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Senate Committee Votes to Authorize Warrentless Wiretapping

LividBlivet writes, "The Senate Judiciary Committee approved a bill that not only authorizes, but extends, US warrentless wiretapping. No accountability. No oversight. No definition of 'terrorist.' No record of who voted for what. Great way to devolve a democratic republic into a fascist theocracy. Me worried? Yea." Here is the text of SB2453, the National Security Surveillance Act (PDF). Confusingly, the committee also voted out two other bills, one of which "all but declares the warrantless wiretapping illegal," according to Wired.

47 of 927 comments (clear)

  1. Vote! by BWJones · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't know who is more dangerous, the "Islamofascists" who are behind terrorism or the Neocons who are willing and able to give away all of our Constitutional rights and freedoms. The thing that gets me is that I cannot see an endgame to the Neocon strategy as it is based on a continued fear and principals of isolationism. What are they getting out of the deal by giving away our rights?

    Your first chance, should you disagree with these strategies (rights erosion, elimination of civil liberties, etc...etc...etc...) is to exercise your Constitutionally given rights (for now) and vote this November for a change. Elect those individuals that will best represent the people, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights at home and abroad. Make these people responsible for what they say and do by linking their jobs to their implemented law and take back your country.

    --
    Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
    1. Re:Vote! by Franio · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And what do we do when "individuals that will best represent the people, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights at home and abroad" are not on the ballot?

    2. Re:Vote! by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or, what do we do when they are on the ballot, and the people vote for them, but the official election results once again differ wildly from exit poll results, as they hve in every election since 2000?

      Exit polls were the gold standard of election forcasting...until 2000. Funny...that's when all the trouble started, isn't it?

      --
      ____

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

    3. Re:Vote! by HiroProtagonist · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Run for office.

      --
      --Remove chicken to e-mail
    4. Re:Vote! by tgd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't know who is more dangerous

      When is the last time you were directly threatened by a "islamofacist"?

      Yup, me neither.

      Gues we know the answer to that question, then.

    5. Re:Vote! by daigu · · Score: 5, Insightful
      What are they getting out of the deal by giving away our rights?

      Easy question to answer. More money and more power.

      Make these people responsible for what they say and do...

      The problem with American-style "democracy" is that it is all too easy to control the tyranny of the majority. It is easy to move from tyranny of the majority to simply tyranny. The major problem is not the people in power - they simply exploited the flaws in the system to their advantage. The major problem is that the system can be gamed by profiling voters, media control (did you see that extended ad by the president that he did from the Oval Office a few days ago?) and so forth.

      The sad fact is that despite this administration's incompetence on everything from Iraq to Katrina, it is still going to be a tight race. If the Democrats happen to take back a piece of Congress, they might become a minor thorn - but these guys will never see the jail terms they so richly deserve. Further, they have set the precedent where this will happen again a few presidents from now - and it will likely be even worse.

      So, let's not pretend that voting this November is anything major shall we? Yes, people should vote and we should do what we can to deal with the immediate problem - but it does not solve the bigger issue.

    6. Re:Vote! by jtharpla · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, technically we're not at war. The President publicly declared the end of the war in Iraq like 3 years ago. And Congress never voted him new authority to be at war. So while there's cleary still conflict, the President does not have the authority, as his war powers ended 100 days after he declared an end to hostilities. The fact that this sticky point has been missed by most people shows that we have already come to accept the rewiting of the past to fit the present, just as Orwell feared. Yes, this truly is the Long War--the end of which will always be conviently adjusted to fit those in power.

    7. Re:Vote! by Cheeze · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Can we declare war against an intangible target?

      War on Terror is hardly a war in the definition of the word. War on Drugs is the same way.

      Who and what are we at war with right now?

      Afghanistan? Didn't we win and pull most of our troops to Iraq?
      Iraq? I thought Bush declared "Mission Accomplished"
      Terror? Terror comes in all forms, including saying things like "if we pull out of Iraq, we will be attacked again."

      --
      Why read the article when I can just make up a snap judgement?
    8. Re:Vote! by gr8_phk · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The President is tasked in a time of war to protect the country as he/she sees fit, and guess what we are at war. Our enemy has said that they are at war with us.
      There are a couple problems with that. 1) Only congress can declare war - and hence enable the wartime powers of the president (see that constitution thing). Foreign governments (or anyone else) can not invoke an escalation of the presidents power - duh. 2) Even if I concede that we are at war, who is the enemy? How do we decide when it's over? A war on "terrorism" is not well defined - you can always say there may be someone plotting something that falls under that term. We have not had a "terrorist" atrack on the US in 5 years. Where is this war you speak of? Iraq? That's "peace keeping", not war any more.

      Yes, the modern world has problems that were not anticipated when the constitution was written. However, the behavior of the current administration IS the type of thing the constitution was designed to protect us from, and those protections are getting thrown out. OK, as far as I know, bush is not an evil dictator and probably has good intentions. But how do we know the next guy won't be? Or the one after that? What about behind the scenes abuse of a system challenged only in "secret" courts? WTF? New laws enacted without record of who voted for them? WTF? Now that I think of it, your post must just be an attempt to stir the pot. I guess that makes me a sucker for responding.

    9. Re:Vote! by The+AtomicPunk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I wasn't aware exit polls showed Libertarians winning ...

      Surely you aren't so blind as to think this is a republicrat vs. demopublican issue. They both approved the war, they both approved the patriot act. There's no real dissent, except for a handful of folks -- like Ron Paul (Libertarian in Republican clothing)

      As long as YOU keep voting for either one of the two halves of the dominant party, we're all screwed.

      The "football team" voters that root for "their" team regardless of what they stand for, and rationalize everything their team does, are the real cause of all our problems.

    10. Re:Vote! by BWJones · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I plan to vote this November.

      Thank you. It is your right.

      ...because I'm convinced that the "good guys" (and we ARE them, by & large) cannot win against an insidious, merciless, and determined enemy by being Dudley Do-Right and playing with one hand tied behind their back.

      If you are not willing to do what is *right*, then you have already lost any moral high ground. There are times that one needs to stand up for what is good and reject efforts to take from others what we have written into our governing documents. Conflicts can be resolved and yes, sometimes fought much more effectively with creativity, thought and carefully planned action. However, with a culture of doing what we are told and not questioning or thinking, we appear to be willing to cede power to those who appease us with thoughts of fear and shiny things.

      I couldn't care LESS if the government is reading my emails, listening to my telephone calls, or keeping me under direct surveillance, aside from being annoyed that they're wasting their time. Yawn.

      This is a fundamental problem. What happens when you get caught up in this because one of your co-workers does something unacceptable to whomever might be in power. The thing to realize is that this government as it currently stands, may represent you and your beliefs, but individuals change and governments slowly morph and the constituency changes (and the US is changing). So, if you are willing to give your government so much power, what happens in 50 years when they do not represent you or your beliefs? Think down the road just a little more...

      No, I don't believe the sky is falling, EITHER.

      While the sky is not falling, the US is only a couple hundred years old. There have been stable governments in history that have persisted for much longer than we have been around because of principals of government. When their principals changed or altered beyond a critical tipping point, those governments failed.

      --
      Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
    11. Re:Vote! by Eccles · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Do you like the ~$1250 we've paid so far per-person for the war in Iraq? As a part of a family of four, I know I'd like my five grand back.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    12. Re:Vote! by smilindog2000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      We exported freedom during Bush Seniors term, and continued it through Clinton's term. The Berlin Wall fell during Bush Senior, and we ended the Cold War. Bloodless revolutions for freedom and democracy happened throughout the world.

      This happened not because we rattled our sabers and conquered the oppressors. It happened because we made a shining example of what democracy can be, and because we convinced the world of our sincerity for a united world in peace. We earned the world's respect, and that made all the difference.

      Bush Junior has destroyed all that. Now the world arms itself to defend against us. We are no longer trusted. We no longer exemplify freedom, democracy, and human rights. Hopefully the EU can continue the cause while we figure out how to fix our broken democracy.

      There is exactly one person in Washington who represents your district in the House of Representatives. If he's a Democrat, his vote does not count. If he's a Republican, his vote will be whatever Bush wants, so again, his vote does not count. Is this a working democracy?

      --
      Beer is proof that God loves us, and wants us to be happy.
    13. Re:Vote! by Tim+C · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But yeah, al-q is real, and so were the London, India, USS Cole (sp?), etc. bombings - so not taking threats seriously - and personally - is pretty damned stupid.

      I've lived, studied and worked in London for 13 years now. I was on my way in to work when the bombs went off last year; I walked past police officers leading some rather shocked looking people away from (I assume) a bus. I was here when the IRA were still actively targetting the main land, I was here when some nutter was detonating nail bombs (one in a pub just round the corner from where I worked), I was here when a bus blew up outside the BBC building, etc.

      I guess I must be stupid though, as I certainly don't take the threat personally. Nor do I support some of the more egregious measures that are being taken in the name of the so-called war on terror. I refuse to allow myself to be cowed by the vague threat of being involved in an attack. I have far, far more chance of being killed crossing the road than I do of being blown up.

      Sure, the threat is real, and should be taken seriously. However, it seems to me that a lot of the things that are being done are knee-jerk overreactions that we'll be lucky not to regret in the future. I worry about the sort of world my daughter is going to end up living in, as much for the direction my country seems to be heading in as for the threat of terrorism.

    14. Re:Vote! by fotbr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Can't speak for anyone else, but I refuse to talk to exit poll people. My vote is my own damned business. And I've seen many, many people tell the exit pollers to go jump off a cliff (or other not-so-polite words to that effect).

      Maybe I just never understood why, when the exit polls said one thing, and the actual counted results show something else, it MUST be the counted results that were wrong, and not the exit polls that had incomplete data in the first place.

      That said, I'm convinced there were shennanigans from both sides in 2000 and 2004 -- but taking exit polls as fact is fundamentally flawed.

    15. Re:Vote! by Gulthek · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Mathematically infeasible. Socially infeasible. Logically tenuous.

      Your position seems based on ideals rather than rationality.

      The "football team" voters that root for "their" team regardless of what they stand for, and rationalize everything their team does, are the real cause of all our problems.


      Retort: the idealistic voters who ignore the fact that we have a two party political system and, instead of choosing the better of the two candidates available, choose to throw their votes away and allow the conservative side to gain a numeric advantage are the real cause of all our (political) problems.

      Note: Neo-Con takeover of the republican party. Salient point: existing parties can be almost completely reformed to new goals and ideals. Conclusion: possible to work within the system to achieve a goal.
    16. Re:Vote! by EllisDees · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The only way to keep the government from becoming a police state is to never give it the power to do so in the first place. You have to be insane to give this much authority over your life to the government. Will you trust it so much when Hillary is in control?

      You are a coward. You can't deal with the fact that freedom means that danger is sometimes unavoidable.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    17. Re:Vote! by demigod · · Score: 3, Insightful
      ...so not taking threats seriously - and personally - is pretty damned stupid.


      Take the threat seriously by all means, but keep it in proportion. I heard the other day that you are more likely to kill yourself than be killed by a terrorist.

      Let's not forget other things more dangerous than terrorism, I'll just list a few.

      • Heart disease
      • Cancer
      • Drunk drivers
      • Not drunk drivers
      • homicide
      • AIDs
      • Firearms
      • ladders
      • Drowning
      • ...
      Fear can lead to the destruction our country. Something terrorist could never accomplish.

      --
      "The last thing I want to do is deal with a bunch of people who want something."
      Major Major
    18. Re:Vote! by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Unless I'm reading it wrong, the parent poster's point is that until 2000, exit polling did jive with the actual result of the election. After 2000, it did not. Regardless of how flawed exit polls are, the dichotomy indicates a problem unless public behavior radically changed (and I don't think it has).

      --

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

    19. Re:Vote! by Faylone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Excuse me while I climb up off the floor from laughing. "when the war is over"? Your thinking is great, as long as you assume the 'war' will end, and that they'd be willing to give up power if it did.

    20. Re:Vote! by .killedkenny · · Score: 3, Insightful

      One problem with that. Any Dems or Reps listed on the ballot have already sold their souls.

      Don't give me any malarky about voting for the "lesser of two evils". If you do that, you are VOTING FOR EVIL, and you deserve this broken government.

    21. Re:Vote! by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While I agree with your point about wasted votes,

      Both bloody parties are OWNED by the powers that be now.

      It doesn't matter which side you vote for except on trivial side issues (like abortion).

      For everything that matters, we have one party, owned by big business and the wealthy.

      The republicans choose from 5 to 7 candidates *chosen* for them.
      The democrats choose from 5 to 7 candidates *chosen* for them.
      Then we all get to vote between the two "candidates" to pick a "winner".

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    22. Re:Vote! by demigod · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I will be voting FOR the people that are writing/passing this legislation, because I'm convinced that the "good guys" (and we ARE them, by & large) cannot win against an insidious, merciless, and determined enemy by being Dudley Do-Right and playing with one hand tied behind their back.

      Please tell me how these US actions make them the "good guys"?

      • In November 2004, U.S. occupation forces launched their second major attack on the city of Falluja. The press reported major war crimes instantly, with approval. The attack began with a bombing campaign intended to drive out all but the adult male population; men ages fifteen to forty-five who attempted to flee Falluja were turned back. The plans resembled the preliminary stage of the Srebrenica massacre, though the Serb attackers trucked women and children out of the city instead of bombing them out.
      • After several weeks of bombing, the United States began its ground attack in Falluja. It opened with the conquest of the Falluja General Hospital. The front-page story in the New York Times reported that "patients and hospital employees were rushed out of rooms by armed soldiers and ordered to sit or lie on the floor while troops tied their hands behind their backs. Note:The Geneva Conventions states "fixed establishments and mobile medical units of the Medical Service may in no circumstances be attacked, but shall at all times be respected and protected by the Parties to the conflict."
      • "Dr. Sami al-Jumaili described how U.S. warplanes bombed the Central Health Centre in which he was working," killing thirty-five patients and twenty-four staff. His report was confirmed by an Iraqi reporter for Reuters and the BBC, and by Dr. Eiman al-Ani of Falluja General Hospital, who said that the entire health center, which he reached shortly after the attack, had collapsed on the patients.
      • In another gross violation of international humanitarian law, even minimal decency, the U.S. military denied the Iraqi Red Crescent access to Falluja. Sir Nigel Young, the chief executive of the British Red Cross, condemned the action as "hugely significant." It sets "a dangerous precedent," he said: "The Red Crescent had a mandate to meet the needs of the local population facing a huge crisis." Perhaps this additional crime was a reaction to a very unusual public statement by the International Committee of the Red Cross, condemning all sides in the war in Iraq for their "utter contempt for humanity."
      • The UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, Jean Ziegler, accused US and British troops in Iraq of "breaching international law by depriving civilians of food and water in besieged cities as they try to flush out militants" in Falluja and other cities attacked in subsequent months. US-led forces "cut off or restricted food and water to encourage residents to flee before assaults," he informed the international press, "using hunger and deprivation of water as a weapon of war against the civilian population, [in] flagrant violation" of the Geneva Conventions.
      • In an investigation in which Marines were ordered by a superior officer to strip detainees and take their money, an investigator stated that, "the alleged conduct is a pattern of abuse of detainees in direct contravention to the Marine policy of 'No Better Friend, no worse enemy,' as well as the law of war. A Senior Naval Officer's conduct of publicly humiliating these Iraqis clearly jeopardized the Battalion's mission and the Battalion's standing with the public....these acts could have been a "tipping point" resulting in hostility against coalition forces."
      • A detainee named Awayed Wanas Jabar died in U.S. custody in Iraq after having his legs tied to the bars of a window and a strap of engineer tape tied tightly around his midsection. A preliminary inquiry stated that, "His position resembled that of a person who had been crucified." According to one Marine, the detainee seemed "exhausted, with his entire bodyweight appearing to be supported by t
      --
      "The last thing I want to do is deal with a bunch of people who want something."
      Major Major
    23. Re:Vote! by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually I will blame you. If you didn't vote for Kerry, you basically elected Bush.

      Libertarian or any other 3rd party is a complete WASTE in a presidential election. I generally favor the ideas of non Dem/GOP candidates as they are more realistic. However, the 3rd party groups need to win some local elections before they can lay any claim to being a superior choice.

      Lets talk when there are more than 30 Libertarians in the House....show the country you actually have convinced some people to vote for you and they will listen. Until then deal with the choices you have, not defacto electing the worse of the evils by claiming to vote 'better'.


      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    24. Re:Vote! by legoburner · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Douglas Adams rest in peace.

                "No," said Ford, who by this time was a little more rational and coherent than he had been, having finally had the coffee forced down him, "nothing so simple. Nothing anything like so straightforward. 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 though 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. Got any gin?"

                "What?"

                "I said," said Ford, with an increasing air of urgency creeping into his voice, "have you got any gin?"

                "I'll look. Tell me about the lizards."

                Ford shrugged again.

                "Some people say that the lizards are the best thing that ever happened to them," he said. "They're completely wrong of course, completely and utterly wrong, but someone's got to say it."

    25. Re:Vote! by skadus · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Actually I will blame you. If you didn't vote for Kerry, you basically elected Bush.

      I have a friend that says the same thing to me all the time. Like I'm somehow the reason Kerry didn't win. Funny, at the time of the election my parents told me the same thing, only with the names reversed.

      I didn't like either of them. That's why I voted third-party. Otherwise, I wouldn't have voted at all.

      Between a Fascist and a Communist I picked neither, and apparently that makes me the bad guy? I may never get my ideal candidate into office, but at least I voted my conscience. Maybe if other people did the same thing there'd be some change in the government.

    26. Re:Vote! by moeinvt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Actually I will blame you. If you didn't vote for Kerry, you basically elected Bush."

      Wrong!

      "Libertarian or any other 3rd party is a complete WASTE in a presidential election."

      Wrong again!

      The Republicans and Democrats have owned the House, Senate and White House for decades. Each party has also had the opportunity to control all 3 simultaneously. What have they brought us?

      Vietnam War
      $8 Trillion national debt
      2 Iraq wars
      GATT
      NAFTA
      The War on Drugs
      20M illegal immigrants
      The Patriot Act

      ALL with strong bi-partisan support, active or passive.

      The only wasted vote is one that is cast for Republicans or Democrats! They create the illusion of choice by squabbling over nonsense issues, but work together to screw us over on the real ones. Once you realize that they are just one big party pursuing a legislative agenda that is detrimental to the vast majority of U.S. citizens the only logical thing to do is vote for an alternative.

  2. Please define "no oversight" by Kainaw · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Going to Thomas - where the REAL text of the bill is located - it clearly requires FISC and Congressional oversight. It does allow for emergency authorization of a wiretap, but not without later Congressional oversight. So, without meeting the narrow definition of an "emergency", these wiretaps have to be authorized by FISC and then go to Congressional oversight. How is that considered "no oversight"?

    --
    The previous comment is purposely vague and generalized, but all of the facts are completely true.
    1. Re:Please define "no oversight" by protohiro1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Narrow definition? I have read this bill, and it requires the most minimal oversight I could imagine. The president and attorney general can do WHATEVER they want as long as they sign an avidavit that says that it was important and then inform the congress about it after the fact. There is no teeth to the requirements and nowhere does it say when, if ever, the courts or congress could stop this activity. Ok Shaun, think about this for a minute. Do you really want to give the president and future, possibly democratic, presidents this power? How would you feel about Bill Clinton being able to tap your phone without warrent or court order merely by asserting (not proving or demonstrating) that you were talking to a terrorist?

      --
      Sig removed because it was obnoxious
  3. No worries here. by boyfaceddog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is just political tactics. These loosers will tack this brick onto some Democratic feel-good bill, like free Housing for All, or National Health Care, or Puppies are Good.. Then the Dems will be forced to kill their own bill and the GOP will tell the world how the Evil Democratic Party (tm) doesn't like National Health Care or poor people or puppies.

    --
    Here will be an old abusing of God's patience and the king's English.
    1. Re:No worries here. by QCompson · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is just political tactics.

      No special tactics are required here. By and large, this isn't framed as an issue of civil liberties, this is framed as an issue of national security. The majority of democrats in the House and Senate are too frightened to be called "weak on national security" to come close to opposing this. The republicans have been extremely successful in narrowing election topics to exactly what they want. The only issue that matters in November? War on terror and national security. Other important issues such as health care, the deficit, education, etc. are barely mentioned if mentioned at all. Iraq is often discussed, but the republicans have been very adept at morphing the war in Iraq into some sort of larger world war against terrorism (and thus any criticism of the war in Iraq is a tacit support for terrorism).

      The democrats will lose once again in November, because they never learn their lesson. Instead of choosing their own political battles, they willingly march right into the trap set up by the republicans. The campaign slogan of, "Look at me! I'm just as tough as that guy when it comes to terrorism! I'm just like him but I have a "D" next to my name!" isn't going to work.

  4. A little bit OT, but by knightmad · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From where did this "Islamofascist" expression came? I'm not a native english speaker, and this expression makes absolute no sense, except if I'm missing some context-dependent information that is out there. Islamic theocracy (that is, according to the most distorted views on both sides, the ultimate goal of the islamic terrorism) and fascism are so different concepts that "islamofascism" sounds like an oxymoron.

    I don't know, I'm guessing here, but it sounds like an attempt to label the "other side" fascist, in order to evoke towards them the anti-fascist feelings that survived after the WWII, and also to avoid to be labeled themselves as fascists.

    Anyway, it is a lame expression (meme) and I doubt there is an equivalent for it currently in use in any other country/language.

    1. Re:A little bit OT, but by CaymanIslandCarpedie · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Just because I was curious about a more exact meaning of "fascit" (wasn't really sure the exact meaning through out time) I ran to wikipedia for a quick read and found this among the descriptions about fascits.

      This meant embracing nationalism and mysticism, and advancing ideals of strength and power as means of legitimacy, glorifying war as an end in itself and victory as the determinant of truth and worthiness. An affinity to these ideas can be found in Social Darwinism. These ideas are in direct opposition to the ideals of humanism and rationalism characteristic of the Age of Enlightenment, from which liberalism and, later, Marxism would emerge.

      and I'm left thinking..... which side of this "war on terror" does this sound like?

      --
      "reality has a well-known liberal bias" - Steven Colbert
    2. Re:A little bit OT, but by knightmad · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You know what is sad? Being a Brazilian (and consequently a South American), I've studied (and saw the demise of) the exactly same thing that is happenning now on the U.S.: a mix of fascist and populist government, conducted mostly by the militar and industrial elite. It's all the seventies again, but this time, on North America instead of down South, and without the clear military coup. It is a proven working tactic: unite the people against a common enemy (like Argentina against England over Falklands/Maldivas island) so there is a "us vs. them" feeling, leaving no room to internal dissent, stir passionated nationalism (like Brasil with the Football world cups), use the internal GDP growth as a way to create an illusion of prosperity while, in the reality, the only thing that is growing is a concentration of the wealth (on of the Brasilian military slogans was something like "let's first make the cake grow and later, to share it", what, of course, never happen), institucionalize mistreatment of prisoners (you think CIA is not torturing, well, they taught Latin America dictators the joys of the interrogation tactics in the Escuela de las americas, and they used it gladly against the average joe when they got ride of all dissidents), etc.

      The saddest part is that, at least down here, people took 30 years even to realize what was happenning, and even if the military regimes came down, people in politics are still the same, only changed the party names.

    3. Re:A little bit OT, but by sethg · · Score: 3, Insightful
      you think CIA is not torturing, well, they taught Latin America dictators the joys of the interrogation tactics in the Escuela de las americas, and they used it gladly against the average joe when they got ride of all dissidents

      As an American, I'm starting to feel like those were the good old days--when US officials were sufficiently embarrassed by torture that they tried not to get the blood directly on their hands.

      And I thank God that Bush is not as smart as, say, Pinochet or Stroessner....
      --
      send all spam to theotherwhitemeat@ropine.com
  5. Re:Bedtime for Democracy by kfg · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Stick a fork in the Republic, it's done.

    Ave Caesar!

    KFG

  6. Filibuster by RyanFenton · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Consider encouraging Democratic (and Republican - though that's unlikely) senators to filibuster this.

    Senator contact list

    It looks like filibusteris the only realistic option on this one.

    Oh, and vote however you prefer to end this destruction of personal and public liberties in November. I'd HIGHLY suggest Democratic in most cases this election.

    Ryan Fenton

  7. In the good old days by MECC · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Actually, by declaring 'war on terror' (the pretense for invading Iraq and his mad rush for 'war powers'), GWB has done something that hasn't happened since King Charles I of England started a war with Scotland in 1637 without consulting Parliament. Parliament later didn't give him an army when the Irish rebelled, and in 1649 beheaded Charles.

    GWB is trying to take the country in the direction of Caesar-like rule, in that a leader under the pretense of fighting defending the empire/country could act with total impunity and a complete lack of accountability. He's actively fighting the constitution itself, even though he twice swore to defend it. Separation of powers in a standing government isn't just a hallmark of democracy - its a sign of being a civilized society.

    Also, its one thing to temporarily alter the separation and balance of powers laid out in the US constitution during a time of war - but in this case war has not been declared, and it also a 'war' with absolutely no end in site. As long as there is one terrorist group "plotting and planning", the undeclared war will continue. This is clearly a grab for permanent power, and he's using the pain of 9/11 to do it.

    --
    "We are all geniuses when we dream"
    - E.M. Cioran
    1. Re:In the good old days by jeti · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well - I don't know much about King Charles I.
      But I see some frightening parallels to the Reichstag Fire Decree.

  8. To War, Or Not To War by dereference · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The President is tasked in a time of war to protect the country as he/she sees fit, and guess what we are at war. Our enemy has said that they are at war with us.

    Oh, I see. So I guess Congress no longer needs to declare war, what with all the bureacratic trivialities of debate and voting; as long as our "enemy" says we're at war, we are. Ah, that should be a real time-saver. I sure hope that's a troll, but I fear you were serious (albeit terribly misguided).

    Yes, Congress grants special power to the President in a time of declared war, but only when Congress agrees indeed there is a war. The "war" on terror, the "war" on drugs, and the "war" on child pornography are all marketing campaigns at best, not actual legally-declared wars.

  9. Re:Can I have my country back? by twifosp · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Uhm, one moemnt please, let me check with our voting population.

    Ok, the two geysers in the back said no.

    The young hipster who listens to NPR said "Leave me alone you facist, I'm trying to protest a highway here".

    The under educated rural American could not be reached for reply. Allthough one of her 7 kids did throw a rock at my car.

    The middle class family I spoke with said, and I quote, "what are you talking about, this is America you left wing commie pinko terrorist supporting liberal". Well, at least the Father did, between commercials of Fox and Friends. The mother had no idea who her senator was, and the kids were trying to talk to me about government responsibility and all kinds of neat stuff, but who cares what they think, they were only 11 and 13. Not old enough to have purchasing power, or vote, so they don't exist.

    Well that's about your voting population. All 15% of em.

    Yea, so your answer is... no.

  10. Re:A question by EllisDees · · Score: 3, Insightful

    >I'm curious as to how the Fourth Ammendment protects you from having your international phone conversation tapped by agents from the other country you are talking to.

    Ask yourself, if the framers had had telephones, would they have included them in the forth amendment or not? My thinking is that they absolutely would have, as the British would have been tapping them like crazy to get those 'Colonial Terrorists'.

    --
    -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
  11. No one's trying to block wiretapping by doublem · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "I'm convinced that the "good guys" (and we ARE them, by & large) cannot win against an insidious, merciless, and determined enemy by being Dudley Do-Right and playing with one hand tied behind their back. "

    You really aren't paying attention to what the issue is, are you?

    You've fallen hook line and sinker for the Neocon talking points.

    This isn't about the government's ability to get a wire tap and listen to those conversations. No one is trying to block that.

    This is about the fact that the constitution requires the government to get a damn warrant.

    During the Clinton administration, laws were passed allowing them to get those warrants after the fact, up to 72 hours after placing them!

    Tell me, how is requiring the government to be accountable for it's actions going to give the terrorists a leg up?

    How the HELL is requiring the government to follow the constitution, to actually leave a damn paper trail of who they're spying on, going to help terrorist?

    --
    "Live Free or Die." Don't like it? Then keep out of the USA
  12. I fixed that for you by Maximilio · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Fascist behavior like a members of Congress basically threating ABC to have their FCC license revoked for broadcasting free propaganda, and an ex-President also calling the ABC president asking for a movie to pulled because it slanderously portrayed entirely fictional episodes that shifted historical blame from a sitting president to an ex-president. . . .

  13. What, do you think warrants are "quaint"? by doublem · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What part of Needing a Warrant do you NOT understand? Why is the need for a warrant something you're so eager to piss away? DO you understand that warrantless searches were one of the things the Revolutionaries were pissed off about when they started the Revolution in the first place??? Do you know ANY of the history behind WHY we require warrants?

    As for the whole "It has to be renewed every year" nonsense, all it takes is one rider in one bill to remove that Sunset clause. We saw that happen with The Patriot Act.

    --
    "Live Free or Die." Don't like it? Then keep out of the USA
  14. I did read the PDF by KarmaOverDogma · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Excluding the currently proposed revisions to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, FISA already provides for the oversight of Wiretapping via the FISA Courts and Congress.

    Consider the following Facts:

    1) The FISA Court has the authority to hear and issue decicions in a completely secret manner, so that if the court chooses, neither the case or its decision will be made public. The FISA court has, on very rare (and mostly recent occasions) occasions chosen to state its decisions publicly, but this is quite unusual.

    2) From wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_Intelligence _Surveillance_Act#FISA_court): "Proceedings before the FISA court are ex parte and non-adversarial. The court hears evidence presented solely by the Department of Justice. There is no provision for a release of information regarding such hearings, or for the record of information actually collected." This means that unless the FISA Court chooses to publicly release its findings, its decisions cannot be challenged by any other court (including SCOTUS) save the FISA appeals court, which only met once in US history, in 2002.

    3) FISA already has provisions which allow for the President to temporarily bypass the 11 member court, in cases that he deems of sufficient need, as long as the case is brought before it soon after. The President (via U.S. AG Alberto Gonzales) has acknowledged this provision but essentially said that it is too much trouble to have to go back to the FISA court every time he wants to start a new round of spying programs or make changes to them.

    Why then, is it neccessary to make any more changes to FISA?

    I did read the SB2453: like most bills it is full of very specific verbage and definitions. From what I could digest of it it has a lot of room for a President to wiggle through (IANAL, but the ACLU which has plenty of them and found it "stunning"). I also read the wired article. SB2453 makes me nervous precisely for the reasons you cite, listed below:

    "1) It's for people communicating the terrorists"
    Duh. And Who has the legal authority to define what terrorist is? While congress could define such security terms narrowly they usually do not, deferring to President, the DOJ or the Department of State. The DOJ and DOS heads are nominated by, guess who? the President, and rubber stamped by Congress. Judging by how many people in the US are subjeced to this domestic spying program, the current President has shown he thinks a lot of US citizens could be terrorists. That bothers me, but even more is the idea that FISA courts can be ignored completely here.

    "2) It's being overseen by a court."
    See my above comments.

    "3) it's ALSO being overseen by Congress."
    As I stated in the beginning, FISA is already under the jurisdiction of Congress but as a whole it has demontrated remarkably little oversight to the public with respect to the current domestic surveillance. Their "solution" to the President's illgal wiretapping of citizens has been to propose this bill, which purports to make it legal. So much for the concept that no one is above the law. I doubt the courts will allow it to stand. That is, if they even get the opportunity to review it; under the proposed bill normal citizens will no longer have the right to do challenge it, only the FISA court will, and it rarely lets us know what's going on.

    I think our best hope is for SCOTUS to declare the current program unconstitutional, but because Judge Taylor was so left wing in her outspoken criticism of the program, I think the strength of her decision has been weakened by it; IMO there was plenty unconsitutional about the program without having to spout so much left leaning platitudes.

    To sum it up: your argument is a Red Herring.

    Republicans are always so good at talking about how Government is intrusive and bad, but are almost always the first in line to vote our civil liberties away, one bill at a time. Then enough meek Democrats follow along for fear of being labled "soft on terrorism." The whole thing disgusts me.

    I know who I'll be voting for in November.

    --
    uR iGn0ranc3, Their Power
  15. I am tired of hearing this. by pavon · · Score: 4, Insightful
    First on the issue of throwing votes away. It only takes one vote over 50% to win, so any amount over that is unnecesarry - ie wasted. Therefore, unless the race is close, and you have a chance of casting the deciding vote, then voting for a major party has just as little practical effect on the result of the election as voting for a third party.

    Secondly, if the democrats actually defended civil liberties, then I would start considering the lesser of two evils. But they are just as bad as the republicans when it comes to throwing out our freedoms to appear tough on crime or terrorism. Furthermore the progressives have gotten as bad as the religious right when it comes to forcing everyone to live the way they want them to. The only civil rights issue that the democrats still defend are equal rights for gays, and other minorites. While I give them credit for this, it doesn't matter much if you are systematically eliminating everyone's rights.

    As an aside, you cannot blame liberals voting for third parties for the result of the last presidential election or for democrats poor showing in congress. That is due to more people voting republican, not third party.

    I vote for the candidate I think is best in almost every election. The only time I vote for the lesser of two evils is when all the following are true:
    1. One of the two major candidates really is significantly worse than the other.
    2. the race is close
    3. I am in a swing state/district
    4. The race is close in my state/district

    The last presidential election was the very few times that has happened in many years.

    If the only "realistic option" is to vote for a major party, then we might as well admit that there is no solution to the problems that are facing the country today, because they are the ones who created them and they show no signs of changing track. I don't think that voting third party is a waste, but even if it is, I would rather waste my vote than be complicit in the destruction of our country.