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Widespread Spying Preceded '04 GOP Convention

Frosty Piss alerts us to a story in the New York Times reporting on details that are emerging of a far-flung spying operation lasting up to a year leading up to the 2004 Republican National Convention. The New York Police Department mounted a spy campaign reaching well beyond the state of New York. For at least a year before the convention, teams of undercover New York police officers traveled to cities across the US, Canada, and Europe to conduct covert observations of people who planned to protest at the convention. Across the country undercover officers attended meetings of political groups, posing as sympathizers or fellow activists. In at least some cases, intelligence on what appeared to be lawful activity was shared with other police departments. Outlines of the pre-convention operations are emerging from records in federal lawsuits brought over mass arrests during the convention.

471 comments

  1. This is the police. by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 3, Insightful
    This is the police.

    Police has no morality whatsoever; they are not sworn-in to the Constitution like the armed forces are, and so are open to perform all abuses for the rich and powerful.

    1. Re:This is the police. by chris_eineke · · Score: 4, Insightful

      the rich and powerful
      Follow the money. Don't stop at Parties. Don't stop at banks. Stop at the Federal Reserve.
      --
      "All you have to do is be fragile and grateful. So stay the underdog." Chuck Palahniuk, Choke
    2. Re:This is the police. by Seumas · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Of course, the typical American response is going to be this:

      For a couple days, half of people will get upset over the abuse of power and invasion of privacy and misuse of government while the other half excuse and justify it with comments like "if ya don't have nuthin' tuh hide" and "we're at war - you have to give up some freedoms to be safe during war!".

      Some minor news organizations will make a huge deal out of it.

      Most will largely ignore it and not make a story out of it.

      Within 72 hours, Americans will have forgotten entirely about it and be back to fretting over the poor blond haired, blue-eyed, pretty, affluent girl that disappeared a couple years ago in Bermuda thanks to the non-stop cable news coverage (still, two years later - as of the broadcasts LASTNIGHT!).

      Remember, this is America. We don't start revolutions. We don't fight for anything unless it's the last Tickle Me Elmo on store shelves at Christmas. The most effort we're willing to put into our civics and society and the most we're willing to risk of ourselves for them is a text vote or two on our cell phones.

    3. Re:This is the police. by SydShamino · · Score: 1

      The police aren't sworn in to serve and protect the Constitution?

      I've served on the Planning and Zoning Committee of a small town, and I took an oath to take my office.

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
    4. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Alternatively, Americans attempt to vote against said parties (if they were voted in) or get said parties displaced from power (through the legal system). Any attempts such as these are ignored or rerouted based on technicalities.

      Anybody considering a definite physical response would be deemed a terrorist and would be gone. Fast.

      We don't fight for anything unless it's the last Tickle Me Elmo on store shelves at Christmas.

      Don't forget those PS3s, lad. I heard they've got lots o' FLOPS. Lots and lots of FLOPS.
    5. Re:This is the police. by El+Torico · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Within 72 hours, Americans will have forgotten entirely about it
      and we'll find something else to read and rant about on /.

      --
      In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is usually crucified.
    6. Re:This is the police. by Seumas · · Score: 3, Interesting

      To be fair, how would they know who to stick in the Free Speech Zone if they didn't spy on them, first?

    7. Re:This is the police. by Kagura · · Score: 3, Funny

      Follow the money. Don't stop at Parties. Don't stop at banks. Stop at the Federal Reserve.

      Do not pass go. Do not collect $200. :)

    8. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really wish you were wrong, but you're not.

    9. Re:This is the police. by vandan · · Score: 1

      Certainly the police are not there to protect individual freedoms. They're there to protect private property of the fabulously wealth, and a part of that 'protection' is intimidating anyone who argues against the rights of these people to continue to enrich themselves at everyone else's expense.

      On 18th April, at 7pm at the Newtown Neighbourhood Centre ( Sydney ), I will be speaking at a Socialist Worker forum on these issues precisely, entitled, "The Police, the State, and Civil Liberties". Anyone interested is more than welcome to come along and join the discussion.

    10. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny
      Follow the money. Don't stop at Parties. Don't stop at banks. Stop at the Federal Reserve.

      Make a huge withdrawal. Then go to the Parties.

    11. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Anyone interested is more than welcome to come along and join the discussion. Does that include undercover police officers?

      Turing Word: tippers
    12. Re:This is the police. by vandan · · Score: 1

      :) Why of course. We've had a number of our members followed, 'interviewed', and generally harassed. It would certainly be no surprise to us if this bullshit continued.

    13. Re:This is the police. by jacquesm · · Score: 1

      follow the money is an excellent principle but it really does not apply to the case at hand.

      These people were spying abroad, no point in tracing the money. Throwing the book at them
      would be a better alternative, surely there are records of who went where and when.

    14. Re:This is the police. by owlnation · · Score: 4, Funny

      Within 72 hours, Americans will have forgotten entirely about it and be back to fretting over the poor blond haired, blue-eyed, pretty, affluent girl that disappeared a couple years ago in Bermuda thanks to the non-stop cable news coverage (still, two years later - as of the broadcasts LASTNIGHT!).
      Yup. Gore Vidal said it best... welcome to the United States of Amnesia.
    15. Re:This is the police. by WED+Fan · · Score: 1

      Miss your meds much?

      Really, if you want to postulate a conspiracy theory, for some reason, Masons, German bankers, the Federal Reserve, or CFR have got to be an element, or you can't appear on the whacked-out shows like Art Bell, and other conspiracy kooks won't take you seriously.

      (Note: All sperring errors ar doo to the vodka martininini i had in the hotel lounge. Reporting from DevConnections in Orlando, Im Bue Hrinkley.)

      --
      Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong fix.
    16. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember, this is America. We don't start revolutions.


      Well, maybe one, but that's all.
    17. Re:This is the police. by Seumas · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm no history major, but I'm pretty sure those were not Americans at the time of the revolution. They were colonists. To my knowledge, the closest thing to a revolution that actual Americans have participated in was the civil war and I don't think that really counts. Again, I don't know shit about history, so someone feel free to correct me.

      Regardless, they were a different breed of people. Those were people who would stand up for their ideals and freedoms. They didn't have to risk losing sit-coms on television, lattes at starbucks and their 9mpg sedans for standing up for themselves. Look at the liberties we've already lost. Do we even have half of our Bill of Rights left? I don't think so. And where is the outrage? There isn't any. As long as we can still buy Pepsi from vending machines, drive whatever car we choose and wave little american flags made in China and have our Superbowl, we believe we have freedom and are better than the rest of the planet.

    18. Re:This is the police. by Seumas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This may be a poor analogy, but here goes:

      It is generally known that the reason you learn to defend yourself and carry a gun is that the police do not exist to save you from rape and murder. Presuming you can get to a phone in the middle of a life and death situation, there is no certainty they will arrive in time to help. Their job is to catch the person after the crime has been committed.

      Likewise, it is not the job of the police to protect your individual freedoms and liberties and constitutional rights. In fact, police are always violating them from one end to the other. Sometimes by sheer will and other times by sheer ignorance. It is the job of the lawyers and judges to ensure that your rights are not being violated. That is why when a copy abuses you, treats you poorly, violates your fourth amendment right, threatens you, fabricates evidence or fabricates statements in his police report, you should never argue with them. Just shut your damn mouth and take it up with a lawyer afterward.

      And that is where the problem comes in. The people who are supposed to directly fight for our rights as individual citizens and be sure that public servants serve without violating people's rights are not free. And the more money you have, the better lawyer you can get. The more money you have, the more you can afford to assert and protect your rights. Even better - the more money you have, the more you can afford to assert your desires by bullying other people and violating their rights.

    19. Re:This is the police. by BalanceOfJudgement · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I agree completely, and not because I want to. For too long I considered myself a patriot, proud to be an American and proud of the tradition laid down by our founders. I believed we had created the greatest nation on earth, and I do still believe that for awhile, that was true.

      And yet.. at some point, I saw too much, and the scales were removed from my eyes and I saw before me a nation of horror, and no matter how hard I try I cannot put that genie back in the bottle.

      I know, as does anyone who spends more than 5 minutes thinking about this, where all of this is going..

      How all of this will end...

      In fire.

      There is only one end to what we have built. And brother, it ain't pretty.

      --

      We are the fire that lights our world.. and we are the fire that consumes it.
    20. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm one of those most Americans And i just don't find an issue with it. Are we trying to say that someone who comes to a public meeting of an organization cannot talk about what went on there? Are we trying to say a cop cannot join said org on his own? These were public meeting of public organizations. What is there to worry about? Oh yea, it was the police and they were doing it to protect the security of the republicans who held the convention in that city.

      Really, this is a non issue. Even the police files marked secrete from protesters who weren't planning on breaking the law is a non issue. It was likely done this way to single out potential problems and have a way to distinguish the people without intent from those with intent. "oh, your with mothers against the war? ok you can go, sorry for the mistake".

      Someone please tell me were the issue is? Is it because people who were planning on breaking the law were foiled by those pesky kids again? Is it because we expect the police to be able to ensure our safety and when they do, we find out what they had to do in order to do it? Or is it just the tax payer funds spent on this effort? IS it because NY city had a democrat mayor (Michael Bloomberg) at the time, or that he ran for office as a republican to get elected?

    21. Re:This is the police. by Bassman59 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Of course, the typical American response is going to be this:

      For a couple days, half of people will get upset over the abuse of power and invasion of privacy and misuse of government while the other half excuse and justify it with comments like "if ya don't have nuthin' tuh hide" and "we're at war - you have to give up some freedoms to be safe during war!".

      Ah, so then by that logic, Alberto Gonzales, Harriet Miers and Karl Rove should be the first ones to volunteer to testify in front of the House and Senate committees investigating the federal attorney firings. After all, if they had nothing to hide, then they should have no objections to testifying under oath, in public, with published transcripts made available immediately.

    22. Re:This is the police. by HobophobE · · Score: 1

      As I posted on digg when this story was there, all this really shows is that the establishment still fears the dissent of the people. And, therefore, that we can still reform our government and change things for the better via simple dissent. We don't need a revolution or violence. All we need is to keep talking.

      --

      -HobophobE
      Nothing laughs forever.
    23. Re:This is the police. by DreadfulGrape · · Score: 1

      Agree 100%. You crypto-anarchists (and NYT reporters) can call it "spying" all you want; what this is simply is good police work.

      --
      sig has been sent away for a few small repairs...
    24. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really don't see a problem with city or state cops traveling the country and internationally to attend rallies and planning meetings of organizations under false pretenses with the only goal of spying on them and thus deciding how to treat them when they arrived into the state or city?

      How about those cops a couple years ago that were on the news (not sure if these were the same cops) who would attend meeting and rile the protesters and organizers up and instigate criminal plans and behavior anonymously either there or once on the scene?

      I understand you adore big brother, but some of us do not and abhor anything that even remotely approaches it.

    25. Re:This is the police. by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      follow the money is an excellent principle but it really does not apply to the case at hand.

      These people were spying abroad, no point in tracing the money. Throwing the book at them would be a better alternative, surely there are records of who went where and when.


      Yeah, throw the money at 'em. Wait what?

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    26. Re:This is the police. by wdr1 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Funny. Every time I do that, I end up with organized labor. They dominate the list of groups throwing around their weight in terms of political contributions. Unions hold the #1 (AFSCME/$38 million), #6 (IBEW/$26M), #7 (Laborers/$25M), #9 (SEIU/$25M), and #10 (Carpenters & Joiners Union/$24M).

      It's a shame as 1) people often have no choice & are forced to join the union, and 2) that money could be spent on improving the lives of their members.

      -Bill

      --
      SlashSig Karma: Excellent (mostly affected by moderatio
    27. Re:This is the police. by Seumas · · Score: 4, Funny

      No, that's an exception. After all - remember that if the president's advisers can be held accountable for the advice they give the president, then when they give the president advice to do illegal or immoral things, they will be held accountable for it. And - knowing that they would be held accountable for it - they would cease to be willing to advise the president do illegal things that they would otherwise have been willing to advise him to do had they not had the fear of being held publicly accountable via testimony for!

    28. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So lobbying for laws benefiting their constituency isn't trying to improve their lives?

    29. Re:This is the police. by Seumas · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but we are too busy telling gay people to keep their wieners away from each other and contesting the teaching of scientific theory in science class to be bothered with dissent against real problems!

      It's almost as if we're intentionally kept busy arguing about meaningless things like ... hey... wait...!

    30. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, just look at how their lives have benefited. Their members are primarily Chinese, right?

    31. Re:This is the police. by triclipse · · Score: 1

      Follow the money. Don't stop at Parties. Don't stop at banks. Stop at the Federal Reserve.

      Then ... uhhh, don't you mean, "Follow the Federal Reserve Notes"?

      --
      No Inflation Taxation without Representation
    32. Re:This is the police. by tobiasly · · Score: 1

      Remember, this is America. We don't start revolutions. We don't fight for anything unless it's the last Tickle Me Elmo on store shelves at Christmas. The most effort we're willing to put into our civics and society and the most we're willing to risk of ourselves for them is a text vote or two on our cell phones.

      For America to fare so poorly in your judgment system, there certainly must be some other country that does start revolutions, that does fight the good fight for Truth and Justice, where people do risk of themselves for civics and society?

      So what is this other country? What is that single shining example of the paragon of humanity, the heights of which all other countries should strive to achieve?

    33. Re:This is the police. by Columcille · · Score: 1

      You really don't see a problem with...
      No, I don't. None whatsoever. As was mentioned, this was just good police work.

      How about those cops a couple years ago
      A reference on this could be helpful, I don't recall anything about that.

      I understand you adore big brother
      Nice. If someone disagrees with you, automatically lump him into a strong negative stereotype rather than consider that he may actually have a point. This has nothing to do with some elusive "big brother" boogey monster, this is about good police work performed in perfectly legal ways. No invasion of privacy (remember - public meetings), no entrapment, no instigation.

      --
      I love my sig.
    34. Re:This is the police. by Columcille · · Score: 1

      For a couple days, half of people will get upset over the abuse of power and invasion of privacy and misuse of government
      This despite the fact that there was no abuse of power or invasion of privacy or misuse of government?

      while the other half excuse and justify it with comments like...
      How about comments like - "I appreciate the police going to the effort of doing good police work in legal ways to keep people safe. I'm glad they don't just wait until after crime happens but somehow work to prevent crime before it can happen. I wish there were more of this sort of thing - legal, ethical investigation in scenarios that might invite crime."

      --
      I love my sig.
    35. Re:This is the police. by Seumas · · Score: 1

      So let me get this straight.

      You don't want to be part of a country that leads the way. You need another country as an example?! You want to be a country that follows the lead of others? That's very sad. Yet I'm sure you're one of those people who so eagerly sends our resources to other countries and encourages them to revolt and rebel.

    36. Re:This is the police. by essence · · Score: 1

      I can think of one, well its not a country, its a network of autonomous communities: Chiapas

    37. Re:This is the police. by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      Well, there was the whiskey rebellion. and shay's rebellion.
      neither were really that big, but.. just filling a lil gap there.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    38. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I like to stick my head in the sand and hope and pray that what big brother does is on the up and up and for my own good, but just in case it isn't, I don't want to know. Shit where's my beer and remote control? Maybe one of my seven kids knows where it's at.

    39. Re:This is the police. by mi · · Score: 1

      This is the police.

      Police has no morality whatsoever; they are not sworn-in to the Constitution like the armed forces are, and so are open to perform all abuses for the rich and powerful.

      They do have morality — they even have their own honor and stuff. It just tends to be different from the rest of ours, which is largely due to their having to deal with the worst (and the Molotov-cocktail wielding Anarchists and Che Guevara sympathizers are way down there, below child molesters, but above actual murderers).

      But I digress. Your flamebait mentioned "the rich and powerful", but that's a combination, that is rare in our society. The rich merchants with large Manhattan storefronts, for example, are not nearly as powerful as the mob of assholes throwing bricks through those storefronts. NYC would've seen that — as Seattle has 5 years earlier — if it weren't for the NYPD's and the rest of the city's administration excellent work.

      If they are found to have broken laws in the process — burn them. Otherwise: ha-ha...

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    40. Re:This is the police. by aussersterne · · Score: 1
      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    41. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You really don't see a problem with city or state cops traveling the country and internationally to attend rallies and planning meetings of organizations under false pretenses with the only goal of spying on them and thus deciding how to treat them when they arrived into the state or city?
      I don't see the problem with the cops doing their homework and then deciding how to treat people who have intentions of breaking the law in order to disrupt the political process. I don't see a problem with cops doing this to bust anyone planing or conspiring to break the law. Some of these people are lucky this happened and something worse wasn't "because of their actions" Like some one accidentally getting killed and then they might have murder charges in their heads. As the other poster commented, This was good police work and is probably a reason New York City went from a place were people were afraid to go, to a place were people want to go. And you cannot tell me that NYC was safe for any outsiders 20 years ago. Especially after dark.

      How about those cops a couple years ago that were on the news (not sure if these were the same cops) who would attend meeting and rile the protesters and organizers up and instigate criminal plans and behavior anonymously either there or once on the scene?
      Like the other poster said, What and were? The message is so vague I cannot even do a Google search for relevant terms. It is up to the individual to decide if they are going to break the law or not. As far as I know, "Everyone was doing it" isn't an affirmative defense for a violation. Just look at the speeding ticket everyone get and says they were going with the flow of traffic.

      I know many canned(or professional) protesters who do the same thing. But they don't jump up and claim they put some one else up to it either. If the police are breaking the law or inciting a riot then they should be held accountable for it in addition to the people who broke the law. We have terms for entrapment when the police plant evidence and such. But somehow I don't see this as what is going on.

      I understand you adore big brother, but some of us do not and abhor anything that even remotely approaches it.
      Big brother has nothing to do with this. The mere mentioning of it only goes to show the total lack of understanding. Look around and tell whoever to stop pulling your strings. This was nothing more then an investigation into people planning on participate in an activity that Usually ends up in violence, laws being broken, property damaged or destroyed and whatever else. If it was big brother, they would have watched all the citizens going to work, shopping, eating out, and/or whatever else someone does in their normal life. This situation involves the police looking into people planning to participate in an event. Nothing more, nothing else. Most cities require a permit to protest or hold a rally and it isn't big brother. The people monitored weren't just going about their normal daily lives.

      And truthfully, This is the exact reason Bush needs the patriot act and the secrecy surrounding holding enemy combatants. This is exactly why he needs the suspension of Habeas Corpus for some non citizens. And this is exactly why he need the process to be conducted in a secure manor. None of these investigation or so called spying techniques would have been public for quite a while unless the various criminal charges in the court system haven't went to trial. The likelihood of the police infiltrating organizations in the future to head off illegal and criminal activity in this area of concern has been greatly damaged. Imagine if all the detainees pulled from sting operations or the middle of the battlefield were afforded this opportunity. The enemy would know exactly how and were they got their information, possibly endangering the lives of the agents working it, and let them know what to do in the future to avoid getting caught.

      If there is any story here, It is the justification and necessity of the secrecy involved in the war on terror. I wonder which news agency broke this story?
    42. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is only one end to what we have built. And brother, it ain't pretty.

      Yep. I'll see you at the next GOP convention. We've got the
      "refreshments" lined up.

      (flood the net with enough references to planned protests, and
      let those who are opposed to free speech drown in their own
      paranoia)

    43. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They offered to go in front of the comity. Were did you hear that they won't? They just want ot do it in their terms.

      What they wont do is go in and have all this stuff made public or be sworn to an oath that has no other purpose then to position them into a perjury trap. The dems are trying to pull a Lewis Libby in were they confuse them, and then hold a misstatement that was made that he later corrected on his own admission as perjury (lying to an investigator)and trick a conviction out of them when nothing illegal has been done.

      And to note, In case you one of the few who know enough to blame Cheney for the "Plame outing", I guessing you already know that Richard Armatage was the person who outed Plame. He is a long time Democrat and a critic of the bush war policy who notified the special investigator that he was the one who outed Plame on accident in a conversation with a reporter at the very beginning of the special council investigation process. So we had Four years of collecting evidence on someone who misstated the order of events in which reporter he talked to first when they were all asking if it was Cheney's office that outed her.

      Tell me it isn't a perjury trap. They have all the emails and communications records in the last several months pertaining to this including several Prominent democrat communications questioning the records of some of these prosecutors. Everyone investigating says no law was broken. Tell us why the Bush administration's pulling executive privilege on this is any different from Clinton's when he did it except that Clinton was actually guilty or suspected of breaking a law.

    44. Re:This is the police. by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      After all - remember that if the president's advisers can be held accountable for the advice they give the president, then when they give the president advice to do illegal or immoral things, they will be held accountable for it.
      Except there is no indication that there was anything illegal or immoral about the firing of the US Attorneys...
      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    45. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Breaking laws and property damage is in no way free speech. I don't see how you can think it is. Should someone who doesn't like what your saying be able to deface your car in the name of free speech?

      Do what you want. But tell it like it is, Those that oppose criminal and illegal activity are not opposing free speech.

    46. Re:This is the police. by Darby · · Score: 5, Insightful


      And truthfully, This is the exact reason Bush needs the patriot act and the secrecy surrounding holding enemy combatants. This is exactly why he needs the suspension of Habeas Corpus for some non citizens. And this is exactly why he need the process to be conducted in a secure manor.


      But those of us who are not cowards would prefer to have some risk (even though even what there is is largely overblown) than to have a totalitarian society.
      In fact, that's how this country came to be.
      So your cowardice (don't whine ad hominem, a coward is exactly what *you* just declared yourself to be) and that of those like you is the gravest threat our nation faces or has ever faced.
      Since you're too weak and cowardly to live in a free society, why don't you move to Saudi Arabia or some other country where they already live under your favored system rather than working to fuck this place as well?

      Oh yeah, that would take the courage of your convictions and you've already admitted to being a coward.

    47. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      problem with what you say is the fact we had this problem over 100 years ago, where the big companies virtually owned congress, the govt allowed abuses of the people, there were few to no labor rights, and children worked at slave wages. If you got hurt on the job, you were fired and kicked out of your company owned home and left to die out on the streets. If you were a woman who worked at a sewing company, you were eventually fired or forced to have your clitoris removed in some circumstances for fear of masturbation. Thank the inventor of cornflakes (not the frosted ones, that was his brother who went on to make billions and owned a ranch in pomona, california) for that bullshit.

      yet somehow, our ancestors made inroads and put an end to all of that.

      we're now facing slightly tougher odds, though I can see why some cynicism can be had here, it's because people are more well off and more apathetic. Especially generation Y. However, look at what happened in nazi germany, people were happy in the first few years because they had everything and everything was stable and good, then someone got power hungry. When people started losing everything, they started wanting their great leader dead and were happy when we invaded, only ones not happy were the facists who were pretty much in for a hardcore assraping.

      Yeah I agree it isnt going to be pretty, and it isnt going to happen overnight, but by no means, I dont think this country is going to meet its end. we may lose some states at the worst.

    48. Re:This is the police. by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      Except there is no indication that there was anything illegal or immoral about the firing of the US Attorneys...

      Exactly. No one seems too upset about a Congress run-amuck. Where were they when Clinton did the same thing? They serve at the President's discretion, he can fire them. Get over it.
    49. Re:This is the police. by rtb61 · · Score: 1
      Whilst your law enforcement is playing politics people are dying in the streets from actual crimes. The sheer waste of resource is appalling, the politicians who abused the system to line their own pockets at the public expense should be hunted down and have their assets seized and auctioned off to pay for the full costs of this abuse.

      Peace protesters are a greater priority than organised crime, union meetings are more important than a law enforcement focus on reducing street crime, and neighbour hood political meetings take precedence over tracking down murderers and rapists.

      Corrupt politicians and the rich and greedy corporate types that put them there, should be the main focus of law enforcement, and for the conservatives amongst us, just think of the profits in seizing and auctioning the assets of the richest, greediest and most corrupt ;).

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    50. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 0

      But those of us who are not cowards would prefer to have some risk (even though even what there is is largely overblown) than to have a totalitarian society.

      I understand that it will be dificult for you but please stop with the name calling. Nothing is totalitarian. Nothing is more totalitarian more today then at most any other time in this or the last centruy. I read comments like this and just have to think that the reasons the schools are fighting the testing is because people like you woldn't get it anyways.

      In fact, that's how this country came to be.

      In fact, your wrong! Well, give me a definition of totalitarian and we will see if you are using it corectly in you interpretation. But I have a good idea the word doesn't mean what you think it means.

      So your cowardice (don't whine ad hominem, a coward is exactly what *you* just declared yourself to be) and that of those like you is the gravest threat our nation faces or has ever faced.

      Cowardness... This is laughable. What is cowardness about wanting to win a war without you side becoming dead in the process? Hmm?.. And i didn't declare anything. You see, your tryig to put words into peoples mouth and I have seen your types before. You come around half cocked without the slightnest bit of knowlege in what your talking about and then for some reason tend to interpret what was said to mean something totaly different. I am willing to bet that you would feel alot better about the world and life itself if you would stop that one thing and take whatever was said as what was actualy said (face value). Now I'm sure your the "brave" keyboard commando here. We can tell because your affraid of the police knowing what your doing when your involved with a certain activity? Or worse yet, You afraid when someoen might be correct and it disagrees with your little shadow world of make believe.

      Now, Is that enough of reading too much into opther peoples words? I can go on and turn this into a flaim fest if you want. And the gravest thing this nation has faced is likley the cowardness of the terrorist attacking inocent women and children because they didn't think they could stand against the army. That real brave, brain wash someone into blowing themselves up and then goto NYC or the london subway and set them loose on little sally who's only crime is being born. And we are cawards for wanting to stop it. What does that make the people who are wanting the other side to win? Islamofacist freedom fighters? The upright citizens brigade?

      Since you're too weak and cowardly to live in a free society, why don't you move to Saudi Arabia or some other country where they already live under your favored system rather than working to fuck this place as well?

      What the hell are you talking about. I live i a free society. Theres nothign coward or brave about it. At least i'm not on the side wanting to give the enemy all the aid and comfort. How free are we going to be when you can't leave you house for fear of being blown up? Nothing you dumbasses claim to be stomping freedoms are actualy doing it. Give me one solid example that reaches beyond your lack of knowledge or troll like additude.

      Oh yeah, that would take the courage of your convictions and you've already admitted to being a coward.

      I have admited nothing..lol But i'm pretty sure that you have proven a lot of things to anyone reading your post. Most people don't find them flattering but maybe you do. Maybe you think that is a step up from were you normaly are in life? I don't know what is going on in your mind, or rather your controlers mind (usualy people like you flock to groups and make things up and secretly one person is the leader and has an alternative agenda. Just don't wear the nike shoes and drink the cerimonial coolaid) But i will tell you what, It isn't anything with a real conect to reality

    51. Re:This is the police. by asninn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The issue is that the police should leave people who haven't committed any crime, who're not suspected of having committed any crime, and who are not suspected of planning to commit any crime in the future ALONE.

      Suppose a police officer would get posted outside your house. He doesn't enter your private property or anything, but he stands there, and when you leave the house, he follows you; if you enter another piece of private property (one that he can't enter - your office, for example, or a friend's house, as opposed to a supermarket or a pub), he waits outside again until you come back out. He's always with you, listening to everything you say in public, compiling a file on you that gets shared with the FBI later on. Heck, for added fun, suppose he's also recording every public conversation of yours and videotaping your actions in public.

      Are you OK with that?

      Clearly, the same reasoning you use could be applied here: you're in public, so everything you do and say is - well - public. And if you ask the police officer why he's doing this, he will tell you that it's in the interest of "security", of course - national security, most likely. And he's sorry, but he cannot give any details, but since he's not intruding on your *private* life, there's no issue there, right?

      Now suppose the same thing's happening, but he's not identifying as a police officer or letting you know he's recording your conversations etc. or compiling a file on you; in fact, you don't even notice that he's there. He's always following you, but you don't even know until you find out years later by pure coincidence. Are you still OK with that?

      The problem here is that the police simply has no business interfering with the lives of people who aren't suspected of doing anything wrong. And that's DOUBLY TRUE when we're talking about protesting and political dissent, since that's arguably one of the fundamental pillars upon which democracy rests; harassing (and I intentionally say "harassing"!) innocent people simply because they intend to attend a political demonstration creates a chilling effect and is at completely odds with democracy.

      THAT is what the issue is.

      --
      butter the donkey
    52. Re:This is the police. by VON-MAN · · Score: 1

      Really? I _would_ stop at the Republican Party in this particular case. But then again, I read TFA, and it's difficult to be "insightful" after that.

    53. Re:This is the police. by mrbluze · · Score: 1

      they are not sworn-in to the Constitution like the armed forces are

      Neither are security guards, or security teams guarding private property. And for all intents and purposes, neither are private eyes and other snoopy spooks, all of whom act within the law, yet are feared and unpredictable.

      One has to wonder, then, what the real difference between City Police and Private Security is, apart from the "owners".

      And even the armed forces, who are sworn-in to the Constitution are performing all manner of abuses for the rich and powerful.

      --
      Do it yourself, because no one else will do it yourself. [beta blockade 10-17 Feb]
    54. Re:This is the police. by VON-MAN · · Score: 1

      "Breaking laws and property damage is in no way free speech. I don't see how you can think it is."

      Well, very few think so, and i don't think i've read anybody saying stuff like that today, also the AC doesn't say that. You must have a point coming along.

      "Should someone who doesn't like what your saying be able to deface your car in the name of free speech?"

      Ah, we're slowly getting somewhere :-) Ok, first off all: were you saying anything? Because I got the impression it were the activists who had something to say (that is: stating opinions or raising objections or proposing ideas, not defacing cars).

      "Do what you want. But tell it like it is, Those that oppose criminal and illegal activity are not opposing free speech."

      Really, you are going very fast here, so lets parse that: "Do what you want." No, let's NOT do what we want.
      "But tell it like it is, Those that oppose criminal and illegal activity are not opposing free speech.",

      And finally, here's the meat of your argument:
      Opposing criminal activity doesn't equal opposing free speech because criminal activity is in no way free speech!

      Well, i can only bow to the inescapable logic of your argumentation.

    55. Re:This is the police. by diablomonic · · Score: 1

      No. he doesn't. (see sig)

      --
      watch "the money masters" on google video
    56. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 0

      The issue is that the police should leave people who haven't committed any crime, who're not suspected of having committed any crime, and who are not suspected of planning to commit any crime in the future ALONE.

      OK, so meeting all those requirements removes our conversation from anything surrounding the Protesters and NYC cops investigating them. But why do you want to bring this up separate? You see, I agree with everything you just said. What I don't agree with is pretending they weren't doing anything wrong/criminal or suspected of planning to do something wrong/criminal. The fact is that they were suspected of planning on doing something and the ones charged actually tried but got caught. Were is the injustice there? And were is the law that says the cops cannot drive down this street because a crime might be happening but he doesn't have enough reason to believe one will? These were public meetings by public groups and have little difference then a cop driving down a street and looking around.

      Suppose a police officer would get posted outside your house. He doesn't enter your private property or anything, but he stands there, and when you leave the house, he follows you; if you enter another piece of private property (one that he can't enter - your office, for example, or a friend's house, as opposed to a supermarket or a pub), he waits outside again until you come back out. He's always with you, listening to everything you say in public, compiling a file on you that gets shared with the FBI later on. Heck, for added fun, suppose he's also recording every public conversation of yours and videotaping your actions in public.

      Are you OK with that?

      No, I'm not "ok with that". But this is pointless to discuss in this context because that is not what happened. Not at all!. What happened was some cops went top public meetings of different organizations who were planning on going to protest somewhere. This somewhere is important because it is were the cops work. The places were the saw criminal intent, they investigated more. The places were they didn't, they noted it.

      I keep a record of all my email and message posts. I have a record of all my phone calls and face to face meetings with people. Some people call it a journal and some call it a diary, Some call it a day planner. Your reply is in it. I can search for your name/nick and bring up abut every conversation we ever had. Does that mean I violated some civil right you have? Am I breaking the law? No, I'm not a cop but I don't see where that would make a difference. If they couldn't prove their conversations or meetings with someone later people would be crying foul there too.

      Clearly, the same reasoning you use could be applied here: you're in public, so everything you do and say is - well - public. And if you ask the police officer why he's doing this, he will tell you that it's in the interest of "security", of course - national security, most likely. And he's sorry, but he cannot give any details, but since he's not intruding on your *private* life, there's no issue there, right?

      It is apples and oranges. They are both fruit but thats about it. And I think you know it.

      Lets put it another way to be more close to what is happening. Suppose I have an open house to attract investors in my latest plan to make millions. I invite the public and a cop shows up. During my presentation, I describe how the plan is to defeat all the security and several banks, use bullet proof vest and rob them in the morning just before they open when the employees show up. And i was going to do this on the day the next space shuttle launched. So the cop seems interested and offers to help finance it. He learns of where I'm going to get my illegal guns, how I'm planning to cause a problem with the shuttle so all the law enforcement will be tending to that mess and he learns which banks I intend to hit. Then on the day it is suppose

    57. Re:This is the police. by diablomonic · · Score: 0, Troll

      well said (and to the coward who responded with yet more cowardly drivel: shut it, moron.)

      --
      watch "the money masters" on google video
    58. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Well, i can only bow to the inescapable logic of your argumentation.
      I can see why you would think this. You took twice as long as I did to make the statement that you were just repeating and you manage to get it wrong in the process.

      AS to the AC, IT wasn't you was it? Well that doesn't matter much, it appears you needed to read it anyways. And yes, I'm sure you can read the little code in there.
    59. Re:This is the police. by polar+red · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, 200 years ago, religion was the method to pull a blanket over your eyes. Now, Nationalism is used in the same way.

      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    60. Re:This is the police. by orcrist · · Score: 2, Insightful
      sumdumass wrote:

      <fuckfreedom>blah blah blah</fuckfreedom>


      I'm sure the user name was meant to be ironic, but seldom has a slashdot user name been more appropriate. The founding fathers must be spinning in their graves at the gullibility of the U.S. citizenry and how they spit on these hard-won freedoms :-(
      --
      San Francisco values: compassion, tolerance, respect, intelligence
    61. Re:This is the police. by VON-MAN · · Score: 1

      "You took twice as long as I did to make the statement that you were just repeating".

      What has the speed of posting to do with anything? Is a faster post a better one?

      "AS to the AC, IT wasn't you was it?"

      No, it wasn't, is there any reason to think so? But anyways, so i went back to the AC and what does he say? Pretty funny: "let those who are opposed to free speech drown in their own paranoia". And what do you do? You think i am a secret anonymous poster!

    62. Re:This is the police. by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Police has no morality whatsoever; they are not sworn-in to the Constitution like the armed forces are, and so are open to perform all abuses for the rich and powerful.

      The same armed forces that tortured prisoners at Abu Gharib?

    63. Re:This is the police. by terraformer · · Score: 1

      It was Aruba, not Bermuda...

      --
      Who are you? The new #2 Who is #1? You are #617565. I am not a number, I am a free man! Muhahaha.
    64. Re:This is the police. by Mo+Bedda · · Score: 1

      Based on the performance, they didn't seem all that picky.

    65. Re:This is the police. by caseydk · · Score: 0

      Is that why the lobby heavily for abortion? To reduce the workforce and therefore force prices higher?

    66. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does back robbery have to do with protest? What does patrolling the streets have to do with infiltrating political groups? I personally would rather have the police out on the streets instead of investigating people who have done nothing worse than disagreeing with the president. If you think that protest is akin to robbery, murder, and rape then you're one sick fellow.

    67. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing like Bill Clinton, when he fired every US Attorney. Yep. All of them. Every one. Amazingly enough, this came one month prior to charges coming from the US Attorney in Little Rock regarding the Whitewater scandal against the Clintons. Appropriate timing? You bet. And the lefty media didn't even blink. Slick Willie managed to get a "friendly" attorney appointed in Little Rock, and managed to get charges ONLY against Macdougal, who Bill Clinton later pardoned. Quite the scam if you ask me.

      The Bush administration fires 8 US Attorneys because they're clueless, and the liberals are crying to the media for weeks and weeks.
      It is legal and common practice for the administration to hire and fire US Attorneys.

      Why no stink when Clinton does it? Why is there only a stink when Bush did it?

    68. Re:This is the police. by Mo+Bedda · · Score: 1

      Where were they when Clinton did the same thing?

      Actually, at the time, Congress launched a three year investigation into the White House Travel Office firings. Clinton didn't really do "the same thing" in this instance. Nobody took issue with previous Bush U.S. Attorney firings, or with mass purges by previous Presidents. But when you only fire 8 people and 6 of them were involved in government corruption investigations, it seems likely that you will raise a few eyebrows. I have little doubt that the Republican Congress of the 90's would have jumped at the opportunity to investigate if Clinton had actually done "the same thing".

      The "President's discretion" is supposed to serve the country and the Constitution. When it appears that the power of the President is being used to serve the interests of the President alone, his Party, or his friends, I believe the People (and therefore Congress) are justified in asking questions and seeking answers.

    69. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, in both cases the police officer would most likely infiringe some local laws. There are two broad categories of laws that cover Police Harassment and Stalking.

    70. Re:This is the police. by Danse · · Score: 1

      What they wont do is go in and have all this stuff made public or be sworn to an oath that has no other purpose then to position them into a perjury trap.

      Perjury trap? It's only perjury if you knowingly tell lies under oath. What exactly do you consider a perjury trap to be? Are United States courtrooms perjury traps?

      The dems are trying to pull a Lewis Libby in were they confuse them, and then hold a misstatement that was made that he later corrected on his own admission as perjury (lying to an investigator)and trick a conviction out of them when nothing illegal has been done.

      Wtf? A misstatement? Like just one? Hah. No. Sorry. Try again. Try at least 3 lies and you might be closer. Seeing as how his testimony was disputed by pretty much everyone, and his defense couldn't find anything to support him and had to fall back on the "oh, he's just a really, really, really forgetful guy" defense, I think he must have known exactly what he was doing at the time, whether he forgot it later or not (which is also bs, of course).

      It's not even clear that leaking the info was a crime. If they didn't know she was covert, then they didn't knowingly reveal a covert CIA agent's identity. The problem is whether you lie about what you revealed or not. If Armitage actually revealed the info, then he apparently didn't lie about it. Libby did. So Libby goes to jail. That's how it's supposed to work. Lesson here? Don't lie.

      If you're not willing to be questioned under oath, then you're probably planning to lie outright, lie by omission, or at least be intentionally misleading. People are expected to testify this way every day, and it's how our system works. This administration seems to think they are above the law.
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    71. Re:This is the police. by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      Perhaps.

      Or, one might say that we DO start revolutions only when it matters, not every time Chicken Little comes screaming down the path? At least, we used to.

      Look, I'm not going to argue the complacence of the American demos with you. We've gotten PRECISELY what we've asked for: a stupid, disconnected electorate created by a decrepit educational system defended vociferously by its own entrenched bureaucracy. These voters (!) have spent the last 50 years being indoctrinated by the nanny state that nothing they do is their own fault (sue someone!), and that failure is someone else's mistake to be corrected by legislation and taxpayer-funded safety nets. Instead of worrying about electronic voting (as a crutch for voters too stupid to work a punch card? Hello?), maybe we should implement a 3-question "are you smarter than a 5th grader?" randomized test - pass all 3 questions and your vote counts?

      Would EITHER party agree with that? I doubt it.

      Add to the high-fructose-corn-syrup-addicted couch-potato masses a 24 hour media which is starving for something to cover, making every event a crisis, every rainstorm a disaster. (Hint: not everything is a "holocaust".) Leaven this mix with ardent (usually young) 'activists' who are so over-certain of their own self-worth that they are positive that they have to "do something!" and spend their time screeching disaster (cheerfully regurgitated by the abovementioned media) over any and everything.

      Want to "do something"? Instead of pointlessly waving a sign or chanting doggerel about Bush or Cheney with your friends at some "meaningful" (actually social) event, spend an evening every week at Feed my Starving Children. http://www.fmsc.org/ (OHMYGOD...they are RELIGIOUS! They must have a secret agenda!)
      Shovel the old person's sidewalk next door.
      Join the local Lions/Kiwanis/Rotary/whatever, and help make your community a better place.

      Or you could just be an anonymous internet poster, bitching about the complacence of your fellow citizens. Tip: posting on /. isn't really actually doing anything. Oh wait, that probably makes me "complacent" doesn't it? Ah well, I'm going to go complacently help my fellow men/women today. You "engaged" people rage all you want on teh intarweb. I'm sure something will come of it.

      (Re the OP: blah blah blah blah disaster blah blah blah Bush blah blah Nazi blah blah Police State blah blah. Drop me a line when something actually happens...something besides some activists getting the attention they're BEGGING for to validate their MEANINGFULNESS. Z-z-z-z.)

      --
      -Styopa
    72. Re:This is the police. by jadavis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      abuse of power and invasion of privacy and misuse of government

      Surveillance of activities in public as well as undercover operations have been used by the police for a long time. The police are allowed to do these things based on a hunch if they want, they don't need a warrant to do any of it.

      What, specifically, did they do that's illegal/unconstitutional?

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    73. Re:This is the police. by Buckler · · Score: 1

      sumdumass: "Breaking laws and property damage is in no way free speech. I don't see how you can think it is. Should someone who doesn't like what your saying be able to deface your car in the name of free speech? Do what you want. But tell it like it is, Those that oppose criminal and illegal activity are not opposing free speech."

      I know exactly what you're saying. Why, how could a bunch of misfits and malcontents actually consider destroying property in the name of free speech by, say, throwing countless crates of legally-purchased tea into Boston Harbor?

    74. Re:This is the police. by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      >When people started losing everything, they started wanting their great leader dead and were happy when we invaded

      The problem being: who is going to come in from the outside and fix the problems, when countries all over the world are all going down the same nasty route? The few countries that aren't busy passing security-over-freedom laws, if they all got together, couldn't take over *England*, much less the US or China.

      Serious totalitarian regimes usually have to be toppled from outside, because by the time they get there, their populations are too scared to make waves from inside. We don't *have* an outside to come in and fix things anymore. It's just scared people everywhere. And the damned part is they're mostly scared of each other, and that's exactly what many governments want.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    75. Re:This is the police. by Princeofcups · · Score: 1

      > Do what you want. But tell it like it is, Those that oppose criminal and illegal activity are not opposing free speech.

      So you are fine with obeying any law passed by the corporate owned local and federal governments, no matter how restrictive? That seems to be what you are saying. Time for Jewish ghettos and invading Poland by your reasoning. And whoever modded this up to +5 insightful, I wish to protest with a hearty "fuck you!"

      jfs

      --
      The only thing worse than a Democrat is a Republican.
    76. Re:This is the police. by Lockejaw · · Score: 1

      Never heard of them lobbying for abortion, but it wouldn't surprise me. Lower-income people tend to be less able to support accidental offspring and more likely to have them.

      --
      (IANAL)
    77. Re:This is the police. by Lockejaw · · Score: 1

      I missed the part where the party-goers claimed to be acting legally.

      --
      (IANAL)
    78. Re:This is the police. by rhakka · · Score: 1

      yeah, seattle was awash in crime and violence. There was what, 40,000 people in that protest? How many windows got broken? Three?

      If that was a "mob of assholes", Seattle would have been burned to the ground in response to the totalitarian mob-attack tactics their police force used. Luckily for seattle, the vast majority of the protestors are inhumanly dedicated to peaceful protest, because I tell you now if it were me taking a face full of tear gas for sitting down on a sidewalk, watching other non-violent protestors getting beaten with batons, I'd have led the rush to show the police exactly what is and is not acceptable when facing a peaceful protest.

      But I guess that's why I'm not a pacifist. but it might illustrate to you why civil disobediance is, in fact, a lot better than the alternative... armed insurrection.

    79. Re:This is the police. by Buckler · · Score: 1

      They didn't. In fact it was the law itself they were protesting. Sometimes you have to exercise your freedoms in defiance of the law to make a point. That's what I was getting as, as opposed to the OP, who seems to think that every law mandated by government is essentially good and proper. It just ain't so. Free Speech Zones, anyone?

    80. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Those that oppose criminal and illegal activity are not opposing free speech."

      In order to make that statement correct, you'd need to add the word "necessarily" before "opposing."

      It's clear that most opposition to free speech comes from exactly those people. People like to pretend they're on the side of justice, and they stand high on that horse while trampling anyone who gets in their way -- regardless of whether they're trampling good or bad people.

      The question you need to ask yourself is this: is your fear of criminals so great that you will adopt their tactics (offensive violence, coercion, abuse of trust) in order to fight them? If the answer is yes, then your reaction has made you a criminal yourself.

    81. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Perjury trap? It's only perjury if you knowingly tell lies under oath. What exactly do you consider a perjury trap to be? Are United States courtrooms perjury traps?
      Bull shit. It is this way if you don't have some connection to Bush or Cheney and the dems aren't trying to buffalo you. Recent events show this.

      Wtf? A misstatement? Like just one? Hah. No. Sorry. Try again. Try at least 3 lies and you might be closer. Seeing as how his testimony was disputed by pretty much everyone, and his defense couldn't find anything to support him and had to fall back on the "oh, he's just a really, really, really forgetful guy" defense, I think he must have known exactly what he was doing at the time, whether he forgot it later or not (which is also bs, of course).
      lol.. I guess it would be three lies if you count the reporter that said "I didn't have this conversation until this date" and the three other reporters who said "I remember talking to him before he talked to so and so on this date". He would have been counted as lied each time someone placed their conversation before the other. All of the offenses resulted around the timing of conversations and who they took place with. Nothing he supposedly lied about was factually different then the timing except for the one reporter who denied having a conversation with him.

      It isn't like He went in and said the moon is made of green cheese. It' is as if he said the moon isn't made of cheese, nasa proved because they then sent astronauts to see.

      It's not even clear that leaking the info was a crime. If they didn't know she was covert, then they didn't knowingly reveal a covert CIA agent's identity. The problem is whether you lie about what you revealed or not. If Armitage actually revealed the info, then he apparently didn't lie about it. Libby did. So Libby goes to jail. That's how it's supposed to work. Lesson here? Don't lie.
      No, It is clear that in this case the leak wasn't criminal. The leaker, Richard Armatage has confirmed the reporter's (who published the leak) story on how and were the leak happened and he has confirmed to Fitzgerald that he was the leaker within the first week Fitzgerald was appointed to investigate it. The so called outing happened when a reporter casually made a comment about Wilson being questionably incompetent to be on a mission to Niger so many years after his service and wondered how he was chosen for the task. Armatage, replied that his wife got him the gig because of her position at the CIA. Plame was already known to be Wilson's wife.

      And when the lie(s) are a series of misstatements of the order of events in who you talked to first after the prosecutor knows who committed the suspected outing along with the conditions surrounding it, it seems pointless to go further. And later, after several months of recounting it, Libby sought out the special prosecutor and changed the statements he made claiming he made a mistake. But for some reason a mistake is now a LIE even when it is corrected at a later date.

      f you're not willing to be questioned under oath, then you're probably planning to lie outright, lie by omission, or at least be intentionally misleading. People are expected to testify this way every day, and it's how our system works. This administration seems to think they are above the law.
      No, It means your afraid you will be convicted of lieing when saying you ate meatloaf and mashed potatoes for dinner the day the memo was posted and you actually had Meatloaf and whipped potatoes. And Whitehouse aids are not expected to testify in this way. Clinton stopped them from testifying entirely claiming executive privilege. Bush is offering to let them testify as long as they cannot be trapped into concocted unrelated charges or be forced to reveal war strategy or administration policy unrelated to this issue. I guess the big problem is that Bush even entertained the Idea of the aids answering senate questions instead of flat out claiming executive privilege.
    82. Re:This is the police. by mi · · Score: 1

      There was what, 40,000 people in that protest? How many windows got broken? Three?

      Well, the Wikipedia article on the subject gives no precise figures of smashed windows and other disruptions. But it paints a much gloomier picture than you try to conjure (three windows, probably, get broken in a city of Seattle's size every hour of every day):

      The situation was complicated around noon, when black-clad anarchists (in a formation known as a black bloc) began smashing windows and decorating storefronts, beginning with Fox's Gem Shop. This produced some of the most famous and controversial images of the protests. This set off a chain-reaction of sorts, with additional protesters pushing dumpsters into the middle of intersections and lighting them on fire, police vehicles turned-over, non-black-blockers joining in the property destruction, and a general disruption of all commercial activity in downtown Seattle.

      Seattle's (Democratic) administration have patently failed to uphold law and order, allowing the mob of 40K (your numbers) to seriously disrupt lives of millions and cause millions of dollars worth of damage.

      Thankfully, New York's (Republican) administration was better...

      But I guess that's why I'm not a pacifist. but it might illustrate to you why civil disobediance is, in fact, a lot better than the alternative... armed insurrection.

      Ha-ha! A /. nerd threatening armed violence (and tries to change the topic)... But don't worry — no tear gas was used in NYC — thanks in no small part to the solid preparations described in TFA.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    83. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      lol. Well maybe you actually didn't see the little code there. Maybe you did and are playing dumb.

      The AC was replying to a whiny snibble about how someone is displease with life and the country and claims it will only end IN FIRE. The AC said he would be waiting with refreshments at the convention. Now what refreshments would you have when showing up for support to something someone thinks will end in fire? Maybe a Molotov cocktail?

      And this idea would be free speech how? This story is abouthow people planning on breaking the law were tracked down and stopped before they could create too much damage. And people are somehow claiming some right to break laws and destroy property as the outrage in being busted.

      The AC nows full well what I was saying. You on the other hand might not. And no there isn't any reason I have to think you were the AC. But the reason the AC was an AC is because anyone can connect the dots and come to the same conclusions. He would be wanting to stay AC so nothing would have come back on him. Also, you seem to be interested in what was said in reply to him so I asked the question.

    84. Re:This is the police. by hondo77 · · Score: 1

      Except there is no indication that there was anything illegal or immoral about the firing of the US Attorneys...

      You mean the firings of attorneys investigating allegedly corrupt Republican politicians? No, no indication of anything wrong there.

      --
      I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
    85. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      lol.. Yea, spinning because they are safe in their graves and now cowards right?

      But of course, if your talking about any of the recent laws passed, then I would suggest that if they were in disagreement with them then why are there specific abilities in the constitution to allow it to happen? Why did they craft a constitution and place provisions in it allowing these laws to be made and them spell out specific instances when they could?

      The founding father foreseen this need and this is the result of their planning.

    86. Re:This is the police. by hondo77 · · Score: 1

      ...I guessing you already know that Richard Armatage was the person who outed Plame. He is a long time Democrat and a critic of the bush war policy...

      Is this the same Richard Armitage who worked for the Reagan administration? The same one that signed "The Project for the New American Century" letter, urging President Clinton to overthrow Saddam? The same one that was a foreign policy adviser to George W. Bush when he was campaigning in 2000?

      It damages your credibility when people find out you have no idea what you're talking about.

      --
      I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
    87. Re:This is the police. by workindev · · Score: 1

      Try at least 3 lies and you might be closer. Seeing as how his testimony was disputed by pretty much everyone, and his defense couldn't find anything to support him and had to fall back on the "oh, he's just a really, really, really forgetful guy" defense, I think he must have known exactly what he was doing at the time, whether he forgot it later or not (which is also bs, of course).


      What exactly are you claiming that Libby knew he was doing? He wasn't the source of the leak - he knew that, and the prosecutor knew that during the Grand Jury interviews. Libby had nothing to hide, so why are you claiming that he (a former lawyer, who would presumably know better) would purposefully lie in front of a Grand Jury about something he didn't do?

      The answer is that he didn't lie. Sure he gave testimony that conflicted with other witnesses testimony. But the testimony of those other witnesses was also inconsistent. In fact, prosecutor star witness Tim Russert told investigators that "he speaks to many people on a daily basis and it is difficult to reconstruct some specific conversations, particularly one which occurred several months ago", so he wouldn't rule out the possibility that Libby's testimony was wrong. But apparently that kind of reasonable doubt isn't enough to acquit a Republican who is accused of lying about a crime he didn't commit.

      If you're not willing to be questioned under oath, then you're probably planning to lie outright, lie by omission, or at least be intentionally misleading. People are expected to testify this way every day, and it's how our system works. This administration seems to think they are above the law.

      No. Unfortunately, the way the our system works today is this: Identify your most potent political enemies. Start lobbing unfounded accusations at them until you can say "See, look. These crooks are accused of so many things that they have to be dirty". Demand high profile investigations so you can keep the issue on the front page even longer. All it then takes is to cycle through a Grand Jury or two (or 3, or 4, or 5...) until you get one that agrees with you so you can indict on a crime they didn't commit, or even better, a completely different "crime" than the one you are "investigating".

      Gee, it's only taken the Republicans over 6 years to figure out that these are rules of the game they are playing in. It shouldn't be a shock that they are finally deciding to take their ball and play somewhere else.
    88. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The laws aren't good and proper all the time. And the point wasn't that they were.

      The point is that there is a law and someone is choosing to violate it. There are ways to change these laws without breaking them. This insistence that breaking them are somehow a right that should be had without any interference. This is not true to any extent and should never be true to any extent. The outrage that someone got caught planning breaking the law because an office went to a public meeting and listened is ridiculous. If your doing the crime be prepared to do the time. It is that simple. Nothing wrong happened here except people weren't allowed to break the laws. It doesn't get much plainer then that.

    89. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Yep, the very same Richard Armitage that was a close friend of Powell who also supported overthrowing Saddam but not the way bush was trying to do it.

      And Yes, I see I was spelling it wrong. IT is Armitage not Armatage like i stated. Thanks for the correction.

    90. Re:This is the police. by xappax · · Score: 1

      So the cop seems interested and offers to help finance it.

      Slightly off-topic, but if a police officer actively assists or encourages the planning or commission of a crime, it's entrapment, and illegal. This does come up in "activist infiltration" cases, where an officer will infiltrate a group not just to take notes, but to pressure the group to commit crimes, like vandalism, sabotage, etc. in order to arrest members who take the bait. There is even photographic and video evidence of undercover police in protests trying to incite aggression towards police lines, presumably to weed out "troublemakers" and justify a violent police response.

      I can search for your name/nick and bring up abut every conversation we ever had. Does that mean I violated some civil right you have? Am I breaking the law? No, I'm not a cop but I don't see where that would make a difference.

      There is a difference, and it has to do with implied threats and a chilling effect on free speech. If you're tracking my every word at political meetings and protests, that's not too big a deal, because I don't have any realistic reason to fear that you would use that information against me, or even if you did, that it would be very detrimental to me.

      However, if the police, or spy agencies are recording the same information, it becomes seriously intimidating to many people, especially when it's associated with political expression. People being persecuted (jailed, seriously harassed, slandered, assaulted, assassinated) simply because of their political speech is not an unknown phenomenon, here or in other countries.

      You can argue about individual cases, and sometimes it's not cut and dry, but the point is that people have lost their jobs, reputations, and even lives because of government responses to free expression. So when the government begins monitoring and recording the activities of people on the basis of what free speech activities they are engaging in, many people see an implied threat that the information may be used to persecute them, and when people see an implied threat related to expressing a certain opinion, they're going to be a lot more timid about voicing that opinion. This is called a chilling effect, and though subtle, it's is a very real, very serious threat to our democracy.

      If the NYPD was infiltrating PTA meetings and conservative think-tanks too, people probably wouldn't be as concerned, because they wouldn't feel that they're being targeted by law enforcement on the basis of their political positions. I don't think that realistically the NYPD gives a crap whether Pastors For Peace has a prayer circle against the war, but the methods of surveillance they're using give the strong impression that the cops consider anyone who expresses a specific political position to be likely targets of law enforcement, and so people from groups like Pastors For Peace will understandably feel intimidated.

      So the obvious follow up question is, are these people reasonable in feeling intimidated, or are they just paranoid moonbats? There are ample accounts of police harassment, disruption and violence toward "good" protesters, meaning people who were breaking absolutely no laws and could not reasonably have been suspected of doing so. Cops are very fond of using legal loop holes to perform drug war-style raids on activist art studios, medical clinics, and meeting centers during the lead-up to a protest, in which equipment is seized and sometimes never returned. They are also fond of performing "pre-emptive arrests", in which groups of people who the police anticipates will cause trouble at a protest are arrested before they even reach the demonstration, only to be released with no charges when the event is over. These are not anomalies either, they have been observed consistently as a pattern in multiple cities during large protests, and it's reasonable to think they constitute a strategic policy. Included in this policy is the allocation of a portion of the police pro

    91. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      What does back robbery have to do with protest?
      Nothing actually. Just as these foiled criminal acts have nothing to do with them. It was the OP who had to have an analogy, so I made it more fitting to the real life actual event surounding this story instead of attempting to hide those facts and act as if nothing illegal was ever being planned.

      What does patrolling the streets have to do with infiltrating political groups?
      Lol, It is very similar. You see, when you put something in the public arena, anyone can witness it. And when they witnessed criminal activity, infiltrating the group is the same as the cop stopping to check on a suspected person in need of help. Except that they are taking note of the planned illegal activities instead of simply helping the victim.

      I personally would rather have the police out on the streets instead of investigating people who have done nothing worse than disagreeing with the president.
      I would too. Unfortunatly, this story isn't about people who disagree with the president. It is about those people planning criminal activities and getting caught.

      If you think that protest is akin to robbery, murder, and rape then you're one sick fellow.
      I never said anything close to this. In fact I went out of my way to show that this isn't about protest. It is about breaking the law and criminal activity. And I don't separate the laws that were broke unless there is something special in how they were broke. In this story, there wasn't.

      The entire story is about how the cops were showed postings and suggested material claiming the intent of some groups or members of the groups who were planning to show up at a legal function to violate the law and got busted when they acted on these plans. It further goes on to show how this happened by evidence extracted from the public hearings of the people charged with crimes because of this.

      Notice this isn't about the protesters, it is about the criminal element within the protesters. People are trying to excuse these criminal action under the cover of the legitimate protesters and it is probably why groups who weren't planning to violate any law were included in the investigations. The fact is, even though these groups are related, the cause and effects or actions and intent are not.
    92. Re:This is the police. by Columcille · · Score: 1

      I like to imagine big brother so that I can feel significant with the idea that someone finds me interesting enough to watch, but if no one is watching me, I'll pretend they are anyway. Then I'll join some big cause that opposes this monster and I'll feel like I'm part of something important, even though I'm really just wasting my time rather than being part of things that really are important.

      --
      I love my sig.
    93. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      So you are fine with obeying any law passed by the corporate owned local and federal governments, no matter how restrictive? That seems to be what you are saying. Time for Jewish ghettos and invading Poland by your reasoning. And whoever modded this up to +5 insightful, I wish to protest with a hearty "fuck you!"
      I'm fine with obeying the law even if i'm not fine with the law.

      More specifically, if the law is unjust, ill-worded or unconventionally restrictive, immoral or whatever, there are ways to get it changed, nullified, or repealed. Breaking it then complaining that someone busted you isn't one of them. Even if you have to remove the standing government to do so. Now, the Jewish ghettos are already blocked by the current constitution. If we decided to implant a system like there, a court would over turn it in a heartbeat. And if they didn't then they weren't following the laws and the next step needs to be put in place.
    94. Re:This is the police. by CreatureComfort · · Score: 1


      Thank you for explaining that to him, so I didn't have to. It was obvious he missed the AC's innuendo.

      --
      "Unheard of means only it's undreamed of yet,
      Impossible means not yet done." ~~ Julia Ecklar
    95. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +5 Funny, -5 Sad Because it's True

    96. Re:This is the police. by cultrhetor · · Score: 1

      Remember, even failed revolutions count as revolutions - don't forget about the one that some foolish southerners started (and lost) in the mid 19th century.

      --
      "Tu fui, ego eris" - Virgil
    97. Re:This is the police. by Lockejaw · · Score: 1

      There are ways to change these laws without breaking them.
      Right, those are the first two boxes. When they fail, you move on to the third. Then, if that's not enough, the fourth.
      --
      (IANAL)
    98. Re:This is the police. by rhakka · · Score: 1

      One group of anarchists crashed the party and broke a small number of windows, in a small area, and were quickly disrupted. Oddly enough, the media coverage on the entire 3 day protest was of the same few storefronts and had very little coverage of the police's absolutely heavy handed response to what was, by any reasonable measure, an incredibly peaceable assembly for any assembly of that size.

      You'd have more damage done at a concert than these protestors instigated. Seriously; if 40,000 people wanted to be "assholes", seattle could EASILY have been a smoking pile of rubble. Nothing even remotely close to that occurred. Yes, traffic was blocked, access to buildings was denied... but no large amounts of property damage occurred nor was any real aggression instigated by the protestors. I agree the wikipedia entry is "gloomy"... when people simply refuse to play, gather en masse (and that's a pretty huge mass), and refuse to obey WITHOUT causing mass damage, which is exactly what happened here... and are attacked by our own police with rubber bullets, tear gas, pepper spray, truncheons, and the like... that's pretty sad.

      I don't know much about New York except that in principle it is extremely bothersome to have government agents of any level infiltrating grassroots organizations, since history shows they tend to engage in disruptive activities like causing strife and discontent within the organizations to render them ineffective, which is EXTREMELY undemocratic and against any principle of freedom I am aware of. But I strongly object to your utter misrepresentation of the events of Seattle. That was a well run protest, run over roughshod by a panicking city administration afraid to look bad in front of the "big boys", and complicit in the spin was the mainstream media in every possible way.

      if you disagree, I would simply ask on what planet is it considered more newsworthy that a few windows got broken, compared to the reasons driving tens of thousands of people into the streets to protest? The reasons were nowhere to be found in the news coverage. No analysis. Nothing. You'd think, were the media independant and objective, at least a small amount of time would have been given to bring viewers up to speed on WHY this many people where this agitated.. no? This isn't a terrorist cell with a manifesto kidnapping someone for publicity. This was a mass movement.

    99. Re:This is the police. by monkeydo · · Score: 1

      The travel office employees were not political appointees, they were career civil servants. It isn't surprising to me that 6 out of 8 were involved in public corruption investigations. Public corruption is one of the few crimes that get a USA's attention.

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum
      The only thing more annoying than a Libertarian is an (un|mis)informed Libertarian
    100. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Maybe if your going through so many boxes that rest of the people don't agree with you. So at this time is necessarily to break laws, to get the people afraid enough that they will give in to your position?

    101. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe if your going through so many boxes that rest of the people don't agree with you.
      Would you say the same about the racial equality movement? They were on the third box, and some were even starting on the fourth.
      Or maybe people have a right to preserve racist laws.
    102. Re:This is the police. by Danse · · Score: 1

      You're taking things out of context and attributing knowledge to Libby that he has now, but didn't have at the time he was talking to the reporters, and that he didn't have when he was talking to the FBI.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    103. Re:This is the police. by VON-MAN · · Score: 1

      Oh man. You never read TFA.

    104. Re:This is the police. by Some_Llama · · Score: 1

      "No. Unfortunately, the way the our system works today is this: Identify your most potent political enemies. Start lobbing unfounded accusations at them until you can say "See, look. These crooks are accused of so many things that they have to be dirty". Demand high profile investigations so you can keep the issue on the front page even longer. All it then takes is to cycle through a Grand Jury or two (or 3, or 4, or 5...) until you get one that agrees with you so you can indict on a crime they didn't commit, or even better, a completely different "crime" than the one you are "investigating"."

      Like they did with Clinton.

      "Gee, it's only taken the Republicans over 6 years to figure out that these are rules of the game they are playing in. It shouldn't be a shock that they are finally deciding to take their ball and play somewhere else."

      See above.

    105. Re:This is the police. by Damvan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow, I think you covered all the bases in that rant!

      "reasons the schools are fighting the testing is because people like you woldn't get it anyways" = you are stupid, or alternately, No Child Left Behind is wonderful!

      "and set them loose on little sally" = Think of the Children!

      "your affraid of the police knowing what your doing" = If you don't have anything to hide, why should you care"

      "At least i'm not on the side wanting to give the enemy all the aid and comfort." = If you are not with us, you are against us.

      "when you can't leave you house for fear of being blown up" = Be afraid! Be afraid!

      "usualy people like you flock to groups and make things up and secretly one person is the leader and has an alternative agenda" = The Vast Liberal Conspiracy!

      "What does that make the people who are wanting the other side to win?" = If you are not with us, you want the terrorists to win.

      "But i will tell you what, It isn't anything with a real conect to reality." = I am right, and you are delusional for not agreeing with me.

      Did I get them all?

    106. Re:This is the police. by workindev · · Score: 1

      Right. Dirty politics and unproductive partisan bickering aren't exclusive to the Democratic Party, and didn't start when George W. Bush took office. Unfortunately, that has been the tone in Washington for years.

    107. Re:This is the police. by Some_Llama · · Score: 1

      "Right. Dirty politics and unproductive partisan bickering aren't exclusive to the Democratic Party, and didn't start when George W. Bush took office. Unfortunately, that has been the tone in Washington for years."

      So to make it sound paritsan (only Democrats doing it) is perverse and thus the reason for my comments, excuse me if I misunderstood your comment for politic spin.

    108. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I believe the boxes worked didn't they? OR am I missing something in society?

    109. Re:This is the police. by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      The point is, they serve at the pleasure of the President. He named 'em. Karl, and Harriet, and Alberto. Brownie and Johnny B.

    110. Re:This is the police. by pr0nboy · · Score: 1

      Question: When is it illegal for the White House to fire and replace political appointees like US Attorneys?

      Answer: Never.

      Game over.

    111. Re:This is the police. by Darby · · Score: 1

      Did I get them all?

      I'd go as far as

      "At least i'm not on the side wanting to give the enemy all the aid and comfort." = If you are not with us, you are against us.

      and toss in: "While giving aid and comfort to our enemies by continuing to stay deluded by these traitors" for the hat trick.

      You nailed it though, Damvan.
      The whole thing boiled down to zero informational content.

    112. Re:This is the police. by hondo77 · · Score: 1

      Question: When is it okay for the Attorney General to lie to Congress?

      Answer: When he is a Republican.

      Game over? You never even made it into the stadium.

      --
      I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
    113. Re:This is the police. by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 1

      "Someone please tell me were the issue is?"
      You answer your own question (at least it's MY issue with this) -
      "the tax payer funds spent on this effort"

      I don't want to pay for cops investigating people who like/dislike certain political parties/ideas. If they want to revert to a freedomless state, don't expect me to pay for it (or support it)... Why wasn't the Democratic Convention equally investigated? If it had been I wouldn't have as much of a problem with this, but using public money to further political agendas is not okay with me.

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    114. Re:This is the police. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please, don't you have a fundraiser for the Department of Homeland Idiocy to be running somewhere? God the government LOVES airheads like you!

    115. Re:This is the police. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      OK, So you listed everything your going to ignore by default. This could be a good reason you are the way you are. But I won't let personalities interfere here.

      You see, I asked for a definition of totalitarianism that match the usage. You you forget = disbeliever in bullshit

      You also forgot "Your trying to put words in someone else's mouth" = your twisting everything for no reason just to ignore the subject.

      What about "You come around half cocked without the slightest bit of knowledge in what your talking about and then for some reason tend to interpret what was said to mean something totally different." = troll troll troll, but I don't care if you live under a bridge.

      How about "I am willing to bet that you would feel alot better about the world and life itself if you would stop that one thing and take whatever was said as what was actualy said (face value). Now I'm sure your the "brave" keyboard commando here." = take your head out of your ass and look around. life doesn't stink like you think it does, your just smelling your own shit.

      OR what about "Nothing you dumbasses claim to be stomping freedoms are actualy doing it." = your ragging about nothing but trying to make it into something it isn't.

      Now you got the The Vast Liberal Conspiracy backward. It isn't a liberal conspiracy. It just seems that way because the liberals are easier to fool. I don't think it goes with politics rather someone is useing it for personal gain.

      And I see you ignored the entire question with this, "What does that make the people who are wanting the other side to win?" = If you are not with us, you want the terrorists to win.

      Maybe your just ating as a coward and not answering the posts because your afraid something might have been right? Or maybe the original posy mine was in reply to was made by a coward trying to make himslef feel better and htis is the way to avoid a blow to his self-esteem.

    116. Re:This is the police. by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      I wasn't referring to the travel office scandal. Clinton fired 93 U.S. attorneys on March 24, 1993.br.

  2. AGAIN again ..... by Brad1138 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The corruption we see today from the republican side never ceases. I am sure it has probably been as bad from the other side in the past but not in my memory. It just keeps coming. I can't think of a single truth I have heard from the current administration.

    --
    If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people
    1. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Qzukk · · Score: 0

      and please, try to prove me wrong!

      OK

      The corruption we see today from the democrat side never ceases. I am sure it has probably been as bad from the other side in the past but not in my memory. It just keeps coming. I can't think of a single truth I have heard from the current administration.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    2. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Of course! Reality has a well-known liberal bias.

    3. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does this have to do with corruption? It's about spying on a bunch of misfits and hooligans.

    4. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Frumious+Wombat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And you're surprised because.....

      Just to be even-handed, wasn't it Clinton who caged protesters off in areas where he'd never have to see them? Something along the lines of "you have the right to free speech, but you don't have the right for anybody to hear you".

      But no, you're probably right, that this admin is working hard to rise to Nixonian levels.

      --
      the more accurate the calculations became, the more the concepts tended to vanish into thin air. R. S. Mulliken
    5. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now that's not entirely accurate. I once heard the president state that his name was "George W. Bush." That's a verifiable fact!

    6. Re:AGAIN again ..... by dbIII · · Score: 1

      From outside it doesn't look much like Republicans. Remember that in the past in many places Kings have been elected and even had term limits. I see it as bizzare that you have a monarchist faction in the Republican party with a leader with more power and less limits than George III - but at least he'll be gone soon and the incompetant royal court will go with him no matter who wins. Prince Cheney had a bigger motorcade and demanded more pomp and ceremony on a recent visit to Sydney than the real Queen Elizabeth - we even had to change the gun laws for him the night before.

    7. Re:AGAIN again ..... by quanticle · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >>But no, you're probably right, that this admin is working hard to rise to Nixonian levels.<<

      Huh? By many measures of governmental openness, this administration has surpassed Nixonian levels of secrecy. Don't forget that this administration had a long period where they controlled all three branches of government, enabling them to change policies and regulations so that secrecy became institutionalized. Nixon did not have an opportunity to do this.

      --
      We all know what to do, but we don't know how to get re-elected once we have done it
    8. Re:AGAIN again ..... by ArcherB · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Since when is the NYPD Republican?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    9. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Brad1138 · · Score: 1

      Do you think the NYPD spontaneously decided to spy on democrats (or whoever the RNC wanted info about). I don't know how the police got involved in this but the orders must have come from higher up, Mostly likely from republicans associated with the RNC.

      --
      If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people
    10. Re:AGAIN again ..... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Do you think the NYPD spontaneously decided to spy on democrats (or whoever the RNC wanted info about).
      Well, I'm sure you were protesting the loudest when the Clintons used the FBI to retrieve information about political opponents. I assume you'll be voting for Ms. Clinton this time around? Still, that's neither here nor there...

      I don't know how the police got involved in this but the orders must have come from higher up, Mostly likely from republicans associated with the RNC.
      I read the article and I didn't see Karl Rove's name mentioned anywhere. Oh, wait, he must have used the dark side of the force to disguise his disfigured face.

      Seriously, even when the article makes no mention of Republicans, other than the fact that it was their convention, you assume that Republicans must have been behind the whole thing. You literally read it into the article, even though it is not there. Go back and re-read your post and tell me that you honestly think you can view any story about politics with an open mind and without an anti-conservative bias. Tell me that your mind is not made up before you read anything. It seems to me that in your mind, nothing bad can happen without a Republican being behind it. Unbelievable!

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    11. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll bet that parent ends up at +5, funny and/or insightful!

    12. Re:AGAIN again ..... by mdfst13 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Since when is the NYPD Republican? Looking at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudy_Giuliani -- I'd have to guess since about January 1st of 1994. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Bloomberg suggests that it still is. At least in terms of who has ultimate control over budgeting and selection of people for task forces.
    13. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Brad1138 · · Score: 1

      you assume that Republicans must have been behind the whole thing

      It isn't hard to assume Republicans would be behind spying for the RNC. Maybe Bush is still looking for WMD's?

      I assume you'll be voting for Ms. Clinton this time around?

      Not a chance, Obama all the way. I have never like Mrs. Clinton much.

      Seriously, even when the article makes no mention of Republicans, other than the fact that it was their convention

      Did you listen to yourself before tying that?

      --
      If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people
    14. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Columcille · · Score: 1

      Yes, yes - NY police officers perform good police work, and this makes Republicans evil.

      --
      I love my sig.
    15. Re:AGAIN again ..... by The+Cydonian · · Score: 1

      I'm not American, and happen to have no real political loyalties to any American organization, but here's how I'm reading it all:

      The police was subverted for a Republican convention. Specifically, it was subverted to spy on groups with "anti-Bush" activities. To quote,

      "Activists are showing a well-organized network made up of anti-Bush sentiment; the mixing of music and political rhetoric indicates sophisticated organizing skills with a specific agenda," said the report, dated Oct. 9, 2003. "Police departments in above listed areas have been contacted regarding this event."

      Law-abiding groups opposed to _Bush_ (not 'US', not 'Republicans', but "Bush") were spied upon. This is political-spying, pure and simple; absolutely no way you can spin this out of the Republicans.

    16. Re:AGAIN again ..... by The+Cydonian · · Score: 1

      Rather, 'spin Republicans out of this'. Bloody dyslexia.

    17. Re:AGAIN again ..... by hax0r_this · · Score: 1

      "Do you think the NYPD spontaneously decided to spy on democrats"

      Do I think the NYPD spontaneously decided to try to prevent riots in NYC? I'm pretty sure thats their job. The number of people who hate the Bush administration happens to be greater than just about any other population of "haters", and as liberals (please note that I consider myself a liberal, and no fan of the Bush administration) they seem to be rather succeptible to mob mentality, and getting carried away.

      Consider the 1999 WTO Conference - "The conclusion by many in Seattle was that the WTO convention was not worth hosting due to the economic damage (although minimal) caused by the protests. Controversy over the city's response to the protests resulted in the resignation of Seattle police chief Norm Stamper, and arguably played a role in Schell's loss to Greg Nickels and Mark Sidran in the 2001 mayoral primary election." - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WTO_Ministerial_Confe rence_of_1999_protest_activity

      Most people don't like losing their jobs, completely aside from the fact that the NYPD was just doing theirs (overzealously perhaps, but I really don't see some "evil Bush administration plot" here).

    18. Re:AGAIN again ..... by JonToycrafter · · Score: 1

      Sigh...I know I'm being trolled, but...

      OK, fine. Here.

      The full article is available lots of places, like here.

      Sorry that you're looking to find evidence of anti-conservative bias, but, well...you're just not up to speed on the politics of the 2004 RNC. Those of us who are (both right- and left-wing) would find your defense of...Karl Rove, was it? They'd find it your straw man argument sort of laughable. Last I checked, Bloomberg, Doctoroff, and company are all high-ranking Republicans in the context discussed (NYC). The NYT article I linked to is just the tip of this iceberg, I'm afraid.

    19. Re:AGAIN again ..... by koreth · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What the hell difference does it make whether Clinton did it? Are you saying that the proper standard for Republican conduct is, "If Clinton did it, it's cool?" If Clinton does bad thing X and Bush also does bad thing X, it's bad and they should both be called on it.

      To be consistent, you should turn your logic around. If Bush does something Clinton was criticized for and isn't himself criticized, does that mean the critics were wrong before and it was okay when Clinton did it?

      The kneejerk Republican "But Clinton did it too!" response to any accusation of wrongdoing is pretty baffling to me. Last I heard the Republicans didn't consider Clinton a paragon of virtue, so why is it somehow okay to stoop to his level?

      (And no, I am not a Democrat. They are a bunch of spineless gasbags as far as I'm concerned. But at least they don't have nearly the finger-pointing reflex the Republicans do, this obsessive need to make every problem someone else's fault.)

    20. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Credit where credit is due: Stephen Colbert at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, 2006.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    21. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you had even half a clue, you'd discover Bloomberg is only a Republican because that was the easier path to be elected mayor. He is not a Republican in any meaningful sense.

      But don't let facts get in the way of your knee-jerk circle jerk here.

    22. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have blue eyes, right?

    23. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Sigh...I know I'm trolling, but..."

      FYP.

      Read your "proof" and I was as unconvinced by it as I have been by most of the shit you Democratic weasels throw on the wall. If you plan to convince me (an INDEPENDENT, registered that way and proud) you'll need more than vague inferences of supposed claims of ideas about possible abuses.

      I swear, you idiots are as bad with your rhetoric ans the other idiots are about defending Bush. And the best part is, for some reason, you think you're smart enough to have an informed opinion, then you display your ignorance. That always makes me chuckle. Your idiotic claims of superiority brought low by your moronic posts.

    24. Re:AGAIN again ..... by Frumious+Wombat · · Score: 1

      No, actually I am saying that they both should be called on it, but given the general tone around here, rather than be set upon by hordes of crypto-libertarians for not mentioning democratic perfidies, I picked one that particularly rankles me. You'll notice, however, that I didn't have a list, which I certainly could have had I had the spleen to remember Bush-I, Reagan, some of Ford, RMN, and various nut-job congressmen over the years.

      Personally, I feel that as long as reasonable precautions are taken for the president's physical safety, then GWB, et al., should have to put up with what LBJ did. They should have to see hordes of disapproving protesters as their motorcade causes traffic snarls for hours. They should have audiences which are not hand-picked for docility, and have to answer real questions. There should be an amendment to the amendment for presidential succession that allows removing them for incompetence, and prevents them from pardoning members of their administrations enmeshed in ongoing investigations. It still bugs me that the Iran-Contra gang was allowed to slither away without ever giving a full accounting of what exactly they'd been up to.

      --
      the more accurate the calculations became, the more the concepts tended to vanish into thin air. R. S. Mulliken
    25. Re:AGAIN again ..... by SiChemist · · Score: 1

      What political party was Mayor Bloomberg a member of again? Didn't the article mention him as a driving force for the spying?


      From TFA: In February 2003, the Police Department, with Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg's support, was given broad new authority by Judge Haight to conduct such monitoring. However, a senior police official must still determine that there is some indication of illegal activity before an inquiry is begun.

  3. NYPD once again violates Handschu Agreement.. by mikelieman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The NYPD exhibiting "Bad Faith"?

    Why am I not surprised?

    --
    Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
    1. Re:NYPD once again violates Handschu Agreement.. by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

      Didn't know what the Handschu Agreement was, so I looked.

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    2. Re:NYPD once again violates Handschu Agreement.. by cold+fjord · · Score: 2, Informative
      The NYPD exhibiting "Bad Faith"?
      Why am I not surprised?


      Let me guess, you comments were in "good faith", ignoring these sections of the article?

      The operation was mounted in 2003 after the Police Department, invoking the fresh horrors of the World Trade Center attack and the prospect of future terrorism, won greater authority from a federal judge to investigate political organizations for criminal activity.....

      "All our activities were legal and were subject in advance to Handschu review," Mr. Browne said. ...

      In February 2003, the Police Department, with Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg's support, was given broad new authority by Judge Haight to conduct such monitoring. However, a senior police official must still determine that there is some indication of illegal activity before an inquiry is begun.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    3. Re:NYPD once again violates Handschu Agreement.. by mikelieman · · Score: 2, Informative

      How is it subject to the Handschu Agreement if it's not being reviewed as PER the Handschu Agreement. *A* Single Police Official is NOT the 3 person review board, is it?

      And how is a court settlement modified without the agreement of the original parties?

      --
      Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
  4. That does it! by zappepcs · · Score: 1

    No more New Yorkers at my parties....

    Oh, wait, I read /.

    Never mind

  5. This is indisputably a Good Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Government should fear the people. The more the J. Edgar Hoover wannabees feel the need to spy on me, the more I feel like I actually have a chance to change things.

    1. Re:This is indisputably a Good Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By this logic, the citizens of the Warsaw Pact had a huge chance to change things and people in the West had little. The reality is the opposite; people in the West could change things just by voting in large numbers, but Warsaw Pact members had to come to the brink (and sometimes past) of bloody revolution before anything changed.

      A quick sanity check of any political theory is that if it proves that people were more happy, well-off, or free under Stalin than almost anywhere else, that theory is wrong.

      A government should fear its people, but this is merely a necessary, not a sufficient, condition for freedom.

    2. Re:This is indisputably a Good Thing by MobyTurbo · · Score: 1

      Then why did you write that as an Anonymous Coward? (Not a flame, a serious question.)

    3. Re:This is indisputably a Good Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because they have no idea just how many Anonymous Cowards there are.

      And that works for me.

  6. spying on Canada by Mowie_X · · Score: 1

    As for spying on Canada, I've read that our spy agency CSIS spends a considerable amount of time keeping an eye on American spies on our soil. Or maybe they are just saying that and have no idea if/where American spies are operating.

    1. Re:spying on Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When the conservatives are in power, the Canadian government HELPS the US spies. The more money spies can put in the hands of christian conservative GOP supporting corporations, the more they can kick back to their buddies in the conservative party. Case in point.

    2. Re:spying on Canada by kitsunewarlock · · Score: 1

      You kicked our asses in 1812 and we wanna make sure the same mistakes aren't made again. Like invading you. *cough*

      --
      Ginga no Rekshiya Mata Each page.
    3. Re:spying on Canada by Gorshkov · · Score: 1

      When the conservatives are in power, the Canadian government HELPS the US spies.
      I've got news for you .... it's got nothing to do with the Tories. Canada, the USA, England, Australia & New Zealand have had formal intelligence sharing and analysis mechanisims in place for at least 40 years, to my direct knowledge.

      The Tories just don't lie about it.
    4. Re:spying on Canada by dbIII · · Score: 1

      It is true - just fairly one way since it is very difficult to trust US intelligence information from what I have read. Those guys believe in weird voodoo like Wonder Woman's lasso of truth and torturing people until they sign a confession, let alone some of the deliberate misinformation. Also look at news items like the complaints of sacked translators to see how amataur and politically driven some sections are - pointless bullying and power games and very little accountability do not get anything useful done.

    5. Re:spying on Canada by Gorshkov · · Score: 1

      It is true - just fairly one way since it is very difficult to trust US intelligence information from what I have read.
      What you read is not necessarily the truth .... or even remotely resembling it. Anybody who has been involved in the operational side of intelligence collection, analysis, and/or sharing will tell you the same thing.

      Like any endeavor, there are good stories and bad stories - but when it really comes down to it, we all work together pretty well.

      Also look at news items like the complaints of sacked translators to see how amataur and politically driven some sections are - pointless bullying and power games and very little accountability do not get anything useful done.
      No more than any other large groups of organisations - and probably less than most.
    6. Re:spying on Canada by dbIII · · Score: 1

      What you read is not necessarily the truth

      Mostly interviews with retired intelligence officials - most notably the former head of ASIO and retired high ranking members of the military who expessed grave doubts about the quality of the shared intelligence in general terms without mentioning any specifics apart from some of the more stupid lies proir to the current Iraq operation.

      As to the other point - I would expect them to behave in a professional manner - other countries expect that of their intelligence agencies.

    7. Re:spying on Canada by Gorshkov · · Score: 1

      Mostly interviews with retired intelligence officials - most notably the former head of ASIO and retired high ranking members of the military who expessed grave doubts about the quality of the shared intelligence in general terms without mentioning any specifics apart from some of the more stupid lies proir to the current Iraq operation.
      First - information sharing is usually done on a much lower level then the head of organisations. And the political bullshit is *usually* confined to the higher levels, where intelligence - and any other government matter - *is* politicised.

      Second - we're talking about information sharing between Canada and the USA, both of which DO have professional intelligence organizations, not fly-by-night operations in countries that are still socially in the dark ages.

      And third - please, don't mistake incorrect conclusions based on faulty or incomplete intelligence with intentionally lying.
      Many competent analysts came to the conclusion, based on how they assessed the intelligence at their disposal at the time, that there were, in fact, WMDS in Iraq ... and many other equally competent analysts came to the conclusion that there were not. It is up to the politicians to decide which assessments are correct. And if the politicians play games with what they're given, don't blame the noob sitting behind a desk.

      As to the other point - I would expect them to behave in a professional manner - other countries expect that of their intelligence agencies.
      They do. Please don't confuse grunts or military policemen interrogating prisoners with professional intelligence operators.
    8. Re:spying on Canada by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Tora Bora, Niger, the list goes on. Sometimes the incompetance is so bad that conspiracy theorists think it has to be deliberate. Possibly most of it is due to political games, starvation of resources and nepotism so you may have a point about the professionals. The descent into evil with "extreme rendition" sometimes to the point of death cannot be justified in any sort of law enforcement operation, let alone lesser bits of ignoring due process that ensure the supects can never be tried under a legal system that is not rigged. Witch drowning has no place in modern times and is certainly not a part of professional law enforcement.

  7. The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by soren42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, what I took from this article is that the NYPD has domestic and international espionage capabilities comparable to (or, worse, better than) our nation's designed intelligence bodies. They also seem to do a better job of sharing information between agencies than the CIA, NSA, the various military intelligence organizations, and the FBI.

    This is yet another illustration of my point... the people that need to be in Iraq and Afghanistan are the NYPD and the LAPD. Their SWAT, negotiations, and (apparently!) intelligence teams are what's needed - these efforts ceased being appropriate "military actions" some time ago. What's needed now is an effective police force - which not the U.S. Army or Marines.

    And, by the way, yes, I do agree with what will no doubt the general sentiment on there - that is an outrageous, appalling, and despicable invasion of the personal privacy rights of ordinary citizens around the globe... but, aside from whining about how corrupt our elected officials and expressing my outrage, I figured there was some small glimmer of upside in this piece.

    --

    "Adventure? Excitement? A Jedi craves not these things."
    1. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by Harmonious+Botch · · Score: 3, Funny

      the people that need to be in Iraq and Afghanistan are the NYPD and the LAPD So when the NYPD catches Bin Laden, they'll sodomize him with a baton? And then give him to the LAPs who beat up Rodney King? Hmmm...I'm beginning to like your idea.
    2. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Outrageous, appalling, and despicable ... to simply talk to some people to make sure they're not planning destructive acts which take away OTHERs' freedoms?

      Oooooh, how terrible. I'm quaking in my boots at the thoughts that the police are, ummm, what exactly - doing their job?

      Yes, that was sarcasm.

      Hey, NYC cops? Thank you for your efforts at keeping folks in NYC safe from destrutive assholes.

    3. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by FFFish · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Leads me to believe, yet again, that there is are population size constraints on effective/efficient government. The best-run countries don't have a humongous population.

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    4. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the people that need to be in Iraq and Afghanistan are the NYPD and the LAPD. Bush tried something like this, albeit more for propaganda purposes than anything else. From this must-read Washington Post article:

      (CPA = Coalition Provisional Authority, run by Paul Bremer)

      In May 2003, a team of law enforcement experts from the Justice Department concluded that more than 6,600 foreign advisers were needed to help rehabilitate Iraq's police forces.

      The White House dispatched just one: Bernie Kerik.

      Bernard Kerik had more star power than Bremer and everyone else in the CPA combined. Soldiers stopped him in the halls of the Republican Palace to ask for his autograph or, if they had a camera, a picture. Reporters were more interested in interviewing him than they were the viceroy.

      Kerik had been New York City's police commissioner when terrorists attacked the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. His courage (he shouted evacuation orders from a block away as the south tower collapsed), his stamina (he worked around the clock and catnapped in his office for weeks), and his charisma (he was a master of the television interview) turned him into a national hero. When White House officials were casting about for a prominent individual to take charge of Iraq's Interior Ministry and assume the challenge of rebuilding the Iraqi police, Kerik's name came up. Bush pronounced it an excellent idea. ...[snip]...

      "I'm here to bring more media attention to the good work on police because the situation is probably not as bad as people think it is," Kerik replied.

      As they entered the Interior Ministry office in the palace, Gifford offered to brief Kerik. "It was during that period I realized he wasn't with me," Gifford recalled. "He didn't listen to anything. He hadn't read anything except his e-mails. I don't think he read a single one of our proposals."

      Kerik wasn't a details guy. He was content to let Gifford figure out how to train Iraqi officers to work in a democratic society. Kerik would take care of briefing the viceroy and the media. And he'd be going out for a few missions himself.

      Kerik's first order of business, less than a week after he arrived, was to give a slew of interviews saying the situation was improving. He told the Associated Press that security in Baghdad "is not as bad as I thought. Are bad things going on? Yes. But is it out of control? No. Is it getting better? Yes." He went on NBC's "Today" show to pronounce the situation "better than I expected." To Time magazine, he said that "people are starting to feel more confident. They're coming back out. Markets and shops that I saw closed one week ago have opened."

      When it came to his own safety, Kerik took no chances. He hired a team of South African bodyguards, and he packed a 9mm handgun under his safari vest. ..[snip]...

      Kerik held only two staff meetings while in Iraq, one when he arrived and the other when he was being shadowed by a New York Times reporter, according to Gerald Burke, a former Massachusetts State Police commander who participated in the initial Justice Department assessment mission. Despite his White House connections, Kerik did not secure funding for the desperately needed police advisers. With no help on the way, the task of organizing and training Iraqi officers fell to U.S. military police soldiers, many of whom had no experience in civilian law enforcement.

      "He was the wrong guy at the wrong time," Burke said later. "Bernie didn't have the skills. What we needed was a chief executive-level person. . . . Bernie came in with a street-cop mentality." (This is just a taste. Read the article for the full shock and awe.)
    5. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by Nutria · · Score: 1
      Leads me to believe, yet again, that there is are population size constraints on effective/efficient government. The best-run countries don't have a humongous population.

      Whew, I'm glad I'm not the only one who thinks that.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    6. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by johansalk · · Score: 1

      the people that need to be in Iraq and Afghanistan are the NYPD and the LAPD
      And Martin Scorsese.
    7. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by pizpot · · Score: 1

      "So when the NYPD catches Bin Laden, they'll sodomize him with a baton? And then give him to the LAPs who beat up Rodney King? Hmmm...I'm beginning to like your idea."

      The sodomy part is overtime, for pleasure. Face it boys, you are sickos.

    8. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by bofkentucky · · Score: 1

      I thought it was a bathroom plunger?

      --
      09f911029d74e35bd84156c5635688c0
    9. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by samkass · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The best-run countries don't have a humongous population.

      I take it your assertion is that China and India have ineffective, inefficient, badly run governments? Because while I sure don't agree with the means to China's ends, they don't seem to be failing at their goals or wasting their GNP.

      --
      E pluribus unum
    10. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      It's very noticable in Europe. The UK and France seem much more disorganised (and statist) than the Scandinavians or Dutch.

      Arguably in the Chinese parts of Asia it's true too. Mainline China has a vast population and seems like a hellhole, but Taiwan is small and civilised. Singapore isn't a bad place, even if it's no Taiwan in terms of freedom.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    11. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Have you ever been to China? It's a nasty atomised society where people go off on ugly nationalist rants at the drop of hat. It's much worse than Taiwan. And remember with the GDP figure they are a starting from extreme poverty caused by the government, and the figures probably bear no resemblance to reality.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    12. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by quantaman · · Score: 1

      This is yet another illustration of my point... the people that need to be in Iraq and Afghanistan are the NYPD and the LAPD. Their SWAT, negotiations, and (apparently!) intelligence teams are what's needed - these efforts ceased being appropriate "military actions" some time ago. What's needed now is an effective police force - which not the U.S. Army or Marines. I won't argue that the US has the wrong types of troops in Iraq (need forces trained to keep peace, not just kill enemies). But just dropping in a western police force isn't going to work either, you need troops trained in real combat (not the occational shootout you sometime get here) and who know how to deal with a foreign population while keeping order.

      Any actual law enforcement that doesn't involve a military threat should probably be left to local authorities so you aren't percieved as occupiers.
      --
      I stole this Sig
    13. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by asninn · · Score: 1

      It's more complicated than the GP claims it is: "Large population, democracy, efficient government - pick any two".

      You can have a democratic government that's efficient, but only in small countries. You can have a democracy in a large country, but then it's not going to be efficient. And you can have an efficient government in a large country, but then it's not going to be democratic (e.g. China).

      I'm not at all convinced that this is actually *true*, of course, but at least it's an a priori more refined version of what the GP said that *could* be true, and some interesting food for thought. :)

      --
      butter the donkey
    14. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by _iris · · Score: 1

      Actually this is exactly why agencies should _not_ share information. Aside from obvious jurisdiction limits and the group-think problems (e.g. "every intelligence service believed the Niger story"), there is an undue burden on the larger, more capable organizations (i.e. NYPD, LAPD) to do the work of the smaller organizations. The fact that different divisions of the FBI could not share certain information, and especially that the FBI and CIA could not share certain information, was by design. It was written law, designed, debated over, and voted on by legislators. It was not some side effect of legislators operating willy-nilly as the Bush administration implies and the naive half of the Congress seems to believe.

    15. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by jvkjvk · · Score: 1

      Well, i guess that depends on your idea of what an inefficient, badly run government is.

      Stalinist Russia dragged the State into the industrial age, but I don't see many people citing that as a well run government in the sense most people use.

    16. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      China achieves its goals in terms of GNP and control by being effectively a fascist state that calls itself Communist. Fascists have always been good with economics and industrialization because they are very keen on regimentation and efficency in terms of groups. Their big problem is that they are police states and many of them have a tendancy to want to invade other countries. Unfortunately, this does not often get seen as a major problem until they start a World War.

      China is not a model of a well-run government, although it is effective at certain types of control. In fact, the party leaders are always giving speeches about "reducing corruption in the Provinces", most recently in the speech at the rubber stamp Congress where they also announced their new laws for regulating private property. While some of that are simply charges to accomplish the latest micro-purge, corruption is a real problem in China.

      China's stability is based on who controls the military and Party apparatus, you only need to harken back to 1987 to see that. If those people want economic growth, they adjust their control to allow for that, and nothing else. You don't need freedom or good governemnt to get a decent GNP. Indeed, effective government is often an impediment to raw business growth due to regulations that have other priorities than businesses (ie. workplace safety, minimum wage, environmental regs, and etc).

    17. Re:The Best Intelligence Agency in the US! by FFFish · · Score: 1

      Is there any doubt that those are inefficient governments? Is there any doubt that many (most?) of their citizens fall through the cracks?

      I suppose it all depends on what you mean by "best-run." A government that is failing most of the people most of the time can not, imo, be a "best-run" government.

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
  8. Yep. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    When I read that, I couldn't help but feel an overwhelming sense of well, nothing. Our government as a whole has fallen so far it is no longer suprising or even "despicable", it's almost routine, and that is the truly disgusting part.

  9. Previous operations of this sort by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So let's review what we know so far...

    * FBI abusing its snooping authority under the patriot act
    * Major telecommunications companies provide secret rooms to the government to pick through Internet communications
    * Al Gonzalez authorizes (illegal) collection of phone call databases
    * "Total Information Awareness" (TIA) program continues to create mass associative database of all american entities (people, businesses)
    * Inkjet printers embed hidden serial numbers
    * Newly issued American passports leak personal information including pictures
    * Government has access to all Americans' financial transactions
    * US government contracts w/private companies to harvest information (which it itself can't do)
    * Law enforcement infiltrates peaceful organizations (occasionally incites and/or foments violence)
    * Attorney General removes Federal Prosecutor for lack of loyalty to Administration... (raising questions about those who WEREN'T fired)
    * ???
    * Someone profits.

    1. Re:Previous operations of this sort by UncleTogie · · Score: 1

      ... and a kewpie doll to the first person that can tell us just WHO profits *without* mentioning a party name or politically-related person or proper noun.

      {Disclaimer: I'm not the AC above; I would've claimed that post.}

      --
      Don't tell me to get a life. I'm a gamer; I have LOTS of lives!
    2. Re:Previous operations of this sort by crazy+al's · · Score: 1

      could it be...corporate money interests? No nouns of the proper sort there...

      I welcome our "new" economic overlords. I have nothing (left) to hide...

      --
      Crazy Al's House of Intertubes - where we make up in volume what we lose per bit...
    3. Re:Previous operations of this sort by Yartrebo · · Score: 1

      The ruling class and, to a lesser extent, their petty bourgeoisie servants are the ones who benefit. In this case, the petty bourgeoisie servants are the police and spies paid to do the snooping with other people's money.

    4. Re:Previous operations of this sort by Plutonite · · Score: 1

      It's good that there are people counting. When elections begin, people should not only vote, but try as much as possible to publicize the reasons why party X lost their vote. Lists like these should be made common knowledge. We all know it is (sadly) a matter of least-dislike, and if the newly elected government knows in general what made the other party so unlikable, they will do what they can to avoid the same demise. Multi-term elections are great in this respect - they give the people in power incentive not to piss people off. If we only we knew how to use that.

    5. Re:Previous operations of this sort by Garrett+Fox · · Score: 1

      Can you explain who "the ruling class" are in this context, and how they profit from the listed abuses of power?

      --
      Revive the Constitution.
    6. Re:Previous operations of this sort by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      Weapons manufacturers.

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    7. Re:Previous operations of this sort by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... and a kewpie doll to the first person that can tell us just WHO profits *without* mentioning a party name or politically-related person or proper noun.

      The Haves.

      The ones losing the most are the "think-we-haves", since you cannot take all that much from the "have-nots".

    8. Re:Previous operations of this sort by oyenstikker · · Score: 1

      * Government has access to all Americans' financial transactions

      Remember SWIFT? The Government has access to _everyone's_ financial transactions.

      --
      The masses are the crack whores of religion.
  10. Knowing what to do? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Does anyone thing that maybe the reason we put up with this stuff is that we just don't know how to effectively change it? It seems like the only examples we have are

    (a) Ineffectual: writing or congresspersons, letters to the editor, voting.

    (b) (Typically) Crazy: armed revolt.

    It's like none of us (including me) knows how to navigate the territory between those two extremes. Heck, I don't even know whether or not there is any territory in between.

    Is this why we're damned to stand bye, then get over these things and go watch the newest B.S.G episode to forget about the state of the nation? We're just convinced that there's no effective way to deal with these things without resorting to violence, which we're (sensibly) loathe to do?
    1. Re:Knowing what to do? by jeff4747 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There is an effective way to deal with these things. Vote. When elections are lost because of this kind of thing, this kind of thing will stop happening.

      It doesn't matter if the other candidate is only slightly less repugnant. Eventually you'll run the crappy people out.

      Apathy is the only reason politics is in it's current cesspool state.

    2. Re:Knowing what to do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's true.

      The sleep of a nation gives birth to monsters.

    3. Re:Knowing what to do? by Harmonious+Botch · · Score: 1

      It's like none of us (including me) knows how to navigate the territory between those two extremes. Heck, I don't even know whether or not there is any territory in between. It looks like there is no territory between, because if you do something effective ( stronger than 'a' ) and non-violent ( not quite as strong as 'b' ) you get squashed. Examples of this range from the Whiskey Rebellion to Selma to Waco. The only way to do something effective for very long is to be armed so that you can shoot back. And sad to say, they will force you to quit or shoot back.

    4. Re:Knowing what to do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think of the children, you fucking terrorist.

    5. Re:Knowing what to do? by Broken+scope · · Score: 1

      There is a small amount of middle ground. A show of force and unity against a group that protects the government(the military) and you hope like hell that the majority of the soldiers find the prospect of shooting fellow citizens so distasteful that they refuse to follow orders or if your lucky significant parts of the military structure command structure join said rebellion because they realize that the government no longer follows that which they swore loyalty to. You still have to deal with the inevitable "by the grace of the government i will kill you" loyalists. In many countries this tends to be the "elite" soldiers, though in some they would be the first to ask "why am i fighting that which i swore to protect?"

      Until someone realizes that sometimes you have to get violent and you need alot of people who are willing to get violent. We are stuck. Part of it is that they bring up children and tell them that democracy and votes are the only answer to a problem. They never say that sometimes to remove something so entrenched you have to get violent you have to fight and some times people have to die in the process. You have to accept that somethings are worth fighting and even dieing for. The US was to an extent created by that idea, yet we refuse to teach an idea like that to our nations youth. It almost like were afraid that they might find something that means that enough to them.

      When was the last violent democratic revolution? There has been a few socialist and communist ones but I can't for the life of me name a democratic one.

      --
      You mad
    6. Re:Knowing what to do? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It doesn't matter if the other candidate is only slightly less repugnant. Eventually you'll run the crappy people out.
      Are you implying that the number of crappy people in politics isn't infinite? :)

      Apathy is the only reason politics is in it's current cesspool state.
      I disagree. You'll never get good citizen oversight of elected officials and the election process (at the national level) when the average Senator represents 6 million people. Politicians are not responsible to the people, they are responsible to the media who inform the people. Even most self-described "informed" voters get the bulk of their information from television.

      You're right, apathy is a problem. But ignorance and miseducation are just as big a problem, as is access to media.
      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    7. Re:Knowing what to do? by vandan · · Score: 1, Troll

      Vote?
      You're missing some very important points.

      Firstly, people DID vote against Bush, twice, and their votes were not counted for various reasons, ranging from Diebold 'malfunctions', to manual electoral fraud, to people mysteriously winding up on the felons list, etc, etc. Voting clearly isn't working.

      Secondly, vote for WHO, exactly? Big business OWNS the election. They pay MASSIVE, multi-million dollar bribes ... sorry ... donations, to BOTH political parties. Sure if you get enough people to vote Democrat ( shudder ), you can get rid of the Republicans ( yay ), but no matter who you vote for, big business wins.

      The only way ordinary people can affect society is by organising OUTSIDE of the official political process, and calling massive demonstrations, strikes, etc. These events wield far more power than the pathetic jokes that we call 'elections'.

    8. Re:Knowing what to do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't matter if the other candidate is only slightly less repugnant. Yes, it does matter. If you vote for the lesser of two evils you are still voting for evil. Something is seriously wrong when we need to settle for the least repugnant of two candidates. Shouldn't we demand better than that?
    9. Re:Knowing what to do? by vandan · · Score: 1

      When was the last violent democratic revolution?

      The Soviet revolution was democratic. Lenin waited until they had a majority in the Soviet councils until they arguing that the Soviets themselves should seize power, as the only group with a valid claim to it.

      If you want a non-violent revolution, the best current example is Venezuela. They're part way through anyway. Most socialists agree that they won't be able to complete the revolution without things getting violent, but only because the capitalists ( inside and out ) will resort to violence in an attempt to crush the revolution if it goes too far.
    10. Re:Knowing what to do? by maxume · · Score: 1

      The problem isn't that we have lost democracy as an ideal, it is that we treat democracy as an ideal. Democracy is a handy way to give people quite a bit of freedom(mostly compared to other ways of running a society; overall, it sucks), which is the only good thing about it.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    11. Re:Knowing what to do? by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      When was the last violent democratic revolution? There has been a few socialist and communist ones but I can't for the life of me name a democratic one. That's because, like you said, most democracies end up teaching nonviolence as one of their cardinal values.
    12. Re:Knowing what to do? by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      Are you implying that the number of crappy people in politics isn't infinite? :) No.

      There are alot of honest, bright, and upstanding(pick two!) people out there in Congress. Tom Tancredo is such a case. His politics are incredibly nutty, but he's honest about it and is also consistent.
      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    13. Re:Knowing what to do? by QuantumG · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Isn't it clear then that the only solution is to stop corporations from buying politicans? And no, you can't use the political process to stop them.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    14. Re:Knowing what to do? by LineGrunt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The four boxes of Freedom:

      Soap Box,
      Ballot Box,
      Jury Box,
      Cartridge Box.

      Use in that order.

      We're between Soap and Ballot Box at the moment. Depending on how the elections go, we MAY get some of these guys to the Jury Box stage.

      LG

    15. Re:Knowing what to do? by Laughing+Dog · · Score: 1

      Even beyond voting, volunteer for candidates you believe in, or even the ones that seem least frightening. I went to New Hampshire ahead of the '04 primaries for Dean, and before that, did local visibility-type things (manning Farmer's Market tables, registering people to vote, etc.). If the campaign has a reasonable level of organization on the local level, materials like buttons, stickers, and such come "free" (i.e., from wealthier volunteers), and the campaign itself should have fact sheets on their site that can be printed out. When I went to New Hampshire, all I paid for was my plane ticket- housing was provided free of charge with local volunteers, and some of the others who couldn't devote lots of time during the day brought us food at night. You can also potentially run for a local delegate position, where, if your candidate wins your state's primary, you go to the party convention to cast your district's vote. Basically, you have a greater chance that, as you talk to other delegates and such, your opinions will be heard.

      As campaigns are increasingly being organized online, security becomes very important. Volunteers are needed there, too, both to configure and manage servers in local offices, and to make sure that the information stored in campaign databases is protected from other campaigns, who WILL try to crack it. Our security could have been better. Last time, one campaign had people from all over the country calling New Hampshire voters; people are needed to coordinate calling parties to make sure that the same people aren't being harassed over and over again, and that, say, people in California keep the time difference in mind. On election days, people are needed to give rides to supporters that otherwise couldn't make it to the polls, act as poll monitors, and help get that last turnout push. Even if your candidate doesn't win, if they're successful enough, others will be less nervous about expressing those same ideas down the line. Dean bombed in the primaries, but he enjoyed heavy support early on because he was against the war- an idea the other candidates didn't seem to subscribe to when they announced their candidacies.

    16. Re:Knowing what to do? by vandan · · Score: 1

      Sure, that's a great step. But good luck implementing it.

      The problem is very deeply ingrained in the political process now - more so in the US than anywhere else. You need to have MILLIONS of dollars to run for President, for example. The only quick-fix I can see is to make the PUBLIC pay for election campaigns ( while preventing corporations, of course ). Some people will complain that they don't want to see public money used for such things, but the public money gets wasted in so many other areas ( 4 billion in Iraq, isn't it? ), I hardly think that's a valid arguement. We need to provide EQUAL access to the media to all parties. It's not good enough that people only really know about the big 2, and have no idea whatsoever what other people are saying. Sure, it might be an expensive solution, but it looks like if the people want democracy, they're going to have to pay for it themselves, or else stand aside so someone else can pay for it.

    17. Re:Knowing what to do? by dpilot · · Score: 1

      The grandparent post brings up a good point:

      >It doesn't matter if the other candidate is only slightly less repugnant. Eventually you'll run the crappy people out.

      It's called incremental improvement. We do it to code all the time. No matter how many times Libertarians shout Republicrat! and Demican!, the fact is that we can vote for "even slightly better," even a slightly less owned candidate.

      WE have to keep the pressure on, with our votes. Maybe progress will be slow, but right now too many are giving up, using not even incremental pressure. (Not me, I know how I voted in both 2000 and 2004. Bush looked far too "anointed" for my taste even in the primaries, so though registered as an independent, thought I wanted to vote Bradley over Gore, I felt it more important to vote in the Republican primary to vote McCain over Bush in 2000.)

      Incremental improvement also has a habit of accelerating. But you have to get started, first.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    18. Re:Knowing what to do? by deblau · · Score: 1

      Eventually you'll run the crappy people out.
      Wrong. All the major party candidates are crappy. If you vote for the lesser of two evils, you're still voting for evil. Do your homework. Vote for someone who isn't evil, even if you think they won't win. One vote can make a difference.
      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    19. Re:Knowing what to do? by Comrade+Kat · · Score: 1

      In addition to all the other accurate replies, let me direct you to the article about that vote about marijuana legality... Voting, even if it wasn't for a meaningless choice, already made for us by our corporations, subverted by our courts, can always just be ignored.

    20. Re:Knowing what to do? by Comrade+Kat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm pretty sure that there isn't anything in between and I'm pretty sure they're the only options.

      Go for the revolt. It's obviously the only effective thing to do and it's how our country tried it the first time, maybe we can get it right now...

    21. Re:Knowing what to do? by Xiroth · · Score: 1

      Oh yes, there's a middle ground. You've probably winged about it a number of times in recent years; I know that I have. What have been the most effective tools for causing politicians to make bad (for us) policy decisions? Lobby groups. Everyone here has heard of the corporate lobbyists who get laws passed that are beneficial to them and detrimental to the general public. Similarly, the special interest lobby groups like the fundamentalist groups that try to force Intelligent Design down our collective throat.

      So my question is: Why tell aren't we using these tools? Is there a special rule that you have to meet a certain evil quota before you can form a lobby group? Assuming not, then how would we go about making such a group? The answer seems pretty damn obvious in this day and age: the internet. Might it not, just maybe, be possible to create groups that lobby for certain things (like, say, privacy, or net neutrality), and gather support on the internet so that you can build the voting bloc that you represent into a significant political force?

      Maybe I'm just dreaming and people really are so apathetic they can't even be bothered supporting a political ideal. Or maybe, just maybe, there's a lot of people out there disenchanted with the system and giving up, saying "What can I do?", but who would, given a chance, leap at the possibility of really making a difference.

      I'm a pessimist by nature, so I personally doubt it would work. But all the same, the possibilities it could open might just make it worth giving a shot. It's gotta be better than giving up, anyway.

    22. Re:Knowing what to do? by Jasin+Natael · · Score: 3, Informative

      4 billion in Iraq, isn't it?

      400 billion, FWIW. Javascript Ticker

      --
      True science means that when you re-evaluate the evidence, you re-evaluate your faith.
    23. Re:Knowing what to do? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      (a) Ineffectual: writing or congresspersons, letters to the editor, voting.

      (b) (Typically) Crazy: armed revolt.

      It's like none of us (including me) knows how to navigate the territory between those two extremes.

      What is takes is both.

      The power structure can ignore a fairly large movement is there's no potential for it to spark into something radical; it can ignore a radical spark if there's no "fuel" of a larger movement that it might ignite.

      We didn't get much progress in civil rights for people of African descent in this country until we had both the peaceful politics of Martin Luther King, and the armed direction action of Heuy Newton. Imagine looking at the 250,000 people at the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom and thinking, "What if they picked up guns like the Black Panthers?" Suddenly listening to them while they're still peaceful protestors seems like a good idea.

      (Of course, the other side of that is "we need to do anything possible to prevent that spark", so you get COINTELPRO, agents provocateur sent into radical groups, and so on...never mind that that make for more chances of a spark.)

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    24. Re:Knowing what to do? by Man+of+E · · Score: 1

      Doesn't the EFF do some lobbying? The ACLU? If so, why do they seem to be relatively ineffective? Have you donated? (I can't find statistics on how many donations they have received, and how much money it adds up to.) You have to fight money with money, and putting some cash behind your rhetoric will make it more effective. If corporate lobby groups, media companies and special interests hire good lobbyists to write persuasive memos, they will easily persuade lawmakers who have no time to read slashdot (all of them). Solution: help the organizations who support your point of view to hire lobbyists who are just as good, and stop directly or indirectly supporting those who you disagree with. Put as much emphasis on voting with your wallet as you do on voting in the booth.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une sig
    25. Re:Knowing what to do? by non · · Score: 1

      vote? really? i don't think that voting changes anything. it only changes the faces. if you really want to change something, demonstrate. why are americans so placid? it amazes me that there are hardly any demonstrations in this country. yes, there are other options; fax campaigns, email campaigns, etc, but in reality, they're not as effective as a demonstration. put 50,000 people in front of city hall and they *will* notice.

      --
      ...vividly encapsulates that post-Watergate/pre-punk/coked-up moment when you could trust no one, least of all yourself.
    26. Re:Knowing what to do? by Man+of+E · · Score: 1

      Incidentally, I'm not doing it right either. I donate $25 monthly to the EFF. This makes me feel good about myself, and allows me to make smug posts like the above. Compare this to the amount I spend on my telephone landline, my cell phone, my cable TV, my broadband internet, electricity, gasoline, CDs, movies, videogames. So, what does my money say about my sentiments towards net neutrality? My stance on copyrights? My opinion of the Iraq war? My cashflows just called me a hypocrite.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une sig
    27. Re:Knowing what to do? by Xiroth · · Score: 1

      What do political parties want cash for? To buy votes. If you can supply the votes directly by being able to say that x people have registered their support of your position, then you should have some clout.

    28. Re:Knowing what to do? by regularstranger · · Score: 1

      Another option: donate resources to organizations that seek the protection of civil liberties. They will pursue stuff like this in court. The courts are an important part of this nation's balance of power, even if it isn't very balanced. Also, encourage your friends and family to learn about the importance of civil rights in this country. Teach your kids how to say no to a police officer's request for a search without warrant, even if they have "nothing to hide". Make sure they understand the importance of the Bill of Rights, and how these rights are designed to protect people from their government. There are many websites filled with this kind of information. It's unfortunate that every generation must spend so much of their time defending their rights, but it is a problem that is unlikely to go away completely.

    29. Re:Knowing what to do? by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Wrong. All the major party candidates are crappy

      I never said you had to vote for a major party candidate.

    30. Re:Knowing what to do? by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      if you really want to change something, demonstrate

      There were massive anti-war demonstrations in the US before the Iraq war. That stopped the war, right?

      Politicians want to keep their jobs. Thus they're going to do whatever they think will keep them employed longest. Right now, that means pandering to large donors so they can get a huge warchest to out-spend their opponents on advertising. But if that kind of pandering causes them to lose elections, it'll stop....or at worst go 'underground'.

    31. Re:Knowing what to do? by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      Well, the best form of political protest is this.

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    32. Re:Knowing what to do? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The Soviet revolution was democratic. Lenin waited until they had a majority in the Soviet councils until they arguing that the Soviets themselves should seize power, as the only group with a valid claim to it.
      Of course, the Soviets (more properly called "the workers' Soviets" or "the workers' councils") only democratically represented the workers, which constituted the minority in the country at that time (the vast majority were peasants). Meanwhile, one of the first things Lenin did after gaining power was the dissolution under gun point of the truly democratically elected Constituent Assembly, after the latter refused to affirm the Bolshevik rule and voted for pro-peasant Social Revolutionary party instead.

      So much for democracy...

    33. Re:Knowing what to do? by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Equal for who though? You have to have some kind of criterion, otherwise everyone will say they're running, just to get a piece of the pot. no amount of money divided 300 million ways would even matter.

      So, do you do it the way they do now, with the "matching funds" available to those who accept its restrictions? 'cause that just means that pols will *still* be beholden to "big money" except that $3,000 can leverage another $3,000 (or whatever the limits and rates are.)

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    34. Re:Knowing what to do? by lee1026 · · Score: 1

      Where did you get 6 million from? The last I checked, 300 million people/100 senators implies 3 million people per senate.

    35. Re:Knowing what to do? by vandan · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I'm not sure how it goes in the US, but here in Australia, you have to have a certain number of paid members before you can register as a political party ( otherwise you can only run as an independent ). Then you can claim money back from the state as campaign funding, based on the number of votes that your party gets. I'm not claiming that we do it perfectly here, but it's a good basis for a fairer system, once you outlaw corporate 'donations'. Smaller parties will still claim that they are being marginalized, and I agree with them ( hence there being room for improvement ), but the main point is that getting rid of corporate 'donations' is the big improvement. You could do something like have a sliding scale, so the more votes your party gets, the lower the claim:vote ratio is.

    36. Re:Knowing what to do? by vandan · · Score: 1

      Ouch! That's right.

    37. Re:Knowing what to do? by Chowderbags · · Score: 1

      It depends on the state, actually. For California it's roughly 1 senator for 17 million people, but for Wyoming it's 1 for ~250,000 people. It's certainly one vestage of the political system that I wouldn't more people to take a good hard look at: The 26 least populated states, representing ~1/6th of the population, can block the rest of the country from passing national legislation. Strange indeed.

    38. Re:Knowing what to do? by brian0918 · · Score: 1

      "There is an effective way to deal with these things. Vote. When elections are lost because of this kind of thing, this kind of thing will stop happening."

      Voting only works when a significant portion of the population is informed. Such is not the case in the US. People here vote based on physical appearance, ability to sound cool in the debates, and most importantly, whether the candidate is Democrat or Republican (the only 2 choices, right?). Uninformed voting is not voting at all. We might as well flip a coin.

      "Apathy is the only reason politics is in it's current cesspool state."

      Actually, it's ignorance, combined with the ability to vote while remaining ignorant.

    39. Re:Knowing what to do? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Each Senator represents, and is answerable to, the full population of his or her state. It's not set up so that 50% of a state's population votes for one Senate seat, and the other 50% votes for the other.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    40. Re:Knowing what to do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      apathy isn't the source problem, its really more of a symptom

      the lies, misinformation, and other political bullshit is the problem, thats what makes people apathetic

      give the people power, and they will use it

    41. Re:Knowing what to do? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      You'll never get good citizen oversight of elected officials and the election process (at the national level) when the average Senator represents 6 million people.

      Senators aren't supposed to represent the interests of the people. They're meant to represent the interests of the states. That's why they there's an equal number of them for every state regardless of population, and why they weren't originally directly elected.

      The average member of the House of Representatives -- the Congressional body which WAS intended to represent the people -- represents only about 700,000 citizens. Still a huge, but a more practical, number.

    42. Re:Knowing what to do? by RyoShin · · Score: 1

      There is an effective way to deal with these things. Vote. When elections are lost because of this kind of thing, this kind of thing will stop happening.
      I agree, but there is a problem with that, too: time delay.

      If the populace is unhappy with an elected official, they generally have to wait until the next election to oust them. At least within the federal government, I don't know of any process whereby the voters can force a person out of office. Sure, sometimes there's enough public pressure over a scandal that the official will resign, but most of the time we have to wait before replacing an elected official.

      This causes the furor of an incident to die down. This can be both good or bad, depending on how you see it; it gives people a time to think and be rational (oh, the media was just blowing up the story for ratings, they didn't actually do anything bad), but it can also cause apathy to set in, with less of a chance that they'll actually take to the polls to vote the person out of office.

      If there were some method by which the populace could instigate a "recall vote", where the official in question loses the office and is replaced by a temporary person (not sure how the temp person would work) until a regular election can be scheduled and executed, public officials would be much more reluctant to do or sign things that would be unpopular.

      For instance, a congressman spearheads some stupid bill that gives the RIAA more breathing room with lawsuits, the RIAA starts suing puppies and girl scouts, independent media points to the congressman as allowing them to do so, and enough public hatred is built up to do a "recall vote" in that congressman's state/district.(It probably wouldn't happen over something like that, but it's just an example.)

      As it stands now, even if the public's anger lasts until the next election cycle, that gives the official time to do lots of other shit. They know they're now hated, and have no chance at being re-elected, so hey, why not lower taxes for their own tax bracket, pardon murders/rapists who are friends of friends, and generally just screw up more stuff? (I hope no elected official is that over-zealous, but you never know.)

      So people can control things by voting, but that may not be enough any more. (See that article from a few days ago where the people voted favorably to something in Montana, and the outcome was ignored anyway.)
    43. Re:Knowing what to do? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Senators aren't supposed to represent the interests of the people. They're meant to represent the interests of the states. That's why they there's an equal number of them for every state regardless of population, and why they weren't originally directly elected.

      Semantics. Interests of the states == interests of the states' peoples. And that was not the reason there are two per state; perhaps you should read about the Connectitut (Sherman) Compromise and the Pinckney Plan. Nor was it the reason they weren't directly elected; that was due to the belief that the masses shouldn't be entrusted with the full reins of government.

      Both houses were meant to represent the best interests of their people and the nation. The different structures were due to the need to balance equality with proportional representation. The different election processes were due to the fact that the upper house, being more powerful, could not be entrusted to the whims of the electorate.
      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  11. Watch the Extremists by QuantumG · · Score: 1

    It's kind of annoying that extremists can't seperate themselves from peaceful protesters. I mean, if you want to throw stones at cops, do it when they are beating up on civilians, or taking bribes, or driving through red lights without the siren on. Don't go fuck up a peaceful protest.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:Watch the Extremists by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Or turning on the siren just so they can drive through a red light, after which they quickly turn it back off, and continue on at their regular non-emergency pace. Guess they just couldn't wait get to Tim Horton's.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    2. Re:Watch the Extremists by Dun+Malg · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's kind of annoying that extremists can't seperate themselves from peaceful protesters. I mean, if you want to throw stones at cops, do it when they are beating up on civilians, or taking bribes, or driving through red lights without the siren on. Don't go fuck up a peaceful protest.

      Part of the problem is that you will still be classified as an "extremist" if you do something they don't like. FOr example, if you try to stage a peaceful public protest where the leaders in question can actually see you, rather than staying in your "free speech zone" box in the corner of a parking lot, like they told you (cough)DNC '04(cough). They consider anyone who doesn't sit quietly at home watching TV to be an extremist.
      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    3. Re:Watch the Extremists by dr2chase · · Score: 4, Interesting

      How do you know the "extremists" aren't police plants? Once upon a time, that would have sounded like a paranoid remark, but with this crowd, who knows?

      And kids, don't forget, not only should we start planning how to disrupt the 2008 Republican Convention, we should make "plans" even if we have no intention of going. Make those spies earn their pay. Shouldn't be hard to get their attention, if they are willing to infiltrate the Quakers and Billionaires for Bush.

    4. Re:Watch the Extremists by _KiTA_ · · Score: 2, Insightful


      It's kind of annoying that extremists can't seperate themselves from peaceful protesters. I mean, if you want to throw stones at cops, do it when they are beating up on civilians, or taking bribes, or driving through red lights without the siren on. Don't go fuck up a peaceful protest.


      Funny, I always thought the guys starting those riots were undercover cops. Say, the type that would go cross country and violate who knows how many laws to spy on innocent civilians wanting to use their free speech rights.

      C'mon, it's easy.

      1. Get a cop to dress up in street clothes.
      2. Enter protest.
      3. Throw a rock, push some people around, start a fistfight, whatever
      4. The protest turns into a riot, the cops come down and beat the crap out of whomever they want, arrest everyone else, and go home.

    5. Re:Watch the Extremists by Frumious+Wombat · · Score: 1

      You know, the cops could cut out the middle man by just going into the station house break room, punching someone, a riot breaks out, and then more cops come in and give everyone a beat-down, after which everyone goes home.

      We really should make a more efficient government a higher priority.

      --
      the more accurate the calculations became, the more the concepts tended to vanish into thin air. R. S. Mulliken
    6. Re:Watch the Extremists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you know the "extremists" aren't police plants? Once upon a time, that would have sounded like a paranoid remark

      Far from it. See Agent provocateur

    7. Re:Watch the Extremists by Yartrebo · · Score: 1

      Violent extremists are actually quite rare at protests. I've never seen an incident personally. Even with the violence that does happen, a lot of it is done or egged on by undercover cops.

    8. Re:Watch the Extremists by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      Don't forget to include the word "bomb" followed by the name of some randomly chosen landmark several times in each e-mail you send.

    9. Re:Watch the Extremists by cathector · · Score: 1

      i refer you to All the Shah's Men by Stephen Kinzer.
      it's a well-researched history of the 1953 coup staged in Iran by the CIA on the behalf of British Petroleum. the facts it presents are not controversial; they're official record.
      and they include the long-term and regular recruiting of people for the specific job of joining opposition protests and throwing stones, smashing windows and generally fucking up peaceful protests which the CIA wanted to associate with violent extremists. all of this is well-documented. that was 54 years ago, and the coup was magnificently successful. - do you really imagine The Man is now above such methods ?

    10. Re:Watch the Extremists by hazem · · Score: 1

      I mean, if you want to throw stones at cops, do it when they are beating up on civilians, or taking bribes, or driving through red lights without the siren on. Don't go fuck up a peaceful protest.

      Who is to say that some of these "anarchists" are not people working for the cops themselves? It's not like this is unheard of. What the NYPD did here is a lot like the activities of COINTELPRO, which included people working on the behalf of the government to cause violence and mayhem at peace protests - in an effort to discredit the peace movement.

      This also happened in Operation Ajax - where the CIA overthrew the government of Iran. They hired gangs to fight each other (and attack "civilians") in the streets of Tehran in order to establish in the minds of the people that the recently ELECTED Mosadegh did not have control over the situation.

      If they'll spy and infiltrate a year before a convention, why assume that they would stop at inciting violence and illegal activity?

    11. Re:Watch the Extremists by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Didn't say they were. The CIA did the exact same thing in my country which resulted in our Prime Minister having to step down.

      Australia. Gough Whitlam. In case you're curious.

      Again, the CIA doesn't debate this. It is official record.

      None of this changes the fact that people, for whatever reason, cause trouble at peaceful protests.. and the police feel a duty to try to stop this stuff from happening. How do you tell the good infultrators from the bad infultrators? No idea.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    12. Re:Watch the Extremists by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Well shit, who's to say that the NYPD are not eating people? Jesus, can you at least try to make a sensible argument?

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    13. Re:Watch the Extremists by cathector · · Score: 1

      fair enough. i guess my point is that we should be aware that violent elements at Protest-For-Cause-X have in the past often been planted by the opponents of Cause X.

      i didn't know about Gough Whitlam, thanks.

      how does a cop tell actual violent elements from planted ones ?
      good q. one step might be raising hell when the plants come to light.

    14. Re:Watch the Extremists by hazem · · Score: 1

      There is a verifiable history of people working for or on behalf of the government infiltrating protests in the guise of anarchists and committing and inciting vandalism and violence in order to discredit the entire group of protesters in the eyes of the general public.

      As far as I know, there is no known history of NYPD eating people. Killing them without cause? Yes. Eating them afterwards? No.

    15. Re:Watch the Extremists by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Is there a verifiable history of the NYPD doing that? Or are you just painting them with your very long brush?

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    16. Re:Watch the Extremists by jvkjvk · · Score: 1

      Yeah, once upon a time -- like 1950.

      It is already historically proven that American Power Interests will and have posed as extremists, to the point of instigating and participating in violent acts. Anyone who lived through the '60's and had their eyes open already knows this. Just look up cointelpro.

      Stuff like this gives weight to even the most paranoid "delusional" fantasies of government persecution.

    17. Re:Watch the Extremists by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

      How do you know the "extremists" aren't police plants? Once upon a time, that would have sounded like a paranoid remark


      It doesn't sound paranoid at all, if you know a little history. That's exactly what the FBI did to the Black Panthers.

      From Wikipedia:
      However the final report of Senate "Church Committee" which investigated the actions of COINTELPRO in 1975 and 1976 did not agree with Adams, and purported to demonstrate that the FBI "itself engaged in lawless tactics and responded to deep-seated social problems by fomenting violence and unrest."
  12. Governments aren't the only ones who spy by SpaghettiCoder · · Score: 1
    You will find that the "activists" and "sympathisers" in all walks of life are much more prolific in their use of spying than the authorities. That's because, if you disagree with them, you're Wrong. Police forces have much more pragmatic mundane concerns, such as will they will be able to show some results to the boss.


    If you're my enemy's enemy, that doesn't mean you're my friend. These days you won't find an idealist anywhere.

    1. Re:Governments aren't the only ones who spy by colmore · · Score: 1

      Ehhhh.... what?

      American activists and sympathizers are spies? I know a lot of activists, even extreme, black block, brick through the starbuck window types. And while they (we) may read a lot of blogs and follow the news pretty close, I haven't ever heard of anyone wiretapping anything. Where the heck are you getting that from? I'm going to go out on a limb here and say you're making this one up entirely.

      Anyway, crime by the police is far more upsetting than crime by criminals or crime by activists. There will always be criminals, and any angry political group will always have those who take things too far. However, the police are our representatives. If we can't create a society in which the enforcers of the law can themselves follow the law, I don't see how we can make any legitimate claim to being free. We may be temporarily contented, but we live that way only at the authorities' convenience.

      --
      In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
    2. Re:Governments aren't the only ones who spy by SpaghettiCoder · · Score: 1
      No, what I'm saying is that inside activist groups, especially high-tech net based sympathisers and anti-government/anti-capitalist/anti-globalisation /anti-law-and-order malcontents (hackers, greenists, extreme left, etc) you will find the most avid and paranoid cult-like thought police in place, who watch and exert a rule of fear over "their" people, despite that they're generally ignored by the rest of the world (the normals).


      They are far more dangerous than NYPD. I'd rather see those activists get denied legal rights and a bloody nose from the school bullies who joined the cops, than hear about scientists being threatened, "darknets" being erected, personal computers hacked, websites defaced and individuals defamed. At the end of the day I believe that some semblance of order, no matter how flawed, is better than any attempt to bring down the status quo (as opposed to natural evolution). Revolutionaries need to be dealt with hard. Simple as that.

    3. Re:Governments aren't the only ones who spy by Mieckowski · · Score: 1

      Isn't that a false dichotomy? Denying activists legal rights is better than anarchy, so therefore "revolutionaries need to be dealt with hard." It's already illegal to hack sites, etc. Why not go with the law in dealing with these offences. Or if the current laws are inadequate, why not work towards changing them? The idea that we should start breaking the law because "those guys are ruining society" seems kind of counter-intuitive.

    4. Re:Governments aren't the only ones who spy by SpaghettiCoder · · Score: 1
      But they don't respect the law themselves. They just see it as a set of impositions upon them, that have absolutely no legitimacy whatsoever just because the mode of government does not tally with their beliefs.

      These Malcontents are a huge annoyance to people with more realistic ways of changing things in the long term. It just seems that they are determined to be the whetstone that sharpens whatever new tools for oppression the government might buy (Tasers, shootable batons, new emergency powers to torture, sexually abuse, etc). It just seems to me that they have a deep-seated obssession with being the sacrifical lamb who is beaten, abused or whatever for "our" sins.

      The only result from their actions is that the government gets tougher and more effective in its machinery of oppression. Like giving someone a punching bag and martial arts training. They make it much more difficult for us in the long run, by creating situations in which our concerns for humam rights can be ignored with an appearance of legitimacy. When their protests are successfully quashed in our city centres and the police get their bonuses and promotions, how can we then persuade anyone to be more compassionate in their methods of government and framing of new laws? We start to look like stupid hippies, and are ignored. All thanks to these fanatics who can't even account for the effect of their useless reactions.

  13. All that intelligence gathering for what? by John3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My brother was one of the 1,800 people held for one or two days at the old vehicle maintenance facility on the west side of Manhattan. Many of these people (including my brother) were rounded up like cattle just because they were walking down a block where a protest was taking place. People were out getting groceries and arrested, with no way to place phone calls, no place to sit, and unhealthy conditions (the police who worked in the facility during the same time period have filed numerous health claims).

    So all this data was gathered and used for what...to cordon off a city block with snow fence and arrest EVERYONE in that block?

    Ultimately the police likely had no real way to use any of the data, and to keep their Republican guests happy they resorted instead to just rounding up as many people as they could. By the time everyone was released the convention was over. The lawsuits will drag on for years (my brother is suing the city) and cost the city a ton of money.

    The police like to boast that there were no disturbances or major incidents during the convention and they take the credit. More likely the reason is that the protestors and the citizens of New York were well behaved, protested peacefully, and even welcomed many of the convention attendees. My daughters (13 and 10 at the time) and I marched in the protest on Sunday during the convention and it was a wonderful day of peaceful expression of our political feelings.

    --
    "We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers." Carl Sagan
    1. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by mikael · · Score: 2, Informative

      Here's a link to the story:

      Arrests at GOP convention criticised

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    2. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by maxume · · Score: 0, Troll

      Aw, did you tell the nice men that you think their politics are deplorable?

      It would be cool if you could throw out some insight on why you seem to think that people who you think have everything in the world wrong would care about the neat parade that you had.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    3. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another link (A Bloggers report).

    4. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by John3 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, you're right. How silly of me to think I could make a difference. Please arrest me before I make a fool of myself again.

      --
      "We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers." Carl Sagan
    5. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by maxume · · Score: 1

      You really think it made more of a difference than voting?

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    6. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by Jorgandar · · Score: 0

      Sometimes the police have done some really messed up stupid shit..but that's the only stuff that makes the news. The stuff you never hear about is when the police do things right and by the book. I was part of a protest group who were protesting some fundamentalist christians (and their views on homosexuality) in a fairly conservative area. The police showed up, not to stop us (the protesters), but to protect us from the threat of physical violence from the public. It didnt make the news.

    7. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      My daughters (13 and 10 at the time) and I marched in the protest on Sunday during the convention and it was a wonderful day of peaceful expression of our political feelings.

      I doubt that your daughters, at that time, had any "political feelings" that you didn't give them. So much for independent thought.
    8. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by uhlume · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I sure as hell had political feelings at that age, and they didn't always mirror my parents' in content or reasoning. What's worrying is that most Americans, like you, assume that the capacity for rational political thought and reasoning is something that comes automatically with legal adulthood and the right to vote, and therefore needn't and shouldn't be excercised (let alone actively developed) before the age of 18. Small wonder, then, that the minority who even bother to vote seem to go about it so haphazardly and irrationally.

      --
      SIERRA TANGO FOXTROT UNIFORM
    9. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      You really think it made more of a difference than voting?

            You really think voting makes a difference?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    10. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by John3 · · Score: 1

      I doubt that your daughters, at that time, had any "political feelings" that you didn't give them. So much for independent thought.

      Yes, children are so easy to mold, especially as they approach the teenage years. Ask any parent.

      --
      "We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers." Carl Sagan
    11. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by maxume · · Score: 1

      On the sliding scale of things that don't make a difference, voting is rated higher than going outside and standing somewhere with a bunch of your friends.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    12. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by maxume · · Score: 1

      This wasn't a troll. If you see a crowd of 20,000 people in New York City(population in excess of 7 million), a reasonable response is to wonder what fringe group they represent.

      It isn't a hard calculation, so the politicians know that they really don't need to worry about the 0.29% of the population that showed up that particular day, even if ignoring them only gains them the support of 0.3% of the population. 'Demonstrating' doesn't demonstrate very much when saying a couple of phrases gets the politician support from 20%(or whatever) of the population.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    13. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know the student who was rounded up and made a phone-call to his aunt, who is fairly affluent. She in turn contacted a lawyer who filed the writ of habeas corpus on behalf of everyone who was rounded up. The judge who heard it was spitting mad about the whole thing. I'm posting anonymous because I'm not sure if he'd (or his family) would like me speaking like this. In any case, here is the NYT article about him, on an admittedly biased source (but so because of the fee NYT charges for outdated articles): http://anarchywatch.blogspot.com/2004_09_01_anarch ywatch_archive.html - note that it's almost verbatim from the NYT article, minus a letter at the beginning and ugly formatting. He's an amazing guy.

    14. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by John3 · · Score: 1

      The number of protesters at the march was estimated between 250,000 and 500,000, which is a bit more than your 20,000 figure.

      Perhaps your 20,000 figure was referring to the Republican convention attendees inside Madison Square Garden and not the hundreds of thousands protesting outside?

      --
      "We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers." Carl Sagan
    15. Re:All that intelligence gathering for what? by maxume · · Score: 1

      Thin air. Unfortunately, 500,000 still isn't that many people(i.e., if you can assume that they are your polar opposites, you can assume that you have at least that many people on your side).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  14. Mod parent up by wass · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Sadly, he/she tells it like it is.

    --

    make world, not war

    1. Re:Mod parent up by Armadni+General · · Score: 1

      If you have to wait that long for the twenty seconds to pass so Slashdot will let you post, it means your comment is useless.

  15. What's kind of chilling... by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 2, Insightful

    is the fact that we have G. Gordon Liddy talking about similar plans for the '72 (or was it 76?) elections.

    it's not democrat or republican specifically. It just happens that the guys who were behind what happend in '72 were also behind what happend in '04. They just happened to be republican. of course, now we have the problem that most of their ilk ARE the republican party, but that's beside the point.

    --
    Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  16. This Defies Rightist "Conspiracy Theory" Arguments by SRA8 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The argument I constantly hear from those on the far right -- if there actually was a conspiracy, someone would have spoken out. Well, if that is the case, how come such a national "conspiracy," if you would call it, took 3 years to come out?

  17. haha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and we picked them out 30 seconds into every meeting. Everyone knew who the cops were. "Fight the system! We should blow up a bridge or something!"
    "Dude, we're organizing a march. Nice tie dye and combat boots though."
    If they're spending their time investigating quakers, who are they missing?

    1. Re:haha by NevarMore · · Score: 1

      "If they're spending their time investigating quakers, who are they missing?"

      THE AMISH!

    2. Re:haha by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Of course. The Amish are so industrious, not like those shiftless Mennonites...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    3. Re:haha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they're spending their time investigating quakers, who are they missing?

      The real terrorists.

    4. Re:haha by Kamineko · · Score: 1

      Those who prefer Unreal?

  18. What did this cost? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    We know this sort of thing costs the nation its soul, but what I can't find in TFA is what all these operations cost the city of New York. Was the city reimbursed? I thought the Bush administarion was failing to deliver on promises regarding security for NYC? Why are they helping him then?
    --
    Thank goodness for sunshine: http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/01/slashdot-users -selling-solar.html

  19. Was infiltration and surveillance ever immoral? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.searchlightmagazine.com/index.php?link= template&story=136

    "Our unique work in infiltrating the fascist movements means that we are able to embark on intelligence-led campaigning against them; knowing what the issues are that they are campaigning on and able to help lead an effective response. We believe that without knowledge of the enemy's plans it is impossible to wage a successful war against them."

    There are plenty of organisations who openly state that their modus operandi and continuing work is to infiltrate "enemy" movements. As far as I can see, widespread outcry and protests, or use of laws against them, has been rather lacking. The only sensible conclusion to draw is that ethics isn't about what you do, it's about who you do it against. As the people who are subject to surveillance in this instance are radical and organised Democrat activists, whom I don't have excessive sympathy for, I consider it a good and correct thing that they are kept an overview of.

    1. Re:Was infiltration and surveillance ever immoral? by fredrated · · Score: 1

      "In hundreds of reports stamped "N.Y.P.D. Secret," the Intelligence Division chronicled the views and plans of people who had no apparent intention of breaking the law, the records show."

      It should be comming out of your pocket, no one else should pay for this stupidity.

  20. Key Question: "What is the next step?" by reporter · · Score: 3, Interesting
    This domestic spying is almost identical to what the FSB in Russia has done since Putin ascended to power. The FSB has been extensively spying on anyone who supports peaceful, democratic dissent. Spying, by itself, does not suppress democracy. The trouble is that spying often leads to abusing civil rights and other egregious activities that do ruin democratic society.

    Once the FSB determines who the troublemakers are, the Kremlin orders its loyalists in the city governments to suppress dissent. In fact, on March 24, Russian authorities arrested all the peaceful protestors before they could begin their rally.

    Will Washington follow in the footsteps of Moscow and go to the next logical step after spying? I hope that the answer is "no", but I cannot be 100% certain that the answer is "no".

  21. not what you think by mastershake_phd · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They must mean New York, USSR. Americans would never allow this type of stuff.

  22. I don't live in New York, so ... by netbuzz · · Score: 1

    ... when I read a story like this, I usually try to stop and ask myself, "What if I did live there? Would this kind of craziness make more sense?" I cannot imagine that it would, but, like I said, I don't life in New York. ... BTW, if you haven't read the article, you really should just to catch the part about the "wireless bicycle."

    http://www.networkworld.com/community/?q=node/1287 4

    1. Re:I don't live in New York, so ... by fishbowl · · Score: 1


      >... when I read a story like this, I usually try to stop and ask myself, "What if I did live there? Would this kind of craziness make >more sense?"

      Chances are good that between the three jobs you had to work just to maintain a subsistence living, you would not have the time to be concerned with such things.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  23. Start by forming your own voting bloc. by khasim · · Score: 1

    Fuck letters to the editor. Power only respects power.

    Get your friends together and get yourselves registered to vote. Agree on how you'll vote on what issues.

    Then get in touch with your elected representatives (and people hoping to run for office) and make it clear that you represent X voters who WILL be voting in the next election. And tell them what you want to see changed.

    Then carry through and VOTE.

    If you want it to happen faster, volunteer to work on the campaigns of people who are willing to vote for what you believe.

    Change happens when people get out and get involved.

    Sure, you'll end up with a record at Homeland Security, but anyone who doesn't have one in these times isn't much of a patriot.

    1. Re:Start by forming your own voting bloc. by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

      Get your friends together and get yourselves registered to vote. Agree on how you'll vote on what issues.
      This is more or less how political parties get started. I think America could do with some more of those, so by all means, organize!
      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    2. Re:Start by forming your own voting bloc. by flewp · · Score: 1

      Indeed. I've felt for awhile one of the biggest problems with our country is the two party system. Too many people, both politicians and the common voter, vote along party lines. There's just not much room for people who aren't a member of either party. All too often, they get labeled as quackjobs by the population and the media.

      --
      WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
  24. In Soviet Russia by HangingChad · · Score: 1

    In Soviet Russia...

    ...we're all Republicans!

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  25. tax cut needed? by jay2003 · · Score: 1

    The New York City Government obviously has too much money if they can waste money illegally spying on non-violent, peaceful groups. It seems highly doubtful that citizens of NYC approve of this use of their money. Therefore, the police budget should be cut and savings returned to citizens through reduced taxes.

    1. Re:tax cut needed? by birdboy2000 · · Score: 0

      Or alternatively, they could redirect the money into doing something about the astronomical price of housing in the city, instead of pricing the poor(and recent college graduates) out of the place. :)

    2. Re:tax cut needed? by Yartrebo · · Score: 1

      I certainly agree that they waste money. With all the resources wasted protecting out of town Republicans, the war on drugs (another neocon favorite), and the war on terror (yet another neocon ploy), the police department and the associated jail system is a huge money pit.

      Still, the city isn't overflowing in cash. The waste gets paid for by shafting the parts of city government that actually do useful work and by jacking taxes up through the roof. At our tax rates and with our density (higher density areas are cheaper to provision), one would expect gold-plated government services. Instead we have underpaid teachers, overcrowded schools, worsening public housing, state sponsored gambling (lottery), poorly managed mass transit, and gobs of advertisements on city property (including in schools) among other complaints.

      In the case for construction, it's so corrupt that we have added almost no subway mileage in over 50 years despite there being several good places where a new line would pay for itself, were there not so much corruption. The 'airtrain' that was built a few years back cost over $1B for a several mile stretch of elevated light rail with perhaps 1/10th the capacity of a standard subway line (only 2 narrow gauge cars vs. 8+ wide gauge cars for our normal subways).

    3. Re:tax cut needed? by freedom_india · · Score: 1

      The Govt. has ALWAYS been about wasting money that was not theirs in first place.
      Our senators talk about "allotting" 1 billion to a small airbase since it was never their money in the first place.
      We must make a zero-based budget an amendment. Congress can vote to spend money only what they receive as taxes.
      It should be silently slipped into some relatively unknown bill (like statue of liberty maaintenance), and once they realize what has happened, they should be prevented from changing it by mass protests which point to them that if they change it, they would certainly be recalled.

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
  26. Re:This Defies Rightist "Conspiracy Theory" Argume by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why I posted AC, people. The comment started out with zero karma points and the first one it gains is a "-1 overrated". It wasn't a troll or offtopic, it was just distaistful to whoever had mod points to throw around.

    And people wonder why we can't have an honest discussion on topics like this.

  27. Looks like good policework by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > What does this have to do with corruption? It's about spying on a bunch of misfits and hooligans.

    But you don't understand! If they are trying to blow up Republicans they are patriots and heros. Shame on the NYPD for aiding and abetting BusHitler.

    Seriously though; read the whole article and reading through the painfully obvious bias the NYT put on it it looked like a textbook example of good police work. They didn't tap any phones or break the law, they read open sourses like webpages and they put boots on the ground at meetings open to the public to collect human intelligence. Yes they kept files on threats and non threats, who wants to have each team investigate the same harmless nuts? Then when the convention hit they knew which ones were the small hardcore fringe most likely to commit crimes and they culled em out of the herd while allowing several hundred thousand (misguided fools in my humble opinion, but I respect their right to BE fools) protesters to peacefully assemble and petition their government for redress of their idiot grievences.

    Bottom line people, the right to protest DOES not include the right to anarchy, terror and violence. A million or so of the diehard socialist/progressive/green side need to learn the difference, including it appears 75% of slashdot's readership.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
    1. Re:Looks like good policework by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      Hah, I was just going for a +5 Funny, to prove the guy wrong, since s/republican/democrat/ didn't change most of the original message, but I guess humor like that goes over the head of 25% of slashdot, including the ones with modpoints.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    2. Re:Looks like good policework by NMerriam · · Score: 4, Interesting

      it looked like a textbook example of good police work. They didn't tap any phones or break the law, they read open sourses like webpages and they put boots on the ground at meetings open to the public to collect human intelligence. Yes they kept files on threats and non threats...


      Somehow I find it unlikely that the NYPD is up to date on current law in every jurisdiction where these activities took place. The likelihood of them having violated the legal rights of citizens increased with every new jurisdiction they entered for this conduct.

      It should be noted, for example, that California's Constitution has an explicit right to Privacy, and the state AG has directed local law enforcement that "it is a mistake of constitutional dimension to gather information for a criminal intelligence file where there is no reasonable suspicion of criminal activity". In other words, what these officers did is blatantly unconstitutional in California, and only questionably unconstitutional in other jurisdictions.

      It's okay, I support the right of you to be a fool willing to throw out the rights of anyone other than yourself, as long as they disagree with your politics. Continue to tell yourself that 90% of the world's population and 75% of the American population is wrong about current policy and that you, in your infinite wisdom, are the only one who understand how true peace and order may be brought to the world.

      Bottom line people, the right to protest DOES not include the right to anarchy, terror and violence


      Thank you! If only you'd tell law enforcement agencies that, perhaps more peaceful protests could take place and we could all forget that the phrase "agent provocateur" ever existed!
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    3. Re:Looks like good policework by Trailwalker · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Anarchy, terror and violence are a police prerogative.

      I watched this convention on television and saw the mass arrests in D.C. during the Nixon years.

      Police are always politically controlled and will commit any violence necessary to satisfy their masters.

      When police leave criminal investigations to enforce political decisions, no one is safe.

    4. Re:Looks like good policework by Comrade+Kat · · Score: 1

      Umm... it's not the "right to protest," it's the right to free speech. And actually, I'm not an anarchist, but I don't see any reason that anarchy wouldn't be something we have a right to, if we want it...

    5. Re:Looks like good policework by John3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Bottom line people, the right to protest DOES not include the right to anarchy, terror and violence

      It does, however, include the right to speedy processing if you are arrested.

      "senior police officials had said for months that they anticipated 1,000 arrests a day during the convention" (msnbc article).

      So police intelligence indicated as many as 1000 arrests per day, the state and courts geared up for the onslaught, and yet the police department decided just to hold everyone in a converted maintenance garage and then release without charging them with anything? Sounds like a bit like a police state to me. Thankfully "State Supreme Court Judge John Cataldo held officials in contempt of court. "These people," Cataldo said of those arrested, "have already been victims of the process.""

      So the police had a wealth of info about who they should watch and arrest and yet they went over the top and arrested entire blocks of people.

      --
      "We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers." Carl Sagan
    6. Re:Looks like good policework by AlgoRhythm · · Score: 1

      Bottom line people, the right to protest DOES not include the right to anarchy, terror and violence. How could you read the entire article and come to the conclusion that the NYPD only filtered out the ones with a potential for violence?

      I know that I don't fear a graduate student with a chalk spraying bicycle. Saying that they overstepped their bounds isn't saying that they didn't nab any legitimate threats, but that they used those legitimate threats as an excuse to quash nonthreatening, legal opposition.
    7. Re:Looks like good policework by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      it's not the "right to protest," it's the right to free speech

      The "right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances" is indeed a right to protest.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    8. Re:Looks like good policework by fredrated · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Welcome to america

      I declare you to be a terrorist.

      That's it, pack your bags, you now belong in Gitmo, enjoy (not) your stay.

    9. Re:Looks like good policework by pnot · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yes they kept files on threats and non threats, who wants to have each team investigate the same harmless nuts?

      Indeed: for too long has it ben assumed that the police only need to keep files on people who constitute threats. There's no harm in their compiling and disseminating dossiers on the innocent as well -- after all, those of us who aren't doing anything wrong have nothing to hide.

      when the convention hit they knew which ones were the small hardcore fringe most likely to commit crimes and they culled em out of the herd while allowing several hundred thousand (misguided fools

      It sounds like a very sensible efficiency measure to me: arrest people before they have committed a crime and save time all round. I for one applaud the work of the NYPD's new Precrime Analytical Wing!

    10. Re:Looks like good policework by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      It should be noted, for example, that California's Constitution has an explicit right to Privacy, and the state AG has directed local law enforcement that "it is a mistake of constitutional dimension to gather information for a criminal intelligence file where there is no reasonable suspicion of criminal activity".
      Come on, California itself has disseminated countless documentaries where NY policemen^H^H^Hpeople come and make fun of the local police force in order to investigate on California residents with no legal support whatsoever.

      All this while destroying numerous cars for humorous purposes.

      So I hardly see how California, of all states, could now come and complain about this kind of thing.
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    11. Re:Looks like good policework by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Axel Foley was from Detroit, not New York.

    12. Re:Looks like good policework by Brian_Ellenberger · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In other words, what these officers did is blatantly unconstitutional in California, and only questionably unconstitutional in other jurisdictions.

      Since the NYPD police have zero jurisdiction in California or any other place but their own city, they have no more or less rights than any other citizen. They are just regular people. So they can goto public meetings like any other US citizen can. They have no power of how to tell how the NYPD runs its police force, and to make some blanket statement to all police from any state would run afowl from Equal Protection.

      Continue to tell yourself that 90% of the world's population and 75% of the American population is wrong about current policy and that you, in your infinite wisdom, are the only one who understand how true peace and order may be brought to the world.

      I don't know about 75% of the US population, but I could not give a darn what 90% of the world's population thinks. If we did care, this country would not have existed in the first place. If you do care about the majority opinion, prepare to make adultery and homosexuality illegal. "The World" is more than North America and Europe.

    13. Re:Looks like good policework by essence · · Score: 1

      oh please, stop associating anarchy with terror and violence. You're just doing the job of the ruling class. Most anarchists are peaceful peaple. Please go and read up on what anarchy really means.

    14. Re:Looks like good policework by NMerriam · · Score: 2, Informative

      Since the NYPD police have zero jurisdiction in California or any other place but their own city, they have no more or less rights than any other citizen. They are just regular people. So they can goto public meetings like any other US citizen can. They have no power of how to tell how the NYPD runs its police force, and to make some blanket statement to all police from any state would run afowl from Equal Protection.


      No, police officers outside their jurisdictions but still acting in their official capacities are NOT "just regular people". They are still acting as agents of the government, they just don't have arrest powers in another state (actually they might depending on the situation, there is a great deal of vagueness since usually it's easier and more polite to have the local cops handle the arrest).

      Residents of California have rights. Agents of the NYPD, who were there on official NYPD business, being paid by the NYPD, in activities directed by the NYPD, created and maintained records for the NYPD based on the mere conjecture that criminal charges might be filed (someday for some reason) by the NYPD, in complete violation of the California Constitution. They can't pretend they were just acting as random citizens while drawing a government paycheck for the very activities in question.

      Anyone acting as a government agent is required to observe the legal rights of citizens. That's why cops can't just call their friend Bob and have him conduct an illegal search rather than going to the trouble of getting a warrant. Just because Bob can't arrest anyone or hand out tickets doesn't mean he isn't acting as a government agent in the search.

      You're right, of course that California can't tell cops what to do outside California. But the minute those NYPD officers came into California on government business, you better bet they have to respect the rights of citizens the same as any other government agent in California.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
  28. I am going broke by janneH · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Everytime something like this happens I log on to the ACLU site and give them another hundred dollars. At this rate I am going to broke by next week.

    1. Re:I am going broke by maxume · · Score: 1

      Burning it would be quicker.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    2. Re:I am going broke by BandwidthHog · · Score: 1

      I just received my card in the mail yesterday. I like that the list of phone numbers on the back starts with the White House switchboard.

      --

      Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
  29. invasion of privacy??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There was no "invasion of privacy"! The police only attended PUBLIC meetings and sent emails to members of these groups.

    1. Re:invasion of privacy??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What part of "spying" eludes you?

  30. Another reason to distrust those smiling coyotes. by copponex · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Whenever anyone tries to tell you that the government should be making any decision without the consent AND knowledge of the populace, tell them you distrust the US government because they assassinate citizens and sell weapons to sworn enemies. For reference, see COINTELPRO and the Iran Contra Affair.

    "The truth is subversive and anti-American." -Noam Chomsky

  31. Re:This Defies Rightist "Conspiracy Theory" Argume by NMerriam · · Score: 1

    When undercover cops attent public meetings there's nothing remotly nefarious about that.


    Um, yes there is, if he's using it to gather intelligence on political activists for later persecution based on nothing more than political activities which are explicitly protected by the first amendment of the Constitution. You should acquaint yourself with the 20th century abuses of such "innocent" behavior (particularly 1960-1975) before making such silly comments.

    Of course, this is only made worse by the fact that the officers were working well outside their jurisdictions when no actual crimes had been committed or were planned. It's one thing to follow a criminal enterprise where it leads, another to speculate that someone half a country away may someday think about doing something criminal and therefore should be infiltrated by an agency that has no right to be operating in that area in the first place.

    If you want to get all indignant about something how about you start making citizen's arrests the next time crazy wackos in the middle of a peaceful crowd start throwing stones.


    That's pretty funny, considering it's been shown by countless official documents that pretty much everyone instigating riots and throwing stones during the period I mentioned above was a police officer or FBI agent whose job was to start violence as a way to discredit the protesters.
    --
    Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
  32. NYC mayor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't the mayor of NYC at a time the same man who is running for the domination of the Republican party?
    Sure, he would spend some of the city tax payers money on helping his Republican buddies.

  33. By their standards, you are an extremist. by khasim · · Score: 1

    The real question is whether you'd be consider an "extremist" by Washington, Jefferson or Franklin.

    Sheep cannot form a Democracy. That requires informed, active participation by its citizens.

  34. The good citizens of New York City by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

    The good citizens of New York City must be delighted to know that their tax dollars and police manpower went to safeguarding the Republican Party from protesters instead of, for example, finding Al Quaeda operatives.

    Vote for Guiliani for president, he really knows how to respond to terrorist threats. Not!

    --
    [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    1. Re:The good citizens of New York City by freedom_india · · Score: 1

      Well, clinton claims she represents new yorkers interests. Why doesn't she do any thing about this wasteful expenditure. I say lets wash the old cobwebs away (clinton, bush, etc) and bring in a fresh new view: Obama.
      Atleast he would be as fresh as Kennedy was and do something useful rather than pandering to special interest lobbies.

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
  35. next step?" Nothing, since this is 3 years ago. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This domestic spying is almost identical to what the FSB in Russia has done since Putin ascended to power. The FSB has been extensively spying on anyone who supports peaceful, democratic dissent.

    Will Washington follow in the footsteps of Moscow and go to the next logical step after spying?

    You're comparing the US and Russia? The FSB are all of Putin's ex-KGB friends and the NYPD has nothing to do with the Bush administration and, this happened 3 years ago.

  36. If by "best", you mean "overzealous" by alienmole · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thank you for your efforts at keeping folks in NYC safe from destrutive assholes.

    Hopefully you don't mean to conflate "people who planned to protest at the convention" with "destructive assholes". And that's the problem here: the police are treating people with dissenting political views as potential criminals. That's an unfortunate situation in a supposedly free society: at the very least, it certainly has a chilling effect on free speech. I've lived in a country where you had to worry about whether your neighbor or some of your college buddies were reporting on what you said to the government. That's a very effective tool for keeping a populace in line and suppressing dissent, or at least driving it underground. Paradoxically, though, the more you do that kind of thing, the more likely you are to have a huge blowup (figuratively and literally) in future.

    Have you ever sat around with a group of friends who you know share your opinions, and bullshitted about how you'd like to kill someone, or see them killed, or blow up something to make a point, etc.? People say that sort of stuff all the time, even quite respectable people, especially when they're young. Now imagine there's an undercover cop in the room, and what's going to go in his report. Watch the movie "A Scanner Darkly" (or read the book) to get a bit of a feel for this, it's quite accurate in that respect. Pretty soon you've got federal agents chasing shadows, and SWAT raids on innocent people's houses. That hasn't happened all that much in the U.S. recently, yet, but the way things are going, it seems like just a matter of time. Perhaps every few generations, it's necessary to rediscover firsthand why the iron fist approach to governance doesn't work.

    That all said, cops still have a job to do. But when conducting operations like this one, they need to be held to a high standard. Did you RTFA? Here's a quote:

    In hundreds of reports stamped "N.Y.P.D. Secret," the Intelligence Division chronicled the views and plans of people who had no apparent intention of breaking the law, the records show.

    These included members of street theater companies, church groups and antiwar organizations, as well as environmentalists and people opposed to the death penalty, globalization and other government policies. Three New York City elected officials were cited in the reports.

    In at least some cases, intelligence on what appeared to be lawful activity was shared with police departments in other cities. A police report on an organization of artists called Bands Against Bush noted that the group was planning concerts on Oct. 11, 2003, in New York, Washington, Seattle, San Francisco and Boston. Between musical sets, the report said, there would be political speeches and videos.

    The problem is that when you give people power over other people, abuse all too easily follows. We saw that in Abu Ghraib, and it's been demonstrated over and over in psychological experiments. When you turn someone into a spy, especially someone who isn't properly trained, it can be difficult for them to remember their real mission -- suddenly, finding anything out about anyone starts to seem important. (Some special prosecutors seem to have suffered from this effect, too.) So with operations like this, real care and oversight is needed.

    1. Re:If by "best", you mean "overzealous" by ArcherB · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The problem is that when you give people power over other people, abuse all too easily follows. We saw that in Abu Ghraib, and it's been demonstrated over and over in psychological experiments. When you turn someone into a spy, especially someone who isn't properly trained, it can be difficult for them to remember their real mission -- suddenly, finding anything out about anyone starts to seem important. (Some special prosecutors seem to have suffered from this effect, too.) So with operations like this, real care and oversight is needed.

      I was in NY during the Republican convention. I wasn't there FOR the convention, but I just happened to have an install that same week in NY. I saw the "protests". These people were allowed to crowd the streets, scream, yell, carry their signs, and even harass anyone they thought to be a delegate, which was anyone not dressed in "protester attire". There was no repression of free speech. There was no oppression of the masses. There were not even that many areas that were blocked off. I was able to walk within a rock's throw of the Garden without any problems whatsoever. One protester even managed her way into the convention itself to disrupt it. These people would block streets, throw things at the delegates and even lay their bodies down on the path to the Garden to try and stop the convention in its tracks.

      THAT was the full intention of these "protests". These people were not out there to protest anything. They were out there to disrupt the convention. They wanted to deny the Republicans their right to convention. These people were no different than the brown-shirts of the 1930's and 40's. Their job was to silence all opposing views through any means possible. I see the same thing at pro life marches, support the troop rallies, pro Israeli marches or anything that does not jive with what is, ironically enough, considered to be the PC ideals.

      It was not just the job of the NYPD to ensure the Republicans their right to a convention, but to also protect the President, the Vice President and nearly the entire Presidential cabinet. When you have that many high-profile government officials in one place, their safety is a matter of national security. Now if the NYPD kicked down doors, harassed friends, wives and family members of "suspects", and detained "persons of interest", then we'd be on to something. But all it seems to me that they did was look into potentially harmful groups that may pose a security risk.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    2. Re:If by "best", you mean "overzealous" by alienmole · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I was in NY during the Republican convention.
      So was I. A friend of mine worked on the NYC host committee staff for the convention.

      These people were allowed to crowd the streets, scream, yell, carry their signs, and even harass anyone they thought to be a delegate, which was anyone not dressed in "protester attire". There was no repression of free speech.

      That has almost nothing to do with the chilling effects of spying on legitimate political groups.

      Tangentially, you're making all sorts of errors in generalizing from the behavior of the most visible protesters. I originally responded to a comment about "destructive assholes", and was pointing out that not all protesters, or political groups, fall into that category. If you conflate the two, you're helping us as a society go down the road I'm warning about, because it makes it all too easy to legitimize excessive investigative tactics.

      But all it seems to me that they did was look into potentially harmful groups that may pose a security risk

      And if that's all they did, there wouldn't be an issue. However, a point which the NYT article raises is that NYPD's collection and sharing of information went beyond this. I'm saying that this is something to be wary of, that it can very easily get out of hand. Simply saying "Yay NYPD" as the comment I responded to essentially did, is missing the point.

    3. Re:If by "best", you mean "overzealous" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      support the troop rallies

      Yeah, I saw that too, bunch of freaks screaming about how they were all going to die and go to hell because they're all gay. Oh wait, sorry, I forgot we're trying to foster an illusion that only liberals are publicly raving lunatics.

      But all it seems to me that they did was look into potentially harmful groups that may pose a security risk.

      That and arrest several thousand of them, detain them without charges, and finally let them go since they were too lazy to even fake the paperwork for "threw a rock at me" or "too fat to step over" or whatever it is you thought the thousands of people who got arrested did to deserve it.

      These days at least most cops take the time to fill out the form for "resisting arrest", even if they can't explain why the person was supposedly being arrested in the first place, or show any signs of resistance having taken place.

    4. Re:If by "best", you mean "overzealous" by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Warning: if you do not follow the group think and echo the popular sentiment being expressed in the thread, you will be labeled "Flamebait". Evidently, it is not enough to follow big brother, you must love him as well.

      --> But all it seems to me that they did was look into potentially harmful groups that may pose a security risk
      And if that's all they did, there wouldn't be an issue. However, a point which the NYT article raises is that NYPD's collection and sharing of information went beyond this. I'm saying that this is something to be wary of, that it can very easily get out of hand.


      I don't see this as any different than placing an undercover officer in a drug ring or underground casino or whatever. I mean, going into a bar looking for illegal gaming, it is not known if any crime has been committed. When you send out a "John" to try to hire hookers, up until that point, the suspect has committed no crime. How is this any different than any other undercover operation?
      Granted, I agree that it could have gotten out of hand, but it didn't. This story is two years old. This happened back in 2004 and nothing came of it. The Republican Brownshirts did not swoop down on these groups and beat them senseless with bars of soap in socks. Nothing came from it. The abuse of power that could have come, didn't. It really is much ado about nothing. No laws were broken. No rights were violated. Nothing happened.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    5. Re:If by "best", you mean "overzealous" by alienmole · · Score: 1

      Warning: if you do not follow the group think and echo the popular sentiment being expressed in the thread, you will be labeled "Flamebait". Evidently, it is not enough to follow big brother, you must love him as well.

      Perhaps you're focused on the wrong big brother. The big brother of societal disapproval will always exist in many forms, but it is not usually backed by the force of law, and in fact the law acts to protect your right to say unpopular things. It's those same laws we're discussing here, that the NYPD is accused of violating.

      But more to the point, perhaps in this case the moderators are not entirely off-base, in the sense that it's really sounding to me as though you haven't read the article, or if you have, then you're dismissing some concerns which you should consider taking more seriously. (I don't agree that moderation should be used to suppress legitimate debate, but I'm not so sure about uninformed debate.)

      I don't see this as any different than placing an undercover officer in a drug ring or underground casino or whatever. I mean, going into a bar looking for illegal gaming, it is not known if any crime has been committed. When you send out a "John" to try to hire hookers, up until that point, the suspect has committed no crime. How is this any different than any other undercover operation?
      From the article: "Before monitoring political activity, the police must have 'some indication of unlawful activity on the part of the individual or organization to be investigated,' United States District Court Judge Charles S. Haight Jr. said in a ruling last month." The standard for monitoring political activity is different, for the exact reasons I've described. There's a demonstrated chilling effect on political activity if you allow unrestricted government spying on political organizations.

      Nothing came from it. The abuse of power that could have come, didn't.

      You don't know that. The ongoing lawsuit, described in the article, alleges that the NYPD broke the law in this case. If that's true, that may be an abuse of power in itself, and if they were allowed to get away with it without investigation, it certainly would be.

    6. Re:If by "best", you mean "overzealous" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Wow...

      The Republican Brownshirts did not swoop down on these groups and beat them senseless with bars of soap in socks .
      Hmmm.... "bars of soap in socks"...
      That's really not a good way to clean your socks...
      Seriously, though (to get back on-topic), how do you know the NYPD didn't come down hard on certain protesters? I mean, since we didn't know about the surveillance, the public and press didn't realize scrutinize the actions of the NYPD during the convention. The could have beaten tons of protesters - and it might go by unnoticed... just business as usual at the NYPD Soap-in-a-Sock-Beating Team (that's the team all the SWAT guys really want to be on).
  37. I thought that that was illegal to do but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...I shouldn't be surprised that GOP'ers wanted this.

  38. The issue is? by OakLEE · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Disclosure: I don't feel like registering, so I did not read the article. My comments are based completely on the summary. Feel free to correct me if the story indicates otherwise.

    That said, what the NYPD did is (1) travel to cities around the world (2) to observe public meetings of groups of people (3) who were likely to be in NYC during the convention (4) and cause significant disruptions in business and city services (5) for an extended period of time.

    This is not espionage, it is scouting. The NYPD did not obtain any secret information from these meetings. These were publicly open meetings intended to disseminate the information the NYPD was after to anyone in attendance. The NYPD took action that an average person could take if they were willing to spend a several thousand dollars.

    This is no different than a basketball coach attending an opposing team's game or looking at their game film. This is no different, even, than a police man listening to two people talking in the middle of a busy street. It is settled law, in the US at least, that individuals or groups of individuals have no expectation of privacy in a public area.

    The NYPD did not exercise any extra-jurisdictional control over these people or use any methods that would illegal under either US, New York, or Local Country law. All they did was attend public meetings without advertising their presence. There is no evidence here that NYPD was abusing its authority in observing these groups, that it infiltrated these groups to cause internal disruptions, or that its observation invaded the privacy of these groups. In short, the NYPD did nothing legally or morally wrong.

    --
    The sun beams down on a brand new day, No more welfare tax to pay, Unsightly slums gone up in flashing light...
    1. Re:The issue is? by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1
      If I had mod points you'd get them... FINALLY someone thinks about this RATIONALLY. It seems to me we WANT our police to scout, so they can cleanly, efficiently, and safely deal with potential problems before they arise.

      I guess if the police plan ahead, here on /. it's considered a breach of the Constitution. Of course, if the police don't plan ahead then they're trashed for not doing their job...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    2. Re:The issue is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah but couldn't the money have been used more effectively to harrass gun owners and NRAA members? Seems like a waste to spend so much time investigating aknowledged wusses?

    3. Re:The issue is? by pizpot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "the NYPD did nothing legally or morally wrong."

      Like if they got into your house undercover and then arrested you for something.

    4. Re:The issue is? by e-scetic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They didn't just attend open meetings. They took down information, names, places, times, what was said, political viewpoints, etc. They then entered this information in a database somewhere, which they shared with other law enforcement agencies. That information in turn gets percolated to other government agencies like the FBI, CIA, DIA, etc.

      So, for participating in a lawful activity your name is now in reports you'll never see, in a file with your name on it, nor will you know how they've categorized or portrayed you, nor is there any way to challenge the information or its correctness, or have the records removed. And this information will be used against you when it is advantageous to do so.

      Plus, the whole law enforcement system is set up to track information about *criminal* activities. If information is now being collected about non-criminal activities, where does it go? Into the same databases? Where does it appear? Who sees it? Who has access to it? Who has worked out the protocols and what guidelines are they using for sharing the information? Isn't there a legal requirement to inform the subjects?

    5. Re:The issue is? by fermion · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The issue is that the New York police investigated, created records, and exchanged such records with other jurisdictions, without any evidence of wrong doing. Generally such investigations, done without probable cause, is called harassment, and is frowned upon.

      What is missing in this hysterical world is good police work. Such work requires investigation, analysis, and conclusions free of political bias. Such work is difficult, not glamourous, but must be done. So, instead of working to reduce the 80,000+ violent crimes, the nearly 900 murders, that is one every 10 hours, 3000+ forcible rapes, they decided to attend meeting, file reports, and make accusations against individuals for which they had not evidence.

      Is it clear the parent did not read the article because the parent missed the whole point. Let's put this in another perspective. What the NYPD did is in effect a very expensive fishing expedition. Such work is frowned upon. For instance, police cannot enter a premises without cause. Police cannot create reports and exchange reports for innocent person. For instance, a police officer does not have the right to claim that parent poster is a murderer if not such evidence exists. For those who have forgotten history, we do this because the country we were fighting in the American revolutionary war felt like it had the right to enter where it like, take what it wanted, and hold anyone indefinitely without cause. Many thousands good people lost their life fighting England for the freedoms we know enjoy. What is sad that we are so afraid of losing our lifestyle, not out life, just our lifestyle, that we are willing to throw it all away.

      I often wonder if the people who support the policy of widespread detainment and widespread police power would actually be willing to allow their property or person to be searched without warrant, or would be willing to give up all possession for the benefit of the state.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    6. Re:The issue is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The NYPD did not exercise any extra-jurisdictional control over these people or use any methods that would illegal under either US, New York, or Local Country law.

      Really? Did the NYPD officers enter Canada & other countries with a vacation visa or with a valid work visa? Were these wetbacks working illegally?

      Further, depending how long they were working in these foreign countries, they may owe income tax since they worked while in another country. Not filing tax returns when required to may be considered criminal tax evasion in some cases.

    7. Re:The issue is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is no different than a basketball coach attending an opposing team's game or looking at their game film/b>. This is no different, even, than a police man listening to two people talking in the middle of a busy street. It is settled law, in the US at least, that individuals or groups of individuals have no expectation of privacy in a public area.


      Since you mention this, does that mean i can sit in on their meetings as well to even things out a bit?
    8. Re:The issue is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Many thousands good people lost their life fighting England for the freedoms we know enjoy."

      Complete rubbish. You rebelled against legal authority because the English would not let you kill the natives.

      Americans have always been cowardly shits, prone to a bit of genocide, and full of self-delusion. This is just your natural selves coming out.

    9. Re:The issue is? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      That said, what the NYPD did is (1) travel to cities around the world (2) to observe public meetings of groups of people (3) who were likely to be in NYC during the convention (4) and cause significant disruptions in business and city services (5) for an extended period of time.

      The police have sued, multiple times, to have it determined that they are not required to "protect" anyone. That is, if they know a crime will be committed, they do not have to act to prevent it. If they know a crime is in commission, they are not bound to disrupt it. Their sole task is arresting people *after* the crime. Because the number of times that cops have elected to not put themselves in harms way of a crime in progress, they have earned the court verdicts that they neither have to protect nor serve, regardless of what they have printed on the side of their cars.

      That said, when an abused wife calls and the police and tell them that her husband is drunk and coming over and she thinks he will beat her up and is lawfully ignored until the neighbors call to report the murder, that conflicts with actively investigating people that, as far as the police know, have never committed a crime and are not planning on committing any crimes and might be visiting their city at some point in the future seems to be hypocritical. They will spend more resources investigating non-crimes that are politically motivated than investigating real crimes. Talk to anyone that had a burglary and ask them how much they think the police investigated.

      In short, the NYPD did nothing legally or morally wrong.

      They purposefully chose to ignore actual crimes that have been committed to investigate non-crimes that might occur sometime in the future. That is morally wrong. There is nothing the police can do legally wrong, unless it is caught on video tape, pretty much by definition now.

    10. Re:The issue is? by OakLEE · · Score: 1

      Is it clear the parent did not read the article


      Um, yah, I said exactly that.
      --
      The sun beams down on a brand new day, No more welfare tax to pay, Unsightly slums gone up in flashing light...
  39. Dead bodies in Waco would say Dems to blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How many children did Janet Reno barbeque, anyway?

    This isn't a Republican/Democrat thing. It's a "too much power" thing.

    Remember that the next time you vote for someone who wants to increase government power. And more taxes means more government power.

    Governments with no money are pretty powerless. So if you fear a powerful government, don't vote for anyone who'd raise your taxes.

    1. Re:Dead bodies in Waco would say Dems to blame by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      Janet Reno barbequed no one.

      The fire started at the compound was the result of a standoff between a paramilitary organization and the ATF and FBI. Even if the FBI was at fault for starting that fire, it was the Branch Davidians who started the stand off. The funny thing about incidents like Ruby Ridge and Waco is that people forget that these standoffs occurred during the attempt to serve due-process to the people involved.

      Yes, it was under the Clinton years that we get extraordinary rendition, and I didn't like him because of that. But it's under Bush's watch that it becomes a widely used tool.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  40. Re:This Defies Rightist "Conspiracy Theory" Argume by turing_m · · Score: 1

    I don't believe that anyone in the far right would actually use that argument. It smells more like something you might hear from a standard issue Republican.

    --
    If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
  41. Shit-My Bad by OakLEE · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ok, I did not read the part about NYPD officers posing as sympathizers. That completely blows my argument up. I was under the impression that the officers were silent, uninvolved observers. There's nothing to look at here, carry on.

    --
    The sun beams down on a brand new day, No more welfare tax to pay, Unsightly slums gone up in flashing light...
    1. Re:Shit-My Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why does that matter?

    2. Re:Shit-My Bad by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      That, plus the issue of them arresting people with no probable suspicion much less cause. And violating rules on how long people can be held in jail without seeing a judge. The NYPD crossed waaaay over the line between due diligence in investigating threats to the convention and blatant police state behavior.

    3. Re:Shit-My Bad by OakLEE · · Score: 1

      It matters because then the police are committing actions that at best morally not in the right, and at worst are an abuse of their powers. I think in general, we expect the government to use its power in ways that would not offend our sensibilities as citizens. For example, like I said, if a basketball coach scouts the opposition by attending one of their games, we view that as a common sense action taken to gain tactical advantage. By the same token, if police use legal methods to obtain publicly available information, there is no violation because the information is available publicly so that anyone can freely access it. If all the NYPD were doing were attending public meetings to gather intelligence, then there would be no core problem since obtaining that information did not involve an abuse of power or authority.

      --
      The sun beams down on a brand new day, No more welfare tax to pay, Unsightly slums gone up in flashing light...
  42. So the Free Speach zones... by r_jensen11 · · Score: 1

    weren't free?

    1. Re:So the Free Speach zones... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know you're in trouble when you can't spell 'Speech'

  43. Re:Propaganda - You are being used. by N8F8 · · Score: 1

    How amusing, I'm being labeled a troll. What exactly am I trolling?

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
  44. Re:Propaganda - You are being used. by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

    Operation Gem Stone back in the 60's.

    It was G. Gordon Liddy's pet project that eventually ended up with the Watergate scandal in the 70's.

    Then in the 80's, you've got the theory that Reagan conspired to trade arms or other goods for the safety of hostages. Not to mention Grenada, Iran-Contra, Noriega, the Savings and Loan bailout scandals...

    The 90's sees the start of the cover up of the Mark Foley scandal that blossomed in this decade, not to mention the incredibly wasteful witch hunt against President Clinton in both the Government and the rightwing media. David Brock wrote about it in "Blinded by the Right." James Carville also wrote a similar covering of the impeachment that resulted in "...And the Horse You Rode In On." Sure, it was written by Democrat zealot James Carville, but it's worth a read.

    --
    Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  45. Re:This Defies Rightist "Conspiracy Theory" Argume by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

    Um, yes there is, if he's using it to gather intelligence on political activists for later persecution based on nothing more than political activities which are explicitly protected by the first amendment of the Constitution. You should acquaint yourself with the 20th century abuses of such "innocent" behavior (particularly 1960-1975) before making such silly comments.

    No; in that case it's the oppression that's illegal, not the information-gathering. It's not illegal for the police to compile dossiers on people, or send undercover officers to public meetings.

    There's a key difference between compiling information on someone and then actually using that to oppress someone, or a group of someones.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  46. Sort of by KKlaus · · Score: 1

    It's the tactics of the LAPD and NYPD that you want in Iraq, not the actual blue suits themselves. You're right about them being better trained to go after non-fixed targets, but we need to be honest and say that they're not equiped (or trained) to go after people that tend to be armed with assault rifles and explosives. They would be fairly drastically outgunned.

    --
    Relax I just want some peanuts.
    1. Re:Sort of by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      It's the tactics of the LAPD and NYPD that you want in Iraq, not the actual blue suits themselves. You're right about them being better trained to go after non-fixed targets, but we need to be honest and say that they're not equiped (or trained) to go after people that tend to be armed with assault rifles and explosives.
      Are you saying that LA is not in reality as it is portrayed in the movies or that the whole Iraq thing is being overblown by the media ?

      (trying to figure things out from Europe)
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    2. Re:Sort of by KKlaus · · Score: 1

      I'm saying that while I think the Army may be bad at doing what is essentially police work, police (who are good at police work) aren't equiped or trained to fight an enemy as well armed as your average insurgent.

      --
      Relax I just want some peanuts.
  47. It costs them nothing, but costs us everything by Eternal+Vigilance · · Score: 1

    The thing to remember is that all monies used by "the government" to pay for anything come from the public, having been extracted essentially at gunpoint by the IRS. (Don't think so? Try not paying taxes and see what happens.) So whether it costs a thousand bucks or eleventy-gazillion dollars is immaterial. It doesn't cost the people spending it anything, only us, so in general they're never going to care what it costs. What real difference would it make if there had been a line in the article that said "Bush had the Federal Reserve issue $100B in new notes to reimburse the city" ?

    It's not an unreasonable question. It's just a distraction from the underlying issue, which is mechanisms by which small numbers of people can control all the rest.

    (It will be an issue that will have to be addressed in the transition to a post-capitalist society, though. What people start to see that we're only ever giving or taking money from ourselves ("notes to self: 1. take $1,000,000,000,000 out of wallet to pay self for taking out garbage 2. take out garbage 3. put $1,000,000,000,000 in wallet as payment for taking out garbage"), we'll need to come up with other kinds of agreements on how to structure society.)

    The reason there seems to be cooperation between groups who we're told are adversaries (in your question NYC and BushCo) is that they have far, far more in common than they have separating them. While one group of chicken farmers may believe free-range farming is best, and the other argues animal-abusive factory farming maximizes their ROI, it's still a discussion between gentlemen farmers - conducted over chicken dinner.


    There's free as in speech, free as in beer, and free as in range. American citizens are of the last kind.

    1. Re:It costs them nothing, but costs us everything by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      In this case, not exactly gentlemen I think. Foxes perhaps?

  48. Gotta set their priorities ... by rrohbeck · · Score: 1

    so they obviously don't have any criminals or terrorists to chase.
    Now there's a good way to save some tax money.

  49. Great Hoover's Ghost! by Nemus · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I've noticed several people attempting to use fallicious arguments in order to dismiss this report as "liberal-bias." So, as a conservative (a real one, as in small, limited government = the exact opposite of Bush and co.) let me lay it out for you.

    The problem here isn't necessarily what they were monitoring, but why they were monitioring it. As the article repeatedly states, one must have grounds for an inquiry (i.e. possible illegal activity, backed up by either compelling circumstantial evidence or hard empirical evidence) before conducting a covert inquiry. As an example: it would be perfectly legal, in most cases, to begin covert surveillance of a target if the object of the investigation could in some way be demonstrated to be a possible factor involved in illegal activty, such as someone here in TN buying extremely large amounts of, say, nyquil (can be used in making crytsal methamphetamine), so long as the amounts were truly beyond any conceivable norm (compelling circumstantial evidence). While this would by no means be enough for an arrest or conviction, a judge could be convinced to allow wiretapping, diversion of assets towards surveillance, etc. However, one bottle of nyquil would not be enough (one would hope) to get this kind of permission.

    In the case reported in the article, the NYPD was effectively conducting surveillance of the one bottle of nyquil people. Simply being involved in a political protest group is by no means indicitive of illegal activity; however, the police apparently deployed assets to groups with apparently peacful intentions, with no cause to suspect illegal activity (one bottle of nyquil.) Now, if the police could show that Group A. had been responsible, say, for severe property damage at the WTO riots in Seatlle, that is compelling circumstantial evidence (did it before, might do it again) that could be used in obtaining permission for covert intelligence gathering (55 gallons of nyquil, so to speak). This does not seem to be the case here, however.

    The reason that this distinction is so important is that power does tend to corrupt, not necessarily morally, as the old adage is often taken to be stating, but more often ethically. You're a cop: protect and serve, preserve the peace, and all that. By the very nature of your job, if you're dedicated to it, anyways, you are going to always be pushing as close to the edge as possible. But where exactly is that edge? Where society (in the form of government, an ethical government one would hope) places it. Only when these distinctions are upheld, only when this line is constantly reinforced and restated, does the concept of checks and balances truly work. In this case, the police have overstepped their authority, it seems. Conducting an investigation with no probable cause is no different than pulling random people off of the street and interrogating them for a crime that one has no reason to suspect they comitted. Case in point: guys, how would you feel if everytime a woman was raped in your town, every male was wiretapped, followed, and snooped on? You might say that such a thing would be different, but it's not. After all, you have a penis (these people were involved in protest groups), and almost all women are raped by men (these groups are similar in form to groups that have created disruptions in the past), so all men should be surveilled equally (RTFA).

    The argument can go on and on: it is logically sound. However, the thing that is most compelling to me in this instance is it reminds me of the FBI during the Cold War, expecially during the Mcarthy era, and the Vietnam war. Do we not find it disturbing that people like MLK Jr., John Lennon, and the vast majority of the faculties of NE colleges were under surveillance, that dossiers were compiled on their potential "socialist," or "Communist," leanings, due to no more evidence than that they "fit the profile,"? Same thing here. Such policies were the product of Hoover and his protegees at the FBI, which nowadays are

    --
    Mod Points: Helping you keep your opinion to yourself.
    1. Re:Great Hoover's Ghost! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you understand that the KGB, um, I mean DHS, um I mean secret police, have to monitor everybody?

      The arabs and jews and homosexuals are everywhere.

      We just need to torture people because of the dirty terrorists/brown people/liberals/gypsies/homosexuals.

      You just need to be quiet and let us take care of you; God is on our side, that is why He sanctions our torture.

      Pontius Pilate understood -- he had to torture dirty rabble-rousers too, just like us Republicans...

    2. Re:Great Hoover's Ghost! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good post. But isn't the root question, in terms of Franklin's quote, what is it that constitutes "essential" liberty?

      Note that he didn't condemn the possibility of needing to give up *some* liberty, just a quantum of it.

      For me, I have no issues with TIA. Let the collection of information be as efficient and widespread as possible. But accompanying the expansion of collection should be an increased stringency on what is done with the information. It's not the information collection that's a bad thing - it's what you do with it.

      That's why I see the action of evading FISA court oversight as being far more pernicious than a few cops listening in with their asshole detectors running.

    3. Re:Great Hoover's Ghost! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm posting as "Anonymous Coward" because I don't need another account to keep track of right now! My email is colorless.blue.ideas (youknowwhatgoeshere) gmail..

      Thank you, Nemus, for your thoughtful comments. You have some compelling arguments, but I think that they do apply to the situation that existed then. First, there is a history of small numbers of people infiltrating other-wise peaceful demonstrations in order to create a triggering event. Then, the trouble is that the various John (and sometimes Jane) Does involved are often not known in advance, nor is it known which open organization they are attached or will attach themselves. Thus there is a reasonable requirement to keep tabs on what is being planned in order to prevent illegal activities or escalation from peaceful to non-peaceful demonstrations.

      Admittedly, the question of where to draw the line remains---and well-intentioned people may draw the line at different places. In the cases in this thread, it is difficult to see where any "Essential Liberty" was given up: people still assembled peaceably, demonstrated, etc. One could argue that the NYPD allowed them more "Liberty" than was either "Essential" or warranted. No harm; no foul.

      BTW, with the opening of the Soviet Union KGB files, although the FBI over-reacted (and, to be frank, J.E. Hoover used the situation as an excuse in building up his personal power), there was some justification for surveillance of Soviet sympathizers and beneficiaries in the U.S. Again, where to draw the line . . . .

      Thank you again.

    4. Re:Great Hoover's Ghost! by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      "Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety" -Benjamin Franklin

      Just as valid a saying today as it was then, as is and was the Constitution. And considering the constituion was, in some part, conceived with a bias towards liberty over safety, you can't deny one without denying the other.


      Whether or not I agree with the rest of your comment, I have to repudiate this. It's just as INvalid today as it was then.

      Ben Franklin was a brilliant man, and we were fortunate to have him as one of the early minds behind our Republic. He was also a self-promoter that would make Al Sharpton blush, and had a keen eye for the clever catchphrase which would stick in people's heads - all the more important in a word-of-mouth society like Colonial America. Luckily, he used his marketing mojo on behalf of the Revolution, not against it.

      But back to my point: that quote you reference is was nothing more than an anti_George III marketing slogan. Its meaning was vapid even then.
      The whole sense of SOCIETY is one of constantly trading/compromising "liberties" in exchange for more "security".
      Ever stopped at a red traffic light, despite the fact that nobody was coming from the other directions? You might think it's trivial, but it's not: you have CONCEDED the SIMPLEST liberty in exchange for no increase in actual security, just a ritualized obedience to the mechanical whim of the stoplight.
      Something more substantial: got a job? Maybe one that requires you to spend 10+ hours a day at a specific location doing tasks you wouldn't otherwise want do? Why? You've trade a magnificent chunk of your liberty for the security of a salary.
      Most substantial of all: do you pay taxes? You spend your time working for money, and the government arbitrarily takes a goodly chunk of that - essentially taking your time - for what? Police services, fire services, roads, city services, defense, government, etc. ALL OF WHICH (ostensibly) increase your security.

      So I'm sorry, but I wish people would think before they repeat that phrase. Meaningless marketing pap from the 18th Century is no less meaningless because its aged.

      Truth in Advertising: I'm an ardent libertarian myself, and I despise anything but the most minimal government. But I prefer thinking libertarianism to empty-catchphrase libertarians any day.
      --
      -Styopa
    5. Re:Great Hoover's Ghost! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      okay one, nyquil doenst have pseudoephedrine anymore, which would be useful in making meth
      two, it isnt illegal to buy mass quantities of otc drugs
      three, drug laws are fucking stupid as hell anyways
      four, nyquil has DXM, which is probably the reason someone would buy allot of it, that or, lets pretend they have a cough....
      five, the police are not around to protect and serve, they are around to investigate crimes after the fact, thats kinda why citizens are allowed to have guns, because the police arnt gonna protect you, you have to do that
      six, the police are just another abstraction of the government, their intelligence is no better then the FBI, perhaps not as encompassing but not better
      seven, i totally fucking agree with you, Ben Frank was the OG pimp....

      (this was not an attempt to be a dick to the parent, just simply trying to thrown in my 2c, but im a little short right now, so ill hit you up next week)

    6. Re:Great Hoover's Ghost! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with your argument lays within the "ESSENTIAL liberties" bit. Running a red stop light is not essential; feeling free to speak your mind, even in direct opposition to popular sentiment, is. And it is always easiest to say that someone else should gladly give up one liberty for the good of others - it is quite another to voluntarily sacrifice one's own. How about this: you give up your guns, freedom of speech, religion, and all that other mess that just gets in the way of being safe - and stop telling others that living in a box is better for them than being free.

      This may have been marketing "pap" - but it is still fundamentally true.

    7. Re:Great Hoover's Ghost! by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      I agree with your argument. I would object just as much if they had instead been hoovering up how many delegates visited prostitutes.
      Oh wait, those were the prosecutors Gonzales kept on board. (Nice picture here, great shot, won't want your wife to see it though. How about staring an investigation of a democrat. See how useful investigations can be?)
      --
      Solar power at atmospheric pressure: http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/01/slashdot-users -selling-solar.html

  50. Saaayyyyyy..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Any of you Republicans-Is-Evil people remember the '68 DEMOCRAT convention? Thought not, it might open your eyes that both sides are just as bad, meanwhile the Mass Publis wastes it's time blaming each other's chosen party.

    1. Re:Saaayyyyyy..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      40 years ago.

    2. Re:Saaayyyyyy..... by Targon · · Score: 1

      The problem with this sort of argument is that the country has changed a LOT since 1968. Looking at the past may give perspective on the present and future, but it doesn't always apply.

      For starters, what the political parties stand for TODAY has changed from what they used to stand for in the past, and most people don't seem to understand that. In both parties, there are conservative and liberal groups of people. In both parties you have those who are wealthy, and those who are poor. So, you need to look at the approach to issues that the parties TEND to use.

      The Republican politicians of today tend to feel that if you help businesses, that will give those businesses a chance to hire people, which in theory will help the economy. This is the trickle-down approach. You see it in the current administration where huge corporations get more help from the government.

      The Democratic politicians tend to lean toward policies to help the lower to middle class in terms of money. This includes welfare and other programs which drain money from the government, but at the same time includes policies that help the low to middle class worker improve their situation in life, which boosts sales of both products and services.

      When either side gets too much power or control though, or bad candidates run from either party because there are a lack of GOOD candidates who are seen as electable, then things get bad when they end up in control. There will be "bad people" from both parties who get into positions of control, and the voters need to learn how to see those who who abuse their power for what they really are.

      You have a LOT of people who blindly vote Democrat or Republican in each election, mostly because they are blinded by the OLD ways of looking at the political parties. Individuals need to be looked at across the board, for all elected positions, but most people only know about those running for president, congress, and the senate. Without doing a lot of research, most people don't really know about the 10-15 other people they vote for except which party they belong to.

      So, don't complain too much about things that went on 30 or more years ago, because political parties and really the entire country has changed a lot. Things are NOT the same as they were in the 1960s, 70s, or 80s. It can be argued that things are still fairly similar to the 90s, though the tech boom is over, and there isn't a single industry in this country except drugs(the legal kind) and to a lesser extent, military supply contractors, that is prospering right now.

    3. Re:Saaayyyyyy..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course. Nothing changes in 40 years. I mean, 40 years? Might as well be 40 seconds for as little could possibly change in that amount of time.

  51. Ask someone who voted... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in Florida in 2000.

  52. Zeroeth Post? by istartedi · · Score: 1

    When Frosty Piss submits an article and it gets accepted, what else can you call it?

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  53. Re:Another reason to distrust those smiling coyote by Dun+Malg · · Score: 0

    For reference, see COINTELPRO and the Iran Contra Affair.
    HAHAHAHA! Come join us in the 21st century! You have to go back 20-40 years to find examples of government malfeasance? Where have you BEEN, man? On a hippy commune somewhere with no TV or newspapers?

    "The truth is subversive and anti-American." -Noam Chomsky Noam Chomsky? You quote THAT old doddering dope? You are from another century!
    --
    If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
  54. Re:This Defies Rightist "Conspiracy Theory" Argume by NMerriam · · Score: 1

    That's interesting, you should let the Supreme Court know ASAP. Even back in the 50s they recognized that gathering information could itself have a chilling effect on free speech, hence their overturning the requirement that the NAACP hand membership lists to the government. There is actually a SC-recognized right to anonymity, to a certain degree, when it comes to political protest.

    Of course, in the state of California, this isn't even a question, the right to privacy is explicit in the constitution and information gathering on political groups by law enforcement without reason to believe they are engaged in illegal activity is, in fact, prohibited. Somehow I doubt the NYPD officers were required to get a degree in California criminal justice before they bought their plane tickets.

    Fishing expeditions against people you dislike is not only a lousy use of police resources, they are in fact quite contrary to both policy and law in many parts of the country (including NYC, which is part of why this case is so interesting -- the NYPD seems to be blatantly violating one of the most famous court-imposed intelligence-gathering restrictions in the entire United States -- imposed due entirely to the NYPD's vast PRIOR abuse of such operations to violate the civil rights of activists!).

    --
    Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
  55. You missed my point, that money is power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the people that seem to fear government power being misused the most here on /. seem to strongly support the idea of giving more money to that very government.

    "But it's for a good cause."

    Guess what? It won't always be. There will come into power someone to abuse that power that was given in good faith.

    And once you give a government a certain level of power, it usually takes violent revolution to return that power to the people.

    1. Re:You missed my point, that money is power by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      Well, no. Money spent won't always be for good. However, the '06 election proves that the electorate can stand up, speak out and hold people in office accountable.

      But my point was that a powerful Government isn't always a bad thing. Bad things happened under Clinton. Elian Gonzales, Rendition, DMCA, NAFTA, GATT, ESRB(not a Government program, but formed out of pressure from folks like Tipper Gore and Hillary Clinton), etc. But that's not to say that there wasn't anything good done. Competent leadership in key areas like FEMA meant that Government programs meant to help people, actually helped people. Federal grants and other support meant that crime was on a drop. Was it perfect? No. Was it PROGRESS? Yes. As Stuart Smalley would say, "Progress, not perfection."

      Skepticism towards a Government is a fine thing, but you're talking about all out cynicism, which is really unhealthy to the whole process. It's why we've had several decades of just god awful leadership in the House and Senate. I mean, as much as I like alot of the Republicans and Democrats, very few of them are willing to lead and be bold. Granted, I think I saw more spine and backbone from the various random acts of humanity that Harry Reid had in the last few years before he became Senate Majority leader than out of say, Bill "Diagnosis Cam" Frist or Trent Lott, but that's probably due to my own biases.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  56. Who is we? by gelfling · · Score: 1

    50% of you voted for this. Don't tell me you're shocked now that they're doing exactly what they told you they would. Youre' allowed to be outraged that the vote you sold your souls for is now being used against you. But you're not allowed to whine that it's being used against someone.

  57. Set the wayback machine by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    to 1972 , Sherman.

    --
    What?
  58. Re:Propaganda - You are being used. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then in the 80's, you've got the theory that Reagan conspired to trade arms or other goods for the safety of hostages. Correction: Not for the SAFETY of hostages. The Carter administration was in talks with Islamic Jihad to secure the release of these hostages, and it looked like they would be released in September or so, just in time for the elections, when all of a sudden, IJ stopped responding. No answer at all.
      The release of the hostages was delayed until TWENTY MINUTES after Reagan's inauguration. There were rumors coming out of lower echelons in the Reagan camp, stuff that people had heard about arms trades being set up, certain people quietly taking trips out of the country and so forth.
      Congress investigated, but couldn't find any smoking gun evidence, but it sure was fucking suspicious. OTOH, the former Iranian President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr stated in 1992 that he was aware, at the time, of a deal between Ayatollah Khomeini and Reagan. He said he felt Khomeini was playing both sides of the street, as it were.
  59. Your NY protest was ignored by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your NY protest was ignored, because it wasn't a protest. Welcoming people and acting like attendees is not protesting. Sad to say you wasted your time and that of your two daughters.

  60. Re:This Defies Rightist "Conspiracy Theory" Argume by poopdeville · · Score: 1

    As it stands, the police are only allowed to actively investigate[1] an individual if they have at least a reasonable suspicion that the person has been, is, or is about to be, engaged in criminal activity based on specific and articulable facts and inferences.

    This is the standard put into play by the PATRIOT Act, and is a much lower standard than what we used to have. "Merely" collecting information can certainly be illegal.

    In any event, "public" meetings can also be private. We still have the right to assemble with whoever we want. That right includes excluding people with whom we don't want to assemble. And that can certainly include the police, unless they have a warrant to collect specific evidence (in which case undercover agents are merely distasteful).

    [1] As opposed to passively investigating an individual, say, by collecting an archive of letters to the editor, and other public statements.

    --
    After all, I am strangely colored.
  61. and your point is? by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

    Where do you work at where doing the minimum that is expected of you gets reported on the nightly news? And yes you DO hear about good police action ALL time, whenever a suspect of a crime is caught and arrested.

  62. My favorite things are... by copponex · · Score: 3, Funny

    Thinking in context. Most young people agree that the government is a failure, so most likely the hawks are going to be like you - unjustifiably condescending, poor with logic, and perhaps unlike you, at least aware of these two well-documented scandals which are hard for pro-government types to deny.

    My other favorite thing is experiencing a laughable attempt at character assassination during the course of an argument. Oh Noam, you old guy! Let me call you a name without referencing any fact or ideology to which I can provide an intriguing counter-example! My reputation as a slashdot reader will certainly provide some credit to my unbeatable intellect!

    Of course, I know your petty little mean streak is the only thing you can hold on to with any clarity. Please continue, and leave the thinking to the rest of us. (And if you are trolling, good job - and please, continue trolling slashdot and leave the thinking to the rest of us).

  63. Re:Propaganda - You are being used. by pembo13 · · Score: 1

    I fear people like you the most of all: those who actual believe these things.

    --
    "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
  64. Re:This Defies Rightist "Conspiracy Theory" Argume by Duhavid · · Score: 1

    I suspect that you are correct, that it is not illegal for
    the police to compile information on people. I dont think
    it is a good use of tax dollars to do so when it becomes
    clear that there is no criminal intent. Also, not being
    illegal does mean that all is well and "good".

    --
    emt 377 emt 4
  65. Take That, Hippy! by haakondahl · · Score: 1

    Actually, I would like to know what sort of counseling was made available to the NYPD Officers after wading through the indymedia feverswamps.

    --
    Don't trust anyone under thirty.
  66. The real scenario of republican spying. by rwwyatt · · Score: 1

    We have traced the call.. It is coming from inside your house!!

    Oh, do you have any lube?

  67. My favorite line in the article. by Night+Goat · · Score: 1

    The group was linked to a band of anarchist-communists whose leader had visited New York, according to the report.

    I'd like to meet one of these fellows. Or maybe it's a case of the report writer writing with a flourish.
    1. Re:My favorite line in the article. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nearly all anarchists are communists. There's a small group of "anarcho-capitalists", but the very idea is contradictory and they're basically the pariahs and laughingstocks of the anarchist movement. Anarchism is now and always has been a leftist doctrine.

    2. Re:My favorite line in the article. by BandwidthHog · · Score: 1

      I noticed that, too. I assumed it was a case of a group identifying themselves with a certain misleading term and others unthinkingly repeating it, kinda like Hitler’s little group calling themselves Socialists and nobody really questioning that.

      --

      Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
    3. Re:My favorite line in the article. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As I said before, anarchists are and pretty much always have been leftists. Go read Bakunin, Proudhon, even Emma Goldman. Anarchism and anticapitalism have been as one from anarchism's inception- it is anarchocapitalism which is similar to the Nazis referring to themselves as socialists.

    4. Re:My favorite line in the article. by BandwidthHog · · Score: 1

      Right, but I think the disconnect is in thinking of anarchists also being communists. Ya know, people advocating an absence of government thinking that said absent government should own all the property. Or something. It's hard to know exactly what they would believe, but fun to joke about. Kinda like Jews For Jesus. Or a Muslim strip club. Or a religious school.

      --

      Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
    5. Re:My favorite line in the article. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you mean, hard to figure out what they would believe? It's what all anarchists believe. Hit up Amazon or a bookshop, or libcom.org or soforth. It's an ideology that's been around for over 150 years. Think libertarian socialism- socialism without centrality or hierarchy.

    6. Re:My favorite line in the article. by aussersterne · · Score: 1

      You might also want to read some Marx, to problematize your notion that communism supposes property owned by the government. (Hint: communism proposes the abolition of property).

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    7. Re:My favorite line in the article. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, actually it proposes the abolition of private property on the means of production. That's actually quite a difference.

    8. Re:My favorite line in the article. by aussersterne · · Score: 1

      I took the original poster to mean property in the colloquial sense (i.e. bourgeois private property) and his or her statement to thus be the common assertion that the communist ideal is the transformation by the state of all things into the private property of the state.

      In Marx's conception property as a general abstraction is simply the appropriation of nature by man and has little to do with ownership. Private property (which is what is typically meant when people mention property or ownership) is seen as a specific type of appropriation whose fiction and location is maintained through legal and forcible instruments.

      "All production is appropriation of nature on the part of an individual within and through a specific form of society. In this sense it is a tautology to say that property (appropriation) is a pre-condition of production. But it is altogether ridiculous to leap from that to a specific form of property, e.g. private property. (Which further and equally presupposes an antithetical form, non-property.)" (Grundrisse)

      "...the theory of the Communists may be summed up in the single sentence: Abolition of private property. We communists have been reproached with the desire of abolishing the right of personally acquiring property as the fruit of a man's own labour, which property is alleged to be the groundwork of all personal freedom, activity, and independence. Hard-won, self-acquired, self-earned property! Do you mean the property of the petty artisan and of the small peasant, a form of property that preceded the bourgeois form? There is no need to abolish that; the development of industry has to a great extent already destroyed it, and is still destroying it daily. Or do you mean modern bourgeois private property? But does wage-labour create any property for the labourer? Not a bit. It creates capital, i.e., that kind of property which exploits wage-labor, and which cannot increase except upon condition of begetting a new supply of wage-labour for fresh exploitation. Property, in its present form, is based on the antagonism of capital and wage-labour. To be a capitalist, is to have not only a purely personal, but a social status in production. Capital is a collective product, and only by the united action of many members, nay, in the last resort, only by the united action of all members of society, can it be set in motion. Capital is, therefore, not a personal, it is a social power. When, therefore, capital is converted into common property, into the property of all members of society, personal property is not thereby transformed into social property. It is only the social character of the property that is changed. It loses its class-character." (Manifesto)

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    9. Re:My favorite line in the article. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that your AC is equating communism (as described by Marx or as not-really-practiced by a variety of heads of state) with socialism.

      Your AC was right in one way... Emma Goldman was certainly a socialist, as were Bakunin and Kropotkin. The first two would bridle at being called a communist, especially if the term were qualified with Marxist or Leninist, while the latter would gently correct you to "anarchist communism" and stress the origin of "commune" in Proudhoun's work. Certainly the communist states would balk too, since the Soviet Union was in the habit of Goldman and Kropotkin enemies of the state, enemies of the party, and counter-revolutionaries. (Those accusations were basically true.) Proudhon died before "communism" was established anywhere as a system, and his minor criticisms of Marx were minor mostly because he died before Marx was considered a major thinker.

      Leftists can both oppose communism and be considered by communists (with and without quotation marks) as political opponents. Socialists may have less problem with private ownership of property (qualified by wealth redistribution and in exchange for reasonable access easements) than with state ownership and management of of all property.

      The socialism in anarchism generally involves income redistribution so as to avoid the situation wherein two parties cannot break off negotiations towards an exchange of labour because the labourer cannot afford to refuse even abusive agreements. (When this is knowingly exploited by the non-labourer, and when that second party can afford to break off negotiations, the situation is called wage slavery).

      Consequently almost all people who call themselves anarchists favour a guaranteed minimum income (or housing and food and so forth) for every human being paid for through wealth distribution, or community prevention of wage slavery through regulation or arbitration, or some combination, in order to prevent wage slavery.

      There are people who call themselves anarchists who oppose community interventions of all sorts, including redistribution that is not consensual and community interference in established private contracts. They usually qualify "anarchist" with "libertarian", and are not socialist by virtue of opposing any social (community) control over private assets and agreements.

      Most other anarchists argue that individuals or collectives can amass enough wealth and power to exploit other individuals or collectives by leading them into wage slavery wherein they willingly (but with little option) enter into contracts to supply their skills and services while suffering abuse. The abuse can be in the form of an unfair exchange rate for the suplied labour, or conditions of employment which restrict the exercise of the labourer's basic rights and privileges on and off the job.

      "You will use our collective's soap, or you cannot work here." That is an imposition when the person presented that rule does not want to use the soap, or at least wants a choice of which soap to use. It becomes wage slavery (of a passive sort) when the labourer cannot afford to say "ok, I don't like your rule, so I won't work here". It becomes a deeper sort of wage slavery when the labourer cannot afford to negotiate for fear of a reprisal. It becomes abusive when the rulemakers refuse to negotiate, and it becomes deeply abusive when the rulemakers know that the wage slave has no realistic option but to agree to their terms.

      Anarchists of a socialist mindset would oppose this sort of situation, no matter how good the intentions of the collective or its rulemakers might be.

      Some degree of redistribution of wealth assures that there is always a realistic and survivable option to every individual, namely "going on the dole". Some degree of social regulation of private negotiations ensures that stronger parties cannot refuse to negotiate with weaker ones, or impose abusive conditions upon them.

      This is *far* from communism, and even farther from "communism"-as-practiced.

  68. Subverting our right to protest by MrSteveSD · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Police around the world use intimidation to discourage people from attending protests. The article states that the intelligence reports "chronicled the views and plans of people who had no apparent intention of breaking the law". They must have known this would come out at some point. Having your name end up on police files for no good reason is precisely the sort of thing that scares many people away from protesting in the first place. One common tactic in the UK is for police forward intelligence units to photograph protesters, making them feel like criminals. This going on all the time.

    Now, people may say that what the police did is ok and legal because the meetings were all public, but think about it for a moment. In democratic countries we are supposed to have the right to protest and the purpose of protesting is to make a big noise, attract media attention and make governments change their minds about things. If everyone is arrested on route because the police knew exactly what train people were going to use, no big noise is made at all. That is an affront to our right to protest. The police are not there to protect governments or political parties from embarrassment. That is a complete misuse of the police force, yet it happens routinely. The easier it is for the police to stop people protesting, the worse it is for our democracies.

    In the UK we now have the wonderful protest exclusion zone for a kilometer or so around parliament. Although you can apply for permission to protest, any effective protest is now impossible since the police dictate how many people you can have, how many signs you can have etc. It's not so much the protests themselves that the government fears, but rather the media attention that a protest draws. A protest outside parliament is much more attractive to the media than one in some random field, and the government knows this full well. It seems that the police are also briefed to avoid drawing media attention to protests. You will find that when celebrities attend protests, the police tend to keep their distance since their intervention could only result in more media attention.

    1. Re:Subverting our right to protest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alex Jones Police state Here you will find video from the RNC convention, check it out for yourself!

  69. Re:Key Question: "What is the next step?" by BalanceOfJudgement · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Spying, by itself, does not suppress democracy.
    That is arguable. If people are even *aware* that spying is occurring, regardless of whether they themselves are being spied on (or if they know they're being spied on), it can have a chilling effect on the self-correcting behavior of democracies.
    --

    We are the fire that lights our world.. and we are the fire that consumes it.
  70. Not Surprising by coaxial · · Score: 0, Troll

    None of this is surprising. This was done in the 60s as well. Then it was called COINTELPRO. Sure it targeted some groups that legitameately should have been watched (The KKK for one), but it also disproportionately targeted non-violent liberal organizations. (the civil rights and the anti-war movements for two.) The Church Committee found this was illegal. With the new war, COINTELPRO was dusted off by the Bush adminstration, only this time instead of rooting out "communists" it targeted "terrorists." Unsurprisingly, the threat was once again non-violent liberal groups that opposed the current administration's policies. For example, a non-violent, geriatric (and I mean that in the best possible way) anti-war movement was infiltrated by the police in Fresno, CA [ http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/mar2006/fres-m07 .shtml ]. Also not surprisingly, the police officer was the only one advocating "direct action" (i.e. violence). This pattern has been repeated all across the nation for years.

    Strange how the threat is always perceived to come from the non-violent left, yet the most destructive domestic terrorist activities have come from radical right (e.g. the OKC bombings and the Atlanta bombings). I would suspect this is because there's an element of truth to the "liberal-pussies vs take-action-conservatives" meme, where the action is of a violent nature.

  71. Re:Key Question: "What is the next step?" by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    Huh? did you even read the article?

    How is it more damaging to a democratic society to spy on disruptor's as apposed to people illegally rearranging information systems, defacing websites, disabling charter buses, and all this to interfere with a convention designed as part of the democratic process itself?

    You may not agree with the republicans and that your right, But don't hypocritically claim to be protecting the freedoms and actions of a democratic society when the intent of the protesters in question is to hamper and ruin the democratic process for a minority they don't agree with.

    And judging by your tone here, I would hope Washington was able to do something to stop people from interfering with the American political process regardless of who's side they are on. Of course this is mostly a one sided issue because Conservatives don't act out as criminal on the political process. They have freaks who bomb in the name of saving lives. Two separate context but i would expect the government to do something about that too.

  72. Straight talk by felix+rayman · · Score: 1

    "Gentlemen, get the thing straight once and for all -- the policeman isn't there to create disorder, the policeman is there to preserve disorder."

    -Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley.

  73. Foxes, farmers, and nobody here but us chickens by Eternal+Vigilance · · Score: 1

    Sadly, I'd guess that the farmers in this metaphor do indeed consider each other gentlemen. After all, even the worst atrocities in history were carried out by people who believed themselves reasonable men. (And foxes don't usually imagine they own the henhouse.) So I think the metaphoric equivalent of foxes would be criminals - they prey on the chickens, and the farmer hunts them because they eat into ( :-> ) the farmer's profits, but for all the threat to the chickens they pose no threat to the farmer or the farm.

    I'd also say the farmers feel that way because I can feel the part of me that would feel that way were I in their position. And I don't reject it - I just don't let it be the one in charge.

    "The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which."

    1. Re:Foxes, farmers, and nobody here but us chickens by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      I suppose that thinking oneself polite and well mannered is something even spies do. It is probably needful to pull it off. On the other hand, a referee who listens in on the huddle of one team and passes it on to the other is nothing but a cad no matter what he thinks about the nobility of his intentions. It is hard to see how this behavior can be excused. Perhaps just trimming the payroll of the NYPD would clear this matter up. They clearly have too much time on their hands.

  74. Most Americans don't get it... by Smith_J_Winston · · Score: 1

    They never will. It isn't about freedom of speech or fiscal responsibility or whatever, it's about which guys can control the ridiculously large mass of people who go by the name of the "General Public". Reality exists, but it's drowning in wave after wave of newspapers, propaganda, TV stations, etc, etc.. etc...

    Literature is good, it helps the spread of knowledge and information and other things that are important to the well-being of most people, but mass-media, by nature, is a force to help minorities - the rich, the anarchists, CEOs, and so forth. It's been the same social dynamics for the last 150 years, if not 300 years, the public is just less militant now.

    I'm not a liberal, nor a right-wing conservative, I consider such camps as manufactured. I just think that most people should do what's in the honest well-being of others. Of course, most people barely know how to keep themselves alive anymore, let alone help keep other people alive or help to feed others or give them some help throughout their daily work. Is this too much to ask?

  75. Exporting the very best. by twitter · · Score: 1

    So when the NYPD catches Bin Laden, they'll sodomize him with a baton? And then give him to the LAPs who beat up Rodney King? Hmmm...I'm beginning to like your idea.

    Great. Spying and torture. Someone tell me what we are doing in Iraq again? Like Robin William said before it stopped being funny, "We gave them our constitution. We were not using it anyway."

    How is a party that "keeps tabs" and jails potential protesters any better than the Bathists or Iranian Revolutionary Guard?

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Exporting the very best. by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      This operation looks like an attempt to find out which protestors were going to try to start a riot. A riot is not protected speech. Though I can see this is troubling to you, you sound exactly like the sort of fanatic who confuses the two, assuming you don't confine your protesting to the internet.

      How is a party that "keeps tabs" and jails potential protesters any better than the Bathists or Iranian Revolutionary Guard?

      Why don't you read up what the Baathists got up to with peaceful opponents of their regime and find out for yourself?

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    2. Re:Exporting the very best. by cicho · · Score: 1

      The difference, then, is only one of degree.

      --
      "Only the small secrets need to be protected. The big ones are kept secret by public incredulity." - Marshall McLuhan
    3. Re:Exporting the very best. by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      No, it isn't.

      Let's compare and contrast. In the US the police attend public meetings of various protest groups to work out which will protest peacefully and which will protest violently. Peaceful protests are left alone, violent ones get arrested after they commit some crime.

      In Iraq, anyone who says anything against the government even in private is tortured using medieval methods and then executed.

      In one case, the police are trying to weed out people trying to start a riot whilst implicitly accepting that non violent protest is a right. In the other, the police are trying to kill or intimidate any opposition into silence. Even MI6 in the UK did far more questionable things against pro communist groups in the Cold War, like burgling their apartments and tapping their phones without a warrant, which was probably illegal even in 1980's UK.

      If you don't believe me, why don't you try moving to some totalitarian hellhole, complaining about the government and see if you can get away with it the way you do living (I hope for your sake) in a civilised democracy.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  76. It's worse than that. Time for a Regime Change. by twitter · · Score: 1

    ... the problem here: the police are treating people with dissenting political views as potential criminals

    No, we are all potential criminals. When you spy on, lie to and jail people, you are treating them as criminals.

    The problem is preemptive justice. "Disrupting" your fellow citizens before they do anything is bullshit. When you give government to jail and torture you without evidence, trial or chance to defend yourself, you have not made yourself more secure, you have created a government that's a dangerous and frightening as any other terrorist organization.

    I did not like hearing about domestic spying in the first place. The massive abuse shown here is worse than I expected.

    Mark this down, all you big brother assholes, I'm voting you out next election. I have voted republican since Ronald Reagan told me he thought that small business were America's largest employer, best innovators and most deserving of encouragement. I liked the party that fought and out competed the Soviet Union. What I see now is a bunch of whores who get along with big business as they do with Communist China. The party who's diplomats were just stomping around Nato saying, "The West is an outdated concept," has lost more than one kind of compass. No, I'm voting for anyone but you.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  77. A big shakeup is coming by Animats · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Major political milestone today: a Republican senator said that impeaching Bush "might be an option".

    This is starting to look like the last months of the Nixon presidency. Gonzales is on the way out, with more disclosures coming every few days. Even the Republicans want him out. Bush is trying frantically to keep Karl Rove from testifying under oath. Cheney's old chief of staff was convicted of perjury last week. Bush's approval rating is down to 30-34%, depending on the poll. Cheney is somewhere around 18%.

    It's like 1973 all over again.

    1. Re:A big shakeup is coming by freedom_india · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I still wonder where does he get his 30%-40% rating from?
      Are these texans and other Southerners still SO blind?
      Can't they see he is not a cowboy like them? that wearing cowboy boots, a 10-gallon Hat, does not make you brave and smart?
      Maybe we SHOULD have let the civil war succeed so that texas and other southern bush states were a separate country. That way, bush would be today the prez for these S.U.S.A which the North would invade for oil.

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
    2. Re:A big shakeup is coming by gettingbraver · · Score: 1

      I still wonder where does he get his 30%-40% rating from?
      "There are three types of lies in this world--lies, damned lies, and statistics."
  78. Use the law too by alienmole · · Score: 1

    One thing I thought was promising in the NYT article is that there are laws in place which protect political organizations from this sort of spying. So we don't have to rely solely on voting to stop this kind of activity.

  79. Re:Propaganda - You are being used. by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

    Good point, but that was just a point to say that to deny that there have been right-winger conspiracy theories is kind of wrong. But like i've posted earlier on this topic, it tends to be the SAME people. They just happen to be Republican a vast majority of the time.

    Dick Cheney, Reagan, Bush Sr., Richard Armitage, G. Gordon Liddy, Donald Rumsfeld, etc.

    --
    Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  80. Parent is more insightful than funny by warm+sushi · · Score: 1

    Wish I had mod points, cause I don't think anyone read past that first funny line!

    This point about representation being ineffective (or dominated by media) when you have a ratio of citizens to representatives of 6 million to 1 is extremely important.

    Is part of the problem for the USA that it has effectively outgrown it's old boots? The states were formed when the population of the US was a tiny fraction of what it is today.

    Democracy works best when it's personal and local.

  81. Re:Propaganda - You are being used. by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

    NPR is not socialist.

    CNN is not socialist.

    BBC is not Socialist.

    Fox Noise Channel is not socialist.

    MSNBC is not socialist.

    Keith Olbermann is (probably) not a socialist.

    The only person in the mainstream media who HAS admitted to being a socialist is Lewis Black. He's on COMEDY CENTRAL for god's sake.

    --
    Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  82. Re:This Defies Rightist "Conspiracy Theory" Argume by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obviously somebody spoke out (as we're hearing about it). So how does this disproove the "Rightest Conspiracy Theory" argument? Or is it just that it took 3 years for /. to notice the story? If that's the case, what sort of timeframe is acceptable for conspiracy busting? One year? One week? One second?

  83. Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bill Clinton fired 92 out of 93 US Attorneys when he took office. You want to start a witch hunt for Gonzales, Miers and Rove? Where were you 10 years ago?

    1. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by koreth · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Don't feed the trolls. Don't feed the trolls. Don't feed the... ah, crap.

      The current controversy is because firing US Attorneys en masse in the middle of a President's term is unprecedented. Lots of presidents appoint new attorneys when they take office. If you think Clinton is getting a free pass, here's a brain twister for you: Bush did the same thing when he took office, and nobody said a thing about it. If it's really "it's okay if Clinton does it, but not Bush!" then why didn't anyone complain then? Maybe because what's happening now isn't the same thing?

    2. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by hxnwix · · Score: 1

      You hit the nail on the head. I recently had a discussion an individual who turned out to, well, rather like Bush a heck of a lot. It went about like so:

      me: so, what about this latest scand -
      neoncon (interrupting): la la la la I see nothing important about the destruction of DOJ impartiality la la la
      me: wtf? Now every aspect of every facet of every prosecution carried out by the DOJ is suspect. You don't think that matters?
      neocon: la la la this latest scandal isn't happening lalala I can't here you la la la la
      me: *starts to walk away*
      neocon: la la la la
      LA LA LA LA
      CLINTON DID IT LA LA LA LA LA LA WHAT'S THAT, CLINTON DID IT? LA LA LA LA LA CAN'T HEAR YOU CLINTON DID IT! LA LA LA LA LA LA LA


      (For those of you who don't live in America, yes. Yes. This absurd Clinton shit really is the latest prefab Republican talking point & the best they have to offer.)

    3. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by mikelieman · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It's more than that.

      There is no argument that USAs serve "At the pleasure of The President".

      *IF* George Bush had simply asked them to resign, there would be no scandal.

      *BUT* George Bush chose to lie about the reasons they were asked to leave, defaming those USAs who in fact had very highly rated performance reviews.

      Pay attention to this simple fact:

      It's not the action, it's the cover-up.

      And the kicker here? NO COVER UP WAS NEEDED. They just did the cover-up move out of habit.

      And then Gonzales lied to Congress. And it all fell apart.

      Hmmm.. Why is it important for all the USAs to be "Loyal Bushies" to use the criteria Alberto Gonzales office was using according to their emails?

      It's the simple fact that the entire administration is vulnerable to charges for violating 18 USC 371.

      Let me excerpt a bit of Elizabeth de la Vega's book, from the Model Indictment she drew up. ( She's an ex-United States Attorney, btw. )

      From USA v. Bush. http://www.amazon.com/United-States-George-Bush-al /dp/1583227563/

      11. Pursuant to the Constitution, their oaths of office, their status as Executive Branch employees, and their presence in the United States, BUSH, CHENEY, RICE, RUMSFELD, and POWELL, and their subordinates and employees, are required to obey Title 18, United States Code, Section 371, which prohibits conspiracies to defraud the United States.

      12. As used in Section 371, the term "to defraud the United States" means "to interfere with or obstruct one of its lawful government functions by deceit, craft, trickery, or at least by means that are dishonest." The term also means to "impair, obstruct, or defeat the lawful function of any department of government" by the use of "false or fraudulent pretenses or representations."

      13. A "false" or "fraudulent" representation is one that is: (a) made with knowledge that it is untrue; (b) a half-truth; (c) made without a reasonable basis or with reckless indifference as to whether it is, in fact, true or false; or (d) literally true, but intentionally presented in a manner reasonably calculated to deceive a person of ordinary prudence and intelligence. The knowing concealment or omission of information that a reasonable person would consider important in deciding an issue also constitutes fraud.

      14. Congress is a "department of the United States" within the meaning of Section 371. In addition, hearings regarding funding for military action and authorization to use military force are "lawful functions" of Congress.

      15. Accordingly, the presentation of information to Congress and the general public through deceit, craft, trickery, dishonest means, and fraudulent representations, including lies, half-truths, material omissions, and statements made with reckless indifference to their truth or falsity, while knowing and intending that such fraudulent representations would influence Congress' decisions regarding authorization to use military force and funding for military action, constitutes interfering with, obstructing, impairing, and defeating a lawful government function of a department of the United States within the meaning of Section 371.

      It looks like it would take a SINGLE United States Attorney with the guts to do their job, as per their oath, and the ENTIRE administration would be perp-walked at the same time.

      Explains why Bush will ultimately give away whatever he's asked. That's a hella big club to hold over his head.

      --
      Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
    4. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The current controversy is because firing US Attorneys en masse in the middle of a President's term is unprecedented"

      And yet, perfectly legal and within the rights of the President. You're a moron if you this this has more to do with being "unprecedented" than it does with being "Bush did ...".

      "Don't feed the trolls. Don't feed the trolls. Don't feed the... "

      Yeah I know, I read your advice, but what can I do you're wrong and I had to tell you about it.

    5. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "(For those of you who don't live in America, yes. Yes. This absurd Clinton shit really is the latest prefab Republican talking point & the best they have to offer.)"

      Additionally, this absurd "Bush did something completely within his rights and responsibilities as President, but we don't like it so it MUST be a scandal" is the best the Democrats can do.

      But no one with any understanding of the situation is paying attention. It's equivalent to the Democrats getting pissed because the President used a veto. They sound like morons ranting about it, but are too short sighted and vitriolic to see it.

      And yes, you do sound like a moron.

    6. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by dharbee · · Score: 1

      "If it's really "it's okay if Clinton does it, but not Bush!" then why didn't anyone complain then? Maybe because what's happening now isn't the same thing?"

      Not to take sides, but this logic is... iffy. If it wasn't wrong then, then it wasn't wrong then. Why would anyone complain about something that wasn't wrong then?

      As to whether Bush did the same thing, or something different and less acceptable, I have to say it was different, but I have no real idea if it was wrong because I don't particularly trust the news sources that seem to be covering it.

    7. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not the half of it; the mass firings in the middle of the term are only an indicator of the underlying scandal. The real scandal is the politicization of the US Attorneys offices: USAs are being leaned on to harass political opponents and fired if they investigate political allies. Josh Marshall sums it up here. Taking your enemies to court on totally trumped up charges is basically SOP under corrupt third-world regimes (see e.g. Robert Mugabe). Do we really want this happening here?

    8. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by workindev · · Score: 1

      It seems as though you are confusing the term "unprecedented" with "illegal". I suggest you open up a dictionary to figure our that those terms are not remotely synonymous.

    9. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by hxnwix · · Score: 1

      Ah, we have a winner.

      So tell me again how Clinton did it?

    10. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
      Well spoken, Good Citizen koreth, so allow me to please add several very important tidbits:

      First, numerous federal statutes were indeed broken including Criminal Interference with an Ongoing Investigation, Obstruction of Justice, Witness tampering, etc.

      It was also unconstitutional and an impeachable offsense.

      For reference, please read the US Constitution --- for historical reference, please see the Proceedings of the House of Representatives (concerning creation of government), June 17, 1789, and James Madison's declaration of it as an impeachable offense.

      It is not that there have been impeachable offenses committed by the Bush administration people, it is that most salient fact that everything they have done to date falss into the category of impeachable offenses.....

    11. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by pr0nboy · · Score: 1

      I am an individual that likes President Bush a heck of a lot. Based on my experience interacting with people that share your political views, I'm guessing the discussion went more like this:

      hxnwix: I can't believe how much of a criminal that Nazi Shrub is!
      neocon: What law did he break?
      hxnwix: (interrupting) WHAT LAW HASN'T HE BROKEN? THE EVIL MORON LIAR CHIMP FIRED 8 ATTORNEYS!
      neocon: He has the constitutional authority to staff political appointees as he sees fit. Why are we even talking about this?
      hxnwix: THOSE WHO GIVE UP FREEDOM FOR SAFETY GET NEITHER! DON'T YOU SEE?
      neocon: See what?
      hxnwix: IT WAS A CONSPIRACY BY ROVE AND HALIBURTON! YOU ARE JUST BRAINWASHED TO NOT SEE THAT WE LIVE IN A POLICE STATE!
      neocon: Huh?
      hxnwix: BUSH LIED, PEOPLE DIED! DICK CHENEY!
      neocon: Well, I'm glad that two people can still have a rational debate in this country.
      hxnwix: NIGERIAN YELLOWCAKE! WMD! NO BLOOD FOR OIL! WTC BUILDING 7! SADDAM HATES AL QAEDA! *gurgle* *spit*

    12. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read douchebag, no one but you said squat about Clinton.

      Funny how YOU just went "LALALALALALALALALLA I'm NOT LISTENING...OK TELL ME ABOUT HOW CLINTON DID IT"

      So now you're wrong and you look like a moron. Again.

    13. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, it's not am impeachable offense. You're a moron for attempting to suggest otherwise.

      Second, an investigation is independent of the investigator. READ THAT AGAIN until you understand it, or find someone smarter to explain it. Remove the investigator, the investigation IS STILL THERE, STILL VIABLE and IN NO WAY COMPROMISED.

      Why are you people so stupid? And why do you try to act informed when you say stupid shit like this is impeachable (legal scholars with real credentials disagree, but you some jackass on the net parades out James Madison, so even though he is in no way a constitutional authority, you must be correct)and illegal?

      You're wrong. Instead of getting pissed at the people who are more informed than you, try to figure out why you're so vitriolic when you're wrong. What is wrong with you as an individual that would cause such behavior?

      Then fix yourself.

    14. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by hxnwix · · Score: 1

      Although I see nothing wrong with your accusations against Bush, I do wonder why you feel the compelled to characterise his opponents in this manner.

      Object to the substance, or lack thereof. For example, the Iraq war cassus belli proved to be fraudent.

      The patriot act does indeed invade our privacy and does indeed impinge upon constitutional freedoms. Oh, and by the way, the USA firings are authorized by an obscure clause of PATRIOT act. You can add "protecting big tobbacco" to the list of unintended Patriot Act consequences. Don't dismiss the abuse of the PATRIOT act to damage the DOJ in order to protect big tobacco just because you don't like how it sounds.

      Buddy, it sounds bad because it's criminal behavior. Grow up.

    15. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by pr0nboy · · Score: 1

      Although I see nothing wrong with your accusations against Bush
      Of course you don't...

      Object to the substance, or lack thereof. For example, the Iraq war cassus belli proved to be fraudent.
      If you truly think that the Nigerian Yellowcake claims were the casus belli for the war in Iraq, that can only mean one of two things: either you are intentionally trying to distort the issue, or you were not paying any attention to what world leaders were saying in the buildup to the war. Either way, the United States' claim that Iraq had sought uranium in Nigeria was based on British intelligence that had nothing to do with the forgeries, and it was later confirmed by Joe Wilson when his Nigerian contacts told him of a visit by an Iraqi envoy seeking uranium. Fraudulent? I think not.

      The patriot act does indeed invade our privacy and does indeed impinge upon constitutional freedoms.
      Of course it does. So do traffic laws, or zoning restrictions, or any one of the number of limitations we have accepted in modern society. The concept of a finding a balance between freedom and security is not new, nor is it surprising.

      Oh, and by the way, the USA firings are authorized by an obscure clause of PATRIOT act.
      Not quite. It has always been legal to fire political appointees such as US Attorneys at any time for any reason. This "obscure" clause in the PATRIOT act only modified the 120 day deadline to have replacements confirmed by the Senate, which has nothing to do with the recent manufactured controversy because it hasn't even been 120 days since the attorneys were fired.

      You can add "protecting big tobbacco" to the list of unintended Patriot Act consequences. Don't dismiss the abuse of the PATRIOT act to damage the DOJ in order to protect big tobacco just because you don't like how it sounds.
      That's a nice "talk left" rant, but it has nothing to do with the PATRIOT act. It is the job of political appointees (like US Attorneys) to further the agenda of the administration that appointed them- period. That is the way that it has always been, and that is the way that it should be.
    16. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by hxnwix · · Score: 1

      either you are intentionally trying to distort the issue, or you were not paying any attention to what world leaders were saying in the buildup to the war. *sigh*. This one has been so thouroughly debunked that I wonder why you mention it. Do you know better? I feel like I'm debating Rush. Yeah, world leaders spouted lies - some unknowingly. What was your point again?

      Of course it does. So do traffic laws, or zoning restrictions, or any one of the number of limitations we have accepted in modern society. The concept of a finding a balance between freedom and security is not new, nor is it surprising. What in the world? Yes, zoning laws and the PATRIOT act are both laws. Indeed. However, zoning laws don't infringe upon my fundamental constitutionally guaranteed rights, nor do they authorize the president to fire US Attorneys, secretly arrest citizens, secretly try them in a secret jail with secret evidence for secret crimes. Do you understand what this kind of stuff means? Do you understand how it is different from zoning laws?

      Not quite. It has always been legal to fire political appointees such as US Attorneys at any time for any reason. This "obscure" clause in the PATRIOT act only modified the 120 day deadline to have replacements confirmed by the Senate, which has nothing to do with the recent manufactured controversy because it hasn't even been 120 days since the attorneys were fired. This is an outright lie. To wit:

      All of the dismissed United States Attorneys were appointed by President George W. Bush and confirmed by the Senate. A key issue in the controversy is the political nature of United States Attorneys' appointments. A 2006 revision of the USA PATRIOT Act amended the United States Code to permit the term of an interim U.S. Attorney to last until a nominated replacement is approved by the Senate, in effect giving the United States Attorney General, the officer authorized to appoint interim U.S. Attorneys, the power to appoint U.S. Attorneys without Senate approval.[7] On March 20, 2007, the Senate voted to overturn this provision by a vote of 94-2.[8] On March 26, the U.S. House overturned it as well, by a vote of 329-78.[9] Read up. Or does wikipedia, like reality, have a well known liberal bias?
    17. Re:Clinton fired 92 US Attorneys by pr0nboy · · Score: 1

      *sigh*. This one has been so thouroughly debunked that I wonder why you mention it.

      Er, I didn't mention it. You did. Anyway, I didn't think that I needed to spell this out so explicitly, but I guess I do, so here goes.
      • Claiming that we justified the war because Iraq was trying to buy uranium in Africa is patently absurd. Here are the three major public speeches that were given right before the war explaining the reasons for it. You will notice that none of them even mention Iraq's attempts to procure uranium: 1, 2, 3.
      • The conclusion that Iraq was trying to buy Uranium in Niger had nothing to do with the forgeries found in Italy. In fact, multiple sources had already confirmed Iraq's uranium efforts in Africa before the forgeries even existed (again, I refer you to the Butler report).
      • Saddam's attempts to buy uranium in Africa are documented fact, confirmed by multiple sources including Joe Wilson himself. I don't know how you can claim that it has been "debunked".

      Yeah, world leaders spouted lies - some unknowingly.
      I defy you to find any lie or untruth in Tony Blair's speech that I linked to (and that you so trivially dismissed).

      Do you understand how it is different from zoning laws?
      The point that just majestically soared over your head is this- we already compromise freedoms in exchange for safety in almost every aspect of our daily lives. To feign outrage and single out the PATRIOT act because it invades privacy and impinges on freedoms is disingenuous.

      That said, you do have some pretty extreme misunderstandings about what the PATRIOT act authorizes. Lets have a look at your claims:
      • "they authorize the president to fire US Attorneys"- The President has been authorized to fire US Attorneys since 1789 when the position was created. 28 USC 541(c): US Attorneys are "subject to removal" by the President.
      • "secretly arrest citizens" - Pure fiction. Just what section do you think authorizes this? The closest I can think of is section 412 that mandates the arrest and detainment of non-citizens that are engaging in terrorism, with an explicit right to petition for habeas corpus and continued judicial review (in other words, nothing like what you said).
      • "secretly try them in a secret jail with secret evidence for secret crimes" - Again, this is pure fantasy. The PATRIOT act authorizes nothing like that. Not even close.
      I don't know if it could be any more clear that you do not know what you are talking about. If you would like to clarify which section of the PATRIOT Act it is that you think authorizes this hyperbole, I will be all ears.

      This is an outright lie. To wit:
      Fascinating. You accuse me of lying, and the only "evidence" you have to support that is a quote that completely backs up what I had written. What gives? It is exactly as I said before: prior to the PATRIOT Act, when a US Attorney was fired, the interim appointee could serve up to 120 days without Senate confirmation. The PATRIOT Act removed that 120 limit. Considering it hasn't even been 120 days since the attorneys were fired, and that all of the internal memos that have been made public indicated that they intended on submitting the new appointees for regular Senate confirmation, this change is pretty irrelevant, don't you think?
  84. DISSENTER! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You posted a dissenting opinion! Quick! Mod the dissenter into oblivion! Silence him! He wants to trample on our free speech rights!

    Agree or disagree, the last thing in world the above post is flamebait or troll. When "OMFG what is next, people DISAPPEARING!!!!??!?!?" gets modded up as +5 insightful, but a well written post like parent gets modded down, you see what sort of commitment to intellectual debate Slashdot has.

    Bah, the people of Slashdot makes me sick some times.

  85. Re:Key Question: "What is the next step?" by asninn · · Score: 1

    Spying, by itself, does not suppress democracy.

    I don't know. What exactly *is* a democracy? For me at least, a democracy is not just defined by the existance of laws, regulations, procedures etc. that are normally associated with democratic states (i.e., free speech, right to vote, presumption of innocence and so on) but also by the actual reality of the political system. That's why some states are not democracies even though they hold sham elections (like the GDR did, or Iraq under Saddam Hussein, and so on).

    When your rights still exist on paper but aren't worth anything in reality anymore, you don't live in a democracy anymore, and therefore, spying (on innocent people for no other reason than the fact that they are not in favour of the current government, no less!) is, at the very least, dangerous for democracy.

    I certainly agree with the rest of your comment, though.

    --
    butter the donkey
  86. Guiliani ? by unity100 · · Score: 1

    Anyone smell something here or am i mistaken ?

  87. This is New York by mapkinase · · Score: 1

    So they took money from New Yorkers (upstate, too?) to overprotect one of the political parties. The only good thing I see here is that I didn't pay for it. At least, directly.

    --
    I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
  88. Criminals by VON-MAN · · Score: 1

    Someone please tell me were the issue is?

    Very simple, the police have no authority whatsoever to secretely spy on lawful political activity. That means, unless they have some indication of unlawful activity on the part of the individual or organization they are NOT ALLOWED TO DO THAT. Do you get it now?
    (of course, i do realize it is very easy for the police to pull some kind of fantasy suspicion out of their collective ass and take it from there)

    So my issue here with you is this. You don't seem to like activists who plan to rally against the Republican Party. So logically, you think all kind of police activity against these people is fine. And you probably don't think of yourself as someone who's against democracy. So, you simply proclaim these people to be criminals. Well, that is not impressive, at all. So, how about some argumentation, next time?

    1. Re:Criminals by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I rolling around laughing here with this.

      I don't have any issues with activist protesting the republican party. I have the problem with criminal action being dismissed as protest. Often the criminal actions take away any of the real protesters voice when the news covers the cop car flipped over and set on fire by thugs instead of anything the people are protesting.

      And you need to get some better logic. If some one is breaking the law, Regardless of their motivations, they broke the fucking law. If there is some extenuating circumstances that allow the law to be broken like killing the guy trying to kill you, then it is different. And I proclaim only the people breaking the law to be criminals. Not the people showing up to protest within the guides of the law.

      And this secretly spying on people business is further from the truth. Plain clothes cops often walk around public venues and when they witness someone breaking the law, they act like cops and arrest them. They are not secretly spying on people. These groups were public and the meetings were public, the only thing wrong with the cops showing up is that the groups or individuals are planning to break a law under the guise or protesting.

    2. Re:Criminals by idontgno · · Score: 1

      I have the problem with criminal action being dismissed as protest.

      Yes, dammit. Rosa Parks was a criminal. So was Martin Luther King, Jr. And Martin Luther. And Mohandas Ghandi. Criminals all.

      Violent illegal protest is a step beyond; perhaps that's what you meant? (Talk about burning cars and such.)

      But there's a very real distinction between property violence (what you were speaking of) and personal violence. I think some of the protest community you're condemning doesn't hold property violence as morally wrong the way you (and I) would. In the continuum of illegal-but-not-immoral, their tipping point is farther towards unlimited violence then ours. But you condemn them, because what you saw them do is not merely illegal, but really illegal because it offends your moral imperative.

      As to the "police spying" versus "police watching"... it's largely in the police's expectations and the perceived threat embodied there. If the police watch a community with the expectation of finding illegal activity, they will. Regardless of the intentions of the people being watched.

      Not to mention that almost any act can be called illegal at the spur of the moment, generating at least 24 hours of disruption before dismissal of charges (in the least evil outcome).

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    3. Re:Criminals by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Yes, dammit. Rosa Parks was a criminal. So was Martin Luther King, Jr. And Martin Luther. And Mohandas Ghandi. Criminals all.
      As far as I know, they didn't break any laws. As a matter of fact, they strived with peaceable protest and doing so withing the law. That is why they were so influential. And these thugs aren't any where near the people you mentioned were.

      Violent illegal protest is a step beyond; perhaps that's what you meant? (Talk about burning cars and such.)
      The california protest were we have an online journalist sitting in jail because he refuses to turn over a video with the people who did it? The Seattle WTO protest with the vandalism and all the damage? The groups charged in NYC who were vandalizing public property, sabotage charter buses, attempting to remove the right of others staying within the law from participating in the political process? Of course this is violent. Of course there is cause for the cops to be concerned. And of course this is what this article is about. Did you read it? It is about the evidence being presented at trials were the people were accuse of these very same things and then connecting the dots to determine the cops had a secrete spy program and that why everyone was caught before too much damage could have happened.

      But there's a very real distinction between property violence (what you were speaking of) and personal violence. I think some of the protest community you're condemning doesn't hold property violence as morally wrong the way you (and I) would. In the continuum of illegal-but-not-immoral, their tipping point is farther towards unlimited violence then ours. But you condemn them, because what you saw them do is not merely illegal, but really illegal because it offends your moral imperative.
      I'm not sure it would be a moral imperative. I just know there are ways to resolve problems without resorting to what they were charged with. And if no one else is supporting them, then resorting to this isn't the answer. It is a last ditch attempt to scare people into you cause.

      I condemn them because flipping a car over and catching it on fire does nothing to say you don't like WTO policy. Changing the signs at the subway so people get directed to parts of the town they shouldn't' be in does nothing to say I don't like republican policy. It does however attempt to remove one persons right to participate in the political process in the name of some ill convoluted interpretation of their rights. Damaging charter buses so people cannot show up and participate does the exact same thing.

      As to the "police spying" versus "police watching"... it's largely in the police's expectations and the perceived threat embodied there. If the police watch a community with the expectation of finding illegal activity, they will. Regardless of the intentions of the people being watched.
      It is my understanding from this stroy and some of the others that have come out since, that the police decided to do this because there was postings and such on the internet and other indications in various places bragging about intended illegal action over a year before the convention. They didn't go in looking for someone to break a law. They went in to find out who and how the laws were going to be broken at this specific event.

      Not to mention that almost any act can be called illegal at the spur of the moment, generating at least 24 hours of disruption before dismissal of charges (in the least evil outcome).
      Sure, And what is stopping them? Lawsuits? Courts? Yep, both. And IF i recall correctly, there was a judge or two who mandated some of the arrested protesters be let go or charged durring this event. So i don't see the system as being broken in the least. It could probably use some improvement but it isn't broken.
    4. Re:Criminals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, dammit. Rosa Parks was a criminal. So was Martin Luther King, Jr. And Martin Luther. And Mohandas Ghandi. Criminals all.

      As far as I know, they didn't break any laws.

      Then you are ignorant. While all three of your examples were advocates of non-violent non-cooperation, all three were deliberate law-breakers who went out of their way to provoke arrests, and all three had associates who had been convicted for violent offences. This is common in civil rights and independence struggles against oppressive powers, especially those where those in power are of different ethnicity than those they treat uncivilly.

      The slightest bit of research would reveal that Gandhi was arrested, tried, convicted and jailed on numerous occasions both in South Africa and in India, most notoriously in 1922 after his conviction for sedition based on the non-violent resistance offered by his non-cooperation movement, and in 1942 (along with the entire Congress Working Committee).

      Many many of his followers were arrested, including 60 000 (sixty thousand!) during the Salt March from Ahmedabad to Dandi. (This was in 1930 and was a non-violent campaign against a tax on salt).

      The initials "JB" (jailed by the British) became a badge of respect for Gandhi, Nehru, and many of their associates in the struggle for Indian independence.

      In the case of India, independence came after the end of a war in Europe in which Britain was too heavily invested resources-wise to provide sufficiently strong military support for crackdowns by overseas colonial administrators during the European hostilities or immediately afterwards. There were certainly more than sufficient legal grounds to imprison the leadership and rank-and-file members of most Indian independence groups (not all of whom subscribed to non-violence), and the colonial administrators would dearly have liked to have made more arrests and detentions. Instead, they were forced to make early releases of convicted prisoners for fear of inciting an armed insurrection they did not have the firepower to win.

      Rosa Parks on several occasions deliberately refused to exit busses and reenter through the back entrance as the front sections filled with white skinned passengers. She did this in a deliberate attempt to provoke an arrest -- you probably are ignorant of her support during the similar Claudette Colvin case, in which Ms Colvin was handcuffed and frogmarched off a bus for refusing to give up a seat. You are probably also unaware of Rosa Parks's involvement in the NAACP at the time, and her various letters urging people to do exactly what Ms Colvin did.

      Rosa Parks began refusing to give up seats herself mostly because Ms Colvin turned out to be pregnant, and there were worries by E.D. Nixon and the NAACP that unmarried pregnant black teenage woman who tended to freeze up during mock cross examination practices would fail to capture positive public attention as a symbol.

      Parks's various subsequent refusals to cede places to whites usually resulted in long walks after being persuaded or pushed off the bus by conductors. However, on the most famous occasion, her resistance incensed the conductor enough for him to summon the police.

      Parks was charged with a violating a local ordinance (Chapter 6, Section 11 of the Montgomery City code) and disorderly conduct. After a 30-minute trial on 5 December 1955, she was convicted and fined.

      Martin Luther King Jr., was arrested on several occasions -- a sit-in in 1960 (convicted, imprisoned), during the Albany demonstration in 1962 (convicted, imprisoned), demonstrating without a permit on Good Friday 1963 (held for twelve days but released pending appeals; the Supreme Court of the United States in 1967 upheld the conviction and a sentence of seven further days) and once more in 1965.

      On 28 March, 1968 (note that today is the 39th anniversary), for the first time, one of King's demonstrations t

  89. Or someone who voted... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  90. Not quite... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You could have possibly escaped downmodding if you hadn't started on with your shit about leftist groups "partly" wanting violence.

    You should at least consider that violent people will tend to realize that a crowd helps hide their identity, so they can start violence. But, these violent people might not be a part of the group, and they're just joining in because they like to be violent.

    No, you weren't downmodded because you implemented Devil's Advocate. You were downmodded because your post sucked. ...for the record, though, I agree, slashdot's moderation system is...not perfect.

    1. Re:Not quite... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words it was modded down because someone disagreed with my opinon. Which is still not a troll or offtopic or overrated (especially when it started at zero).

  91. China's corruption is inefficient, even dangerous by Engineer-Poet · · Score: 1

    One of the consequences of a command economy is that those with political power control things like the banks. China's elite has been forcing the banks to lend huge amounts of money to failing state-owned enterprises, which can never repay these loans. The purpose is to buy off the employees of these enterprises and keep them pacified rather than threatening the elite.

    The financial consequence is that the banks have huge portfolios of non-performing loans. The only thing keeping them solvent is the net flow of savings into the system. If a recession interrupts that flow, the whole house of cards comes down.

  92. Re:Key Question: "What is the next step?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The best part of the Russian protest thing was the reason given for breaking it up - to protect the the children. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/25/world/europe/25r ussia.html

  93. Re:Another reason to distrust those smiling coyote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    HAHAHAHA! Come join us in the 21st century! You have to go back 20-40 years to find examples of government malfeasance? Where have you BEEN, man? On a hippy commune somewhere with no TV or newspapers?
    He could have mentioned the DoD sale of retired F-14 parts to Iran last month. Recent enough for you?
  94. Protestors in Boston were Caged by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The protestors in Boston were put in a cage. The protestors in NYC took over the whole city.

  95. DNC caged opposition in Boston by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DNC caged the protestors in Boston due to extraordinary security concerncs. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A956 4-2004Jul23.html I guess they were afraid of the swift boat veterans for truth track record of car-bombings.

  96. As someone who distrusts government... by dmcooper · · Score: 1

    I have no problem with what the Police Department did. For those who bothered to read the article, you will notice that many of the groups did indeed conspire to conduct unlawful activity or find ways to breach security for whatever purposes. Other groups planted hoax bombs, disrupting traffic, and other non-peaceful activities. I am 100% for the right of peaceable assembly and peaceful protest. I am also 100% for the safety and security of those who are being protested against. If this means that groups which are open to the public end up with a couple of interested parties gathering information to facilitate the latter - then so be it. There is no 'right' to 'privacy' when you open up your membership to anyone. I am also quite certain that the same sort of activity took place at the DNC in 2004. I also support that as well. Freedom of speech doesn't give you the absolute unhindered right to express yourself by bringing harm to others - or endangering others.

    --
    "To work for libertarianism -- to oppose the growth of government and aid the liberation of the individual -- used to be
  97. Good police work by Lockejaw · · Score: 1

    Time spent on investigation is "good police work" if it's investigating something illegal. In your own jurisdiction. If you think there's something going on outside of your own jurisdiction, contact the proper authorities.

    --
    (IANAL)
    1. Re:Good police work by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      If the illegal activity is being planed to happen in your jurisdiction then you have every right to investigate it in others. Ever heard of the "French connection"? It is more then a book. It is the accounting of investigating crimes covered up over seas. And it accurately depicts the investigation of these matters for prosecution in the area the crimes are committed.

      This idea isn't something new. The expectation of leaving the scene of the intended crime as somehow protection from prosecution for doing the crime is. Of course the movies have long displayed cops stopped at the county line because the criminals drove into another jurisdiction. This is just the movies and not real life though.

    2. Re:Good police work by Lockejaw · · Score: 1

      You still cooperate with local jurisdictions when operating outside your own -- unilateral police activity outside one's jurisdiction is suspicious in itself. It looks like TFS left that part out -- the NYPD did work with the local authorities when operating outside New York.
      However, TFA (and the summary) also includes another detail which I mentioned above and you ignored -- the fact that they were investigating perfectly legal activity. They spent quite a bit of time investigating people and groups who showed no signs of trying to incite violence. It is rather difficult to justify this level of investigation on the grounds of "preventing violence." What might they have been planning? Speaking outside of the "free speech zone"? This country is a free speech zone. We may as well have "religious freedom zones," "habeas corpus zones," or "firearm ownership zones."

      --
      (IANAL)
    3. Re:Good police work by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You still cooperate with local jurisdictions when operating outside your own -- unilateral police activity outside one's jurisdiction is suspicious in itself. It looks like TFS left that part out -- the NYPD did work with the local authorities when operating outside New York.
      The article/story broke by the NYtimes was a compilation of evidence presented at trials for the people who were charged with crimes that happened during the GOP convention. The police have been forced to respond and that is why you are now getting more information. The submitter knew this but probably failed to mention it for one reason or another. Several stories like this have been front page at slashdot recently.

      However, TFA (and the summary) also includes another detail which I mentioned above and you ignored -- the fact that they were investigating perfectly legal activity. They spent quite a bit of time investigating people and groups who showed no signs of trying to incite violence. It is rather difficult to justify this level of investigation on the grounds of "preventing violence." What might they have been planning? Speaking outside of the "free speech zone"? This country is a free speech zone. We may as well have "religious freedom zones," "habeas corpus zones," or "firearm ownership zones."
      We already have those zones in America. And they are being challenges and taken down every time someone puts it up. Washington DC just had one of the countries most restrictive gun laws over turned. We have had gun free school zones that have been over turned. We have had speech zones overturned. What part of this working without breaking a law doesn't work?

      And you correct, I didn't address it specifically with you. But I haven't been brushing it aside. I have been addressing it whenever it pops up. Unfortunately, When you have an investigation started by anonymous postings, the investigation will have to include people who are innocent, never intended to do anything illegal and possibly never intended to show up. But this isn't A big concern. A police investigation often checks leads/questions people who weren't involved in anything.

      We accept the premise of metal detectors and security guard/sheriffs looking for weapons when we goto the courthouse. They even look through bags and such. We accept them at airports and other realms were there is/was a likelihood of something happening. We accept a cop who pulls you over or stops because you look suspiciously out of place and asking who you are and why your here.

      This investigation isn't much different then this. We have an event and place people are going, we have a clear threat of someone breaking a law and in some cases attempting to deny someone else their right to participate in the political system. And most of all, everything started as observations of public meetings in public venues.

      This isn't about big brother always looking and knowing what you are doing. This is about isolated instances with isolated people who have choose publicly to participate in something. And it was because of the people who were choosing/planning to break the law that innocent people were roped up in it. But then again, it wasn't everyone in the world being "spied" on, it was certain people with certain goals, going to certain places, to do certain things.

      I don't think we have to worry about the FBI keeping a file on you for showing up to a rally. The only reason the cops got involved with this is because they were warned that people were planning something at this specific place and event. If your free speech rights are being violated, the court will back you up. If the law is unjust, it will be struck down. If you violate a law under the color of some right, you better make sure you have that right in order to get out of trouble.
  98. Next GOP con: St Paul, Minnesota (MN) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, this is oooooolllldddd news. What we should be asking is what the Minnesota BCA (state police paramilitary) and the Minneapolis - St. Paul police are up to now for the next convention.

    You people are driving by looking in the rear view mirror.

  99. Surprising by cdrguru · · Score: 0

    Everyone knows the police are utterly blind to the Internet and anything younger people talk about, so it should be a complete surprise that before a meeting with folks identified as "Rethuglicans" and "war criminals" that they would take any kind of precautions. Certainly, police aren't smart enough to understand that protesters who post statements that the people attending should be shot or executed and assassination would be a good thing could possibly actually do anything other than protest.

    The US has evolved completely into a nation of sheep that would never actually "do" anything, so what could they possibly be worried about? Muslim terrorists?

    Besides, taking any kind of precautions against folks like that would be illegal discrimination. So, rather than acting on any real intelligence they can harass ordinary protesting white americans because they cannot be sued for violating anyone's civil rights.

  100. "Bikes Against Bush Creator Busted" 8/31/04 by geekotourist · · Score: 1
    I have this memory from 2 and a half years ago, a giant thread, nearly 1200 posts... What was it... oh, yes:

    Bikes Against Bush Creator Busted

    "Joshua Kinberg, creator of Bikes Against Bush, was arrested in NYC [original link 404d] for vandalism while being interviewed by MSNBC. Kinberg's website describes his project as 'using a Wireless Internet-enabled bicycle outfitted with a custom-designed printing device, the Bikes Against Bush bicycle can print text messages sent from web users directly onto the streets of Manhattan in water-soluble chalk". Both Wired and Popular Science [original link changed] have done stories on Kinberg's work." Update: 08/30 01:30 GMT by J : Mr. Kinberg has been released; he describes his arrest and brief stay behind bars on this MSNBC blog.


    Funny, haven't yet seen the Slashdot story mentioned in this current thread. There's probably a few commenters here who commented then (quickly checks that I didn't).

    It sounds like the police, having compiled the 4 page dossier on him, were planning to arrest him as soon as he got to NYC. And they did, because being 'capable of spraying anti-R.N.C.-type messages' is dreadful.

    It took months and several thousand dollars to get the case dismissed, a year to get his computer and phone back, and they "lost" his bicycle.
  101. Just curious, but... by Buckler · · Score: 1

    Why the fsck are city police allowed to have "Secret" documents anyway? In the city government I work for, *every* document or piece of writing is available for public viewing at anytime, including police documents. It looks to me like NYPD may be getting to big for its britches.