting worse has nothing to do with the amount of money spent on it, which already exceeds most other industrialized countries by about any relative measure. Ironically, the DoD is one of the few organizations in government that actually returns relatively good results for the investment even as it continues to shrink (i.e. the military competently does what it is supposed to do).

  96. Re:Good by Bones3D_mac · · Score: 1

    So basically, you're saying that regardless of whether or not a weapon is concealed, crimes would still be committed anyway

    By that logic, wouldn't it make more sense *not* to conceal a weapon, so you know definitively that at least *some* of the people won't become victims, rather than leaving the situation entirely random?

    --


    8==8 Bones 8==8
  97. Re:For everybody who thinks this guy is paranoid.. by radtea · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Is it a good idea to simply let them have the power to do these things and assume they'll never exercise it?

    No. It is a fundamental law of human behaviour: All power gets used.

    If you grant power to someone that power will eventually be used. History suggests sooner rather than later. Things you'd think would never happen in a million years have a way of being done well ahead of schedule. And any power will be used to the benefit of the people wielding it unless there are obvious negative consequences in doing so. Secret power is absolute power, because it can be used for anything with no consequences to the wielders.

    And for anyone still using the "you have nothing to worry about if you've done nothing wrong" line, I would like to point out that that line requires assuming that the organs of the state Never Make Mistakes. Good luck with that.

    --
    Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
  98. this has been going on a long time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    i worked, as an unclassified consultant, on a program in the early nineties which involved the commerce dept, the fbi, and various dod agencies to mine financial transaction records for all americans. checks, atms, credit cards, everything.

    the data we saw had been anonymized, but they have been building tools to do this forever.

    the excuse of the day was detecting money laundering to catch drug trafficers. its amazing how only the names change.

  99. Media Bias by Brandybuck · · Score: 0, Troll

    Washington Post and New York Times are reporting on a Bush administration initiative that has...

    For those of you still doubting the existance of media bias, compare and contrast the following two snippets. The first is from the story blurb. The second is written with an effort towards political neutrality:

    Washington Post and New York Times are reporting on a Bush administration initiative that has [done a bad thing].

    Washington Post and New York Times are reporting on a Treasury Department initiative that has [done a bad thing].

    See the difference? While both are accurate and truthful, the first is clearly biased. The quote above is from Slashdot, but the original Washington Post makes the same bias.

    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    1. Re:Media Bias by 0star · · Score: 1

      He has an interesting obeservation and he is modded a troll? I wish I ahd my mod points right now.

    2. Re:Media Bias by 0star · · Score: 1

      Yes, I see the mispellings. That's what I get for being ashamed and upset at the quality of debate that is in this thread and posting too fast.

  100. All the banks knew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All the banks knew, SWIFT is a society made from a collection of banks. They all took the view that doing business in the USA over-ruled their duties under banking laws and their duty under US law.

    Now SWIFT is pretending it received a subpoena that it had to comply with, but the revelations coming out show they knew what they were doing wasn't legal - they wanted to pull out of the deal exactly because it wasn't legal.

    1. Re:All the banks knew by kop · · Score: 1


      >All the banks knew, SWIFT is a society made from a collection of banks. They all took the >view that doing business in the USA over-ruled their duties under banking laws and their duty >under US law.

      Yes and the national banks that are there to protect national interests where sleeping, or they were not and warned thier governments who then did nothing to protect us. I think the real story for a European national here is the fact that our governments gave away our privacy.

      Just yelling "f*ck america" is dumb.

  101. Hawala by mip_co · · Score: 1

    I question the value of this fishing expedition. Seems to me that there is higher likelihood of abuse than effective use. I doubt if anyone who genuinely wants to fund one of these groups would use a bank transfer addressed to the group or its members. Especially when Hawala is a more anonymous and effective transfer system. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawala

  102. Do some research before you post by unassimilatible · · Score: 0

    It is well-settled in constitutional law that a warrant is not required to obtain bank records. Your post is completely ignorant to this fact.

    Funny how the anti-Bush left has no problems with my tax dollars being taken away by the government and redistributed. It's just my money's privacy that they care about? So my privacy interest in my finances is more important than my property interest therein? What nonsense.

    And it has been reported that Congress did, in fact, have oversight of this program. AP reports that Congress was briefed. In fact, several members of Congress called newspapers to plead with them not to publish it (do a simple Google news search for crissakes). Seems the members of Congress aren't too quick to stand up and admit to being briefed until they do some polling on it. - Victory is born of 1000 fathers; defeat is but an orphan.

    I seriously think some of you either 1) want to lose this struggle against terror or 2) are incredibly naive about the fact that al Qaeda wants to nuke your asses (all of your asses, even the appeasers, as Canada learned). I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and assume the latter.

    It's hard enough to beat these guys; how sad that we have to fight the left every step of the way.

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:Do some research before you post by Broken+Bottle · · Score: 1

      It is well-settled in constitutional law that a warrant is not required to obtain bank records. Your post is completely ignorant to this fact.

      Someone may wish to inform congress of this fact because several congressmen, including one quoted in the fair and ballanced (tm) Fox News article you link to below. I'd like to see some evidence that my bank records are not subject to the same protections that other evidence collected against me would be. I'm not saying you're not correct but not even Stuart Levy mentions that fact when defending this program. If what you say is true, that would be an easy trump card for them to play in defending this program.

      Funny how the anti-Bush left has no problems with my tax dollars being taken away by the government and redistributed. It's just my money's privacy that they care about? So my privacy interest in my finances is more important than my property interest therein? What nonsense.

      There is not just a conern about "your money's privacy" there is a concern about your and my privacy in total. Levying a tax is not the same as snooping through your financial transactions and it's very prejudicial to suggest otherwise. These two things are apples and oranges.

      And it has been reported that Congress did, in fact, have oversight of this program. AP reports that Congress was briefed. In fact, several members of Congress called newspapers to plead with them not to publish it (do a simple Google news search for crissakes). Seems the members of Congress aren't too quick to stand up and admit to being briefed until they do some polling on it. - Victory is born of 1000 fathers; defeat is but an orphan.

      Yes, I see that congress was informed. In the article you site, it says:
      "He (Snow) said Congress had been briefed on the program."

      Note that it doesn't say what agency of with authority over the White House is checking to see that they're carrying out this program in a manner that is contitutionally compliant because, in this case, briefed means that the White House is telling them what they're doing but no one is able to check their statements against the facts, just like in the domestic wiretapping program. Briefed does not equal oversite. Oversite means that someone in charge is watching and verifying they're doing their jobs properly and honestly.

      Also, I'd like to point out that I did do a Google search on the topic. I was entirely unable to find any statements leading me to believe that any members of congress asked the press not to run the story. I was, however, able to find plenty of ink about how the White House asked them not to run the story. From the very article you pointed us to:

      "Treasury Department officials spent 90 minutes Thursday meeting with the newspaper's reporters, stressing the legality of the program and urging the paper to not publish a story on the program, McManus said in a telephone interview.

      The New York Times and Los Angeles Times quoted their editors as defending their decision to publish the financial data tracking effort despite being asked by the administration to withhold publication."
      http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,200733,00.html

      "But he (John Snow) was unhappy that the program's existence was revealed in news accounts. The Bush administration tried to talk reporters out of running the story."
      http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?story Id=5507145

      Last I cheked, neither Treasury Secretary John Snow nor "Treasury Department officials" were congressmen or agents answering directly to congress.

      I seriously think some of you either 1) want to lose this struggle against terror or 2) are incredibly naive about the fact that al Qaeda wants to nuke your as

  103. suprised by nude-fox · · Score: 1

    is anyone actually suprised by this asshattary anymore ?

  104. More people die... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    every year in car accidents than died in 911. And while it was a great trajedy and attack on US soil, the solution is a free enegy/hydrogen based economy. Not blowing up the midde east.

  105. How will they do it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have the very strong suspicion that we will still have the same president come Jan 21, 2009. The big question is, how will he and his cronies pull it off?

    My bet is that come election day 2008 or sooner, one of our cities will be destroyed and we will be put in a special 'state of emergency' that, will be as permenant as the accompanying suspension of the constitution. The worse part is that there will be a ton of people in total support of this.

    Anyway, any one else have any guess on how the final step from Democratic Republic to Totalitarian State will be accomplished?

  106. German Beer by MrCopilot · · Score: 1
    That's like saying that when the US marched into Germany and liberated the concentration camps, that it was for the German beer.

    Close but no cigar. Try scientists, Rock, Physics, Nucular etc....Bet they did snag a pint or too though.

    --
    OSGGFG - Open Source Gamers Guide to Free Games
  107. My personal reaction by Laser+Lou · · Score: 0

    I'm worried the NYT report on this program will help some members of Al-Qaeda avoid capture. I wish they considered this, but I guess they just don't care.

    --
    No data, no cry
    1. Re:My personal reaction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And Miracle on 34th Street put Santa's capture back by _decades_....

  108. Choice by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Hint Ronald McDonald has killed quite literally thousands as times as many people as Osama Bin Laden,
    chew on that for a while.


    How many people klled in 9/11 knowingly made a choice to enter a tower they knew would collapse that day?

    It seems you confuse free will with murder. How hard it must be for you to cope with reality with that fundamental lack of understanding as a base.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Choice by mrraven · · Score: 1

      No dumbass I chose to worry about things that have a high probability of killing me like heart attacks
      which is 1 in 5 day after day, year after year, as opposed to things that have a low probability of killing me like the one off event 911 that only killed as many people as heart attacks kill every 4 days. I know it's dispointing to you constitution shredder wannabees but some of us are paying attention to what the actual dangers are.

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
  109. In Other News by Unlikely_Hero · · Score: 1

    Government Grows Tired Of Declaring Wars on Nouns, Decides to Try and Declare War On Gerunds

    --
    Happiness does not come from having much, but from being attached to little.
  110. Yes they're both bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes they're both bad, thanks for pointing that out. But we're back to the original point saying we're ruled by bad people.

  111. regularly shifting and changing people... by fantomas · · Score: 1

    hmm, many western countries have power groups that maintain influence over many years too, they don't seem to move that much. Condoleeza Rice (for a high profile exmple) has been advising presidential decisions for 20 years or so, plus a lot of links with the oil industry over that time (damn, they got to love you to name an oil tanker after you, right?). I'd say this equals if not exceeds the duration of power held by leaders in non-western countries. Also "theocratic" would be maybe stretching it but the US for example has seen a strong resurgence in fundamentalist Christian philosophy influencing everything from presidential opinion to education. Not as extreme in some ways as fundamentalist muslim countries but nevertheless influential.

    1. Re:regularly shifting and changing people... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Condoleeza Rice (for a high profile exmple) has been advising presidential decisions for 20 years

      Actually, I'd say you've just made my point for me. If her influence was that substantial, I doubt that her idealogical opponents would have been in the White House for 8 years out of those 20.

      Also "theocratic" would be maybe stretching it but the US for example has seen a strong resurgence in fundamentalist Christian philosophy influencing everything from presidential opinion to education. Not as extreme in some ways as fundamentalist muslim countries but nevertheless influential.

      I agree that "theocratic" is stretching it. Personally I can't stand the fundy-types. But their resurgence is, I think, a lot noisier than substantial. And the pendulum (especially on that fringier side of things, both for the right-wing crazies and the left-wing ones) does swing back and forth, pushing around the more functional moderate middle that actually does things.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  112. Re:For everybody who thinks this guy is paranoid.. by cluckshot · · Score: 1

    This is a very sensible and moderate response. The analogy is nearly perfect.

    --
    Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
  113. Statement on compliance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SWIFT has a history of cooperating in good faith with authorities such as central banks, treasury departments, law enforcement agencies and appropriate international organisations, such as the Financial Action Task Force (FATF*), in their efforts to combat abuse of the financial system for illegal activities.
    http://www.swift.com/index.cfm?item_id=6149

  114. Where's the balance? by 0star · · Score: 1

    If I saw a few more comments like "Yes, this seems to have caught some terrorists that have killed hundred of innocent people but I don't think it is still worth the potential abuse and erosion of civil liberties" it would a sign that people have actually thought about this issue and not just had a reaction because Bush or America did it. (Reference example - the US has used it to capture the mastermind of the 2002 bombing of a Bali nightclub. That bombing killed 202 people, for example - almost all non-Americans). There are terrorists out there that behead innocent women for not wearing a veil, send carbombs into groups of children just to get one American soldier, and hundreds of other evils that need to be defeated. They are trained to take advantage and abuse our laws whenever possible - captured (authentic) training manuals for example say to always claim you are tortured when captured by the "infidels" even if you are not. Is this program worthwhile to defeat them? That is a valid point that should be argued, and reasonable people might come to different conclusions. But not even mentioning what the program is currently used for and ignoring the terrorists methods, that shows me that there are people out there who are not approaching this logically or using reason.

  115. Law Lesson by unassimilatible · · Score: 1
    I don't have time to do all of your research for you, but here's the current law:

    April 21, 1976, the Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the Fifth Circuit in United States v. Miller, holding that the bank depositor had no legitimate expectation of privacy in the contents of checks and deposit slips since the documents were not confidential communications, but rather were negotiable instruments voluntarily conveyed to the bank. Moreover, the Court ruled that the fourth amendment does not prohibit a third party from obtaining information and conveying it to the government.

    Again, it would be nice if not only /. posters would research the relevant law before they accuse the President of trampling civil rights, but it would also be nice if the NY Times, the Post, and all the other liberal MSM's would do some legal research as well.

    Someone may wish to inform congress of this fact because several congressmen, including one quoted in the fair and ballanced (tm) Fox News article you link to below.

    If you are going to be such a smartass that you won't even read a byline, I can't help you. The article was an AP story carried by Fox. AP is of course left-leaning (by American political standards). The reality is that several congressmen who are on their respective intel committees did call the newspapers asking them not to run the story (I actually saw this on a news report). Remember that these congressmen are sworn not to divulge what they have been briefed on, so they can't just come out and confirm the stories!

    There is not just a conern about "your money's privacy" there is a concern about your and my privacy in total. Levying a tax is not the same as snooping through your financial transactions and it's very prejudicial to suggest otherwise. These two things are apples and oranges.

    Again, if you can't see the irony in placing a privacy right (nowhere articulated in the Constitution) above the very property right the privacy concerns (clearly articulated in the Constitution) then I can't help you. That the left distrusts the government completely, except to take away and redistribute my property is another irony that you may fail to grasp.

    And I seriously think that there is a large segment of conservative America that honestly thinks that Bush has to trample our civil rights to defend us. Bush was give temporary emergency powers in the wake of 9/11. They've had FIVE YEARS to put the legal structures in place to carry out these kinds of investigations legally. Hell, there was even a special court setup for this sot of thing PRIOR to 9/11 that rarely ever turned down warrant requests. Why is it that court warrants and REAL congressional oversight were acceptable and effective for every president we've elected prior to this one

    You assume that everyone agrees with you about the "trampling" of our civil rights. What exact program are you referring to that didn't exist in some shape or form prior to 9/11? I think if you look at Echelon (which CBS News and all the MSM have conveniently forgotten about now that Bush is President) you'll see that the government was doing this back when it was Governor Bush. As for the Patriot Act, that merely took existing tools that law enforcement has used for decades and applied it to intelligence.

    As far as warrants go, the Fourth Amendment doesn't say all searchs have to have warrants, just that searches not be unreasonable. I'll bet the framers would be all for intercepting the international calls of enemies of the Republic without warrants (the Clinton adminstration actually did searches without warrants, in the FBI spy case). Perhaps liberals believe that we would need a warrant to listen to a call Adolf Hitler made to agents in America in 1944? This is a war, not a law enforcemn

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:Law Lesson by Broken+Bottle · · Score: 1
      A couple of comments:

      - I don't see how the case you linked to supports your argument. In that case, the government issued a subpeona to a bank to obtain a customer's financial records and the customer attempted to prevent the bank from handing them over by sighting prevous case law. The court ruled against their arguement. Note the presence of a subpeona. This is indicates due process and is exactly what the Bush administration is NOT doing in the case of this financial records database.

      -

      "If you are going to be such a smartass that you won't even read a byline, I can't help you. The article was an AP story carried by Fox. AP is of course left-leaning (by American political standards). The reality is that several congressmen who are on their respective intel committees did call the newspapers asking them not to run the story (I actually saw this on a news report).

      Hey, you sighted the article, not me. I searched for references to congressmen trying to intervene and came up empty. Your version of reality is, as yet, unsubstantiated. Whether or not the AP is left leanng is debatable, but even if they are, that does not make what they've written here automatically false. I sighted seperate 2 examples of Bush agents trying to kill the story, you've sighted exactly none.

      -

      Again, if you can't see the irony in placing a privacy right (nowhere articulated in the Constitution) above the very property right the privacy concerns (clearly articulated in the Constitution) then I can't help you. That the left distrusts the government completely, except to take away and redistribute my property is another irony that you may fail to grasp.

      Again though, whether you like it or not, it's still an apples and oranges scenario. To pass a tax, that tax is at least examined and signed off on by congress and the President before it goes into effect. It's that checks and ballances thing that Bush finds so constraining. Those bank records belong to someone, if the government has good reason to look at them, they need to let someone know. NOT necessarily their owner, but someone with some oversight power (like the FISA court for example) needs to OK it.

      -

      As far as warrants go, the Fourth Amendment doesn't say all searchs have to have warrants, just that searches not be unreasonable. I'll bet the framers would be all for intercepting the international calls of enemies of the Republic without warrants (the Clinton adminstration actually did searches without warrants, in the FBI spy case). Perhaps liberals believe that we would need a warrant to listen to a call Adolf Hitler made to agents in America in 1944? This is a war, not a law enforcemnent investigation people!

      You can "bet" all you like about the framers' intentions and you may even be right. I'll bet that the framers' heads would spin over the idea of electronic banking but it didn't exist at the time so we, or Congress, the Prez, and the Courts are left to determine how the contitution is applied to them but warrants, or at least meeting the criteria of a warrant, are the standard on how evidence is collected in investigation like these. Remember FISA courts have been in place since the late 70's to handle situations like this, only now FISA isn't good enough for Bush and he doesn't care to work with Congress to retool it for our new post 9/11 era.

      BTW, Hitler? come on, you can do better than that. Taking the most extreme example you can think of to support your argument doesn't speak at all to the situation at hand.

      -

      Well, not sure what eveidence you have of this, since every intelligence agency in the world thought Saddam had WMD, and since Saddam himself was doing everything he could to make the world think he had them. When the CIA Director, a Clinton appointee tells the President that WMDs are "a slam dunk," you can't blame Bush for lying. But that's the lefty mantra - don't let th

  116. Re: Wow (from a -1 treshold) by Xiph · · Score: 1

    The amazing thing is that we can't really refute what chuckshot is saying.

    Yes a lot of things point that direction. In fact, the more we find out, the more is found to point to a global & total information awareness scheme.

    What i do find scary is not that it's possible, but that the best argument found against it currently is, They wouldn't do something like that - would they?

    If we want a free world, we need to free it, it is not free untill there are noone who are not free.
    You are not free untill the rest of the world is, either you're opressing, being oppresed, or being ignorant; being ignorant is counterproductive of freedom.
    If you're free you still have responsibility, responsibility limits freedom, but responsibility is preferable to oppression, ignorance will either lead to you or someone else being oppressed.
    Politics are politics, most are just in it for the ride and spin-offs, I greatly suspect many even top leaders to be so, if you don't get rid of those, they'll be spinning off you.
    If you want to make a difference, do something activily about your opinions, if you spend more than half an hour a month on such your political views, you're doing more than most of the other sheep of humanity.
    If you want to make a difference, just keep arguing, the fact that people like jack thompson gets listened to is due to the fact that he does the ground work to get heard.

    If you you publicly speak out your opninons, some people will think you're crazy, but at least you'll be heard. The promise of being heard is what I think pluralistic democracy is truly about.

    --
    Blah blah sig blah blah blah irony blah blah
  117. Wonderful speech, but by TheConfusedOne · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Last time I checked the ol' Constitution, the checks and balances didn't include unelected newspaper reporters deciding what gets classified and what doesn't.

    I'm sooo glad that Mr. Keller feels that he is qualified to sit in judgement and wave the almight "public right to know" just so that they can sell a few more papers on their way to bankruptcy.

    Former official both Democratic and Republican urged them not to publish, but NOOOOO, Mr. Keller apparently knows better.

    Too bad he didn't publish earlier, maybe Hambali would still be free...

    --
    --- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
  118. it is about WHO gets to make the money by wilec · · Score: 1

    I think there were a several reasons that this administration decided a war with Iraq was in their best interest. Historians will deem some of the theory's reasonable and legitimate, others as not supportable by fact. If, that is, historians are allowed to openly and honestly investigate these issues, this may not be a possibility in the future. A lot of past history being taught is inaccurate, incomplete, over simplified or just plainly used as propaganda. Often this is due to information being classified, and the volume of that increasing.

    I believe that the 911 events were used in premeditated manner by the perpetrators to elicit just such a response. It is well know now that Bush had Iraq in his sights before 911. I find it hard to believe that the perpetrators of 911 were not aware of this. A mostly absentee president who was in power via a close election that was beginning to appear stolen. The economy in a steady downward spiral after several years of steady gains by his predecessor of the opposing party. There were many hints of coming legal troubles for the leaders of his own party. The chances of his reelection were not very good.

    This presidents cabinet was and is infested with neo-conservatives and totally in bed with the big energy and construction companies that make trillions from the Middle East oil and natural gas reserves. The spread of the theocratic Islamic states in the area were and still are a huge concern for these global corporate interests. It is unlikely that these states would decide to just sit on these resources, after all that is about all most have going for them. They would however be very likely to demand a much better deal that the totalitarian or monarchy's that exist in most today. I can even see how Bush and company thought they could plant a democratic republic in the Middle East. It is not implausible that such could happen. It is just that like everything else this type attempts they tried to do it on the cheap. End result, as usual penny wise a pound foolish, the cost will be many times what it should have been if the effort is ever successful at all.

    Even the politically unchallenged war in Afghanistan is not all that it seems to be. Afghanistan lies between the Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan and the ports on the Arabian Sea. These relatively undeveloped nations hold huge natural gas reserves that have for some time now been courted or already actively assisted under contract by US energy companies in the development of these reserves and the construction of pipelines.

    The results of 911 were the same as one would get by smacking a hungry dog in the nose with a rib eye steak. Today one of the theocratic Islamist's most formidable opponents in the Middle East has been not only neutered, the half dead carcass serves as a breeding ground for new recruits. Even worse it may very well be democratically elected into a theocratic Islamic state itself in the near future. In the end though I have to say this war is not directly about oil, not in the way many believe. It is about WHO gets to make the money off the oil, natural gas, and all the activities that surround and support the industry.

    BTW this is also what the deal is with coal as well. The technology exists to burn coal cleanly, or to convert it to LPG and thus even plastics efficaciously. The whole oil and natural gas or coal debate is a red herring, it is simply all about WHO gets to make the money in the short term. If you are under thirty you will probably live to see a transition away from oil as the predominate energy source, because it will be exhausted as a source or too expensive to get at. The same people that make trillions off oil now will move to making trillion more off coal and biomass.

    Matthew

  119. Hey at least we can agree on something :) by wilec · · Score: 1

    "The Democrats are more fascist (yes, I know what the word means) and inept than the Republicans will ever be"

    Apparently you don't. It may be somewhat fair to say that the Democrats of today have socialist tendency's but fascist, naw they can't compete with Republicans there. The definition of fascist does however describe todays corporate butt sucking, bible thumping, flag waving, issue baiting, war mongering Republican party very well. And as for "inept", well I will agree that the Democrats seem to be inept at politics lately, or maybe it is just a matter of ethics that keeps them from sinking to the new lows of the Republican party. All in all though it looks to me like the "decider" has provided all the data necessary to complete the definition of inept to perfection. This guy would be a riot to watch if he was not in command of the most powerful nation the world has ever seen. Just think how much better off we would have all been if he would have went into stand up comedy. You know I hear Hitler was a closet artist, actually a pretty good one.

    "I don't want the children to have healthcare if it has to be paid for by non-voluntary contributions out of my wallet. The same goes for old people and drugs, and poor people and food."

    I suspect you would like to get rid of SSI or dump it into a 401k type account as well. I hope for your sake that all our 401k type retirement accounts are safer than I suspect they are. Because one of those "children" may be the one responsible for what to do with your sick "old" "poor" ass someday. Be a shame if you ended up in a bottom of the barrel nursing home, where the people responsible for feeding you, medicating you and wiping you ass had to resort to stealing your food and medication to take care of their own. Be a shame if they left you laying in your urine soaked, feces soiled drawers for hours due to staffing shortages cause by budget cuts.

    "But I suppose I'm just one of those crazy extremists. Ummm... actually, I am."

    Hey at least we can agree on something :)

    Matthew

  120. Re: Wow (from a -1 treshold) by veritee · · Score: 1

    You are so right with the 'scariest part being', "They wouldn't do something like that, would they?? I am constantly amazed at what people 'allow' to happen to their freedoms which are being eroded away minute by minute. And I do speak out...to those whom I 'think' might be able to hear it...you would be surprised at the comments and feedback such as: "Well, I guess they (you know, the omnipotent 'they') know what they are doing." My reply is, yes, they do, too bad the American people as a whole do not know what they (once again, those omnipotent ones) are doing. The only thing I see that's forstalling it a bit are the weather calamities, etc. And even that won't hold them back for long. I called SS a few years ago when my husband died, so that I could clarify certain things...she had my 'whole' life history on that computer in front of her. I must admit, even with my thinking being where it is, I was a bit stunned by that. At any rate, I find this 'banking overview' that they are doing now just one more feather in their cap. It's not about voting as much as just plain speaking out collectively - although I do not foresee that occurring...so I'll just plant and grow my flowers and carry on, business as usual.

  121. Pieces to a puzzle by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    This is only one piece in a larger puzzle of the government taking away our privacy rights. ( among others )

    If you are correct in that only large transactions are tracked, then it doesnt direcly effect the average joe, but it still does not change the overall 'movement', and its still wrong to do. ( unless you are under direct investigation and its been blessed by the court )

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  122. Secretly, you say? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nothing to see here Slashdot community.

  123. Expectations of privacy by TheConfusedOne · · Score: 1

    It is reasonable to expect that the contents of your mail are private. It is unreasonable to expect that the address that the letter is sent to is private. This goes directly towards pen register information from the phone company. The number of who called and what number they called is not protected while the actual conversation is.

    --
    --- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
  124. Mod parent Way Up by Memnos · · Score: 1

    At the risk of being a kiss-ass, kudos to you for your concise expression of what so many do not understand. It's not the great guy you give power to that you need worry over -- it's the ones who follow after, or even the not-so-great guy he will become. More people should read a bit of history. This should be f'ing obvious.

    --
    I don't trust atoms -- they make up stuff.
  125. Re:4 points, still 4 errors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. If you don't have the power to monitor domestic transactions then FULL congress needs to be informed and grant you the power.

    2. You said
    "Second, the public has been told long loud and clear that the government is watching financial transactions"
    Cheney said NYTimes disclosed a secret program, which is it, secret or public?

    3. SWIFT is personal, down to account name, amount, and transfer reason. It would be useless if it was only institution data.

    4. It is illegal to spy on US citizens without a warrant from FISA and then it is illegal to go fishing.

  126. If this happened... by Krojack · · Score: 1

    back in the 40's douring WW2 then the Times and other media would be held for treasing or whatnot for making such reports.

    80% of the American media (mainly those on the east and west coast) doesn't give a rats ass about keeping smething a secret douring these times. They hide behind freedom of the press and report anything and everythign that will damage America and make it look bad. Liberalism is a mental disorder! =)

    The hippies from the 70's are heading up the media now days and using it to brain wash people.

  127. quick SWIFT facts + context by DonChron · · Score: 1

    I do some work in financial services, including working with SWIFT.

    SWIFT is a network, not a database. It can store and forward data, but only for short periods of time.

    SWIFT transactions can be done directly between organizations over the network, without stopping at SWIFT systems, making them slightly harder to track.

    SWIFT is run by its 7,000+ member organizations, from all over the world. Most SWIFT members are banks, and the largest banks have the most influence among the members. So it's not US-based, but it's well stocked by US banks and corporations. It's not like the United Nations - the biggest players run the operation.

    Since SWIFT is not a database, and not all transactions land on SWIFT computers, you can't really "query SWIFT" about financial data. You can only "query SWIFT" about the status of a message from party A or to party B. So to do data mining on SWIFT data, you would need to build your own SWIFT data warehouse and your own (massive) matrix of data relationships.

    SWIFT is a network, like the Internet, but entirely private. The problem of gathering data from SWIFT communications is similar to the challenge in gathering data from AT&T's Internet backbone routers. But filtering the Internet data is easier - you can probably drop bit-torrent traffic, ISO's, binary software packages, iTunes media, etc. That's a lot of packets to ignore. If you're building a comprehensive financial database from uncorrelated data, in a multitude of formats and languages, you have to start by recording everything just to make some sense of the data.

    Also, why would terrorist groups use banks? For the convenience? Certainly, wire transfers and ATM's are the *easiest* way to move money around the world. But if you were trying not to leave tracks, you probably would avoid banks or use one-time-use bank accounts for individual money transfers. People have been solving this problem in organized crime for decades, why wouldn't the same methods be available to Bin Laden or anyone else?

  128. Can you imagine... by cr0sh · · Score: 1
    If instead of the 100 billion+ dollars that has been spent on this "war on terror", if instead the money had been used to do something completely different, namely getting our country (and later, the world) off of dependence on oil from the Middle East, and ultimately, OPEC?

    What would such a plan look like? Could it be done? Could it have been done (at least for the United States) for the amount of money already spent?

    What if, after learning the pricetag for such a "war on terror" was going to be 100 billion+ dollars, the President had instead stated that instead of using the money in wasteful "blow up the desert" spending in the Middle East, we instead had a 10 year program (10 billion per year):

    • Dedicated 10 billion (1 billion per program year) for taxable deductions for citizens, to those who could prove they were saving energy in some manner
    • Dedicated another 10 billion (2 billion per program year) for a nationwide contest to any individual or company who could create a revolutionary alternative energy technology over the first 5 years of the program
    • Dedicated another 10 billion (2 billion per program year) for a subsidy program to help citizens of America switch to more fuel efficient vehicles (hybrids, electrics, biofuel, conversions, etc) over the first 5 years of the program
    • Dedicated another 10 billion (1 billion per program year) for a subsidy program for homeowners making their homes more energy efficient
    • Dedicated the remaining 60 billion (6 billion per program year) on a "Manhattan" style program to create and implement a sustainable alternative energy program for nationwide use

    Ultimately, the goal would have been to educate America on being energy efficient and conserving energy, while at the same time providing for ways and incentives for the country to move in that direction. This would have to have included all manner of alternative energy - wind, solar, hydrogen, biofuels - and standard fossil fuels. Both in production and usage, as well as saving energy by being more efficient with processes and eliminating waste/errors in production and use (perhaps nationwide application of 6s methodologies). No one alternative energy system would work - but all of them together could possibly take a big chunk out the issue. We would have to have been smart (ie, quit subsidizing corn producers for ethanol production and use something better for it - like hemp or switchgrass or something - also, quit putting a tariff on sugar, etc).

    In 10 years (5 of which have now passed), we should have been able to eliminate - if we worked hard at it, and had the 100 billion+ dollars that we have already wasted - the 20 percent or so dependence we have on Middle East oil. Ultimately, in the end, we would simply "pull out" once and for all - COMPLETELY - from the Middle East. Let them (all of them, including Israel) duke it out in whatever way they want. Yes, we would still be sending money to them via OPEC at first - but I bet we could whittle the amount we would need to send to OPEC for oil (because we would always need it, if only for chemical/plastics) to a small amount compared to today.

    I know my ideas above are very simplistic, and leave out many things (like getting the big 3 to build energy efficient vehicles, among other things). I also don't think that (at least in the short term) such a plan could make our country completely energy independent (as I said before, we will always need oil in some part) - but I honestly think that if we had wanted to, we could have been five years into such a plan already, instead of having spent five years (and way more than 100 billion+ dollars) on a war that doesn't seem to have an end yet. Maybe such a plan could even had made us a manufacturing power again (of "green" industrial solutions, "green" energy systems, biofuels, etc).

    I think about this - it saddens me that our "leaders" have chosen to ignore one of the biggest issues facing us today, and their war is doing nothing (it seems) to al

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  129. You need to read bro by unassimilatible · · Score: 1

    RE-READ THE CASE. The court ruled in Miller (overturning the circuit court): Since we find that respondent had no protectable Fourth Amendment interest in the subpoenaed documents, we reverse the decision below . Can't make it any clearer than that; there is no Fourth Amendment protection for bank records.

    Note the presence of a subpeona. This is indicates due process and is exactly what the Bush administration is NOT doing in the case of this financial records database.

    I think you need to go look up the word "subpoena." Any lawyer can send a subpoena, including me, including an US Attorney working for President Bush's Justice Department, and it does not require any judicial approval. There is no due process in a subpoena, unless it is challenged in court (which is what happened in Miller, and Miller - the depositor - lost).

    Remember FISA courts have been in place since the late 70's to handle situations like this, only now FISA isn't good enough for Bush and he doesn't care to work with Congress to retool it for our new post 9/11 era.

    Assuming for sake of argument that FISA is even constitutional, no court needs to look into a program not involving any expectation of privacy, which financial transcations do not, per Miller. I think there is a strong argument to be made that FISA intrudes into the President's constitutional powers as Commander in Chief, and that FISA would be found unconstitutional, at least in part, by the Supreme Court. The Court might hold that enacting such a court would require a constitutional amendment. Congress just can't pass laws changing the executive branch's powers.

    Wow, so the 4th amendment isn't strong enough to stand on it's own for you? The details of the case you sighted above make it appear that it wouldn't apply to the situation we're discussing.

    Go back and read the case. The Fourth Amendment does not apply to situations wherein there is no reasonable expectation of privacy. For 30 years the law has been well-settled that there is no privacy interest in financial transcations. This is why people get Swiss bank accounts.

    Enough free legal analysis for you. I must go to work!

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:You need to read bro by Broken+Bottle · · Score: 1
      Enough free legal analysis for you. I must go to work!


      As a Fox News fact checker?
  130. Nothing Illegal by oldCoder · · Score: 1
    It is interesting that the program is legal and the NYT story goes to great lengths to emphasize this. And also emphasizes that the program has already helped find some terrorists. The NYT also emphasized that both Democrats and Republicans have lobbied the newspaper intensively arguing that revealing the system will help terrorism and quite possibly result in additional deaths due to terrorism.

    Yet the NYT insisted on publishing anyway. Since the story is no real scandal; Why?

    --

    I18N == Intergalacticization
    1. Re:Nothing Illegal by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Just ebcause it's legal, doesn't mean it's not a scandal.
      It is also scandlis that they tried to stop NYT from publishing.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Nothing Illegal by oldCoder · · Score: 1

      It isn't a scandal for the government to try to use logic and persuasion to stop the NYT from publishing secrets. These are, in effect, military secrets in time of war.

      The NYT article itself says that the program was not being abused and that safeguards were in place. It's the US governments job to go after al-Queda and others making war against the US. Publishing the article made al-Queda safer but did not safeguard the rights of the citizens of the US or anywhere else.

      The individuals in government who leaked the information to the NYT have violated US law. This is a bigger scandal.

      --

      I18N == Intergalacticization
  131. Re:4 points, still 4 errors by praksys · · Score: 1

    1. The NYT and WP articles themselves make it clear that this program is legal, and that congress was informed.

    2. The government said publicly that they were monitoring financial transactions (monintoring financial transations - not secret). The NYT informed terrorist organisations about exactly which financial transations the government is monitoring and how (ways and means - secret). Just like I said in my first post.

    3. Except that this program excludes personal data, unless the name or other identifying information are already know from other intelligence sources.

    4. There are dozens of ways for the government to legally spy on its own citizens without going anywhere near FISA. The constitutional requirement is that it has to be "reasonable" which in some cases means that they don't need to fill out any paper-work at all.

  132. No, Levey *claims* its legal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The NYT and WP articles themselves make it clear that this program is legal,"

    1. No, Levey only claims its legal, there is no such thing as a blanket warrant. Such a thing is called 'fishing' and it is not legal. WP points out the shaky claim they have:
    "the surveillance program has used a broad new interpretation of the Treasury Department's administrative powers to bypass traditional banking privacy protections."

    2. "The NYT informed terrorist organisations about exactly which financial transations the government is monitoring and how"
    There is only 1 interbank international transfer system.

    3. "Except that this program excludes personal data",
    it includes ALL the information I listed including the account name of the sender, receiver, reason, amount, category and more.

    4. It's called fishing, and it can't be done without a change of the law.