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McCain Supports Warrantless Domestic Surveillance

I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "While there have been shifting reports about McCain's view on warrantless wiretapping, nothing could be clearer than the latest comment by McCain adviser Doug Holtz-Eakin, who said, 'We do not know what lies ahead in our nation's fight against radical Islamic extremists, but John McCain will do everything he can to protect Americans from such threats, including asking the telecoms for appropriate assistance to collect intelligence against foreign threats to the United States as authorized by Article II of the Constitution.' Article II, of course, is what Bush has argued gives the President virtually unlimited power during war, and McCain has already voted in favor of Telecom Immunity, though he sometimes mentions, to those asking for accountability, wanting to hold hearings about what the telecoms did."

650 comments

  1. Parity by jeiler · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Just for comparison, I'd like to see what Obama's views are on this issue. Anybody got a link?

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    1. Re:Parity by Jor-Al · · Score: 5, Informative
      I found out in 2 seconds using Google: http://news.cnet.com/8301-10784_3-9845595-7.html

      Obama: No warrantless wiretaps if you elect me Who knows what might happen when he gets in office, though.
    2. Re:Parity by Goobergunch · · Score: 5, Informative
      From Obama's site:

      Obama supports updating surveillance laws and ensuring that law enforcement investigations and intelligence-gathering relating to U.S. citizens are done only under the rule of law.
      Not particularly useful. However, I did find this reference to a January speech:

      For one thing, under an Obama presidency, Americans will be able to leave behind the era of George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and "wiretaps without warrants," he said. (He was referring to the lingering legal fallout over reports that the National Security Agency scooped up Americans' phone and Internet activities without court orders, ostensibly to monitor terrorist plots, in the years after the September 11 attacks.)

      It's hardly a new stance for Obama, who has made similar statements in previous campaign speeches, but mention of the issue in a stump speech, alongside more frequently discussed topics like Iraq and education, may give some clue to his priorities.
    3. Re:Parity by jeiler · · Score: 1

      Thanks, Goobergunch and Jor-Al. I don't have mod points, but please accept a hearty thank you.

      This does, however, make for yet another significant difference between the two candidates. I don't see anything in Article II of the U. S. Constitution that allows for warrantless wiretapping, but I think that all of us can agree that the United States Constitution is a broad framework for government, rather than an exhaustive point-by-point guide.

      The warrantless wiretaps may, technically, be illegal (indeed, they probably are). Can anyone here imagine a situation where a technically illegal act by the President prevents more harm than it causes?

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    4. Re:Parity by tritonman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      warrantless is meaningless if you have judges in your pocket to give you warrents no?

    5. Re:Parity by evilRhino · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If bribing a judge is an extra impediment, I welcome it.

    6. Re:Parity by Jor-Al · · Score: 5, Interesting
      You'd think so, but apparently even the rubber-stamp FISA court had too high of standards for Bush & Co. And that's saying something since it's ridiculously easy for the government to get a warrant from FISA (hell there is even an exemption so that you can apply for the warrant 72 hours after the fact).

      To quote a bit from the article on wikipedia just to give some perspective:

      In the period 1979-2006 a total of 22,990 applications for warrants were made to the Court of which 22,985 were approved (sometimes with modifications; or with the splitting up, or combining together, of warrants for legal purposes), and only 5 were definitively rejected.[4]
    7. Re:Parity by sammy+baby · · Score: 5, Informative
      This is from an Obama Q&A with the Boston Globe. Very first question:

      1. Does the president have inherent powers under the Constitution to conduct surveillance for national security purposes without judicial warrants, regardless of federal statutes?

      The Supreme Court has never held that the president has such powers. As president, I will follow existing law, and when it comes to U.S. citizens and residents, I will only authorize surveillance for national security purposes consistent with FISA and other federal statutes.

      I think that's about as clear a statement as you're likely to get.

      (link courtesy of Glenn Greenwald.)
    8. Re:Parity by mc900ftjesus · · Score: 2

      I just hope he'll constantly bring stuff like this up and drill it into people's heads that McCain is a just as evil as Bush, but smarter.

    9. Re:Parity by Jor-Al · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The warrantless wiretaps may, technically, be illegal (indeed, they probably are). There is no may about it as such acts are codified as illegal under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. It should be quite telling when a president has such a shaky foundation for wanting to do wiretaps that they have to bypass the FISA court because they might reject your request.
    10. Re:Parity by jeiler · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Responding to my own post.

      Yes, I can imagine plenty of situations where a president might commit an act that, while technically illegal, prevents more harm than it causes. By the same token, I cannot imagine any such situation that could not be horribly abused.

      Warrantless wiretaps could catch criminals, but it is precisely the penchant for abusing authority that we, as human beings, have that led to laws requiring a court order for warrants. Bush has abused that authority, and in doing so has broken the law.

      Warrantless wiretaps may be useful for preventing crimes and terrorism ... but only in the hands of a saint. Bush is no saint, and neither is McCain.

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    11. Re:Parity by Hyppy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm relatively left-right moderate in my political views. It cost him my vote.

    12. Re:Parity by hostyle · · Score: 5, Funny

      Hippy!

      --
      Caesar si viveret, ad remum dareris.
    13. Re:Parity by esaul · · Score: 1

      he doesn't really have a choice, and we have always known that he would first go left to get popular, and then right to get the money. http://counterpunch.org/kafoury05272008.html

    14. Re:Parity by Shagg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The only reason for warrantless is so you can hide what you're doing from the other branches of government.

      --
      Unix is user friendly, it's just selective about who its friends are.
    15. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      "Can anyone here imagine a situation where a technically illegal act by the President prevents more harm than it causes?"

      President Bush going on a shooting spree in the White House before turning the gun on himself?

    16. Re:Parity by mako1138 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's really one of the most disturbing things about Bush's view of presidential power. Why don't they do things according to the law, especially when Congress has made it so easy? They seem to pick and choose which laws apply to them.

      It's not surprising that McCain will follow suit. McCain lost my respect when he started flip-flopping like a fish out of water. Now it seems every day brings another reason not to trust him.

    17. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So when will he go right? Defying the constitution is the kind of thing I'd expect from FDR.

    18. Re:Parity by mean+pun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The only reason for warrantless is so you can hide what you're doing from the other branches of government.

      ... or you're doing it on such a large scale, getting court approval is not practical.

      DISCLAIMER: this is purely speculation, although I consider it in character for the current US administration.

    19. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just made his point. The secret FISA court is a joke. "Warrantless" is meaningless when the warrant is issued by a panel of a few judges meeting in secret with no public record and no accountability for their decisions. And it is not at all apparent that the standards(what fucking standards???) of the FISA court were too high for Bush.

    20. Re:Parity by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      I don't see anything in Article II of the U. S. Constitution that allows for warrantless wiretapping,

      Even if you did, and the constitution said exactly these words: "The president may order wiretapping without a warrant whenever he thinks it might be a good idea," amendments would still override that.

      It'll take another amendment, repealing the 4th, to make it legal -- or to even kick the question back to the text of the original constitution.

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    21. Re:Parity by Jor-Al · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You just made his point. Was I trying to dispute his point? I was in fact clarifying the situation for anyone who may not know as to how ridiculous your request would be to have it rejected by a FISA judge.

      And it is not at all apparent that the standards(what fucking standards???) of the FISA court were too high for Bush. I don't know how substantiated they were, but at around the time this whole thing broke, I remember reading about how such a thing was actually a problem. That the Bush Administrations requests were even too ridiculous for even a FISA judge to approve.
    22. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Exactly. Right now both sides are saying whatever they can to get votes. Republican are looking to sway the frightened christian right that are sure there is a terrorist waiting in every bush (pun intended)

      while the Dems are fighting to gather everyone that hates bush (no pun intended)

      When it's all said and done, whoever is elected will be self serving and further their and their party's agenda and the working american people will be screwed outright no matter what.

      This is a fact, it happened under nixon, ford, carter, regan, bush, clinton, and then bush II turned it up a notch. Anyone expecting anything different this time needs to read the definition of insane.

      They install their buddies into the important offices that bake a difference, tell the rest of the world to F themselves with a statue of liberty replica and continue to bully everyone else.

      Yes I am an american and I believe the FIRST thing any real leader needs to do is publicly apologize to the rest of the world for the USA's actions and ask that a forum be convened to find out how we can be better global citizens as a country.

      But I am sure that Hitler will be reborn as the new pope before that happens.

    23. Re:Parity by purpleraison · · Score: 1

      I just hope he'll constantly bring stuff like this up and drill it into people's heads that McCain is a just as evil as Bush, but smarter. I've dropped terds in the toilet that are smarter than Bush. I think the word you may have been looking for was;
      a) diabolical
      b) insidious
      c) conniving
      d) all of the above
      --
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    24. Re:Parity by nuzak · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The point of FISA is not so much to maintain oversight itself as it is to keep records so if Congress ever came up with a single functional cojone, it could subpoena the records.

      This is the contempt that Bush shows for the rule of law. And it's what he got away with, and thanks to that, what future presidents will get away with.

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    25. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is amazing that a liberal voted in favor of a liberal organization's agenda and the conservative voted against it...

    26. Re:Parity by revscat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Who knows what might happen when he gets in office, though.

      That's a stupid objection that could be applied anywhere to anyone. Why bother with what the candidates say or have done at all, in that case? "Vote Hitler! I know he *said* he'd kill all the Jews, but who knows what might happen when he gets in office?"

    27. Re:Parity by Astro+Dr+Dave · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's all well and good, but the ACLU only defends most of the freedoms protected in the Bill of Rights; they deride and ignore the 2nd amendment. And in regards to the 2nd amendment, Obama is very much anti-rights. I may vote for Obama anyway, with the hope that the Supreme Court will save the 2nd, and Obama as president may save the 4th...

    28. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "and ask that a forum be convened to find out how we can be better global citizens as a country."

      That will destroy this country faster than anything. Globalism is the downfall of the US. Let's run our country the way WE want to, not the way the lesser world wants us to.

    29. Re:Parity by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Oh come on, that's awesome...It's not flamebait to call him a Hippy if his name is Hyppy!

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    30. Re:Parity by hostyle · · Score: 1

      Perhaps we need a "0 - Kneejerk reaction, but it makes me feel beter" mod ?

      --
      Caesar si viveret, ad remum dareris.
    31. Re:Parity by G00F · · Score: 4, Funny

      I don't see any harm other than the fact that he may miss someone

      --
      The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive
    32. Re:Parity by esaul · · Score: 1

      ahh, the good old war power excuses. rtfa, he has already gone way right, and if i were american, i would probably annul my vote (can you do this in the us?) while i totally side with the argument that fdr is this big liberal scare, and the yankees have to be kept in check lest the government be allowed to treat us as pawns, as far as defying the constitution, i think the ffs are spinning in their graves over the abominations committed by clinton and the bushes way more than the possible harm that obama might do

    33. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "... or you're doing it on such a large scale, getting court approval is not practical."

      No. This is not speculation. Impracticality was argued by AG as the need for increasing the exemption from 72 hours to 2 weeks.

      Turns out even that is not enough time. Now seeking yearly check-ins as to, "this is what we are doing," with no actual permission sought.

    34. Re:Parity by element-o.p. · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Mod parent up. Shagg is right on the money, although I would throw in the extra possibility of "or if you want to hide what you're doing from the populace."

      While it is very, very unlikely that the FISA court would leak a request for a wiretap, if the request were groundless/abusive enough, I suppose it is a possibility.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    35. Re:Parity by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      And it is not at all apparent that the standards(what fucking standards???) of the FISA court were too high for Bush.
      Of course it is -- if the standards of the FISA court were not too high for Bush and Co., then why would they attempt to sidestep it? If FISA were really just a rubber stamp, with the ability to retroactively approve a wiretap, then what possible reason could the Bush administration have for wanting to bypass it? The simple fact that they wanted to avoid this check and balance -- minuscule that it was -- strongly suggests that even this oversight was too much for Bush's liking.

      And that is a scary thought, indeed. Just how outrageous was the wiretapping program, that a 0.02% chance of rejection was too much?
      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    36. Re:Parity by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      It will cost him my vote. McCain was not my ideal candidate, but looked like he might have been the best of the bunch. But this is a deal-breaker.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    37. Re:Parity by Manchot · · Score: 1

      That may be true, but there is already a major organization dedicated solely to protecting 2nd Amendment rights, the NRA. Given the ACLU's limited budget, I would prefer that they focus on the other freedoms, especially when they're usually the only group doing so.

    38. Re:Parity by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      Regulating guns is against the second ammendment? Read it. It does say "well-regulated" you know.

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      This space intentionally left blank
    39. Re:Parity by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      Very interesting. Thanks for posting those links!

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    40. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the time, "regulated" was taken to mean something different. See: http://www.guncite.com/gc2ndmea.html

    41. Re:Parity by PopeRatzo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      warrantless is meaningless if you have judges in your pocket to give you warrents no?
      Federal judges have a remarkable reputation for integrity. You can find lots of instances of local circuit court judges who are on take, but those federal ones can usually be relied on to take their duty pretty seriously.

      The only thing that can really throw the federal bench out of whack is if you had a president and justice department who was pressuring federal judges and prosecutors to bring (or not bring) cases based upon a political agenda. Somehow, the system had been pretty good about that until Bush and the Gonzalez Justice Department came along. Even Ashcroft, who I disagree with totally, was an honest justice who put the Constitution before political gain. But not 'Berto Gonzalez, who is probably the most crooked Attorney General since the late 1800s. The funny thing is that these guys got elected pushing the notion that the judiciary was crooked and "activist" and then turned around and made it crooked and activist.

      Even though the reign of these little shits is coming to an end, it's going to take a committed leader to chase the rats out of all the little nooks and crannies of our judicial system. It can be done, however. Now that the Dem nomination is settled, I think we'll see some of the prosecutors in Congress (Leahy, Conyers) start to dig into the meat of the criminal activity of the last eight years, and I think the filthy way they prosecuted the Alabama governor will be the starting place. It's going to be an interesting five months.

      I hope Senator McCain really pushes the warrantless eavesdropping thing hard. It's the kind of thing that goes against most Americans' deeply held beliefs and it will show just what McCain is made of. "War on Terror" my pink hairy ass.
      --
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    42. Re:Parity by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      hostyle, I want to apologize for whoever modded you Flamebait. Don't hold it against them. Sitting in front of a CRT for 20 hours a day can do things to your noodles.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    43. Re:Parity by hostyle · · Score: 3, Funny

      Apologist!

      --
      Caesar si viveret, ad remum dareris.
    44. Re:Parity by compro01 · · Score: 1

      The supreme court will have a major say in it when they rule on District of Columbia v. Heller, which is expected by the end of this month.

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    45. Re:Parity by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1
      That is well regulated militia, not well regulated guns.

      Link

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    46. Re:Parity by scipiodog · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Who knows what might happen when he gets in office, though.

      That's a stupid objection that could be applied anywhere to anyone. Why bother with what the candidates say or have done at all, in that case? "Vote Hitler! I know he *said* he'd kill all the Jews, but who knows what might happen when he gets in office?"

      Not true. The OP describes a *skeptical* approach to politicians' promises, which is healthy, whereas your facetious example is *naive*.

      Big difference!

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    47. Re:Parity by QRDeNameland · · Score: 1

      +5: Godwin...well done!!

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    48. Re:Parity by QRDeNameland · · Score: 2, Funny

      IOW, you, for one, welcome our new judge-bribing overlord?

      --
      Momentarily, the need for the construction of new light will no longer exist.
    49. Re:Parity by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 1

      You'd think so, but apparently even the rubber-stamp FISA court had too high of standards for Bush & Co

      The really funny thing about FISA is that, during Clinton's reign, you couldn't get the right wing to shut up about how he had too much power and FISA was this super-secret court, yadda, yadda.

      --
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    50. Re:Parity by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 1

      Even Ashcroft, who I disagree with totally, was an honest justice who put the Constitution before political gain

      Not the first time I've thought this, but did anybody think we'd look back on Ashcroft's tenure as AG with a certain amount of fondness?

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    51. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There's something similar...
      Recently a bunch of students were arrested for either participating in a riot, or inciting one. The arresting officers filled out much of the paperwork identically. The arrests were thrown out because the police had done blanket arrests.

      It's a similar thing. Having blanket warrants is too easy to abuse. Not saying the local arrests were not justified, but we need to checks and balances to prevent falling into some fascist state.

    52. Re:Parity by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 1

      they deride and ignore the 2nd amendment

      It's a poorly written law, in desperate need of an update since the 19th century. I'd be a little snobbish too.

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    53. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      And THAT'S what angered me so about the administrations assertion that they needed to bypass the FISA court. They pointed out that it usually took the FBI ~ six months to prepare a case for the court. ZOMG! by then the terrorists would have already struck. But when your success rate is that far North of 99% you have no idea what the courts minimum standard IS. For all they know, "I REEELY WANT TO" written in crayon on a coctail napkin would be enough. Especially post 9/11. Instead of submitting appications more quickly, with less preparation, they demanded executive authority to ignore the fourth ammendment.

    54. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets Elect Saint Obama

    55. Re:Parity by aplusjimages · · Score: 1

      "Vote Hitler! I know he *said* he'd kill all the Jews, but who knows what might happen when he gets in office?"
      Go ahead and vote 3rd party, you're just throwing your vote away.
      --
      Can I bum a sig?
    56. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [spit-take]

      LOL

    57. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      in america, "liberty" should be EVERYONE's agenda.

    58. Re:Parity by reactionary · · Score: 0

      Or, less cynically, if you wanted to get begin surveillance immediately.

      --
      -- I'm embarassed to look like Hemos.
    59. Re:Parity by 2short · · Score: 1

      "Can anyone here imagine a situation where a technically illegal act by the President prevents more harm than it causes?"

      Sure. And while it is technically illegal to drive over the speed limit, if you explain to the Judge you were rushing a critically wounded child to the Emergency Room, you may well get off. In short, Bush is welcome to make the argument that it was illegal, but critically necessary. (Well, it would be ridiculous given the permissiveness of the FISA court, and his not having asked congress for any change in the law; but theoretically) But he didn't claim it was illegal but necessary. He claims it's not illegal because the President can do whatever he wants in wartime, where "wartime" is defined by him. Which is obviously stupid, but as far as I can tell, McCain endorses this view.

    60. Re:Parity by reactionary · · Score: 1

      You're right revscat, it's a tautology in fact.

      --
      -- I'm embarassed to look like Hemos.
    61. Re:Parity by reactionary · · Score: 1

      despicable that this is marked at a '5'.

      --
      -- I'm embarassed to look like Hemos.
    62. Re:Parity by summerfun · · Score: 1

      Obama doesn't want wiretapping because he's afraid we'll all find out just what Barack is cooking.

    63. Re:Parity by all5n · · Score: 1

      Obama is also in favor of Card Check, which would further degrade our competitiveness in world markets by allowing labor unions to (even more than they do today) use intimidation tactics to swell their membership.

      Labor Unions provide no socially redeeming value today other than as a mandatory source of campaign revenue for a select few. The labor unions of old gave us the labor laws that we have today, and i thank them for that, but modern labor unions (at least in the US) are a joke.

    64. Re:Parity by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      Even absent the 1st-10th amendments, the people *still* would have the rights enumerated therein. The Constitution spells out the rights the people grant to the government, not the other way around.

      --
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    65. Re:Parity by Pete+LaGrange · · Score: 1

      >Just for comparison, I'd like to see what Obama's views are on this issue.

      Does it really matter? You think Obama's gonna stop this? Privacy has been dead for 20 years or more, just run your credit report if you have doubts. 1984 came and went, everyone breathed a sigh of relief and proceeded to forget everything Orwell said. There's only one solution, become a good little drone (or perfectly imitate one, which amounts to the same thing.) Like I tell my wife, I'm glad I'm pushing 50, I don't think I could take another 70 years of this shit.

      --
      loyalty above all, save honor
    66. Re:Parity by Jor-Al · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's why you can apply for the warrant retroactively for up to 72 hours. There is no excuse to have NOT gone through a FISA judge.

    67. Re:Parity by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 3, Informative

      Um. You can begin surveillance immediately under FISA. You have up to 72 hours after the start of the tap to get a warrant, from a judge who is on call 24-7.

      Any excuse about FISA being "restrictive" is bullshit.

    68. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're trying to support a point by referring to a bunch of people who could be considered mentally retarded? The ACLU does nothing other than provides jobs for people who have no marketable skills.

    69. Re:Parity by Digital+Vomit · · Score: 1

      Even though the reign of these little shits is coming to an end, it's going to take a committed leader to chase the rats out of all the little nooks and crannies of our judicial system. It can be done, however

      Not if you guys keep electing Democrats and Republicans.

      --
      Modern copyright is theft of culture from everyone and it retards the progress of the useful arts and sciences.
    70. Re:Parity by pfleming · · Score: 1

      Indeed. A paranoid republican President inspired the creation of the court. A paranoid republican President decided to avoid the court - instead making up his own authority relying on the "state of war" to justify his actions. He forgets that he is just as easily giving this power to a Democrat when he is removed from office.

    71. Re:Parity by Original+Replica · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That is what the 72 hour after the fact warrant request is for. If the authorities must act right now they can, but that doesn't excuse them from judicial oversight. Nothing should ever exclude law enforcement from judicial oversight, ever. Not gag orders, not the need for expediency, not national security letters, not "sorry it's classified". Law enforcement without oversight and transparency is Fascism.

      --
      We are all just people.
    72. Re:Parity by Original+Replica · · Score: 2, Interesting

      While it is very, very unlikely that the FISA court would leak a request for a wiretap, if the request were groundless/abusive enough, I suppose it is a possibility.

      They shouldn't have to "leak" anything. There is no reason for warrants not to be public knowledge after they have been carried out or rejected. It should be a necessary monitor both of police/DHS actions and judicial competency.

      --
      We are all just people.
    73. Re:Parity by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      It may be a "joke" but it is still a meaningful joke. Invasion of privacy
      is supposed to require due process. The process may be trivial but having
      one still shows respect for this little notion called "Law and Order".

      Once upon a time Republicans used to believe in such things.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    74. Re:Parity by thzinc · · Score: 1

      But in America, each person currently has the liberty to not make "liberty" their agenda.

    75. Re:Parity by DustyShadow · · Score: 1

      The only thing that can really throw the federal bench out of whack is if you had a president and justice department who was pressuring federal judges and prosecutors to bring (or not bring) cases based upon a political agenda. Somehow, the system had been pretty good about that until Bush and the Gonzalez Justice Department came along. Can you please link me to something that shows Gonzalez was pressuring judges? He was well within his rights and power to fire the U.S. Attorneys that he fired. The executive branch does have the right to push its own agenda and appointing U.S. Attorneys is one way it does that. If the attorneys aren't working towards that agenda, they get fired. Pretty simple. All that talk in Congress was just that, talk.

      The judges, however, are not under his control...so please if you have something, link me to it.
    76. Re:Parity by jedidiah · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      No, it's perfectly fine.

      This is just one of those areas where Nixon's image of the
      "elitist liberal" is very much on target.

      The problem with "gun control" is one of trust. Either a citizen
      is trustworthy enough to handle the both the ballot box and ammo
      box or they can't be trusted with either.

      Many liberals just don't have the guts to admit that they would
      rather depive some hick farmer of the ability to get Bush
      re-elected than take his guns away. Since they can neither admit
      to, or actually achieve, the former they will settle for the
      latter.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    77. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course the fact they file annual reports to congress on who/what/when they did warrantless wiretaps doesn't really hide anything... now does it? Stop the distortions and smears.

      PLEASE! Can we have one single Presidential campaign where the we elect someone based on their policies and ideas, not on which candidate has the most successful lies, distortions and smears!

    78. Re:Parity by jeiler · · Score: 1

      Obama is also not a saint--but he agrees with the checks and balances, and disagrees with warrantless wiretaps.

      --

      If you haven't been down-modded lately, you aren't trying.

      Sacred cows make the best hamburger.

    79. Re:Parity by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      I don't think he forgets that at all. At that level of government, Democrats and Republicans are indistinguishable. They all owe favors to the same people who put them in that position. Democrats and Republicans both know full well that no matter how badly they fuck things up, they'll be back on top in 4 to 8 years.

      Their real fear is third parties. Qhy else do you think they make it a monumental task just to get on the ballot? Do Republicans and Democrats have to collect signatures every election year?

    80. Re:Parity by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Not to mention the fact that McCain not only is for the warrantless wire taps,but the guy has begun to waffle so badly that he now says he wouldn't vote for his own bill,and is now saying he opposes views that he was resolutely for not 2 years ago. What happened to McCain being a "straight shooter"? This guy has begun to waffle so badly he makes Hillary "What do the polls say I'm for this week?" Clinton look like she has a spine of steel. As someone who is a conservative in the Goldwater sense I would have been happy to vote Ron Paul,but there is no way in hell I'm voting for "President Shrub,the sequel". But that is my 02c,YMMV

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    81. Re:Parity by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Oh you can trust him alright...to follow Bush's exact footsteps. The people that vote for him are just as fascist as he is.

      --
      What?
    82. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Globalism is the downfall of the US."

      It's too late. Corporate USA has already decided our "high-paying" jobs are costing them too much and they want to bring the average US wage down to a global average. I guess they are not worried who is going to buy all those high-end items they sell but that's another problem to worry about later.

    83. Re:Parity by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 4, Informative

      Just to follow up on what you've said:

      I recommend this article for a critical view of McCain's attitude towards personal freedom.

      In short, he doesn't believe you should have it. You're all soldier's in McCain's American army and insubordination will not be tolerated.

    84. Re:Parity by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      Well to be fair not every President has felt the need to either purposefully ignore the law or even expand executive power. The ones that have seem to lean Republican.

    85. Re:Parity by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      i would probably annul my vote (can you do this in the us?) I'm not quite sure what you mean (because I've not experience with a system where you could), but I can tell you that I am not aware of any means for a citizen of the U.S. to annul his vote.
    86. Re:Parity by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      Eliminate the technically. Either it's legal or it ain't.

      The principle that the President can't break the law goes back to the Magna Carta, at least.

    87. Re:Parity by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      Yeah the funny mod is an interesting thing. There's no "not funny" option, so anything that 5 people on slashdot find funny gets a +5. I wouldn't put too much stock in it though.

    88. Re:Parity by smegged · · Score: 1

      It is as I suspected. This is a left-wing site run by people who mistakenly believe that "liberty" means the freedom from natural consequences rather than the freedom to choose the acts which lead to those consequences.

      I would have a lot more respect for these liberal organisations if they actually believed in accepting responsibility for decisions made. Until then, I will continue happily ignoring anything said by such organisations.

    89. Re:Parity by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      I'm very interested in this decision for a couple of reasons:

      1) the Court (capitalized out of respect for the institution in general) has been eroding individual rights for some time now, and I wonder how far they will go.
      2) the current court is considered conservative, because many justices were appointed by conservative presidents. In case I need to point it out, conservatives are generally for gun rights which conflicts with part 1.

      The DC case should be a litmus test for this Court, however it has been the habit of the Court to rule narrowly of late, so I'm wondering if they'll just rule on DC's particular gun ban and leave the greater issue unresolved.

    90. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which makes you wonder why Bush felt he had to do it without warrants, no?
       
      Yes, it would have been very easy to follow the law. The letter, if not the spirit. This should show you the arrogance and disrespect with which Bush approaches US law.

    91. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the ACLU doesn't "cherry pick" their bills? This is utterly useless from any objective sense.

      "Lies, damned lies, and statistics" -- Benjamin Disraeli

    92. Re:Parity by statemachine · · Score: 1

      No more than I'd look fondly at a criminal who was honest about his intention to mug me.

    93. Re:Parity by Candid88 · · Score: 1

      The left-right divide makes no sense, it never did. It's the media's attempt to over-simplify politics by lumping together completely unrelated issues based on the policies of either major party back in the 60's.

      You could have right-wing regimes instituting warrantless wire-taps or left-wing regimes instituting warrantless wire-taps. Just as a democrat's have decided to invade other countries (e.g. Kennedy invading Vietnam) and Republicans deciding to invade (e.g. Bush invading Iraq).

      The Left-Right spectrum is there for the simpletons who like to be told rather than decide on their political beliefs.

    94. Re:Parity by TheLink · · Score: 1

      I'm not a US citizen but I actually think Obama might actually improve things a bit if he wins (or at least slow the decline/rot ;) ).

      That is if Obama lives long enough. Maybe some racist guy will conveniently kill him.

      Obama seems less fake. Clinton seems so fake - the stuff she says and actually does.

      It seems unlikely that the US voters will vote for anything other than R or D.

      --
    95. Re:Parity by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 1

      No, it's perfectly fine.

      Okey dokey then, so you'll have no problem with me stockpiling AKs, bazookas, fighter planes and some nukes then?

      Many liberals just don't have the guts to admit that they would rather depive some hick farmer of the ability to get Bush re-elected than take his guns away. Since they can neither admit to, or actually achieve, the former they will settle for the latter.

      Ah, I see you have problems staying on topic as well as post reading comprehension. Just in case you honestly just don't know, I like the 2nd amendment, I just think it needs cleaning up.

      Moreover, depriving someone of a vote would be a greater sin to me than depriving someone of their weapon. Besides, if nobody votes for Bush, how will I have people to make fun of?

      Thanks for playing, troll.

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    96. Re:Parity by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Several of the amendments in the Bill of Rights appear confusing because they've mixed different rights into single amendments. It's unclear as to what the hell the crap about "well regulated militias" in the second is specifically about, but the only explanation I've heard thus far that makes sense is that the second is an attempt to state two rights, much as the first amendment both prohibits governmental interference with religion and preserves freedom of speech, two related but nonetheless distinct rights. The rights protected by the second are as follows:

      1. States have the right to organize militias to defend themselves
      2. Everyone has the right to arm themselves

      I've never really seen a reading of the second that makes more sense than the above. There's the "You have the right to arm yourself because states have need militias to stay free" interpretation, which doesn't make much sense on any level and goes against the fact that the other amendments don't seem to need to justify the rights they give. There's the "States have the right to organize militias and the Federal government has no right to prevent people from bearing arms because that'd make it difficult for states to exercise their right", which almost makes sense but it's not really what that amendment says and, moreover, the usual interpretation, that this somehow means states have the right to regulate weapon ownership, doesn't agree with the actual wording.

      There is weasel room. It's not clear from the amendment whether everyone's allowed to arm themselves with any weapon, and that seems to be where most of the legitimate debate is these days. If the Supreme Court ruled it means a lunatic living in a highly populated area has the right to keep a nuke in his basement, then I suspect the amendment would be repealed in short order. On the other hand, does it mean the Federal government could outlaw gun ownership on the grounds that you can still technically bear arms by wielding a bow and arrows?

      But no, the term "regulated" does not connect to "bear arms".

      Me, I defend myself with a pair of bear arms, as I take the constitution literally. No, it's not a new joke, in fact, it's been beaten to death (probably by those self-same bear arms) by now so please don't repeat it or mod this funny.

      They are pretty intimidating though. A burglar broke into the house once, and I caught him in the living room. I held the bear arm ready to swing it against his head. He froze. We stared at each other. The adrenaline was pumping, and both of us waited to make the first move. For a minute or two, as he waited for me to hit him, all we could hear was our breathing.

      Finally, after staring at the arms and waiting for me to make my move, he finally spoke up. He took a deep breath, and asked "Why the long pause?"

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    97. Re:Parity by Hyppy · · Score: 1

      I Lol'd.

    98. Re:Parity by jtn · · Score: 1

      Ah, the tired old "well.. someone else did it, so that makes it okay!"

      If someone did something objectionable in the past, it does not excuse someone new performing similarly objectionable behavior. What's wrong is wrong, whether it is the 1940's or the 2000's. But +troll points on the quick "lefty" smear in there.

    99. Re:Parity by CowTipperGore · · Score: 1

      I don't see any harm other than the fact that he may miss someone Give Cheney a few beers and a shotgun...
    100. Re:Parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because the wiretap you just had on Guy X that gave you information about Guy Z should be public. That way the people at the top can follow The Law's progress and know when to flee.

    101. Re:Parity by instarx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The only reason for warrantless is so you can hide what you're doing from the other branches of government.

      ... or you're doing it on such a large scale, getting court approval is not practical.

      ...or wht you are doing is so far out of bounds that even the FISA court wouldn't go along with it.

    102. Re:Parity by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Indeed. A paranoid republican President inspired the creation of the court. A paranoid republican President decided to avoid the court - instead making up his own authority relying on the "state of war" to justify his actions."

      But we have yet to declare office war on any country in decades.......so, how can we be at a state of war?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  2. radical Islamic moderates by florin · · Score: 5, Funny

    We do not know what lies ahead in our nation's fight against radical Islamic extremists I believe he makes an important distinction here, and I would hate to see those cuddly moderate Islamic extremists being lumped in with the bad guys.
    1. Re:radical Islamic moderates by spun · · Score: 2, Funny

      No, we're the Islamic Radical Moderates. The Moderate Islamic Radicals are over there. Splitters!

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    2. Re:radical Islamic moderates by SoupGuru · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You know what has always pissed me off about McCain and his cohorts (and many others too) when talking about terrorism? Calling it "Islamic terrorism"

      There's no fricking practical need in the world to throw that "Islamic" adjective on there. It sounds great because there's some implied racism associated with Muslims and Islam but it really rubs me the wrong way.

      How about we focus on terrorism in general? How about we make it hard for ANYONE to perpetrate terror attacks on our country?

      --
      What doesn't kill you only delays the inevitable
    3. Re:radical Islamic moderates by polar+red · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How about we make it hard for ANYONE to perpetrate terror attacks on our country? Like not pissing everybody off ?
      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    4. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 2, Funny

      Don't let their identical DNA fool you. They differ on some key issues.

    5. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what has always pissed me off about McCain and his cohorts (and many others too) when talking about terrorism? Calling it "Islamic terrorism"

      There's no fricking practical need in the world to throw that "Islamic" adjective on there. It sounds great because there's some implied racism associated with Muslims and Islam but it really rubs me the wrong way.

      How about we focus on terrorism in general? How about we make it hard for ANYONE to perpetrate terror attacks on our country? You're exhibiting precisely the kind of radical understanding and Islamo-fundamentalist tolerance McCain warned me about.

      I can't wait until you moderate sympathizers are put into internment camps to protect normal people like me from extremist reasonable views.

      From what I've learned from my current president, Christian brand terrorism is just fine.
    6. Re:radical Islamic moderates by urcreepyneighbor · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Like not pissing everybody off ? It was her fault for dressing like a slut! She was begging to get raped!
      --
      "The fight for freedom has only just begun." - Geert Wilders
    7. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Dr+Caleb · · Score: 1

      "Like not pissing everybody off ?"

      That would be silly. You (we/us/them)are always going to piss people off.

      Just don't piss them off so much that they are willing to die, so long as that act also has a chance of killing you at the same time.

      --
      "History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme." Mark Twain
    8. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Hatta · · Score: 1

      What I want to know is what he's going to do about the threat from radical nationalist extremists. The islamic extremists are poor, weak, and far away. The radical nationalists are rich and occupy positions of power in our own country.

      It's abundantly clear that there's a bigger threat from radical nationalists in our own government than the islamic extremists. Who will be the first to raise this issue on the campaign trail? I'm guessing no one.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    9. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know what lies ahead either but one thing is sure, it doesn't include civil rights.

      How do you defeat your enemies? One way is to get them to commit cultural suicide like we are.

    10. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      This is insightful? You think "pissing someone off" is an excuse for them to kill 3000 people by slamming an airplane or two into a building? You think "pissing someone off" is an excuse for someone to strap a bomb onto himself and killing a busload of school children and women?


      I'm sorry, but we'll ALWAYS piss someone off just by existing. It's not an excuse for terrorism.

    11. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You make it sound like their grievances are rational.

    12. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Psmylie · · Score: 1
      Well, then, that makes the Patriot Act even better. Since, apparently, the terrorists hate us because of our freedoms. Take those freedoms away, and they have even less reason to attack us. Mmmmyep. It's got nothing to do with bombings, moving troops in, political, economic and social manipulation, etc. etc...

      Just as an aside, my wife and I went out to eat a while back. The special of the day advertised that it came with "AM fries". My wife asked "what are am fries?" and the waitress, looking appropriately embarrassed, responded, "those are American fries. They're just fries." Good lord, are we still doing that? That's sooo 2002!

      --

      psmylie's dictionary: Godzillion (noun) Any number large enough to destroy Tokyo

    13. Re:radical Islamic moderates by lubricated · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      > It was her fault for dressing like a slut! She was begging to get raped!

      Then going down a dark alley on saturday night in a bad part of town.

      --
      It has been statistically shown that helmets increase the risk of head injury.
    14. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How about if we don't turn the whole nation upside down over terrorism in the first place? Isn't that the goal of terrorists, to get you to pee your pants? I'd rather not have a government full of power hungry drones watching my every move. I'll take the extremely unlikely risk that some poor slob on the other side of the earth will come after me. Judging from my drive to work every day I'd say my fellow drivers pose a far greater risk to my life than terrorists.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    15. Re:radical Islamic moderates by nicklott · · Score: 1
      Yeah, he's too honest for his own good. Terrorism is what it is when the bad guys do it, fighting for freedom when it's the good guys. To put the "islamic" qualifier in there is effectively admitting that there are different kinds of terrorism and the logical extension of that is that some kinds of terrorism might be "better" than others.

      I think it's pretty common knowledge that the GOP happily support, and even on occasion fund, Irish, Central American and Israeli terrorism, but it's never explicitly admitted. Old John McC is speaking before he thinks.

    16. Re:radical Islamic moderates by HungSoLow · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Are you daft? I'm your typical liberal, left-wing tree hugging nut ... but is it not a fact that the majority of terrorism is perpetrated by Muslims, and devout religious Muslims at that? It is a fact that the extreme elements of Islam are responsible for the majority of terrorism in the world. It's like shying away from the fact that the nearly all of American creationists are Christian. If it's fact, fuck being PC.

    17. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 1

      REG:
              Right. You're in. Listen. The only people we hate more than the Americans are the fucking Moderate Islamic Radicals.
      I.R.M.:
              Yeah...
      JUDITH:
              Splitters.
      I.R.M.:
              Splitters...
      FRANCIS:
              And the Islamic Moderate Radicals.
      I.R.M.:
              Yeah. Oh, yeah. Splitters. Splitters...
      LORETTA:
              And the Islamic Radical Moderates.
      I.R.M.:
              Yeah. Splitters. Splitters...
      REG:
              What?
      LORETTA:
              The Islamic Radical Moderates. Splitters.
      REG:
              We're the Islamic Radical Moderates!
      LORETTA:
              Oh. I thought we were the Moderate Radicals.
      REG:
              Moderate Radicals! C-huh.
      FRANCIS:
              Whatever happened to the Moderate Radicals, Reg?
      REG:
              He's over there.
      I.R.M.:
              Splitter!r

      --
      "I only speak the truth"
      Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
    18. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Libertarian001 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't think you grok it. There is terrorism throughout the world, most of which we in the U.S. are unaffected by. It is very specifically Islamic terrorism that does concern us and there's nothing wrong with making that distinction.

    19. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Deadplant · · Score: 1, Insightful

      oh please.
      If you butcher people's families you can bloody well expect them to come and try to kill you right back.

    20. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Digestromath · · Score: 1

      Because while you have to be on guard for the "Islamic terrorism", you can rest assured that there is no such worry about "Jewish terrorists," "Christian extremists," "Buddhist terrorism," "Shinto radicals," "Pastafarian supremecists," "Ultra-orthodox pro-violence Jedi movements," or even "Athiest hate groups," because those would just be silly. Besides it's so much easier to deprive the rights of people who aren't like you.

    21. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Collective+0-0009 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You may have it backwards...
      How about we not let everyone else piss us off? How about we just shrug and move on when someone doesn't run their country/religion the way we like it? See, it isn't as much about us pissing people off, as it is about us getting all worked up and then over-extending. When we over-extend, we deny rights to others, we barge into affairs that are not really any of our business, and we make asses of ourselves.

      So yes, let's quit pissing everyone off, but first, let's quit getting pissed when someone does things a little different.

      --
      I finally updated my sig, but now it's lame.
    22. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually, in terms of property damage (money damages), domestic terrorist do a lot more damage than "islamic terrorists." by domestic terrorist i mean environmentalist groups destroying research facilities.

    23. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except in this case, "she" wasn't dressing like a slut, she was going around with a nail-studded strapon and coring out guys weaker than her. You need to work on your analogy more.

    24. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Deadplant · · Score: 5, Insightful
      When "pissing someone off" is done by butchering his family, installing and supporting sick-fucks like the Shah and Sadaam and carpet bombing his country then yes, you can expect a violent reaction.

      I'm sorry, but we'll ALWAYS piss someone off just by existing. It's not an excuse for terrorism. That is what we call a 'straw-man' argument.
      You are not pissing them off by existing.
      You are pissing them off by killing and torturing them.

    25. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Jor-Al · · Score: 5, Insightful
      So which Iraqis were butchering US citizens? Last time I checked the makeup of the 9/11 hijackers was:

      Fifteen of the attackers were from Saudi Arabia, two from the United Arab Emirates, one from Egypt, and one from Lebanon. So why are we going after Iraq instead of Saudi Arabia, again?
    26. Re:radical Islamic moderates by cnoocy · · Score: 1

      The largest act of terrorism in the United States before 9/11 was perpetrated by Timothy McVeigh, a lapsed Catholic with no connection with extreme elements of Islam. Domestic terrorism is a significant threat, and a government that treats Islamic terrorism as the only problem is not protecting the country.

      --
      This sig is not the Zahir. Lucky for you.
    27. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Jor-Al · · Score: 2, Funny

      But... but... they hate our freedoms!!! Right?!?!? Right?!?!?

    28. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Stradivarius · · Score: 1

      The practical need is that it focuses people on the perpetrators rather than the tactic. You can't have a war against a tactic, which is why the phrase "war on terror" is idiotic. It's like declaring a war on missiles - it misses the whole point, which is that there are people out there trying to kill you by whatever tactic they can use. Whether it's by a missile or a suicide bomber is tactically useful to know for your defense but is strategically minor. Those people are the enemy, not their choice of weapon.

      It's important in trying to defeat these folks to understand them. It's also important to understand the communities from which they draw their support, so we can try to drive a wedge between the terrorists and their communities. For these purposes, it's vital to identify the enemy as Islamic extremists rather than simply terrorists.

    29. Re:radical Islamic moderates by thegnu · · Score: 1

      It was her fault for dressing like a slut! She was begging to get raped! Yeah, that a great analogy, except it's not.

      The USA is like that girl that tried to sue Kobe, but it turned out she had the semen of five other guys on her when she went in to the police. Whoops.
      --
      Please stop stalking me, bro.
    30. Re:radical Islamic moderates by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Just as an aside, my wife and I went out to eat a while back. The special of the day advertised that it came with "AM fries". My wife asked "what are am fries?" and the waitress, looking appropriately embarrassed, responded, "those are American fries. They're just fries." Good lord, are we still doing that? That's sooo 2002!

      I can honestly say I've never been to any restraunt that every renamed their fries.. maybe it was local to a certain part of the US? I was in the NE.

    31. Re:radical Islamic moderates by OldeTimeGeek · · Score: 1

      FWIW, I seem to remember that the phrase "Islamic terrorism" was used to show that the US wasn't fighting against all Islam, just the followers that use terror tactics to achieve their goals. Yes, it's spin doctoring on a titannic scale, but we didn't want to piss off all followers of Islam, just certain ones.

    32. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      Calling it "Islamic terrorism" Actually, his catchphrase is "Islamic extremism", and is used specifically to differentiate the views of Islamic extremists from mainstream Muslims.
    33. Re:radical Islamic moderates by thegnu · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm sorry, but we'll ALWAYS piss someone off just by existing. It's not an excuse for terrorism. Right, but supporting a few terrorist states against all the other terrorist states in a volatile part of the world, whipping up racial hatred within our populace, and carpet bombing cities full of innocent people is bound to get people extra foaming-at-the-mouth-hopping-up-and-down-no-fucking-shit angry.

      The Taliban may be the the ONLY target we can justify over there, and a) we quit going after them, and b) we gave them all their money and weapons in the 70s (I think the 70s?)

      If we got invaded by some nation bent on wiping out "radical christianity," you don't think a bunch of heavily armed down-home rednecks with a hand-bound copy of the Anarchist's Cookbook wouldn't be equipping their children so they could get that much closer to the invaders? Insurgents, indeed.
      --
      Please stop stalking me, bro.
    34. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The adjective "Islamic" is used because this is the justification provided by the terrorists themselves. They themselves cite Islam as the belief system that condones and requires their actions. The adjective "radical" is used as an acknowledgement and to differentiate that this particular belief system is not shared by many muslims.

    35. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Psmylie · · Score: 1

      This was in central Minnesota, the last place I would have expected it. Oh, and I see I got modded as flamebait on my original post! How exiting! I don't think I've ever gotten that particular mod before :)

      --

      psmylie's dictionary: Godzillion (noun) Any number large enough to destroy Tokyo

    36. Re:radical Islamic moderates by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Like not pissing everybody off ?
      The U.S. could eat garbage, piss gasoline and cause it to rain thousand dollar bills and the rest of the world would still hate us.
      It's like how we hate Microsoft no matter what they do, even if they do something that we would have adored Apple for doing.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    37. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like not pissing everybody off ? Please elaborate....
    38. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True. I'm also feeling warm and fuzzy that he is focused on the ISLAMIC terrorists. Because you know only terrorists who follow Islam would ever hurt the US...

    39. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's impossible to do. There are people who hate the Western world because we are rich and they are poor. They blame us for the poorness, though that's far from the truth. It's their culture and governments that leave them poor.

      Nice try, though.

    40. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      While 9/11 still needs lots and lots and lots of re-examination, I don't think it's fair to take the foxnewsbushgovernment version as the truth. So, do not ever use 9/11 as an excuse for wars, wiretapping or other stuff like that. No one really knows what happened that day and before we all do (which we probably won't) we should not jump to any conclusions and take actions based on them.

      It is a big misconception, that the Middle East is pissed off by the US and other western countries, just because they exist. I here a lot of 'nuke em all' shouting coming from the US. Those are the ones that watch 20 minutes of FOX News everyday and make that a substitude for reality.

      Anyway, the answer lies in more engagement, not more armour. If you bomb people and their friends and show a lot of disrespect, they won't like you. Same for countries. So: make nice. Don't take all the oil, don't invade countries for it under false pretences. It's time everybody realises we share a world. Everyone is entitled to their share of it. The nicer you are (don't mistake this for being a sissy), the safer you are.

    41. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus, the moderation in this thread makes Special Olympians look like Mensa members. In what parallel universe is this considered flamebait?

    42. Re:radical Islamic moderates by mR.bRiGhTsId3 · · Score: 1

      I'd like to hope that those down-home rednecks with a hand-bound copy of the Anarchist's Cookbook would have the decency to attack the invaders instead of their fellow citizens. I'd also like to hope that Mexico didn't further destabilize the situation.

    43. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason it is 'easy' to attack the US, and the only reason 9/11 happened, is the pussification of the American public.
      There was no reason for those planes to crash, except the herd-like mentality of the people on those planes who followed the governments advice to 'just do what they say, you'll be released later after they negotiate'.
      Remember that OTHER plane? The one that crashed? The one where the civilians on the plane, in a time of national crises, defended their country with their lives? Notice that nobody mentions THAT plane, they just babble about the twin towers and the Pentagon. In my mind there was one plane full of Heroes, and three planes full of sheep that, quite frankly, deserved to die for their apathy.

      The common citizen is the last line of defense. This was true in 1776 and is still true today.
      "Big Government" will not be able to prevent this type of attack, and will bankrupt our economy and ruin our constitution trying to do so. The way to prevent terrorism attacks is to give the common person not only the ability, but also the DESIRE to defend the country.

      It also would help if we would stop pissing all over the rest of the world.

    44. Re:radical Islamic moderates by nguy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There's no fricking practical need in the world to throw that "Islamic" adjective on there.

      You mean other than that most of the terrorists they refer to actually happen to be Muslim?

      It sounds great because there's some implied racism associated with Muslims and Islam but it really rubs me the wrong way.

      There's no "implied racism" there: it's a fact that a large fraction of the people who have been perpetrating terrorism against the US have been Muslim.

      You know what has always pissed me off about McCain and his cohorts (and many others too) when talking about terrorism? Calling it "Islamic terrorism"

      They're calling it "Islamic terrorism" because, say, Catholic terrorism, Buddhist terrorism, or atheist terrorism simply aren't problems for the US right now.

    45. Re:radical Islamic moderates by UncleTogie · · Score: 1

      That is what we call a 'straw-man' argument. You are not pissing them off by existing. You are pissing them off by killing and torturing them.

      Fine, I'll be the one to point this out...

      The first WTC bombing was in 1993... 3 years after the first Gulf War started. Y'know, the war where Iraq was kicked out of Kuwait.

      The bomber there wasn't Iraqi. Wasn't Iranian, nor Saudi, nor Syrian.

      Ramzi Yousef was born in Kuwait... the place we liberated from Iraq. True, his origins were Pakistani, but there's no loyalty there, either; he would've been the one to kill Bhutto instead of Al Qaeda. Only the cops saved her that time. By your logic, the Japanese were killing and torturing his peers as well, 'cause in 1994 he took out a Japanese businessman ...all in a "test" run for his next plot.

      Terrorists/extremists of any ilk are so convinced of their moral "superiority" that they feel compelled to rearrange the world to suit them and their beliefs. They'll use any excuse as long as they get what they want.

      "They killed us first!" is NOT a reason to CONTINUE the violence between rival sects/ideologies/creeds... it's just an excuse, and a pretty bad one at that. Just ask the Hatfields and McCoys.

      Strawman indeed...

      --
      Don't tell me to get a life. I'm a gamer; I have LOTS of lives!
    46. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      There was no reason for those planes to crash, except the herd-like mentality of the people on those planes who followed the governments advice to 'just do what they say, you'll be released later after they negotiate'.

      Well, believe it or not, that was the best strategy for survival for the majority of airplane hijackings.

      Remember that OTHER plane? The one that crashed? The one where the civilians on the plane, in a time of national crises, defended their country with their lives? Notice that nobody mentions THAT plane, they just babble about the twin towers and the Pentagon. In my mind there was one plane full of Heroes, and three planes full of sheep that, quite frankly, deserved to die for their apathy.

      The passengers on "that OTHER plane" had a distinct advantage over the the two planes that hit the twin towers: They fscking _knew_ what had happened to the first two planes. In your mind is pure delusion, nothing else. In each plane, the passengers acted according to the information that was available to them.

    47. Re:radical Islamic moderates by ady1 · · Score: 1

      its 80s.

    48. Re:radical Islamic moderates by alexborges · · Score: 1

      Well... I think killing 60k civilians in a war can very well stand in for "pissing people off". Also, stealing their oil, which is their national property, may also "piss them off". Also, going arround the world preaching freedom and democracy while supporting a regime like the saudi that publicly slaughters homosexuals, while with the other hand you critizize Iran for exactly the same thing can very well stand in for "pissing people off".

      So, who do you think has more of a right to be pissed off: you, who lost a couple of big buildings and about (lets be lenient) 5000 hard working people, or the rest of the world that suffers US external policy skitzophrenia and cluster bombs for no other reason than you guys needing (lots of) oil.

      I admire the US a lot. I like the whole idea. I think she has the wood to lead occident in the cultural war that is about to come. But not with GWB and the like at her head. Not with traitors like that at the wheel.

      --
      NO SIG
    49. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Peaker · · Score: 1

      Actually you are pissing Muslims off by not being Muslim. God hates the non-believers, and it is their job to kill you.

      Also, god hates the Jews, according to the last released tape from Al Queda, and they will try to kill them all over the world.

      So yes, its basically hate for merely "existing" - unless you convert to Islam, then you are allowed to exist.

    50. Re:radical Islamic moderates by alexborges · · Score: 1

      HUH?

      --
      NO SIG
    51. Re:radical Islamic moderates by alexborges · · Score: 1

      You really hold your country at much less than what it could be.

      America is occident at its highest. It could be the rock in which occident survives china.

      It wont.

      Because of people who think like you.

      --
      NO SIG
    52. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Deadplant · · Score: 1

      The first WTC bombing was in 1993... I have no idea what you are getting at...

      I said that violence begets violence. That was my only point.
      The anon poster seemed to be unaware of our side of this horrible cycle of violence.

      This cycle did not start with the invasion of Iraq or the WTC bombings.
    53. Re:radical Islamic moderates by holt · · Score: 1

      ... that girl that tried to sue Kobe, but it turned out she had the semen of five other guys on her when she went in to the police.

      So? What does her sexual activity with other men have to do with whether or not she was raped by Kobe? After all, actual prostitutes can be raped, too. A rape victim might even start having consensual sex with his or her attacker, before withdrawing consent. As soon as consent is withdrawn (or if it has never been given), the sexual act becomes rape.

      In general, rape accusations turn out to be false in about the same percentage of cases as most other crime accusations. That is to say, fewer than 5% of the time. (I don't have sources to back this up at the moment but I did participate in rape prevention activities while I was in college and this was one of the things we discussed.) It's very difficult to pull off a false rape report, not least because people tend to blame the victim.

    54. Re:radical Islamic moderates by thegnu · · Score: 1

      Yeah, here's hoping OUR ignorant fucks are more judicious than THEIR ignorant fucks. :D :D :D ... :D
      Cheers,
      Nathan
      PS: :D

      --
      Please stop stalking me, bro.
    55. Re:radical Islamic moderates by ppanon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How about we focus on terrorism in general? How about we make it hard for ANYONE to perpetrate terror attacks on our country?

      Um, because then he would have to support wiretaps and investigations of anti-abortion groups that hav e used or approved of terror tactics against abortion clinics and doctors. That would piss off his right-wing religious extremists.

      You see he wants to make clear that it will only be used against the "bad" terrorists, and not the "good" terrorists.
      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    56. Re:radical Islamic moderates by nguy · · Score: 3, Informative


      But... but... they hate our freedoms!!! Right?!?!? Right?!?!?


      More precisely, they hate that we have those freedoms while they don't, and they believe that we are responsible for them not having those freedoms.

    57. Re:radical Islamic moderates by 2short · · Score: 1

      Personally, Christian Extremists scare me the most.

    58. Re:radical Islamic moderates by NormalVisual · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Terrorists/extremists of any ilk are so convinced of their moral "superiority" that they feel compelled to rearrange the world to suit them and their beliefs

      Puts a whole different spin on invading and occupying a country that poses no articulable strategic or tactical threat on the basis of "spreading democracy"...

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    59. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it's rediculous that you still believe that it was any arab/islamic person who is ultimately repsonsible for those actions. If you open your eyes, perhaps you'll see the truth.

      www.zeitgeist.com

    60. Re:radical Islamic moderates by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      Well, believe it or not, that was the best strategy for survival for the majority of airplane hijackings.

      Well, it was *believed* to be the best strategy based on not much more than guesswork, and certainly not on any real historical data. Most people would rather live on their knees than die on their feet, I guess.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    61. Re:radical Islamic moderates by thegnu · · Score: 1

      So? What does her sexual activity with other men have to do with whether or not she was raped by Kobe? I was presenting an excerpt from the whole thing, and there is other data. What it has to do with it is that it didn't align with her story. Specifically. Also, if you have the semen of several other people on your person, I'm not sure that any evidence of physical trauma can be admitted, and the onus is on her to provide evidence in a criminal case. What evidence does she have left? Her word? I wouldn't take a dude with 5 girl's pussy juices on him for his word, and I wouldn't her, either. Ergo, it has little to do with her rape, but everything to do with me believing a goddamn thing she says.

      Also, my comment was about the Middle East.

      After all, actual prostitutes can be raped, too. Sure. While we're on the subject, I think prostitution should be legal, because I think it's weird that it's illegal to pay someone to fuck you unless you have them sign a model release, videotape it, and sell it on the Internet.

      A rape victim might even start having consensual sex with his or her attacker, before withdrawing consent. Yeah. I think that there should be a legally defined safe word so that there's not any confusion. In Japanese, saying "no, no, it hurts, it hurts" is porn-star pillow talk. So while I agree with you again on a technical level, I believe that the line that is drawn here does little to protect the majority of actual rape victims, and is easily manipulated to hurt innocent people.

      As soon as consent is withdrawn (or if it has never been given), the sexual act becomes rape. Are we talking explicit consent here? Because if we are, then you are full of shit. Explicit consent is very rarely given, in my experience. I have never raped anyone. Rape and date rape laws are fucked up. For example:

      1. a drunk man and a drunk woman have sex, both out of a sense of obligation.
      VERDICT: Man date raped woman.
      2. a drunk man and a sober woman have sex, both out of a sense of obligation.
      VERDICT: Man date raped woman.
      3. a sober man and a drunk woman have sex, both out of a sense of obligation.
      VERDICT: Man date raped woman.

      Except in very rare cases. I in fact know a girl who made out with a guy at Eckerd College, and he later went to the provost or whoever and told them he was fucked up on PRESCRIBED MENTAL HEALTH DRUGS and she manipulated him into MAKING OUT WITH HER. She was given a curfew or GTFO, so she stopped going there. Everyone I tell that story thinks it's fucked up. I suspect that most people would be ok with it given a gender reversal. I suspect the only reason it happened at all was the college needed to improve its statistics.

      Bitches have made me feel obligated to fuck them, and there's never been a single thing I could do about it, even though I was inebriated in some form or another at the time. Where would you like your river cried? I'll get on that shit ASAP.

      Anyway, I wouldn't climb into a cage with a horny gorilla unless I planned to fuck him, nor would I go up to Kobe's hotel room for a nightcap unless I planned to fuck him. You know why? I'm not fucking stupid.
      --
      Please stop stalking me, bro.
    62. Re:radical Islamic moderates by reactionary · · Score: 1

      Can we refrain from hyperbole like "carpet bombing" and "killing and torturing them"? Let's get a little perspective here before you accuse someone else of a straw-man.

      Everyone accepts that there is collateral damage to military intervention (IMHO this is too often undervalued in the overall cost-benefit analysis) but your casuistry is too strong to warrant a '5'. Also, you are justifying the removal of Saddam by indicating your abhorrence to his installment. So, what is it? Can we only do nothing? Can we intervene in the case of "sick-fscks"? Is all intervention "torture" and "carpet bombing"?

      It seems you've set up a paradox: damned if we do, damned if we don't.

      --
      -- I'm embarassed to look like Hemos.
    63. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read physics man. 9/11 was a product of US military industrial complex to make you think there still IS a enemy somewhere. Cold war is over.

      Some sort of enemy has to exist to justify military spending and to keep no.1 US export in shape. In real life terms this is the safest era ever: it's much more likely to die out of boredom than as a result of (state sponsored) terrorism.

    64. Re:radical Islamic moderates by UncleTogie · · Score: 1

      I said that violence begets violence. That was my only point.

      I'll have to respectfully disagree. Sure, violence can beget violence... if you let it. Just leads to a vicious circle... almost like asking the proverbial blonde to pee in the corner of a round room. Consider, there are a lot of hard-core pacifists out there that won't even defend themselves. I don't feel that they're wrong in feeling such, even if we might disagree? I'm not the only one to see this; this guy, and this guy, and this guy are three easy examples of another way of looking at violence.

      I say that fear, intolerance, extremism, and short-sighted bigotry are far more the excuse for/root cause of the continuing violence... Take your pick.

      --
      Don't tell me to get a life. I'm a gamer; I have LOTS of lives!
    65. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you know Iran at one time was a parliamentary democracy? Did you know we overthrew it and put in the Shah(Who carter and Israel said was such a good friend and man)? Did you know he was a brutal murderer who killed many Iranians and plundered the country? Do you know we prop up many shah like tyrants in the middle east? If I went to somebody's house killed their father and husband, and put in an abusive pedophile who terrorized the family. Then I did the same thing to nearly every house in the neighborhood people would say I was a grade a asshole. If people came to my house and killed me and my family people would feel more good than bad came out of it all. Leaders of countries act more like pedophiles and rapists than humans, remember today's victim is tomorrow's victimizer.

    66. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but we'll ALWAYS piss someone off just by existing. It's not an excuse for terrorism. Bullshit. And this is a piss-weak argument at best

      Look at the death toll due to US "actions" compared to that of "terrorists" and "rogue regimes" in the "Axis of evil".

      The USA pisses the rest of the world off coz they act like they own it, striding around doing whatever it takes to get what they want, then the soft-bellied, weak minded citizens of said USA piss and moan when 3,000 people die? What about the 1,000,000 in Iraq? Or the 1,500,000 in Vietnam? None of whom were a threat to the USA.

      Hell, 2,500,000 people is almost the entire population of the country I live in!
    67. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It depends upon how you go about pissing someone off. An Iranian once told me that the Shah had large numbers of protesters killed. I recall about 13000 as the number. This of course is second hand information and, given the honesty of politicians, could always be propaganda. Sometimes people rationalize this as part of the cold war, but it hardly changes the emotions of the people involved.

    68. Re:radical Islamic moderates by fringd · · Score: 1

      True, even if we behave well, we will still have to defend ourselves. But do not miss the point. Treating other countries and their citizens like the muck that gets on our boots when we dig for oil... well that just doesn't help the whole terrorism thing.

      people have to be _really_ pissed to blow themselves up.

    69. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is insightful? What do you think pisses them off enough to kill themselves and many people that they don't even know? Terrorists have a hard time recruiting based purely on religious ideologies. Its much easier to recruit when a foreign nation attacks and happens to kill some man's wife. Or imposes sanctions that cause his children to starve to death. There is no excuse for terrorism, but their desperation is hardly surprising.

    70. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      There's no fricking practical need in the world to throw that "Islamic" adjective on there.

      Islamic terrorism is distinctive enough to warrant the use of the term. Muslim terrorists and other "extremists" around the world are driven by the same ideology.

      It sounds great because there's some implied racism associated with Muslims and Islam but it really rubs me the wrong way.

      Muslims were not, are not and never will be a race.

      How about we focus on terrorism in general? How about we make it hard for ANYONE to perpetrate terror attacks on our country?

      You want to make anti-terrorism inefficient just for the sake of political correctness?
    71. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      But... but... they hate our freedoms!!! Right?!?!? Right?!?!?

      Yes, that's correct. You might have noticed that the kind of freedoms we take for granted here in the West are violently frowned upon in Islamic societies, whether those societies are countries or just immigrant communities in the West.
    72. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      Like not pissing everybody off?

      Jihad has existed for as long as Islam has, so I don't think not pissing off the world is going to change anything. Muslims are engaged in perpetual warfare against infidels in every corner of the world. You just don't hear about most of it.
    73. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right. Aiding in violently overthrowing democratically-elected governments and starting wars for reasons that turn out to be completely false and causing the slaughter of 100s of thousands of civilians (at least) is perfectly acceptible.

    74. Re:radical Islamic moderates by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Not really an excuse to do evil. The entire "they are just jealous" thing is spin just as the direct reaction idea is simplistic.

      Also spreading misinformation that a very large proportion of the worlds population is duty bound to be homocidal maniacs is not really the sort of action that a responsible adult should be doing.

    75. Re:radical Islamic moderates by arb+phd+slp · · Score: 1

      Well, it was *believed* to be the best strategy based on not much more than guesswork, and certainly not on any real historical data. Most people would rather live on their knees than die on their feet, I guess. No historical data? There were plenty of hijackings in the 70s and 80s and they usually led to a standoff and the eventual release of the passengers. The intentional crashing was a first of its kind event.
      --
      There's a perfect xkcd for my sig but I'm too lazy to look it up. sudo someone go find it.
    76. Re:radical Islamic moderates by urcreepyneighbor · · Score: 1

      In Japanese, saying "no, no, it hurts, it hurts" is porn-star pillow talk That's it! I'm visiting Japan! ;D
      --
      "The fight for freedom has only just begun." - Geert Wilders
    77. Re:radical Islamic moderates by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      And in how many of them did the passengers resist as opposed to sitting there like sheep?

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    78. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm... actually it is possible to exist and not piss other people off. It helps not to be a idiot some of the time.

    79. Re:radical Islamic moderates by kocsonya · · Score: 1

      Probably because after a decade of embargo that followed their defeat in Kuwait Iraq was thought to be an easy target: march in, demolish the underequipped local military, secure the oil fields, make a big parade in Baghdad while the "We are the champions" is blasting from the speakers, put a pupet government in place, build a few big military bases with a handful of missiles so that the nearby Axis of Evil countries crap themselves, open a few McDonald's so that the Axis of Evil can see that freedom can't be stopped, then get home in two months' time and enjoy the cheap oil for ever and ever and ever. A pretty good investment plan indeed. When it works, that is.

      Considering the military strength of Iraq compared to that of Saudi Arabia or Iran and the fact that after so many years the Iraq war is still going (while the oil is apparently not flowing that easily), it was a very wise decision not to try to attack some other country there - the mighty US Army might have been ass-kicked, which is generally an embarrassing thing to a Last Remaining Superpower, I guess.

    80. Re:radical Islamic moderates by smegged · · Score: 1

      It sounds great because there's some implied racism associated with Muslims and Islam but it really rubs me the wrong way. You know what rubs me the wrong way? It is the watering down of language which deprives it of the nuance and subtlety that we need to accurately describe a situation. Your vile, incorrect use of the term "racism" is just that - something which rapes the English language by using a historically meaningful term to describe something completely incorrectly. The only mainstream religion which may possibly have the "racism" term used to describe discrimination against them are the Jewish people as their religion is tied into their ancestory.

      Until people stop equating discrimination based on religion with discrimination based on race, we can never have a sensible discussion on the subject. This stupidity has grown so intense that now in France, you are unable to criticise animal rights violations because of "racism". So instead of criticising the Bush administration for being "racist", take a long hard look at your own massacring of the English language for it is doing more harm to free speech than anything that Bush has ever done. While you're at it, read 1984.
    81. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Free+the+Cowards · · Score: 1

      I have a better idea. How about we not focus on terrorism at all. Terrorism is about as much of a threat to the average person as lightning or sharks. All the evidence I have seen indicates that, monetarily, we have spent orders of magnitude more money in fighting terrorism than we would lose to their attacks. This money could be far better put into saving lives elsewhere, resulting in a net gain for society.

      It truly boggles the mind. To hear the modern Republican talk about it, modern terrorism is worse than the Nazis, who gave a really good try at taking over the world and killed millions of their enemies. To hear them talk about it, modern terrorism is worse than the Warsaw Pact, who threatened us with millions of soldiers, tens of thousands of tanks, and tens of thousands of sophisticated aircraft. To hear them talk about it, modern terrorism is a greater threat than the USSR, who had tens of thousands of nuclear warheads pointed at us for decades, ready to kill 90+% of the population in a fabled "15-minute war".

      It truly defies reason. Somehow the measures which defeated the Germans and the Russians are no longer enough. Somehow a rag-tag group of Arab extremists is a greater threat to the existence of the nation than a supremely determined and heavily armed nuclear superpower. And somehow the Republicans can say all of this with a straight face and people believe them!

      --
      If you mod me Overrated, you are admitting that you have no penis.
    82. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 4, Insightful

      they hate our freedoms!!!

      That's right! They hate our freedom to invade, steal from them, install puppet governemts, tear up the puppet governments and install new ones, blame them for terrorism while remaining really friendly with countries that actuall y produce the terrorists - in fact giving them VIP rights to fly when no one else in the US is allowed to.

      Yep, they hate it that anyone has that kind of freedom.

      --
      I don't therefore I'm not.
    83. Re:radical Islamic moderates by polar+red · · Score: 1

      yes, let's stick with the facts:
      number of deaths on 9/11: 3000+
      number of american deaths in Iraq since war begun: 4000+ (!)
      number of Iraqi deaths since war begun : 1000000+

      MY advice to the US: attacking a country is NEVER a good option (like, say, installing Saddam, and later trying to remove him when he doesn't give enough oil ...)

      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    84. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you are beside the point here, although your replies are valid (and opinionated).

      The bigger point is that by connecting muslim with terrorism you are creating a de facto psychological synonymity between the terms. Look at the way Apple do the same with macs and creativity. It works.

      A bit more obvious though: terrorism is a method not a faith. War on terror is therefore meaningless as anything other than beneficial FUD.

      That the terrorists (in particular) attacking the USA has nothing to do with religion any more than the USA's attack on Iraq has, is pretty clear when you look at the historical motives in play.
      There are American muslims fighting for you in Iraq right?

      Religion helps as a bridge between local interests, just the same way communication itself does. It works as a catalyst.

      That the terrorists in this particular case are mostly from faith A is circumstancial. It is acts that make a terrorist.

      But then I don't buy the axis-of-evil charged terms of some politicians.

    85. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      Well, it was *believed* to be the best strategy based on not much more than guesswork, and certainly not on any real historical data.



      Yeah, right, because there have been no hijackings every before 9/11. Geez, don't you read the paper or watch the news ?



      In most previous organized hijackings, the hijackers were usually heavily armed, and passengers who proved to be a nuisance usually ended up dead on the tarmac during a refueling stop. Heck, there were fairly massive casualties even when planes were stormed by special forces (that have way more firepower than the passengers could bring to bear against the hijackers). There were some instances of passengers overpowering the hijacker, but that usually only happened when there was only a single hijacker, armed with a knife.



      Most people would rather live on their knees than die on their feet, I guess.



      Given the chance, I'd rather "live on my knees" for a short while (hijackings don't last forever, y'know) then be dead forever. A few hours, or even days, don't determine how someone lives.

    86. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      rofl, jesus fucking h christ dude....

      "you think wanting oil is an excuse for the us to start a war and kill ALOT more than 3000 people to save a buck on the fuel-prices?"

      good call, as we all benefit from the historically low oil-prices, and the almost creepy calm in the middle east these days.

    87. Re:radical Islamic moderates by terjeber · · Score: 1

      If you butcher people's families you can bloody well expect them to come and try to kill you right back.

      Absolutely, which is why Mr. Bush is such a terrible president. He doesn't care, and never cared, about 9/11 and the victims of terror. He has never really tried to catch anyone of the people behind that act of terrorism, but we accidentally caught some of them in our token effort to look a little tough in Afghanistan.

      Mr. Bush and his cronies went after Iraq from day one, and Iraq never had any connection to any form of terrorists at all, and no, paying off the families of suicide bombers is not a connection with terrorists, it is a post-fact connection with their families.

    88. Re:radical Islamic moderates by mpe · · Score: 1

      You know what has always pissed me off about McCain and his cohorts (and many others too) when talking about terrorism? Calling it "Islamic terrorism".

      The "Mainstream Media" have been on about this for years, even before "911".

      There's no fricking practical need in the world to throw that "Islamic" adjective on there. It sounds great because there's some implied racism associated with Muslims and Islam but it really rubs me the wrong way.

      It is however popular with Christian, Jewish, Hindu, Sikh, athiest, etc terrorists (and potential terrorists).

      How about we focus on terrorism in general? How about we make it hard for ANYONE to perpetrate terror attacks on our country?

      That would require lots of "backpeddling" on the part of a great many people. There's also the problem that a genuine attempt to deal with terrorists would catch the "wrong sort" of people.

    89. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is insightful? Far more so than your craptastic attempt at a post, that's for sure.

      You think "pissing someone off" is an excuse for them to kill 3000 people by slamming an airplane or two into a building? For large enough values of "pissed off" yes.

      You think "pissing someone off" is an excuse for someone to strap a bomb onto himself and killing a busload of school children and women? See above.

      I'm sorry, but we'll ALWAYS piss someone off just by existing. Well, you're doing a fine job of proving anyone's point but your own.

      It's not an excuse for terrorism. Nobody says it is. Idiot.

      You really don't get that there are degrees of pissed-off-ness, do you?
    90. Re:radical Islamic moderates by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      That's great and all, but you seem to making a logic jump from "Well, we helped Kuwait at some point, and then afterwards the WTC was bombed, by some guy from Kuwait" to "This is just because the bomber wanted to demonstrate his moral superiority."

      The deal is that Osama was upset with the fact that (a) the West was involved in liberating Kuwait. He didn't want non-Islamic forces on Arab soil, and (b) we were "still there" several years after the event. Interestingly, I believe the reasons why the WTC was attached twice are completely different. The first time it was apparently an attempt to get the US out of the region. The second couldn't have been that because Osama had to have known that that wouldn't have been the US reaction. I believe he wanted us in: Osama wants the governments in that region destabilized. Provoking a reaction from the the most powerful country on Earth was a great way to do that.

      No attack on the US has been in any way deserved. But we do blunder by not understanding the politics and motivations of the people who attack us. Sometimes we cause harm. Other times we needlessly create resentment. If we want to get into a position of avoiding terror attacks, the onus is on us to be smart. We need to tackle the terrorists who try to attack us, and we need to do what we can to reduce the risk terrorists will see us as worth attacking in the first place. Unfortunately, for almost eight years, we've had a President and political establishment who was easily manipulated by a tall, bearded, psychopath living in a cave, and it'll be decades, possibly centuries, before we're able to undo the damage.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    91. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      The islamic extremists are poor, weak, and far away.

      Poor? Osama bin Laden is from a wealthy and prestigious family.

      Weak? They have proven themselves quite capable of causing mass casualties.

      Far away? The World Trade Center was in New York City.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    92. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Paranatural · · Score: 1

      Because Bush Jr. wanted to show Daddy he could finish what Daddy started.

      Plus Cheney/Haliburton are making insane money off the deal.

    93. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did it go? "10 kilometers out, do the orders
      still stand,sir?"......"The orders still stand 'til
      I say otherwise! "
      If you don't know what I'm talking about then
      you might as well vote for McCain....or just let
      the voting machines do it for you. This democracy
      is finished.

    94. Re:radical Islamic moderates by mpe · · Score: 1

      While 9/11 still needs lots and lots and lots of re-examination.

      More the case that it needs examination and investigation.

      I don't think it's fair to take the foxnewsbushgovernment version as the truth.

      A fundermental problem is that the whole "Al Quada did it" claim follows the pattern of a "nutjob conspiracy theory".

    95. Re:radical Islamic moderates by instarx · · Score: 1

      They're calling it "Islamic terrorism" because, say, Catholic terrorism, Buddhist terrorism, or atheist terrorism simply aren't problems for the US right now. No, they're calling it "Islamic" because that's a fear-inducing hot-word in an election. There are plenty of other terrorists around that are political and even environmental: Timothy McVey, Ted Kazinsky, and the two DC snipers come easily to mind.
    96. Re:radical Islamic moderates by holt · · Score: 1

      I was presenting an excerpt from the whole thing, and there is other data. What it has to do with it is that it didn't align with her story. Specifically.

      That's fine, I was talking about this specific point. If she lied about the number of partners she has had recently, that affects her credibility. Your original comment presented it like that was the only thing that mattered, which IMO is unfair.

      Also, if you have the semen of several other people on your person, I'm not sure that any evidence of physical trauma can be admitted, and the onus is on her to provide evidence in a criminal case.

      I'm sure it makes it more difficult, but I don't think it would necessarily rule the evidence out as a matter of law. Really, the only thing that the presence of semen indicates is that the pair had sex. It doesn't say anything about consent, whether there is one person's or 20 present.

      ... I think prostitution should be legal...

      Agreed.

      Are we talking explicit consent here? Because if we are, then you are full of shit. Explicit consent is very rarely given, in my experience. I have never raped anyone.

      No, as you point out, consent can be implied. It is, of course, much safer to obtain explicit consent.

      Rape and date rape laws are fucked up. For example:

      1. a drunk man and a drunk woman have sex, both out of a sense of obligation.
        VERDICT: Man date raped woman.
      2. a drunk man and a sober woman have sex, both out of a sense of obligation.
        VERDICT: Man date raped woman.
      3. a sober man and a drunk woman have sex, both out of a sense of obligation.
        VERDICT: Man date raped woman.

      First of all, "drunk" is relative. However, one can be sufficiently drunk so as to be unable to legally give consent. If one legally cannot give consent, then the act is technically rape. Whether the victim interprets things that way or not depend entire on their feelings about the situation.

      In your first case, depending on the relative intoxication levels, different outcomes are possible. I agree that your conclusion is the most likely, but it is by no means foregone.

      In your second case, if the man is sufficiently intoxicated so as to be unable to legally consent to the act, then it is the woman who raped him. These cases are rare, and it is even more rare for them to be reported, but they do happen.

      In your third case, if the woman is sufficiently intoxicated so as to be unable to legally give consent, then the man raped her. Whether she considers it as such is entirely up to her.

      I in fact know a girl who made out with a guy at Eckerd College, and he later went to the provost or whoever and told them he was fucked up on PRESCRIBED MENTAL HEALTH DRUGS and she manipulated him into MAKING OUT WITH HER. She was given a curfew or GTFO, so she stopped going there. Everyone I tell that story thinks it's fucked up. I suspect that most people would be ok with it given a gender reversal. I suspect the only reason it happened at all was the college needed to improve its statistics.

      Making out is not a crime, but private institutions are entitled to establish their own rules. I'm not familiar with Eckerd, but one of my friends went to Oral Roberts in Tulsa, OK, for a semester, and told me that while men were allowed to stay out all night, women had to be in their dorms by 11pm (midnight on weekends). That said, I'm not sure what your story has to do with our discussion about rape, since "tricked into making out" and "forced to have sex against one's will" are two entirely different things.

      If she had "manipulated" him into having sex with her (especially, but not necessarily, if she knew of his mental condition at the time of the event) and he was legally intoxicated (and thus unable to give con

    97. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Mr+Jazzizle · · Score: 1

      Because abortion clinic bombings, enviromentalist attacks et al. (I'm sure you could google for non-muslim terror attacks, there's plenty out there.) aren't problems at all.

      Granted, christians aren't bringing down skyscrapers (Though Oklahoma city bombing was close), but neither have 'muslims,' I'd say that terrorism isn't actually a big issue right now, it's just made out to be.

      If the media just reported some madmen flew airlines into WTC, called it a tragedy and got over it, would we be in this mess right now?

    98. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Deadplant · · Score: 1

      hyperbole like "carpet bombing" and "killing and torturing them"? ... Is all intervention "torture" and "carpet bombing"? That is not hyperbole.
      Only carpet bombing is carpet bombing.
      Only torture is torture.
      I meant nothing beyond the dictionary definitions of those terms.

      Intervention, or invasion does not need to involve either of those things.
      My understanding is that the US refrained from carpet bombing in Iraq(not sure about this) but did not refrain from torturing people.
      We did however carpet bomb Kosovo.
      'We'(Israel) also carpet bombed Lebanon recently.

      Also, you are justifying the removal of Saddam by indicating your abhorrence to his installment. So, what is it? Can we only do nothing? Just to be clear, I made no comment on the invasion of Iraq.
      I honestly do not know how best to deal with nasty dictators. It is an unsupported leap to suggest that I condone or condemn the invasion of Iraq based on my statement that we should not have supported him earlier.
    99. Re:radical Islamic moderates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, like authoritarian neocons...

    100. Re:radical Islamic moderates by nguy · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of other terrorists around that are political and even environmental: Timothy McVey, Ted Kazinsky, and the two DC snipers come easily to mind.

      None of those acted in the name of a religion.

      No, they're calling it "Islamic" because that's a fear-inducing hot-word in an election

      As well it should be. The link between Islam and terrorism, and the link between Islam and anti-democratic movements, is justified. In contrast to Islam, Christian churches, Jews, Buddhists, etc. are not engaged in large scale anti-democratic or anti-US activities.

    101. Re:radical Islamic moderates by nguy · · Score: 1

      If the media just reported some madmen flew airlines into WTC, called it a tragedy and got over it, would we be in this mess right now?

      If the media had done that, they would have been lying. These terrorists were properly called Muslim terrorists because that's how they identified themselves. And we found that that label is justified: their religious texts can be interpreted to justify their actions, they are connected to large Muslim social movements, and they were funded by large Muslim organizations.

      The "mess" we're in is because Bush handled the situation badly. But Bush would have found a way to funnel money to his buddies and cause the US to lose respect internationally no matter what. The problem isn't what the media reported on Iraq, the problem is that we elected a lousy president.

    102. Re:radical Islamic moderates by instarx · · Score: 1

      None of those acted in the name of a religion. That's exactly my freakin' point.
    103. Re:radical Islamic moderates by instarx · · Score: 1

      ... the link between Islam and anti-democratic movements, is justified. In contrast to Islam, Christian churches, Jews, Buddhists, etc. are not engaged in large scale anti-democratic or anti-US activities. You're really buying into that "They hate our freedom" bullshit aren't you? What they really hate are our policies, and maybe our religion. They couldn't care less if our governments are Royal, democracies or dictatorships.

    104. Re:radical Islamic moderates by nguy · · Score: 1

      That's exactly my freakin' point.

      And my point is that the Islamic terrorists did act in the name of a religion: Islam. That's why they are called Islamic terrorists.

  3. And? by Jor-Al · · Score: 1

    So another run-of-the-mill power-hungry politician wants to have no constraints placed on his power when in office. Since when is this news?

    1. Re:And? by polar+red · · Score: 1

      And I thought the republicans stood for small government ? This is actually the biggest government you can have, bordering on an Orwellian Big Brother

      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    2. Re:And? by snl2587 · · Score: 1

      And I thought the republicans stood for small government

      They're supposed to. But these are not the republicans your parents told you about...these are neo-cons.

    3. Re:And? by Jor-Al · · Score: 1

      And I thought the republicans stood for small government ? That's become nothing but a meaningless buzz word in today's political environment.
    4. Re:And? by mR.bRiGhTsId3 · · Score: 1

      McCain is a closet liberal. What you think of as republicanism, I call libertarianism.

    5. Re:And? by uniquename72 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, conservatives stand for small government; Republicans stand for getting Republicans elected.

      At no point in my 36 years have Republicans been any more conservative than Democrats.

    6. Re:And? by Koiu+Lpoi · · Score: 1

      [citation needed]

      I don't know exactly how you're defining "conservative" and "Republican", but this latest batch of canidates shows a pretty clear trend that the Republicans are more to the "Right" than the Democrats. I don't think I need to go digging up much more information to prove my point. Suffice to say, as close as they are at times, the Democrats and Republicans are NOT the same in terms of conservatism.

    7. Re:And? by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

      I don't know exactly how you're defining "conservative" and "Republican" I'm defining "Republican" as someone who is registered or runs as a Republican, and "conservative" as supporting small government and fiscal responsibility.

      And yes, on those terms (which are in fact the basis of conservatism, no matter what Fox News might tell you), neither party is conservative, and are therefore "the same in terms of conservatism."
    8. Re:And? by Koiu+Lpoi · · Score: 1

      Dictionary.com defines conservatism as "Disposed to preserve existing conditions, institutions, etc., or to restore traditional ones, and to limit change." Wikipedia defines it as a "term used to describe political philosophies that favor tradition and gradual change, where tradition refers to religious, cultural, or nationally defined beliefs and customs."
      Using either of those (closely related) definitions, no, they are FAR from the same.

      I think, from now on, you should refer to these people as "Small-government fiscal conservatives", lest your arbitrary definition get confused with the common vernacular.

  4. Business as usual by Armakuni · · Score: 2, Funny

    Seriously, is anyone surprised when a Republican wants to erode civil liberties?

    --
    That's not Picasso, that's Kandinsky!
    1. Re:Business as usual by qoncept · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I am when I'm a rich white man.

      --
      Whale
    2. Re:Business as usual by shawn(at)fsu · · Score: 1

      Funny enough I thought the Republicans were the ones in favor of making it easy for people to get guns... /Couldn't care less who wins, the choice for 2008 looks a heck of a lot better than the last go around.

      --
      500 dollar reward for tip(s) leading to the arrest of the person(s) who stole my sig.
    3. Re:Business as usual by maxume · · Score: 1

      Tuesdays and Thursdays?

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    4. Re:Business as usual by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Seriously, is anyone surprised when a Republican wants to erode civil liberties?

      No. Of course we're also not surprised when a Democrat wants to erode civil liberties. For most people the choice has been which civil liberties are you willing to sacrifice to protect which other civil liberties? Would you like to be able to own firearm for self defense or would you like to be able to read books from the library without the government monitoring you? Pick one or the other... and so on.

    5. Re:Business as usual by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 0, Redundant
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ron_Paul_presidential_campaign%2C_2008

      Proof that mindlessly categorizing a candidate by party affiliation is profoundly stupid.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    6. Re:Business as usual by joocemann · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The subversion of the Constitution and what civil rights we have is happening at an astounding rate and is facilitated by both major parties. I would not blame 'the Republicans' for something that is being methodically enacted with the intent and consent of both parties. It is hard for a person to see the whole when their eyes are closed; please let go of your partisan bias and look at the whole. The whole is simple: The Federal Government is expanding and promoting more power for itself, as facilitated by the politicians who are members of that Government. It is in THEIR best interest to continue to diminish your individual rights so that they can grow. If this 'war' is not apparent yet, you need only to do a brief history review of the lineage of the US Federal Government, noting key points where it has expanded or enacted Federal controls over US Citizens or the States of the Union. Remember, the United States was formed under a concept similar to the EU, a UNION of STATES, with the intent of the States to find self-governance, with little UNION(Federal) interference. ***What we have now is very little states rights and NO transparency, the Federal Government IS the law now, they ARE the rule. Do you see that now? It wasn't always so, and the beginnings of our country show us the America we were supposed to be living in.

    7. Re:Business as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's ironic is that the DMCA and the other nasty acts that are sitting in congress including creating a Kopyright Kops brigade so the RIAA doesn't have to fund its own goons are all made by Democrats.

      Lieberman, who wanted to ban all crypto, forcing PGP 1.0 to be made is/was also a Democrat.

      The Republicans don't have the monopoly on police states. Few people remember Tipper Gore and how much she wanted to censor everything. Anyone remember about '95-'96, the CDA that the Supreme Court tossed out? The bill that made it a 5-20 year crime to say a curse word on any forum that might be read by a child under 18? Its draft was worse... anyone could be liable just by having packets pass THROUGH their network with curse words.

    8. Re:Business as usual by Jor-Al · · Score: 1

      What's ironic is that the DMCA and the other nasty acts that are sitting in congress including creating a Kopyright Kops brigade so the RIAA doesn't have to fund its own goons are all made by Democrats. You mean the act that was introduced to the House by a Republican and passed by Republican-controlled bodies with no resistance from Republicans? You mean that DMCA? Yes, Clinton signed the act, but it originated from Republican sponsors and had almost unanimous support of that party. So trying to paint that one as an act of the Democrats is ludicrous not that they didn't vote for it in just as many numbers, but you have to give credit to where credit is due and that was due to a Republican congressman.
    9. Re:Business as usual by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      It's not always the case that Republicans are pro-gun. Bush himself had said he'd sign the follow-on legislation to the 1994 assault weapons ban if it reached his desk.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
  5. hrm by nawcom · · Score: 0

    What about the radical Christian extremists?

    1. Re:hrm by d3m0nCr4t · · Score: 1

      Parent is right you know. Extremism, on either side, must be avoided.

    2. Re:hrm by KGIII · · Score: 4, Informative

      Probably not a whole lot happened to them but they haven't done much in the way of making the news for violence termed "terrorism" in a long time. This, I suspect, is because they "won" the war, at least for a while. So, well, now we call it just plain war when it is done by the extreme Christians (Fundamental Right Wing Republicans seem to fit the bill nicely) and we call what they do "terrorism."

      Just for the record I don't support either side in this and the above is just my guess so take it as a grain of salt. I just don't see much extremism (from the view of the masses) from the Christians lately but I'd happily see the view that what is going on could be extreme Christan workings specifically the war in Iraq.

      Oh - and if modded troll, well I don't mind. However, this is NOT "Informative." It may be interesting, it may even be insightful, but it surely isn't informative. (I keep getting odd moderations.)

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    3. Re:hrm by Not_Even_Bacteria · · Score: 1

      You mean the ones who are not hung up on careers, properties and toys?

    4. Re:hrm by Hyppy · · Score: 0, Troll

      Timothy McVeigh was a christian.

    5. Re:hrm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Extremism, on either side, must be avoided.

      Avoided, nuthin. We have to wipe out all extremists, anyone with a hint of being one, their families, and their lands! Because that's the, um, moderate thing to do.

    6. Re:hrm by beckje01 · · Score: 1

      Troll? Because its not something you want to hear?

    7. Re:hrm by Decameron81 · · Score: 1

      Oh - and if modded troll, well I don't mind. However, this is NOT "Informative."


      And this is not funny.
      --
      diegoT
    8. Re:hrm by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 1

      Probably not a whole lot happened to them but they haven't done much in the way of making the news for violence termed "terrorism" in a long time. Wasn't McVeigh a Christian?
    9. Re:hrm by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 1

      Because it's irrelevant, and as such, clearly attempting to make a heated argument as it to why it is such a lazy, stupid thing to say?

    10. Re:hrm by HyperQuantum · · Score: 1

      Oh - and if modded troll, well I don't mind. However, this is NOT "Informative."
      And this is not funny. Oh yes it is! (according to some people)
      --
      I am not really here right now.
    11. Re:hrm by HyperQuantum · · Score: 1

      A lot of people apply the label "Christian" to themselves. That does not mean they really deserve to wear it, though.

      Disclaimer: this applies to people in general; I am not judging certain specific people here.

      --
      I am not really here right now.
  6. Yes by daveime · · Score: 1

    Becuse listening to the latest gossip about what Doreen said about Kevin at her sister in law's wedding is such a threat to "national security". Enough already, like Al Kaeda uses anything less than 2048 bit RSA anyway ... 7 years holed up in a cave in Afghanistan, and you useless bastards STILL cant find him :-( First Post ?

    1. Re:Yes by guruevi · · Score: 1

      My tin-foil-hat response to that is: they don't want to find him. They combed the mountains and have any resource from spies and scouts to ulv's, spy-planes and satellites and still can't find him? If they find him, the 'war' would be over and without a war they would lose control through fear over the general populace or start up another one which not a lot of people would like.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    2. Re:Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My tin-foil-hat response is that even if we DID find him, we wouldn't tell anybody about it. Makes more sense that way actually. If we said we got him, the people who like him/work for him would retaliate. If we just grab him, and nobody knows, we get rid of what? 1 of 5000 people capable of doing what he is doing? Yeah that will make a dent... ramble ramble ramble.

  7. Same shit... by bleh-of-the-huns · · Score: 1

    different day

    --
    I came, I conquered, I coredumped
    1. Re:Same shit... by maxume · · Score: 1

      Try eating more vegetables.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  8. Misleading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is very conclusory. McCain says he is going to be consistent with the Constitution, so that means he supports warrantless surveillance? That's quite the logical leap. This statement is completely unclear. He may easily interpret Article II differently than Bush (and there are many indications that he does) and this statement shows nothing different from that.

    Good old Slashdot political smearing.

    1. Re:Misleading by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1
      Six Months Ago:

      Globe: Okay, so is that a no, in other words, federal statute trumps inherent power in that case, warrantless surveillance?
      McCain: I don't think the president has the right to disobey any law.


      Today:

      Well, when the president does it, that means that it is not illegal.


    2. Re:Misleading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read the article, or some of the other articles that have surfaced following this announcement. McCain is saying he supports the Constitution (as he's always said) but he's also saying he supports Bush's interpretation of the law (which is somewhat surprising McCain's past statements regarding telco immunity).
       
      Slashdot is not smearing anyone or jumping to conclusions. This is 100% McCain and 100% newspeak. Again, RTFA.

  9. Terrorism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In simpler words, McCain just admitted to being a terrorist.

  10. and next comes.... by ohzero · · Score: 2, Interesting

    the response from the republican party that reads something like:

    "Supporting article II doesn't necessarily infer that we're willing to arbitrarily wire tap Joe Citizen.."

    and then of course, 3 more months go by, and everyone who is not considered a privacy advocate or a nutjob completely forgets about that they made this statement, the hundreds of others like it from this administration, and the blatant Orwellian nature of the country that we're living in.

    Nothing is going to get resolved without a legislative body, preferably congress, stepping in and saying "no, article II does not mean that, and by the way we're burning the patriot act."

    Dear Democrats, please win.

    Thanks,

    -a guy who likes to talk about guns on the phone, but poses zero threat to national security.

    --
    -- http://www.criticalassets.com
    1. Re:and next comes.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Supporting article II doesn't necessarily infer that we're willing to arbitrarily wire tap Joe Citizen.." From your post, I infer that you may need to bone up on your grammar. This, of course, does not imply that your post is without merit.
    2. Re:and next comes.... by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1

      Before you are so hasty to want the dems to win, remember that Hillary Clinton had FBI files on all of Bill's political enemies. The democrats would be much more likely to use wire tapping for political purposes "in the interest of national security". I am not sure how old you are, but can you remember when the last big gun control push was? It was in 1993. Do you remember who was President? Do you remember who had control of both Houses of Congress? I just always find it an enigma that gun enthusiasts would consider voting for democrats.

      Also, to whoever thinks Bush will invoke the War Powers act to stay in office, let us not forget that the same urban legend went around about Clinton back when Bush took office. As crazy as it is, this is still the USA and when someone wins the election, the current President will let him take office. I think that when the winner takes office this time, the keyboards will have all the letters. (For those of you who are too young to remember, the Clinton staff removed all the "W's" from all the White House computer keyboards.)

    3. Re:and next comes.... by Hatta · · Score: 1


      Dear Democrats, please win.


      Are you really so naive as to think that would help anything? If you remember, the big uproar in congress wasn't that there was warrantless wiretapping, everyone (in congress) agreed that the wiretapping program was necessary. They just got upset because Bush didn't ask for permission first.

      The entire argument was over whether Telcos should be retroactive immunity. There was no argument over whether Telcos should be granted immunity going forward, because everyone agreed they should, democrat and republican.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    4. Re:and next comes.... by purpleraison · · Score: 0, Troll

      I think that when the winner takes office this time, the keyboards will have all the letters. (For those of you who are too young to remember, the Clinton staff removed all the "W's" from all the White House computer keyboards.) My guess is the only reason all the keyboards will have all the letters intact, is because Bush &Co were using Crayons and finger-paint.

      --
      I am open source, and Linux baby!
    5. Re:and next comes.... by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1

      I think the "children" in this case were all the Clintonites who childishly removed all the "W's" from the Keyboards, ripped the phones out of the walls, and were just generally poor sports.

    6. Re:and next comes.... by GreyyGuy · · Score: 1

      For those of you too gullible to fact check what you read, the GAO reported that no such vandalism occurred, and "the condition of the real property was consistent with what we would expect to encounter when tenants vacate office space after an extended occupancy."

      http://archive.salon.com/politics/feature/2001/05/23/vandals/print.html

      But it is a very catchy story. One that people have swallowed even years later.

    7. Re:and next comes.... by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

      I am not sure how old you are, but can you remember when the last big gun control push was? It was in 1993. Do you remember who was President? Do you remember who had control of both Houses of Congress? I just always find it an enigma that gun enthusiasts would consider voting for democrats. Gun control comes up here a lot, so I'll state for the record: I'm a gun owner, and no Democrat has ever (in my lifetime) attempted to take away my guns or prevent me from buying more.

      How a 5-day waiting period or ban on *assault rifles* can be construed as "OMG NAZI DEMS WANNA TAKE MY GUNZ!!1!", I'm not quite sure.

      I also don't get why it's okay for Repubs to tap your phones and lock you up for years without charges, as long as they don't try to take away your guns. Don't all these issues fall under the conservative mantra of "limited government"?

      -conservative non-Republican
    8. Re:and next comes.... by ohzero · · Score: 1

      I guess i'm naive to believe that an administration which has consistently fear mongered its way into passing ridiculous legislation needs to be replaced by one which, at least appears to be diametrically opposed to everything thats been broken already. Oh well...

      --
      -- http://www.criticalassets.com
    9. Re:and next comes.... by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      How a 5-day waiting period or ban on *assault rifles* can be construed as "OMG NAZI DEMS WANNA TAKE MY GUNZ!!1!", I'm not quite sure.

      Because "assault weapon" (not "assault rifle", which the 1994 ban did not cover) is basically an arbitrarily made-up term for "scary black gun". Such weapons are no more deadly than an average 30.06 hunting rifle. The attributes that turn a semi-automatic rifle into an "assault weapon" have nothing to do with how dangerous the gun is, and mostly have to do with making it more comfortable to shoot. It also has little to do with improving crime statistics - I can just as easily punch a hole in a cop with body armor with the Weatherby Vanguard I bought at Wal-Mart as I can with a Rock River AR-15 that costs three times as much, and I can do it from three times the distance. But, because the AR is Parkerized, has a pistol grip and flash hider and *looks* like a military gun, it's somehow much more dangerous. The law was basically a poor attempt to desensitize the populace to the idea of more stringent gun control, and thankfully it failed.

      If you'd lived in New Orleans during Katrina, you wouldn't be able to make the statement about a Democrat not trying to take your guns away.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    10. Re:and next comes.... by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      The current Democratic Congress that replaced the last Republican one also said they were diametrically opposed to what's been going on, and they've done exactly squat about it after having two years to work on it. Republicans and Democrats are equally useless in my book - they're both about promoting their own self-interests on the backs of the populace, and heaven forbid they introduce any legislation that might actually benefit anyone other than their fountains o' funding.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    11. Re:and next comes.... by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1

      To my knowledge, they are only tapping phones of those with ties to the Middle East. I have not heard of any situation where an American Citizen has been dragged fro mhim home and held as you describe. I am generally not into wire tapping, but otherwise, how do you catch these guys before they are able to initiate another attack?

      As far as the waiting period, it is on ALL firearms. Not just assault rifles. The term assault rifles was coined to generate a negative viewpoint on some firearms. They also put restrictions on magazine capacity. You should be aware the liberals use incrementalism to get what they want. They may have changed it, but HCI's ultimate goal is to totally disarm the American Public. Their page used to even include that their latest attack would use product liability laws to do it. They have changed their page since they had that on it and I am not sure what it says now. I am pretty convinced that their end goal is still gun confiscation. They are just using the frog in boiling water approach. You drop the frog in boiling water, he will immediately jump out. If you put him in lukewarm water then slowly turn up the heat, he will stay there and cook.

    12. Re:and next comes.... by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

      To my knowledge, they are only tapping phones of those with ties to the Middle East. This isn't at all my understanding. They've admitted to listening to "international" phone calls, which includes the whole world outside of the U.S., not just the Middle East. And since there hasn't been a serious investigation, and the folks involved have been less than forthcoming, both of our statements are equally (in)valid.
    13. Re:and next comes.... by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

      Nothing you've said even begins to imply that my guns were in danger of being taken away. So a few were taken off the market (which I agree was obviously arbitrary). So what? There are still thousands of guns -- of all types -- available to choose from. Those in my home 15 years ago are still in my home, and no lawmaker has made any attempt to remove them from my home.

      Please enlighten me as to the Democrat who wanted to take away peoples' guns during Katrina.

  11. McFlipFlop by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 4, Informative
    This flip flop took longer than usual. He usually changes position within a couple of days.

    McCain, spying and executive power: A complete reversal in 6 months

    --
    You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    1. Re:McFlipFlop by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm often positively impressed when politicians change their minds, assuming they did it because they learned more about the issue. I'm not impressed with McCain's descent into the bowels of extreme right wing Bushism because he's done it to appease extremist voters to his own benefit.

      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
    2. Re:McFlipFlop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I can't remember where I heard it... but one of the things that makes a good leader is that they have "strong opinions which are weakly held".

      They are clear in what they believe and in what to do, but they will change their mind if they find something that makes them think that they are wrong.

    3. Re:McFlipFlop by mojo-raisin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As a libertarian conservative, I hope McCain goes down in raging flames. I fucking hate neo-cons and am looking forward to destruction of the republican party.

      My loathing of social conservative, do-gooder, busybodies is beyond my dislike of the socialist tendencies of Obama.

      McCain is such an obvious fear-mongering asshole. Such a condescending prick. How the fuck are republicans impressed by that shitbag?

    4. Re:McFlipFlop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obama and Hillary both have no real stance on anything. They just say whatever they think will get them votes at the time.

    5. Re:McFlipFlop by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      but they will change their mind if they find something that makes them think that they are wrong.

      Like votes?

    6. Re:McFlipFlop by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

      If I had mod points, I would give them to you while giving you a backrub and performing a reach-around. You have accurately summed up the thoughts of actual conservatives everywhere (what few of us still exist in the U.S., anyway).

    7. Re:McFlipFlop by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      It's disappointing that this is modded flamebait when it represents how a lot of people feel. Guess some people aren't grown-up enough to moderate objectively.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    8. Re:McFlipFlop by syousef · · Score: 1

      I'm often positively impressed when politicians change their minds, assuming they did it because they learned more about the issue. I'm not impressed with McCain's descent into the bowels of extreme right wing Bushism because he's done it to appease extremist voters to his own benefit.

      Ah yes he's a 'bad' politician because he changed his mind to suit his own agenda, as opposed to 'good' politicians who do it out of the goodness of their hearts and because they're convinced by a logical argument?

      Being a politician is about being the most popular candidate by any means available to you. No shit they have their own agendas. I think you'll find the ones that changed their minds for the right reason just were the ones that actually succeeded in conning you.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  12. Unfortunately... by ah.clem · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    "Four more years, four more years!"

    Sigh.

    Ah.clem

    --
    "Life is not magic." Dr. Ron Weiss - "If we don't play God, who will?" Dr. James Watson
    1. Re:Unfortunately... by Shellbear · · Score: 1, Insightful

      1. McCain will not be 4 more years of Bush. He is more liberal than Bush ever was.
      2. Obama will be 4 more years of Jimmy Carter, and we all know how well that went...

    2. Re:Unfortunately... by 2short · · Score: 1

      1. In the last 2 years, McCain voted for the the Administration position 100% of the time. He talks up "maverick", but he supports Bush every time it matters.
      2. I'm sure Republicans will declare Obama the same as Carter just because he's the least popular Democrat they can remember. But in saying "we all know" how well that went, you ignore that Carter was so long ago a large fraction of voters weren't even born yet. As far as boogeymen, you've got an unpopular Democratic president hazily remembered even by the older of us up against a Republican sitting in the Whitehouse. Who is right now the least popular President ever. We all know how Carter went? Yeah, and he was much more popular than Bush.

      Sorry, but in the "He'll be just like..." sweepstakes, the Republicans are fracked. Hard. Which looks to me to be the theme of this election in general.

    3. Re:Unfortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No results found for FRACKED.
      Did you mean FUCKED (in dictionary) or FUCKED (in ass)?

  13. grr, forgot link by Goobergunch · · Score: 3, Informative
  14. Obama's Stance by eldavojohn · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Barack seems to vote to update FISA to support the ACLU's desires to banish Telecom Immunity.

    If you want to read it from his site, there's a pdf that explains:

    Revise the PATRIOT Act: Barack Obama believes that we must provide law enforcement the tools it needs to investigate, disrupt, and capture terrorists, but he also believes we need real oversight to avoid jeopardizing the rights and ideals of all Americans. There is no reason we cannot fight terrorism while maintaining our civil liberties. Unfortunately, the current administration has abused the powers given to it by the USA PATRIOT Act. A March 2007 Justice Department audit found the FBI improperly and, in some cases, illegally used the PATRIOT Act to secretly obtain personal information about American citizens. As president, Barack Obama would revisit the PATRIOT Act to ensure that there is real and robust oversight of tools like National Security Letters, sneak-and-peek searches, and the use of the material witness provision.

    Strengthen Warrantless Wiretap Approval Process: Barack Obama opposed the Bush Administrationâ(TM)s initial policy on warrantless wiretaps because it crossed the line between protecting our national security and eroding the civil liberties of American citizens. As president, Obama would update the Foreign Intelligence Paid for by Obama for America Surveillance Act to provide greater oversight and accountability to the congressional Intelligence Committees to prevent future threats to the rule of law. And another that goes on to say:

    Eliminate Warrantless Wiretaps. Barack Obama opposed the Bush Administrationâ(TM)s initial policy on warrantless wiretaps because it crossed the line between protecting our national security and eroding the civil liberties of American citizens. As president, Obama would update the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act to provide greater oversight and accountability to the congressional intelligence committees to prevent future threats to the rule of law. I'd say (even from a few of his voting records) that he is against it for the most part. Or at the very least, revising it severely.

    Doesn't really matter in a two party system though, does it? Take what you can get over the crap I read about in this article from McCain's campaign.
    --
    My work here is dung.
  15. He just lost my vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've voted for Democratic presidents for many years, but was considering McCain. Not any more.

  16. Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by spun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They were the best boogie-man ever. The Islamists may, eventually, someday, get nukes. The USSR had enough nukes to sterilize the planet. And a huge conventional army. And chemical and biological weapons galore. As far as keeping the populace pissing itself in fear and doing whatever the authorities tell them to, Islamists just don't hold a candle to our dear former enemies, the Soviets. Well, I suppose they'll have to do until the authorities can cook up something scarier.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    1. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by tritonman · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      don't worry, there is always global warming to be the next big boogie man.

    2. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I suppose they'll have to do until the authorities can cook up something scarier.

      How about... Canada?

    3. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by gnick · · Score: 2, Insightful

      don't worry, there is always global warming to be the next big boogie man. Yes but, after we've loaded our troops into their APCs, boats, and planes, where do we send them to fight that?
      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    4. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Kjella · · Score: 1

      They were the best boogie-man ever. The Islamists may, eventually, someday, get nukes. The USSR had enough nukes to sterilize the planet. And a huge conventional army. And chemical and biological weapons galore. As far as keeping the populace pissing itself in fear and doing whatever the authorities tell them to, Islamists just don't hold a candle to our dear former enemies, the Soviets. The Soviet Union was a good threat of war - all out war - but it didn't make people fear soviet troops blowing up the corner store. Terrorists are no threat to the US as such, but in terms of making people fear they own life I think they've done as well as the Soviets if not better.
      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    5. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by joocemann · · Score: 1

      This isn't informative, it is ignorance. Man's impact on the environment of the earth is extensively proven in science and should not be discarded as a 'boogie man' or any other branding of false alert. Tritonman: Please, go learn.

    6. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Samgilljoy · · Score: 1

      I do miss the Cold War sometimes. I mean, James Bond plots are just lame as hell post-Iron Curtain.

    7. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Bearpaw · · Score: 2, Funny

      Right, because we all know how dangerous those radical extremist climatologists are.

      At least there are a few brave multi-national corporations standing up to defend us from scientists and their deadly knowledge, despite how desperately short of cash and political influence those corporations always are.

    8. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      Having studied both terrorist doctrine and soviet doctrine (OK, so I joined after the fall of the SU, so sue me), I have to say radical islamic extremism is scarier for two main reasons.

      One, the Soviets fought like they trained and trained in the open. We knew with exquisite precision how an infantry division would form up in rough terrain in the attack, or an armor brigade would form up in the defense, etc etc. Terrorist groups vary too much and adapt too fast to really know what they're up to or what they're going to do next.

      Two, the Soviets were not hell-bent on annihilating us, contrary to what many would have you believe in the days of McCarthy. Radical Islamic groups, OTOH, have stated they will not stop, "until the flag of Islam flies over the White House," as more than one terrorist leader has put it. They have vowed to use biological, chemical, and nuclear weapons to those ends and seem to be following through on those promises.

      I'm no fan of the Patriot Act and other encroachments on our rights to privacy, but I genuinely believe these things are done because of a very real threat. Fight warrantless domestic surveillance. But don't think for a second the threat isn't real.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    9. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by spun · · Score: 1

      That simply won't work. First, the solution doesn't enrich anyone in power. What's the point? Second, it won't scare the populace enough. Third, it won't get people angry. In short, the threat of global warming will do nothing to keep the populace frightened and in check, and it works counter the interests of people currently in power.

      Please try to think these things through.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    10. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope that gets modded Funny. The fact that it's insightful is just too damn sad.

    11. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ...where do we send them to fight that?

      I'm thinking Aruba, armed with gaudy print shirts and mai tais.
      After all the shit they been through recently, they deserve a break.

    12. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by mojo-raisin · · Score: 1

      I seriously want Iran and the other Islamic nations to get nukes. If they have nukes, then we won't invade them, and we can avoid another insane war.

    13. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by joocemann · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Blow my dick, theotard. The truth is evident, whether your limited mind can handle it or not.

    14. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

      We have always been at war with the terroristic radical Islamic extremists

    15. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by spun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't think for a millisecond that the threat is real. We've lost more Americans to lightning strikes than we have to terrorism. You've a better chance of winning the lottery than getting killed by a terrorist. Terrorism is a matter for law enforcement, not the military.

      The threat is manufactured, those in power know exactly what they are doing. It's all laid out by right wing think tanks in a plan called The Project for a New American Century

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    16. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm.... let's see what this fortune cookie has to say about "cooking up something scarier".

    17. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by daveime · · Score: 1

      And you should learn that correlation does noty impy causation asshole.

      I don't know the exact percentage, but circa 50% of all methane in our atmosphere is caused by cows farting ... do you advocate the mass culling of cows to sustain gaia ???

    18. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by daveime · · Score: 1

      does not imply causation ... damn spell checker :-(

    19. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Zymergy · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Don't count out Russia yet as a possible US foe... Most of the Nuclear fuel used by the US Navy currently comes from Russian Nuclear Weapons we purchase and reprocess. They could always choose another buyer...

      The Boogie-Man that worries me: China ANGRY...
      China will someday become Very Oil-Deprived, Over-Populated, Starving, and desperately needing to maintain their economy with the fruits of Oil. (this could very well happen...)

      Realize we are in the middle of what Historians are already calling "The Oil Age".
      Even the Big Oil Companies themselves are agreed that the halfway point of "Peak Oil" production is now. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peak_oil

      The world economy is based on a substance (Oil) that yields 100x the energy used to extract it, and modify it, and market it.
      There is NO alternative to Oil other than NUCLEAR that can compete on that ~100x cost/benefit yield concept. When it starts going very scarce wars will happen. This is the nature of man.
      I am no expert, but me thinks the 'war in Iraq' and the over 12+ 'permanent' military bases being built there ( http://www.fcnl.org/iraq/bases.htm ) and the 100+ Acre US Embassy ( http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12319798/ ) are what I call "Prudent Planning".

      Like it or not, the world as we know it is built on OIL.
      I for one, am glad we have established a new good footing in the middle of old Babylon ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babylon ), because we are going to surely need it in the future when the oil wars REALLY get underway. (And in fact, the US presence being there will likely prevent larger wars and ensure that what wars do occur, will be as small as we can cause them to be. It's the big Picture.

      McCain did volunteer and serve and sacrifice in our military for our country with honors during the Cold War.
      He will bring to the presidential desk wisdom, knowledge, and experience which no other candidate can begin to claim they have in this election.
      The next president Must understand how to lead our military and how utilize it to best protect our economy and people and mitigate larger wars that are very very likely when Oil runs out.

    20. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by db32 · · Score: 1

      Sure, because there will be nothing to invade. That has got to be one of the most blind and ignorant things I have heard and I do hope you weren't serious. Look, I think the saber rattling is bullshit, I think this administration has gone WAY past its limits in terms of executive power. But I have no doubt in my mind that Iran's leadership is even more psychotic than our own (which says a frightening amount).

      Bush has already begged and pleaded for small nukes he can use at will without triggering WWIII. Do you seriously want some crazy fuck bastards to get the bomb, toss one at Israel. Israel will likely retaliate (or what is left) and then we toss some at Iran because our trigger happy administration is begging to use nukes. Then I imagine China and Russia would get involved since they have pretty large interests in Iran and then oh yeah..no more war because everyone is a nice pile of radioactive dust.

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    21. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Gat0r30y · · Score: 1

      until the authorities can cook up something scarier. may I suggest the super devil? his marmalade that causes you to commit adultery is just bad ass.
      --
      Prediction: The real iPhone killer is going to be sex robots from Japan. Think about it.
    22. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Tetsujin · · Score: 1

      In Soviet Russia, they had many weapons and a large army!

      --
      Bow-ties are cool.
    23. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by surmak · · Score: 1

      And that is exactly why we need to declare a war on global warning. No one will be hurt, and we (and future generations) may all come out better in the long run.

    24. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by sconeu · · Score: 1

      That's OK. *EVERYONE* on Slashdot joined after the fall of the SU. Slashdot was started in '97, while the SU collapsed in '91.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    25. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by VindictivePantz · · Score: 1

      There are a few differences:

      - The Soviets were not known for suicide bombing, using women, children, and mentally and physically handicapped as bomb carriers
      - Mutually assured destruction kept the threat in-check; the lack of a border and recognized governmental entity means this does not apply to terrorist groups
      - The Soviets were not driven by religious fanaticism, and could be reasoned with (except for Yakov Smirnov)

    26. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      IMHO, the biggest danger during the Soviet era was stupidity. The Russians weren't about to start WW3 on purpose, but if they (or us) mistook a flock of geese for armed missles, the world would have been doomed.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    27. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by oodaloop · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Regardless of what conservatives think, and regardless of the casualties SO FAR, Al Qaeda is in fact actively trying to build multiple nuclear weapons. We KNOW they have already acquired the weapons-grade uranium, and are simply working on the devices themselves and logistics. Care to guess what the casualties will be when they detonate one or more nuclear weapons in major cities in the U.S. and other western nations? I'm guessing more than lightning strikes.

      Terrorism was a law enforcement issue under the Clinton administration, and it was a total disaster. We were not able to stop attacks, merely prosecute people after they already attacked. State sponsorship was not pursued in domestic terrorist attacks. Leads were lost. When it is a law enforcement issue, all we can do is arrest people when they break the law. When it is an intelligence issue (not military), we can track bad guys and stop attacks. This doesn't necessarily mean we use intrusive and warrantless measures. Most of these people are non-U.S. citizens to begin with.

      In the case of the first WTC attack in 1993, state sponsorship was not pursued. Evidence the CIA needed to show links back to Iraq was held by the FBI as evidence in court and was unreleasable. Meanwhile, Abdul Rahman Yasin, who admitted to mixing chemicals for the bomb, fled back to Iraq using his Iraqi passport with the help of the Iraqi government. The Clinton administration did nothing. It's because of cases like this as well as 9/11 that terrorism became an intelligence matter vice a law enforcement matter in the Bush administration.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    28. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      No, I meant the Marine Corps where I served as an intelligence analyst.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    29. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by VindictivePantz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure, more people die in car accidents, etc. than terrorist attacks.

      One of the fundamental goals of a terrorist is to evoke change in society. If a few hundred people a year were killed by terrorist car bombing, mall shootings, etc., in the continental US, think of the phsycological impacts.
      People were wound tight after a uniquely over-the-top attack on 9/11. Imagine what it would be like if the average Joe or Jane started to worry about IEDs made to look like a pile of garbage next to the expressway on their way to work.

      Allowing a very small contingent of people to hold a sword of Damocles over the head of a given society does more harm to societal operations and evolution than lightning strikes or car accidents, and they have to be dealt with proactively (militarily, economically, diplomatically, etc.) Doing so after an attack lets the terrorists achieve their objective - terror.

    30. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      do you advocate the mass culling of cows to sustain gaia ???

      Well, vegans might, but for the rest of us, maybe if we stopped feeding them corn their digestive system might work better and produce less gas and as an added benefit, we'll get to eat less e.coli O157:H7.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    31. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I suppose they'll have to do until the authorities can cook up something scarier.

      already working on it: it's the authorities themselves.

    32. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by beckje01 · · Score: 1

      do you advocate the mass culling of cows to sustain gaia ???
      I vote yes to mass culling of cows, but I would like to advocate we kill them by cutting their hearts out on top of the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan. Thus making use of the Aztecs' knowledge of world sustaining.
    33. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Kenrod · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      First, the solution doesn't enrich anyone in power.

      Please try to think things through.

      --
      Good heavens Miss Sakamoto - you're beautiful!
    34. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by WiseWeasel · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, cases such as Jose Padilla, among others, demonstrate that this administration has been incapable of restraining themselves to non-US citizens, and has set incredibly destructive precedents for thought-crime-type cases of incarceration for theoretical planned acts of US citizens. Who knows whether any of the suspects would have actually carried out any attacks, and the evidence surrounding the cases is invariably kept concealed. This is so incredibly prone to abuse, that even if it has only been used responsibly until now (for which there is little publicly available evidence), it's still unacceptable to create this framework for abuse of US citizens, or of innocent non-US citizens as well. Unless these suspects are caught in the act of initiating their attack, with public evidence thereof, it's completely unconscionable to be holding people for suspicions of future actions, when they might very well have chickened out or changed their mind before they got to the point of carrying out their attack. I hate to be one of those 'Minority Report' type guys comparing everything to a movie, but this is nothing short of pre-crime persecution for theoretical criminal acts, with a massive potential for false positives and abuse of power.

      --
      "I like systems, their application excepted", George Sand (French)
    35. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by spun · · Score: 1

      Oh, please. All those highly paid climate scientists are just swimming in money compared to the poor beleaguered boards and CEOs of megacorporations who pollute. Yes, the climate scientists have all the power.

      If you were attempting to make a point other than 'the rich and powerful climate scientists are gonna make out like bandits,' then I apologize and humbly ask: what the fuck were you trying to say?

      If you were saying, 'the solution to global warming will make the rich richer,' then I beg to differ. It will be small start ups that profit the most from alternative energy and climate control programs.

      But I doubt that was what you were trying to say. I suspect that you are one of the sadly deluded idiots who think that global warming is some kind of left wing money and power grab.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    36. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      The USSR had enough nukes to sterilize the planet. Yeah, but like in the Sting song, it turned out the Russians loved their children, too.

      The radical Islamists encourage *their* children to blow themselves up.

      I'm no supporter of the current War On Terror, but can you see the difference here?

    37. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by spun · · Score: 1

      Fortune say, "Chinese will not attack what they already own... in bed!"

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    38. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      I agree that what we did to Padilla was wrong. He should have been tried in court. BTW, I hope you know one doesn't have to actually be caught in a crime to be charged. One could be charged with conspiracy to commit a crime, which has the same punishment as the crime itself. IANAL, but conspiracy is the planning of a crime with one or more other people. If you get pulled over in your car with a buddy, and you have loaded guns, ski masks, bags, and a map to a bank, you're probably going to face charges for conspiracy to commit armed robbery. Padilla came back to the states with plans for a dirty bomb after meeting known terrorists in Afghanistan. I don't think it's too much to ask that he be charged with conspiracy to commit murder in court and let a judge sort it out, not rot in jail without a lawyer or charges being pressed. Charging people with conspiracy to commit a crime may sound like "pre-crime persecution" to you, but this has been a staple of the American judicial system long before Bush and 9/11.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    39. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by ady1 · · Score: 1

      Soviets were an enemy you could locate on a world map. The so called Radical Islamist are a phantom enemy. Its much easier to cause fear by an enemy which you can't see (and doesn't exist) and yet is told be be all around you and watching your every move.

    40. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by dave562 · · Score: 1
      I'm no fan of the Patriot Act and other encroachments on our rights to privacy, but I genuinely believe these things are done because of a very real threat. Fight warrantless domestic surveillance. But don't think for a second the threat isn't real.

      Look at where the threat really came from. Look how much support truly radical Islamists have within their society. If you believe the propaganda coming out of Iraq, the US government has been able to find support among the Sunni's to fight al Qaeda because moderate, mainstream Sunni's didn't like the radical form of Islam that al Qaeda was trying to hoist upon their society.

      Where did al Qaeda come from? The US government built it to fight the Soviets. They worked together with the Pakistani ISI to make it happen. Where does al Qaeda get its propaganda from? It gets it from the United States having permanent bases in the Middle East.

      Some people are so narrow minded and short sighted. If we agreed to trade for what we are currently taking with force, the world would be more peaceful. If we made it known that we were using peaceful means to compete for the resources but were going to annihilate any al Qaeda supporters in the event of a nuclear attack on the United States, we'd be right back where we were with the former USSR. Sure, al Qaeda could talk about the evil United States all day long, but so long as we weren't overthrowing popularly elected leaders (Iran 1953), playing Arab nations against each other (Iraq versus Iran, ~1980s) and supporting apartheid like conditions (Palestine, right now), the rhetoric would be empty. If, heaven forbid they actually did detonate a nuke in the United States and then we retaliated by levelling Syria or Iran or something, we would be in the right because we didn't strike first.

      I'm not saying that there aren't crazy people out there. Crazy people can be contained and their support can be taken away. Al Qaeda gets support because they have legitimate gripes, namely that the United States is intefering in the internal affairs of Muslim nations.

      Do you really think Iran is going to nuke Israel? It's mutually assured destruction all over again. Do you really think the Arabs are going to detonate an nuke right next to Palestine, the very land that they are fighting to "save" from the Jews?

    41. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by joocemann · · Score: 1

      And you should learn that correlation does noty impy causation asshole. I don't know the exact percentage, but circa 50% of all methane in our atmosphere is caused by cows farting ... do you advocate the mass culling of cows to sustain gaia ??? There is more than correlative evidence, the evidence is conclusive. The people, including yourself, that attempt to diminish this fact, have provided no serious factual evidence, usually resorting to fallacies (as you have done). Nice red-herring, but I'll have a full order of Truth instead, but thanks for offering it.
    42. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by sconeu · · Score: 1

      Cool. Semper Fi, sir!

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    43. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by WiseWeasel · · Score: 1

      As long as the evidence is convincing to a jury of my peers, I have no problems with 'conspiracy to commit' prosecutions. It's when evidence is withheld from the public, or when there is questionable jury selection and following of due process that we must draw the line. Military tribunals are totally out of the question for US citizens, and are highly controversial for foreign nationals as well, if conducted with their typical level of secrecy. Transparency is the best tool we can use to diffuse the tension between security and the rule of law in this country and abroad.

      --
      "I like systems, their application excepted", George Sand (French)
    44. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      If you believe the propaganda coming out of Iraq, the US government has been able to find support among the Sunni's to fight al Qaeda because moderate, mainstream Sunni's didn't like the radical form of Islam that al Qaeda was trying to hoist upon their society. It is to laugh! Propaganda, huh? I was personally involved with providing intelligence to, um, unconventional units that tracked down AQI/ISI (Al Qaeda in Iraq/ Islamic State of Iraq). I followed Awakening movements (Sahwa, or Sahawa), which we later called Sons of Iraq for some unknown reason. And I can tell you there really are Iraqi Sunnis that are rejecting Al Qaeda's grip on their communities and are fighting back, quite successfully in some areas.

      Where did al Qaeda come from? The US government built it to fight the Soviets. Well, we funded some mujahadin who later turned their attention to us. But we didn't "build" it. In any case, what's your point? Some of our allies in the past are now our enemies and vice versa. So what?

      Al Qaeda gets support because they have legitimate gripes, namely that the United States is intefering in the internal affairs of Muslim nations. Higher on their list of gripes is our support of Israel, the plight of Palestine, our presence in Saudi Arabia, not to mention the fact that Saudi Arabia asked us to push Saddam out of Kuwait and not UBL's Mujahadin. The war in Iraq is their latest excuse to kill Americans. When we leave, they will continue to find ways to kill us, as long as we both exist.
      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    45. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Omestes · · Score: 1

      Not refuting you, just addressing a question I've had for some time;

      If Padilla was fighting against the US as part of an organized effort, wouldn't that invalidate his citizenship? After this happened I looked at the small print on my passport, and it had words to that effect.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    46. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by dave562 · · Score: 1
      It is to laugh! Propaganda, huh? I was personally involved with providing intelligence to, um, unconventional units that tracked down AQI/ISI (Al Qaeda in Iraq/ Islamic State of Iraq). I followed Awakening movements (Sahwa, or Sahawa), which we later called Sons of Iraq for some unknown reason. And I can tell you there really are Iraqi Sunnis that are rejecting Al Qaeda's grip on their communities and are fighting back, quite successfully in some areas.

      You further emphasized my point for me. Al Qaeda is so radical that even the majority of Sunni's don't like their oppressive form of Islam. And yes, it is propaganda. It may be propaganda based in fact, but it is propaganda... information released with the intent of influencing discourse about the war.

      Saudi Arabia asked us to push Saddam out of Kuwait and not UBL's Mujahadin

      The point that I was making to the OP was that Iraq wouldn't have invaded Saudi Arabia. The only reason Saddam went into Kuwait was because he believed that he had implicit permission from our government, which he did. He asked the Ambassador what the position of the United States was in regards to Kuwait, and the Ambassador replied that the United States did not consider Kuwait to be of any interest to the United States. Then he invaded, and suddenly we had a reason to villify Saddam as the first step to gaining control over the petroleum resources of Iraq.

      Well, we funded some mujahadin who later turned their attention to us. But we didn't "build" it. In any case, what's your point?

      My point is that the government created the very "problem" that they are now telling us to worry about. My point is that the bigger picture is that our government is creating our problems with a fucked up foreign policy. We've been terrorizing the Middle East since the end of WW2. It's okay for us to "fight them over there", but if "Islamic Extremists" want to come fight us over here in America then they are in the wrong? Violence begets violence, it is as simple as that. We spend $300 million a day in Iraq, killing civilians and further inciting violence that will fuel hatred of the United States as foreign occupiers for generations. That $300 million a day could be spent on better, more effective long term solutions. In any situation, the best defense is to befriend your enemies. Unfortunately the United States government isn't interested in peace. They are interested in the balance of power.

    47. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      One might even go so far to say that the perceived threat of terrorism is such that it's making people more accepting of the idea of a much more extensive armed government presence in their everyday lives, because it will "protect them".

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    48. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      Al Qaeda is so radical that even the majority of Sunni's don't like their oppressive form of Islam. What the Iraqi Sunnis really don't like about AQI is their penchant for killing innocent Iraqis along with Americans. By and large, it is not anything religious.

      It may be propaganda based in fact, but it is propaganda... information released with the intent of influencing discourse about the war. I am utterly baffled by this statement. There are Sahwa movements. The government can either factually report on their existence and be vilified for promulgating propaganda, or they can refuse to report on them and be vilified for withholding information. Is there any course of action the government could take where you WOULDN'T vilify them?

      My point is that the government created the very "problem" that they are now telling us to worry about. Sure, hindsight armchair generals like yourself can point out this was a bad idea, but how was anyone at the time supposed to know what would happen? The stinger missiles we gave them had a very short lifespan (on purpose) so they wouldn't be able to stockpile them and use them against us. But no one seriously expected a bunch of ragged goat-herders to wage an unrelenting global war on us.

      Violence begets violence, it is as simple as that. That may be true. If you punch me, and I have reason to believe you're going to do it again, I'll you hit you back so hard you won't ever consider punching me again. So violence begets violence. Do you have something else in mind that can stop violence? We are facing a group of supremely dedicated individuals, who will resort to anything, including suicidal bombings, to kill any and all Americans, who will not stop until there is no more America. Besides violence, what will stop them? Peace signs? Well-wishing? A promise of change?
      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    49. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by WiseWeasel · · Score: 1

      That's only applicable if you join a foreign armed forces and fight against the US, which is not the case with Jose Padilla. Trying to apply that mechanism for citizenship nullification to cases such as Padilla's is an extremely slipper slope, as any organization can be declared 'terrorist', and participants stripped of their constitutional rights. No, Padilla should have gotten his fair trial.

      --
      "I like systems, their application excepted", George Sand (French)
    50. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Software · · Score: 1

      Oil will never run out, but it will get more expensive because of reduced supply (more difficult and expensive to extract) and the same or increased demand. The world has probably exhausted its supply of $100 / barrel oil; it will be a while before it exhausts its supply of $200 / barrel oil. But you're probably right in that wars will start over scarcity of (cheap) oil. I think they'll start with food prices first, but the price of food is dependent on the price of oil, anyway. I don't know if having bases in the Middle East will help the U.S. a lot, especially if the wars go nuclear.

      All the more reason to begin changing our energy supply to nuclear now. There's no reason we couldn't be driving around in electric-powered cars that get their energy from nuclear. But this won't happen until it's cheaper to do so than to drive around in fossil-fuel-powered cars.

    51. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by tiqui · · Score: 1

      Yeah, right, I really miss all those Russian suicide bombers and that empire whose fanatical leaders thought the world had to end for their utopia to arise...

      The intentions of the guy with a weapon are always FAR more important than the capabilities of the weapon.

    52. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i heard recently that due to the increased price of corn, livestock farmers are starting to go back to the practice of grazing. (cows, eating grass? preposterous!)

      even if ethanol (from corn) turns out to be a dead end, it may still have some worthwhile side effects.

    53. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The USSR, with its massive standing army, many heavily armored divisions, and massive air power, not to mention huge nuclear arsenal, were not enough to cause the US to adopt torture and secret laws and secret police.

      But the nasty sneaky Sunni terrorists (without nukes) that the CIA trained in Afghanistan, they are enough for the US to adopt torture, terror as general policy, secret laws, and secret police.

      Conclusion?

      The CIA-sponsored terrorists are so scary that we need to torture and spy on our own people.

      Ya, that makes sense...

    54. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So violence begets violence. Do you have something else in mind that can stop violence? The point, which you are skillfully avoiding, is that the violence done by America (and before them other imperial powers) to the region, including redrawing the boundaries in the first place (GB) and installing puppet governments (US), and funding brutal dictatorships like those of the Shah and Saddam, Musharaf, and Saudi Arabia (US), has provoked the visceral hatred many people feel for American interference, and the desire to see you leave, for good.

      Sure, hindsight armchair generals like yourself can point out this was a bad idea, but how was anyone at the time supposed to know what would happen? Because of all the previous examples of exactly the same thing happening?

      The point being made is that these groups of dedicated individuals draw their support and motivation from the abuse (economic, military, civic) of American power in the region. From the military bases and puppet governments. Changing the abusive relationship the US has with the rest of the world would do a lot to remove the base of their support. Abusing more countries in the region with a violent occupation will only cause more problems. If the US believed in democracy or freedom or any of the other purported reasons for being in Iraq they wouldn't support the appalling regime in Saudi Arabia (the source of many terrorists), or have supported the Shah, etc etc.

      What would you do if your country was occupied by a foreign force which imposed martial law and built military bases, and worst of all allowed the rule of the gun to take over your streets - would you sit back and take it? Would you feel well disposed to that country or her citizens?

      PS The only unrelenting global war is the one being waged by the US against an elusive enemy, whose best chance at global influence is to bait you into as many unwinnable occupations as possible. Seems to be working so far.
    55. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      OK, so we helped brutal dictatorships at various points of our past. Before moving on to the next point, let me just say there only a few options for dealing with brutal dictatorships, and we've been hated for doing them all. We can support them (both in the name of stability and because our interests may align), we can ignore their abuses and do nothing, we can use empty words to decry their actions, and we can force their demise. We've done them all and been hated no matter what. When we stay out of internal affairs, we're hated for not doing something to help one side or the other. When we step in, we're hated for siding with someone and meddling with internal affairs. Considering the ill consequences of the other options, sometimes the best thing to do is probably just support dictatorships until they collapse on their own. Which option do you think we should do?

      Now, in the case of AL Qaeda you say we should have realized what would happen when we helped the Mujahadin because of what happened when we supported the Shah et al. In the case of Afghanistan, we were trying to PREVENT a brutal dictatorship, namely the Soviet Union. We did not violently occupy them; we were trying to stop a violent occupation. What should we have done instead? Done nothing to help freedom fighters as they fought the bigger enemy in a key part of the world? In the case of Iraq, I think you're mostly right. We should leave. A unified and stable Iraq will be able to fight us better than what they've got right now. We should let Al Qaeda and Iran fight it out without us. That being said, the situation over there is actually MUCH better than what your news is depicting.

      PS The global war on terror only started when we started paying attention. Al Qaeda attacked us regularly during the Clinton years, and we did nothing. UBL himself said he needed to conduct 9/11 because Americans wouldn't listen to anything else. YOU are what he is talking about. No matter what we do, they are going to try to kill us. Instead of feeling sorry for ourselves and apologizing for the mistakes of the past, we need to realize we are at war.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    56. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you meant "best bogey-man ever". John Travolta was the best boogie-man ever.

    57. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by dave562 · · Score: 1
      The point, which you are skillfully avoiding, is that the violence done by America (and before them other imperial powers) to the region, including redrawing the boundaries in the first place (GB) and installing puppet governments (US), and funding brutal dictatorships like those of the Shah and Saddam, Musharaf, and Saudi Arabia (US), has provoked the visceral hatred many people feel for American interference, and the desire to see you leave, for good.

      Thank you for making this point for me. I didn't have the energy to continue this conversation, but you've summed it up well. I will further add that the Chinese seem to be doing quite well in the region, despite being non-Muslim. The Soviets have great ties with the Iranians, despite being portrayed as such a scourge to the region in the 1980s. I don't see either of those huge nations with entrenched business interests in the region being subject to suicide terrorism. I don't see the leaders of those countries telling their citizens to be worried about nuclear suitcase bombs, or biological attacks in their major cities.

      So what is really going on? Is there some huge conspiracy against the United States? Or is it that nearly a century of imperialistic military dominance of the region is finally starting to wear thin? There is a saying, "If your only tool is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail." Well, I'd modify that saying in relation to our foreign policy and say, "If your only tool is violence, everyone looks like a threat."

    58. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by instarx · · Score: 1

      You're right- islamic terrorists are practically risk-free compared to the Ruskies. But they're all we've got as an enemy except maybe for Iran - a third rate power that apparently poses a terrible risk to the US because they just won't do what we tell them to!

    59. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm an atheist you fucking brainwashed sheep. Absent solid evidence that man is causing global warming (ALERT: there is none), I am unconvinced. Correlation does not equal causation. Just because we're here and the earth is getting hotter doesn't mean our actions have contributed to it. If it can be shown that our actions have contributed to it, I will be convinced, but absent that replicatable experiment, I am unconvinced. So suck it down.

      Bonus: captcha word is 'inject'

    60. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by MasterOfMagic · · Score: 1

      Then show me. Show me the evidence. See, logic and arguments work where the person advocating the point of view has to demonstrate to someone unconvinced that they are right. They do this by appealing to logic and evidence. I understand your logic, but I am unconvinced. Show me your evidence, and you might just convince me. Bonus: captcha word is 'quixotic', as in tilting at windmills.

    61. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 1

      there only a few options for dealing with brutal dictatorships, and we've been hated for doing them all. Absolutely wrong, no one hates on America for not intervening - some journalists wring their hands over lack of intervention, without any firm plans for what it would actually involve, but there is no active hatred as there is for an occupying force(Iraq), or the backers of state sponsored violence (Shah, Musharraf etc).

      Supporting dictatorships is the worst possible option, you should just keep out, and use economic and political tools where possible.

      In terms of brutal occupation (a pleonasm I know), I was talking about Iraq. In answer to your question on the Mujhadeen, absolutely, doing nothing would have been better than what was done. The Soviets would have been chased out as the Americans will soon leave Iraq.

      YOU are what he is talking about. No matter what we do, they are going to try to kill us. Instead of feeling sorry for ourselves and apologizing for the mistakes of the past, we need to realize we are at war. I would look past Al Qaeda propoganda and look at their real power base and why they have support in many parts of the world.

      The simple truth is that you cannot defeat terrorism or guerrilla war by military means, unless you are willing to commit genocide. The best alternative is to stop supporting oppresive regimes, stop supporting guerilla war, stop supporting terror groups, stop invading countries, and only provide humanitarian support outside your borders, unless attacked. If attacked (9/11), respond proportionately (i.e. Afghanistan), and make the best attempt you can to set that country straight (West Germany after WWII comes to mind, Afghanistan has been neglected now). None of this has been even attempted by the US, and yet it is at the root of the worldwide distrust of that state.

      Iraq and the 'War on Terror' is like a perfect model of what to do wrong in the face of asymmetrical warfare (hit em harder, declare war!), and is a tactical victory for Al Qaeda.

    62. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      Absolutely wrong, no one hates on America for not intervening - Really? What about Darfur? Doesn't the left criticize us for not sending a military force to intervene in an internal affair? Boy, I'm sure our popularity will soar after that, just like after Bosnia. BTW, one of the reasons the Arab world hated us was that after WWII we rebuilt Japan and Germany but after the first Gulf War we just left a mess. Many Arabs wanted us to go in and take out Saddam, end the embargo, and rebuild Iraq. And of course, now that we're doing it, we're hated for it. We're criticized for not doing anything about the oppressive regime in Saudi Arabia, but what could we possibly do that wouldn't result in more hatred? Stop buying their oil and ruin their economy? Support a coup?

      I would look past Al Qaeda propoganda and look at their real power base and why they have support in many parts of the world. Yeah, I have. May of their complaints are based on misinformation spread through their Arabic-only newspapers, word of mouth, and other media. They believe the Jews perpretrated 9/11 to make the Arabs look bad, that Isreal is called the "State of Israel" because the U.S. wants it as the 51st state, that we couldn't possibly have landed on the moon because that's where Allah lives and anyone who sees Allah is supposed to die immediately, that we invaded Iraq so we can capture the hidden Imam and keep Islam in a state of darkness, ad infinitum. I've actually read their websites, listened to their calls, read their emails, read their interrogation reports, etc. They have, or use, few legitimate gripes against us. Their support base are by and large illiterates. In modern cities with access to real news there is little support.

      and is a tactical victory for Al Qaeda That's news to them. We hear them make comments like, "They're making us look like idiots. We really need to find a better way to attack them!" When the government says that AQI is on the run, they really are on the run. Our tactics are working, along with popular support, to defeat AQI.
      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    63. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 1

      Really? What about Darfur? Doesn't the left criticize us Internal criticism is not international hatred.

      Many Arabs wanted us to go in and take out Saddam, end the embargo, and rebuild Iraq. And of course, now that we're doing it, For certain values of rebuilding - most of the money seems to have been squandered or plundered, and much of it comes from the Iraqi oil reserves. Electricity, water, education - all these things are worse than pre Saddam aren't they? Presumably you understand why many people aren't happy with an American presence?

      Yeah, I have. May of their complaints are based on misinformation Of course much of their propaganda is ridiculous - just as ridiculous as George Bush's 'Crusade' or 'Mission Accomplished'. Perhaps some people even believe it.

      However illiterate does not mean stupid, and people can easily see through bullshit about helping the poor people of Iraq (that may be individually what you strive for, but it is not the goal of Rumsfeld etc). Both sides are not stating their real intentions.

      To the wider world Iraq stands as testament to American hubris, and in that sense, Al Qaeda has already won there (note they weren't even there to start with, they've just co-opted this invasion as an easy way to wear down the great Satan) - they don't need a military victory, just slow attrition and a constant drain of money and resources.

      Our tactics are working, along with popular support, to defeat AQI. Time will tell, but I don't think American politicians have the stomach for nation building, nor is their army equipped with the skills and manpower to do it and fight a war elsewhere as well. The chaos and lack of planning of the post-invasion period is a good indicator of how seriously Washington took the problem of setting up an Iraqi state, and what they've built may well not survive the pull-out of American troops.
    64. Re:Damnit, why did the USSR have to collapse? by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      Internal criticism is not international hatred. Well, what do you think they're thinking in Darfur? Oh, please brutal Americans, don't send anyone to help us! Then if we went, the same people who put up Save Darfur signs in their yards would complain we're overextending our military, wasting money, have no exit strategy, just there to steal oil, etc. My original point is that no matter what we do we're hated, and I stand by it. The comment further upthread about propaganda based on truth just proves it nicely. The military reports accurately on what's going on, and they get blamed for propaganda. For people who hate us, it makes no difference what we do.

      Of course much of their propaganda is ridiculous - I was referring to what individuals think - I did refer to reading their emails, interrogation reports etc. And those ridiculous beliefs were just the more common ones; there are MANY more more stupid than those. And no, they don't see through the propaganda. This is what they believe. There's a great book called "Why I Left Jihad" where the author talks about why he walked away from a terrorist group; everything he was told was a lie. Try reading it before spreading more.

      note they weren't even there to start with, Like this one. It's amazing how quickly we forget how many times the Clinton administration linked Iraq and al Qaeda, not to mention Iraq being on the list of state sponsored terrorism for 20+ years, or how no other country questioned our intelligence leading up to the war. I guess Bush went back in time and fabricated the world's intelligence for the last 20 years.
      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
  17. Nothing could be clearer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    Someone who is not John McCain didn't say that John McCain supports warrantless domestic surveillance. Therefore, John McCain supports warrantless domestic surveillance.

    Thanks, Slashdot!

  18. Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by graveyhead · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hi guys. This seems like a good opportunity to talk a bit about this new distro we've been working on.

    ParanoidLinux is a distribution with a focus on privacy. All network comms will be encrypted and run through TOR by default. IM programs, etc, will be configured for secure communications by default. You'll have to go out of your way *not* to have a secure conversation in ParanoidLinux.

    This idea comes from Cory Doctorow's latest book "Little Brother" which describes a Linux distro similar to what we are building, with the same name.

    It's a new concept, only a couple weeks old, so don't go looking for downloads... but we are looking for help! Come join us. We're looking for programmers, artists, security experts and unix gurus to help us bring this project together.

    If the government takes this basic human right from you, be proactive. Take it back. See you there!

    http://www.paranoidlinux.org

    irc.freenode.net, #paranoidlinux

    --
    std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
    1. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by daveime · · Score: 1

      Or alternatively, we could just sit on a bogus end node and intercept all your packets ...

      Who the fuck is Cory Doctorov anyway ???

    2. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by graveyhead · · Score: 1

      Yes exit nodes are a problem. I think this is one area where we need to concentrate. This is why we need security and unix gurus!

      --
      std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
    3. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by daveime · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes exit nodes are a problem. I think this is one area where we need to concentrate. This is why we need security and unix gurus!

      Erm no, this is why you need to stop pretending that TOR is a valid cryptographic solution "providing everyone plays fair".

    4. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by graveyhead · · Score: 1

      Not a cryptographic solution no. But I think it's really neat way to hide the destination of your packets.

      If the exit node problem could be solved, it would be a fantastic solution.

      BTW, nothing stopping you from using an SSL connection over TOR, so even at an exit node your comm is secure.

      --
      std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
    5. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by daveime · · Score: 1

      You know, funnily enough, my existing SSL on my browser is ALREADY encrypted sufficiently to avoid decrypting the original message ... so tell me, why should I go to the trouble of yet more hooks into my system just so I can send my packets over TOR and hide my IP address ... thus screwing up ANY system that relys on a steady IP to identify myself to that system.

    6. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by Ma8thew · · Score: 1

      Doesn't this put undue strain on the TOR network? Shouldn't only vitally anonymous stuff be put through it?

    7. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by dave562 · · Score: 1

      I could be wrong here, but if everyone running ParanoidLinux becomes a node in the Tor network then aren't they effectively increasing the size of the network in proportion to their increased load on it? Granted the only thing I know about Tor came from the initial presentation at DefCon and I stopped listening after they said, "Frequently your entry and exit points are on the same network, making it trivial to determine your identity."

    8. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by Facegarden · · Score: 1

      What worries me is that i'm so paranoid i can't be sure YOU don't work for the government! -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    9. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by graveyhead · · Score: 1

      Great point and I've stopped by the TOR irc channel to get some details.

      It appears that:

      a) udp is not supported

      b) filesharing hurts their network

      c) web browsing can be painfully slow over it

      So I suppose we will need to be a bit careful about what we send through there. Text messages seem fine and perhaps we can send email through it.

      --
      std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
    10. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by ady1 · · Score: 1

      I was with you and actually clicked the URL until I saw http:///

      There should be no simple http:/// on a site which claims to be the home to paranoids. SSL isn't a new technology either.

      And while I'm at it, I hate lameness filter

    11. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by graveyhead · · Score: 1

      Ok google-able nickname. First name Taylor. Buahahahahaha you've fallen right into our trap!!

      XD

      --
      std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
    12. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by graveyhead · · Score: 1

      Yesyes we will get an SSL site up soonish. Using a dirt cheap host for now.

      Is there really some reason you need to communicate securely with paranoidlinux.org? Or is this just flamebait? If there really is a legitimate reason, I can bump up the priority of this. Wouldn't you rather have a dist first though? I think I'll concentrate on that :P

      --
      std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
    13. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by Facegarden · · Score: 1

      Hah, oh, i know, i am definitely way too Google-able! Sadly, it wouldn't take too much effort to find my phone number and address with the info you just pointed out... It's pretty bad actually.

      Though really my paranoia about a special build of Linux seemingly built for those who want more privacy is that it may be a high profile target for those who want to find out our secrets! I'm not sure how open source projects come together but i'm imagining there is some safeguard against someone adding in their own secret backdoor, right? I sure hope so...

      -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    14. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ok ok ok....but is it based on ubuntu? ;)

    15. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by graveyhead · · Score: 1

      A secret backdoor in an open source project sticks out like a sore thumb.

      You've heard "many eyes make bugs shallow" before I'm sure. It applies equally well to backdoors. With enough people looking, such attempts at jiggerypokery are found during source code audits.

      So yes, FOSS is actually pretty safe in this regard. Compare that to a secret backdoor e.g. in Windows. You'd never even know it was there...

      --
      std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
    16. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by graveyhead · · Score: 1

      Haha! No.

      The plan is actually to use Debian / Apt as a way to bootstrap.

      As we write software and customize package configurations, we'll migrate stuff from pointing to Debian repo to our own.

      Also, we plan on being much nicer about offering our changes upstream than Ubuntu has been.

      --
      std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
    17. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by Facegarden · · Score: 1

      Yeah, good to know. :) -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    18. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by hacker · · Score: 1

      You should be looking into i2p and Freenet as possible methods to route your traffic. Tor is nice for anonymizing traffic, but definitely not for securing it.

    19. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by chill · · Score: 1

      Ummm...tor is for anonymizing traffic, not securing it. It is one tool in the arsenal. Of course, if you send plain text missives on labeled letterhead tor isn't much help. Actually, it could be.

      They may know those documents originated from the Latvian Embassy, but they don't know where the transmission originated from. Tor is good for publishing things like political opinions and helping hide WHERE you connected from to publish.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    20. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by chill · · Score: 1

      Sigh...not always. Many QUALIFIED eyes make all bugs shallow.

      Case in point, the OpenSSL issue with Debian. Crippled for 1 year and 8 months because of a coding error. Very FOSS, but not a lot of people who know the intricacies of crypto. Read the latest comment in my journal for details.

      FOSS is a massive improvement over closed source in this case, don't get me wrong. Just don't assume that because the code is visible it is automatically secure.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    21. Re:Hedging our Bets with ParanoidLinux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought the good people at TOR wanted us to run only the strictly necessary streams through the onion router, as the network is overloaded? Publishing something that runs everything through someone else's service as a default, without asking their permission or even giving them a heads up beforehand, isn't exactly the most polite move ever...

  19. Same old, same old by gnuman99 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Same old, same old FUD tactics we see from GOP since 2001. They *used to* work too! Or is some black op US gov't agency planning a "terrorist" attack to spur people to willingly give up rights? (Sadly, as history and current international events show, this is NOT an unheard of tactic to force masses to comply. Used by various gov't)

    Sure, warrants surveillance makes people safer. It's a fact. Just look at Soviet Union with its domestic KGB wing. But then throwing people into Gulags for 20 years because the neighbor doesn't like you and reports you in as a spy - it is not the society that most people would like to live in.

    So which will it be? "GITMO USA" or "Land of Opportunity and Hope"? Can't have both. The former gives people almost absolute security (unless the secret police doesn't like you), the latter does not. Let freedom die for sake of security or perhaps die due to lack of security in the name of freedom?

    You chose. November 2008.

    1. Re:Same old, same old by SoulRider · · Score: 1

      Same old, same old FUD tactics we see from GOP since 1969.

      There, fixed that for you.

  20. obama will do it also by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    McCain is just nice enough to tell us to our faces and not lie about it

  21. One word must be missing here by temcat · · Score: 5, Funny

    We do not know what lies are ahead in our nation's fight against radical Islamic extremists

    There, that's closer to the truth.

  22. Perpetual War? by Thelasko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, by remaining continuously at war, the President has unlimited power?

    Brilliant!

    What defines a war? Does it have to be against another country? Can it be...
    a war on terror?
    a war on drugs?
    a war on cancer?
    a war on poverty?

    --
    One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    1. Re:Perpetual War? by Jason+Levine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How about a War On War? As long as we wage the War On War, the President needs to keep unlimited power. Only after there is no more War can we end our War and resume normal Presidential power levels. ;-)

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    2. Re:Perpetual War? by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      You don't need to look that far away from conventional war.

    3. Re:Perpetual War? by jeti · · Score: 1

      AFAIK Article II is only relevant if the US is formally at war. Only the congress has the right to declare war, and hasn't done so since World War II.
      So I don't understand the whole argument about Article II. Perhaps someone from the US can enlighten me?

    4. Re:Perpetual War? by Digestromath · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'd like to see the war on poverty treated with the same concern. Iraq costs over 300 million a day. Imagine if that budget was applied to poverty and unemployment. Or education. Hell we could split that 300 million a day, 100 million a day for poverty and unemployment issues, 100 million for cancer research and 100 million for HIV/AIDS research. I bet alot of the troops in Iraq would perfer to be back in America helping feed the homeless instead, or working on a cure for cancer.

    5. Re:Perpetual War? by Thelasko · · Score: 1

      Good observation! That is one way to legally obtain unlimited power. But to keep it you have to get rid of those pesky term limits.

      --
      One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    6. Re:Perpetual War? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically, it is only War if Congress declares it to be so, the President has no power to declare War.

      Of course, the reality is different...

    7. Re:Perpetual War? by Facegarden · · Score: 1

      How about a war on that pesky Sun! It comes back every day! Problem is, i can see is getting so damned lost in our own fake war that we finally build a big enough nuke to blow up the sun... and then do it. :( -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    8. Re:Perpetual War? by siwelwerd · · Score: 1

      What defines a war?

      "The Congress shall have power [...] To declare war, grant letters of marque and reprisal, and make rules concerning captures on land and water"

    9. Re:Perpetual War? by frdmfghtr · · Score: 1

      AFAIK Article II is only relevant if the US is formally at war. Only the congress has the right to declare war, and hasn't done so since World War II.
      Enlighten me too...I can't see how Article II applies to powers during time of war at all, and I have it open in front of me right now. The topic of war isn't even mentioned in Article II.
      --
      Government's idea of a balanced budget: take money from the right pocket to balance...oh who am I kidding?
    10. Re:Perpetual War? by fan777 · · Score: 1

      Doesn't have the same ring to it as Girl On Girl.

    11. Re:Perpetual War? by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      Money by itself won't get a country out of poverty. It just doesn't work that way. Often times, even when a country does find an economic stimulus like oil or other natural resources, they start doing good, but after five or so years later end up even worse off then before. The one reason poverty in America (with respect to the rest of the world, not the definition that means "only one TV or car") is because of (what was) a well structured government with checks and balances, the type of government doesn't matter too much as long as you have that condition satisfied.

      How many African countries have a democracy? Plenty. How many actually have seperate branches of government with restricted and delegated authority to each? Not as many.

      How about Mexico? They have natural resources galore, up until a few years ago they were the number two provider of foreign oil to America, nearly tied with Saudi Arabia (both well below Canada), they have coast line, tourism, and no reason to be anything short of successful, but the economy is in shambles. Much of it can be blamed on the corruption, brought about as an effect of unstructured government.

      And you can thank American innovation and capitalism for bringing the vast majority of cancer treatments that wouldn't exist otherwise.

    12. Re:Perpetual War? by tiqui · · Score: 1

      The US government has become too incompetent to cleverly rig a permanent war to get control over the citizens. The government clearly is not in control of the population with all the examples you cite. If those "wars" gave it power and control, then Michael Moore, Oliver Stone, etc. would have become non-persons long ago. Never presume the government's actions arise from smart & devious plans when incompetence and political paralysis will do. Real wars can only be waged against nations and peoples. Modern US politicians want to convince people they are involved in serious efforts to deal with those issues (the term "war" helps them imply a serious WWII-scale effort) but they are too wimpy to actually go after the people involved (they have drug users and dealers, poor people, rich people, makers and sellers of carcinogens, people with families in terror-supporting countries, etc. in their own districts), so they declare wars on things and methods. Such "wars" are not real wars, and cannot be won because those enemies are not capable of losing or surrendering. The happy side-effect though, is more government spending, and more government workers who will support bigger government.

    13. Re:Perpetual War? by instarx · · Score: 1

      What defines a war? Does it have to be against another country? Can it be... According to that pesky ol' Constitution, only Congress can declare war, ad they have not. Since they have not done that, we really are not at war, and the special powers given to a war-time President do not acrue to Bush. Of course Dick Cheney has a different opinion.
    14. Re:Perpetual War? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Listen Buddy, when the homeless refuse to have fair dealings with US Big Oil Companies, then we'll talk...

  23. politicians protecting telecoms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't understand why so many politicians are so eager to protect telecoms. I mean, sure the Bush administration makes sense. And sure, you can blame every Republican for all the privacy problems in the world, but is anyone surprised that even Democrats defend telecom immunity? It's like when you think you can blame someone, idiots start coming out of the woodwork.

    http://wwwwakeupamericans-spree.blogspot.com/2008/01/telecom-immunity-12-democrats-join-with.html

    http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2007/10/dem-pushing-spy.html

    http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8905

  24. He's his economic advisor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doglas Hotz-Eakin is McCain's economic advisor. Why is this spin on slashdot? OT IMHO

  25. Surprised? I'm not. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    McCain has been moving towards lock-step with RNC views over the last 6 months or so.

    It's shocking what a deliberately blinded and forgetful group of misinformed voters we have become.

    So much for "change"

  26. Re:John McCain: The Cardboard Candidate by polar+red · · Score: 1

    supposed to shut up No, that's Bill O'Reilly
    --
    Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
  27. Slashkos, slashkos... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First an "informative" *sic* article about Obama winning the Democrat primary not marked as "Democrat" followed by an attack piece on McCain clearly marked "Republican".

    I can hardly wait for the counterbalance of attack articles on Obama... *sic*

  28. just look at his campain financiers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    AT&T has given him lots of money just for this.

  29. AMAZING by LockeOnLogic · · Score: 1

    Candidate for head of executive branch in favor of giant executive power grab, shocking!

  30. Legal externally by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Constitution doesn't let the president tap mail or wire internally; but if it's entering/leaving the country, he can. It's the edge dilemma: at the edge point, you can tap inside or outside. Outside, there's no rules, and you're tapping a foreign national with no constitutional rights.

    1. Re:Legal externally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Outside, there's no rules, and you're tapping a foreign national with no constitutional rights.

      Leaving aside the rather questionable assertion that the US constitution places no limits on what the US government can do to foreign nationals, how does the US government know it's tapping foreign nationals?

      Or are you saying that the US constitution provides no protection to US citizens who are not on US soil? So, if a US citizen is traveling in a foreign country, the US government can kidnap him and torture him to death just because it feels like it (as long as the government does all of this without bringing the guy back to the USA)?

    2. Re:Legal externally by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      No. The Supreme Court has already weighed in on the citizenship issue, and the courts' move towards confirming it in the Jose Padilla case is why the administration dropped the attempts to have him treated as a non-citizen.

      Conversations entering or leaving the US would be treated the same way that the FBI handles wiretaps of phones where the warrant doesn't allow every call to be used, as a given call may not have anything to do with the investigation. They can listen for a period of time to see if it's covered, and may check back into the call periodically to confirm that the subject hasn't changed to something, but if it's not in the warrant, it has to be dropped. This prevents them from doing things like listening in on calls to legal counsel or medical personnel, as these are protected by client-provider privilege.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
  31. Clear as mud by cfulmer · · Score: 5, Informative

    That's an absurd argument -- "McCain says he'll follow the Constitution." "You mean, the same Constitution that President Bush says gives him the right to abuse small farm animals? Why McCain must want to abuse small farm animals too!"

    There isn't much question that tapping *international* calls is within the government's power. (At least I haven't heard any major Democrats argue with this). There just isn't enough information in this post to know if this is what McCain is talking about, or if it's domestic surveillance.

    You should leave the political hack jobs to the professionals.

    1. Re:Clear as mud by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      There isn't much question that tapping *international* calls is within the government's power.

      If it was international calls between parties not subject to US laws (e.g. foreign heads of state) then I'd agree with you - but how do you know, without oversight, that the US government isn't also listening in on US citizens abroad.

      The one corner case is calls that cross the border. US customs could claim that such calls might be used to smuggle illegal information into or out of the USA.

    2. Re:Clear as mud by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      The one corner case is calls that cross the border. US customs could claim that such calls might be used to smuggle illegal information into or out of the USA.
      That is a very scary statement, because of two words: illegal information.

      Information should never, ever be illegal. The act of divulging classified information, that can be illegal... but knowledge of particular information is not, and should never be, a crime.

      /This may just be a semantics thing... but I really hope you didn't intend to consider that information itself could be illegal.
      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    3. Re:Clear as mud by instarx · · Score: 1

      There isn't much question that tapping *international* calls is within the government's power. (At least I haven't heard any major Democrats argue with this). Oh no - there is a BIG question about it because one of the speakers is an American citizen. Your rights as a citizen to not disappear when you leave the country or talk to a non-citizen. You may not have heard about it, but that's one of the big sticking points with the warrantless wiretaps.
    4. Re:Clear as mud by Lost+Race · · Score: 1

      I don't necessarily agree that the US government has the legitimate Contitutional power to spy on anyone. The 4th amendment says, "The right of the people ... against unreasonable searches ... shall not be violated," and collateral documents, i.e. the Declaration of Independence, assert that such rights are inherent in all human beings rather than being granted to citizens by government or contract. IMHO the Bill of Rights applies to all people everywhere, and the US government should need a warrant to search anybody, citizen or foreigner, domestic or abroad.

    5. Re:Clear as mud by instarx · · Score: 1

      I don't necessarily agree that the US government has the legitimate Contitutional power to spy on anyone. We're talking about warrantless spying, but that caveat aside I agree 100%. I did not go that far in my reply because putting just one US citizen into the phone conversation made the issue a slam dunk. It's absurd for the Bush administration to claim that I give up my Constitutional rights just because I'm talking to a Spaniard or a Dane. Not that I could give up my rights even if I wanted to - they're in-alienable. However, recognizing that the US Constitution recognizes the rights of all people and not just US citizens, while true, isn't so obvious.

  32. Hey Republicans! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Take back your party! Vote for Bob Barr, or even Ron Paul. Voting for either candidate will be a vote for the restoration of the Rule of Law. Voting for McCain will be a vote for the Rule of Man, and a continuation of the disastrous Bush administration policies.

  33. Obama is Against Warrantless Wiretaps by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 4, Informative
    When Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT) used his presidential primary campaign to lead the Congressional campaign to stop Bush's FISA violations, Obama supported Dodd's filibuster, specifically saying (through his spokesperson Bill Burton):

    Senator Obama has serious concerns about many provisions in this bill, especially the provision on giving retroactive immunity to the telephone companies. He is hopeful that this bill can be improved by the Senate Judiciary Committee. But if the bill comes to the Senate floor in its current form, he would support a filibuster of it.
    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:Obama is Against Warrantless Wiretaps by tiqui · · Score: 1

      OK, so since this article extrapolated McCain's position into "McCain Supports Warrantless Domestic Surveillance", can we now extrapolate Obama's position to be "Obama Supports Unmonitored Terrorist Calls To Their Cells Inside The US"???

      I'm just asking...

    2. Re:Obama is Against Warrantless Wiretaps by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      You're not "just asking", you're just a Republican troll.

      Only an obnoxious fool would ascribe that position to Obama. And only a Republican (shorthand) would ignore that position from McCain.

      In the Senate right now, there is a battle over whether to continue warrantless domestic surveillance. McCain has worked for it, or abandoned his post during the battle in order to campaign and fundraise while telling the world he's against stopping it. Obama has unequivocally stood, and voted, against it.

      Only a Republican could find some FUD in that obvious political difference.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    3. Re:Obama is Against Warrantless Wiretaps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I doubt Obama's intentions.

      Don't get me wrong, I have nothing personal against the man and think he has the potential to be a fine president. However, I do have the feeling that everything he does is orchestrated to get him elected.

      I know it's a given that a politician will do and say anything that may get him elected. I'm just amazed how many people is believing every word coming out of his mouth as gospel.

      It's "time for a change" but how will he make this change? All I hear from him is feel good slogans and political bullshit. I have yet to hear anything substantive from his campaign.

      Make no mistake, I think Obama will probably be the next president. He has shown himself quite capable of using the "rules of politics" to his advantage. To become senator, he had all the signatures of his democratic opponents reviewed and rejected which left him the uncontested democratic candidate. To become president, he has taken advantage of the proportional delegate rewards by concentrating on the smaller states. Also, I find it highly suspicious that two states found itself without full representation at the national convention, AND Obama was eventually able to get delegates from both states despite the fact that his name wasn't even on the ballot in one of them. Personally, I believe it's unfortunate that the democratic party found itself in a position where it had to enforce a rule, and had every right to not allow those state's votes to count. Of course, like elections past the Democrats has proven again the willingness to change the rules after the votes are counted...

      Now I'm beginning to see the next phase of the campaign where astroturfers will start to submit stories questioning McCain's intentions, and post comments supporting Obama.

      I've seen this ploy before...

    4. Re:Obama is Against Warrantless Wiretaps by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1
      Why should I get you wrong, Anonymous Republican Coward, when it is you who's got the facts wrong?

      To become senator, he had all the signatures of his democratic opponents reviewed and rejected which left him the uncontested democratic candidate.


      That's just the kind of Big Lie that you Republicans used to get away with before google and linking to Web archives blew your scam. Not only was Obama not "the uncontested Democratic candidate" that you claimed in your lie, but that primary was distinguished by having so many Democrats Obama ran against:

      From Crowded Field, Democrats Choose State Legislator to Seek Senate Seat
      [...]
      In the primary, a wide and wealthy field of candidates -- seven Democrats and eight Republicans, nearly half of them millionaires -- made for an expensive and messy race.


      In fact, you couldn't be more wrong.

      he has taken advantage of the proportional delegate rewards by concentrating on the smaller states


      Another bullshit lie, but this time more subtle. Clinton was the Democratic Party establishment candidate. As such, she had access to the political machines in the biger states, which threw their weight behind her, while the many more smaller states were more available to an outsider. In fact it was Clinton whose strategy explicitly rejected the "50 state strategy" that the DNC's Howard Dean has pursued to rebuild the Democratic Party from how the Clintons left it (and how the Republicans tyrannized it in its minority), to focus on the "big states" she and her husband had preferred during their time in the White House. But even so, Clinton won California only 55:45%, on the strength of the LA machine. In Texas, the 2nd biggest state, Obama beat Clinton by 12 delegates already (and looking at more in the final stage that awards about 1/3 of its delegates next week). #3 largest, NY, is Clinton's "home state" (Senate seat). #4 Florida didn't have a legitimate primary, and #4 Illinois Obama won from his own home state Senate seat.

      Obama has won the popular vote (which isn't what counts) and the delegate vote (which is what counts). You're as full of shit as the Clinton campaign that you Republicans preferred to face in an election against McCain, though now you can't because Democrats voted to give you your worst nightmare: President Barack Obama.

      You can talk all you want about suspicions about the rules. But you're also saying that "have nothing personal against the man and think he has the potential to be a fine president", even while accusing him of stealing the election. You Republican liars stole the 2000 (and probably 2004, too) elections for Bush. Now you're making up lies framing Obama for doing that, when he's done nothing of the sort. You've "heard nothing substantive" from Obama because you don't listen to him, and you're a liar yourself.

      Oh yes, we've got change. The tricks you're lying to frame Obama with don't work so good anymore for you Republicans, since you wore them out forcing Bush on us. That's where you've "seen this ploy before". In the mirror.
      --

      --
      make install -not war

    5. Re:Obama is Against Warrantless Wiretaps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just the kind of Big Lie that you Republicans used to get away with before google and linking to Web archives blew your scam. Not only was Obama not "the uncontested Democratic candidate" that you claimed in your lie, but that primary was distinguished by having so many Democrats Obama ran against...

      From CNN:http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/05/29/obamas.first.campaign/

      In his first race for office, seeking a state Senate seat on Chicago's gritty South Side in 1996, Obama effectively used election rules to eliminate his Democratic competition. As a community organizer, he had helped register thousands of voters. But when it came time to run for office, he employed Chicago rules to invalidate the voting petition signatures of three of his challengers. The move denied each of them, including incumbent Alice Palmer, a longtime Chicago activist, a place on the ballot. It cleared the way for Obama to run unopposed on the Democratic ticket in a heavily Democrat district. "That was Chicago politics," said John Kass, a veteran Chicago Tribune columnist. "Knock out your opposition, challenge their petitions, destroy your enemy, right? It is how Barack Obama destroyed his enemies back in 1996 that conflicts with his message today. He may have gotten his start registering thousands of voters. But in that first race, he made sure voters had just one choice."

      You Republican liars stole the 2000 (and probably 2004, too) elections for Bush. Now you're making up lies framing Obama for doing that, when he's done nothing of the sort. You've "heard nothing substantive" from Obama because you don't listen to him, and you're a liar yourself.

      You assume I'm a republican and I hate to break it to you, but I'm not. I'm also sorry that you are being irrational and refuse to acknowledge the well documented facts on how Obama won his senatorial seat.

      The tricks you're lying to frame Obama with don't work so good anymore for you Republicans, since you wore them out forcing Bush on us. That's where you've "seen this ploy before". In the mirror.

      Wow what a comeback.. not. Anyway let me be more specific, I seen the DEMOCRATS as well as republicans use this technique before. However, I only see the democrats try to change the rules to benefit themselves after the game has played out...

    6. Re:Obama is Against Warrantless Wiretaps by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Oh, you're a "libertarian", which is how you post-Bush Republican losers now spell yourselves. Fuck you. The worst part of your disgusting posts is how you accuse Obama of all kinds of terrible things (that are lies), but you say you've got nothing against it, even as you complain about it. Evil.

      You started this out with a pack of lies. I'm not going to bother wasting any more time debunking more of them, because that won't stop you. It's left as an exercise for the reader. As if anyone needs to look any further for proof of your kind of sleaze.

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      make install -not war

    7. Re:Obama is Against Warrantless Wiretaps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's a matter? Someone shows you the facts and you turn tail and run? You spew nothing out but irrational statements against everybody but the democratic party. Oh the "Fuck You" part was a real winning point in your argument. I guess that's the best you can do when you had too many swallows of the bad kool-aid you've been drinking!

    8. Re:Obama is Against Warrantless Wiretaps by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      What's the matter is that you've posted a ton of bullshit lies that I've already taken time to debunk, but that hasn't shut you up. You're not even posting under a real userID. I'm not wasting any more time with you lying trolls.

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    9. Re:Obama is Against Warrantless Wiretaps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But you haven't debunked anything. All you do is give links to wikipedia and a partisan blogger from TPM.

      Well you did post a NY Times story about how Obama won in a crowded primary, yet the names listed within that article were not candidate of any real threat. Do you think Obama would waste time eliminating all his competition, or only the ones he sees as a threat. Noticed, that the democratic incumbent was not listed in the election. Hmmm, I also noticed you failed to mention the CNN article that actually quotes a Chicago Times reporter (you know where the election actually took place).

      I also noticed you didn't dispute the handling of the Michigan and Florida primaries. The only thing you bring up is some tired old rhetoric about how the republicans are evil. The republicans being evil has nothing to do with the democrats being just as evil.

      The facts are poison to people like you. All you do is astroturf the comments with pro-Obama and anti-McCain bullshit and then get upset when someone calls you out.

      So what other non-issue are you going to use to try to derail the threads, and elude the questions at hand.

      Oh yea I forgot.... you can't handle the truth.

    10. Re:Obama is Against Warrantless Wiretaps by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      As I said, I'm not going to waste any more time arguing with you on facts, since you're proving that doesn't work.

      But why not have some fun pointing out that "you can't handle the truth" is the line used by a rogue colonel who's covering up murder by soldiers. That's the Republican respect for "facts" at work right there, buried deep in your corrupt culture of "evil by any means necessary".

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      make install -not war

  34. this comes as a surprise? by gadabyte · · Score: 5, Interesting
    be afraid of president mccain makes a rather compelling case that mccain is an "authoritarian maverick," and exposes many of his worrisome positions. my personal favorite:

    McCain said, "I would rather have a clean government than one...where 'First Amendment rights' are being respected that has become corrupt. If I had my choice I'd rather have a clean government." if he views a clean government as more important than our petty first amendment rights (religion, speech, assembly, press, etc) - what does his penchant for associating with lobbyists, and his history with charles keating say about his respect for our freedoms?

    DANGER, WILL ROBINSON.
    --
    the united states is a nation of laws; badly written and randomly enforced -- frank zappa
    1. Re:this comes as a surprise? by Lorien_the_first_one · · Score: 1

      Thank you for confirming my suspicions about McCain. Though I must admit, after the Waco Massacre, I haven't had that much confidence in Democrats, either.

      Green Tea Party, anyone?

      --
      The diversity and expression of human opinion is essential to human survival.
  35. Politics by whisper_jeff · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Ok, seriously, two posts about American politics on Slashdot on the same day? Come on! News for Nerds please. At least, if you're going to post about American politics, spread the wealth for those of us north of the border - post about Canadian politics as well.

    Oh yeah. Canadian politics are boring. Uh. Never mind...

    1. Re:Politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not that Canadian politics are boring .... they simply don't matter.

  36. They don't have to by melted · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Guess what, Russia still has enough nukes to sterilize the planet, chemical, biological and more recently space weapons and a huge conventional army. And it doesn't do what the US tells it to do anymore. A little bit of a propaganda campaign on TV and the populace will be just about as rabid about it as it was back then.

  37. Thanks Slashdot! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm really looking forward to the very objective story posting down the stretch run of the election season here at Slashdot. When Slashdot takes it's lead from Wired postings and the flavor of their leanings, what could go wrong? I'm really looking forward to all the balanced front page material.

  38. you know that bump in mccains left cheek? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    he got it from cheeking george bush's cock in his mouth one to many times.

    did i mislead you with my statement?

    LOL captcha: ointment

  39. SCO at it again by Thelasko · · Score: 1

    ParanoidLinux is a distribution with a focus on privacy. All network comms will be encrypted and run through TOR by default. IM programs, etc, will be configured for secure communications by default. You'll have to go out of your way *not* to have a secure conversation in ParanoidLinux. This time they are trying to sell OpenBSD as their own, proprietary, creation.
    --
    One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    1. Re:SCO at it again by graveyhead · · Score: 1

      Fwa?

      Since when does OpenBSD route through TOR by default? Since when does it ship with IM configured for secure comms?

      Securing your network from hacking seems to be the goal of other "security" focused OSes like OpenBSD.

      We won't even trademark our name. This is a very open project with PRIVACY as the goal.

      But you didn't bother to find out anything about us before trolling. Congratulations, troll successful, I bit :/

      --
      std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
    2. Re:SCO at it again by Thelasko · · Score: 1

      It was a Joke!

      --
      One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
  40. I RTFA and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I don't understand how the original poster claims that 'nothing could be clearer'.

    The title of the article is "McCain: I'd Spy on Americans Secretly, Too"

    And the article includes this gem:

    "The Globe's Charlie Savage pushed further, asking , "So is that a no, in other words, federal statute trumps inherent power in that case, warrantless surveillance?" To which McCain answered, "I don't think the president has the right to disobey any law."

    McCain's embrace of extrajudicial domestic wiretapping is effectively a bounce-back from Fish's comments, made at the Computers, Freedom and Privacy conference in Connecticut last month."

    This is clearly written by someone who already doesn't like McCain. I'm a huge supporter of Obama, but the article is just pure anti-McCain propaganda, and not worth the read.

    Article II exists, and no one can change it. I suppose what everything hinges on is your definition of 'wartime', hopefully McCain's isn't as broad as Bush's. If occupation = war then we're going to be at war forever under that definition.

    1. Re:I RTFA and... by pal3f · · Score: 1
      Article II exists, and no one can change it.

      First: Uh, yes, we can.

      Second: Article II is not by any means the whole picture here. The President takes an oath to "preserve. protect, and defend the Constitution" -- i.e. the whole Constitution. And yeah, that includes those pesky little Bill of Rights amendments.

  41. In Soviet Sweden... by emilv · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In less than two weeks the Swedish government are going to vote for just this type of survelliance. If the propsed new law is implemented, they will connect new cables that will search through all data going over the border.

    They can, in theory, read every e-mail going over the border.

    1. Re:In Soviet Sweden... by emilv · · Score: 1

      ... which, of course, includes e-mail between almost every Swedish person because most of us use Hotmail or Gmail.

  42. McCain Journals, Notes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Notes regarding this scanned and uploaded here.

  43. Short Constitution by pal3f · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Oh good, another presidential wannabe whose copy of the Constitution apparently abruptly ends at Article II.

    Dear Senator McCain,
    Please obtain a new copy of the Constitution, and continue reading it all the way through Amendment XXVII.
    Thank you,
    The American People

  44. Re:McCain or Obama? No-freedom or no-security? by avandesande · · Score: 1

    What does saying that a small third world country is 'as dangerous as cold war USSR' do to their status? Especially among their neighbors?

    --
    love is just extroverted narcissism
  45. Re:Signing Statements. by MobyDisk · · Score: 5, Informative
    Not true.

    First Google hit on a search for obama and signing statements

    Under what circumstances, if any, would you sign a bill into law but also issue a signing statement reserving a constitutional right to bypass the law?

    Signing statements have been used by presidents of both parties, dating back to Andrew Jackson. While it is legitimate for a president to issue a signing statement to clarify his understanding of ambiguous provisions of statutes and to explain his view of how he intends to faithfully execute the law, it is a clear abuse of power to use such statements as a license to evade laws that the president does not like or as an end-run around provisions designed to foster accountability.
  46. Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The Congress is not only essential to the government's power to do anything, it is actually the only indispensible branch. With a supermajority of voting members, Congress can not only write and pass laws, but can override a presidential veto, meaning the Executive branch is not required for making laws. The Executive is, however, required to enforce all acts passed by Congress, even if the president vetoed them - or just doesn't like them. But even if the Executive doesn't enforce the laws as it's required to, Congress has the power to try people for violating them, and to direct Federal (and Washington, DC) police to arrest and imprison them, including in a prison inside the Capitol building. If there is a "Unitary" branch in the Federal government, it's Congress, not the Executive.

    And just look at some of the "war powers" that Congress is instructed by the Constitution to execute, in the section 8 of the Article I that defines Congress:

    Section 8: The Congress shall have power

    [...]

            To constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court;

            To define and punish piracies and felonies committed on the high seas, and offenses against the law of nations;

            To declare war, grant letters of marque and reprisal, and make rules concerning captures on land and water;

            To raise and support armies, but no appropriation of money to that use shall be for a longer term than two years;

            To provide and maintain a navy;

            To make rules for the government and regulation of the land and naval forces;

            To provide for calling forth the militia to execute the laws of the union, suppress insurrections and repel invasions;

            To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining, the militia, and for governing such part of them as may be employed in the service of the United States, reserving to the states respectively, the appointment of the officers, and the authority of training the militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress;

            To exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten miles square) as may, by cession of particular states, and the acceptance of Congress, become the seat of the government of the United States, and to exercise like authority over all places purchased by the consent of the legislature of the state in which the same shall be, for the erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dockyards, and other needful buildings;--And

            To make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the United States, or in any department or officer thereof.


    These "Article II powers" arguments making Bush a king are lies. Talking about them is bad enough, but protected as free speech. However, acting on them by actual officials, whether to make war despite Congress, or as an official campaign to prevent Congress from exercising its powers, is usurping Congress' rightful power by creating Executive powers that do not exist.

    If the Congress passes a law or otherwise officially acts to, say, direct the US armed forces (and subcontractors to it) to put on their boots and march out of Iraq tomorrow (even if that's not quite a good idea), Congress has the power to do so. It is the president who does not have the power to stop them, and is legally obligated to follow Congress' instructions in that march.
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    make install -not war

    1. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Apparently, you failed Civics. There is nodispensable branch of the government.

      Each individual branch can override any other branch, and in some cases the other two branches.

      Oh,and the Executive is not exactly required to enforce any law the Legislative passes. It is very easy for the Executive to simply provide ineffective enforcement either through no agency, or through unlimited warning, to simply not bringing the cases to trial by making deals.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    2. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by mshannon78660 · · Score: 1
      Thank you - I can't believe people fall for this crap. If you read the actual constitution ( ), there is no mention of war powers AT ALL in article II. The only thing close that article II says is

      The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several States, when called into the actual Service of the United States

      By contrast, article I, as you pointed out, does lay out a number of war-related powers - and grants all of them to the legislative branch. I've also failed to find anything in article II granting the executive branch any right to intercept communications inside or outside the US under any circumstances - it seems pretty clear that the founders intended any such activity to be under the direction of the legislative branch instead.

    3. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1, Insightful
      You are totally wrong. You are pulling tyrannical BS out of your "hat", and betraying that you are a stranger to the Constitution.

      You show me where the Constitution says that the Executive can fail to enforce a law passed by Congress. All the stunts you mention are prohibited by Article II, Section 3:

      [the president] shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed, and shall Commission all the Officers of the United States.


      Now show me where that explicit and unambiguous instruction is contradicted in the Constitution.
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    4. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Straif · · Score: 1

      Whatever the constitution says, it's been accepted case law that President's can authorize warrantless surveillence of foreign powers or their agents for more than 25 years. That would include foreign agents acting solely within the United States. That decision has been upheld on every appeal (Truong, 1980)

      That being said, this is only for issues related to foreign matters, not domestic. So if a home grown militia group is planning some attack a warrant would be required, but if 2 or more Al Queida operatives are talking to each other, even if they are all in the US, a warrant could possibly be bypassed.

      The basic rule of thumb is
      - Warrantless = external threat (national security)
      - Warrant = internal threat (law enforcement purposes)

      That was also FISA's take on the subject.

      --
      Of course that's just my opinion...... you could be wrong!
    5. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To put it simply for John Yoo and other "POTUS as Commander-in-Chief" guys out there: Congress is the President's commander, through the purse, through the polls, and through the law. By assuming dictatorial powers that do not exist, he has been attempting a slow-motion coup d'etat.

    6. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by mshannon78660 · · Score: 1

      I believe that such wiretapping is authorized in the FISA - the same law that requires warrants for intercepting domestic communications also explicitly says that they are not required for communications with no domestic component. This goes back to my original point, as FISA is a law passed by the legislative branch - granting authority to the executive branch - as opposed to an executive order or other regulation originating in the executive branch. The latter is what one would expect if McCain's (and Bush/Cheney, etc) interpretation of article II were correct.

    7. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Straif · · Score: 1

      But according to the FISA court themselves, âoeFISA could not encroach on the Presidentâ(TM)s constitutional power.â

      Whatever article or ammendment they are reading, from it's very beginning FISA and its authors have admitted that they cannot actually limit the Presidents consititutional powers to protect the nation except when the President himself allows that limitation.

      So this is not a case of the legislative dictating terms to the Executive, but merely a case of the Legislative and Executive agreeing on a set of guiding principles which by their own admission technically cannot be enforced if the executive chooses not to follow them. Like much of Washington, it's all for show with little substance.

      --
      Of course that's just my opinion...... you could be wrong!
    8. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      Now show me where that explicit and unambiguous instruction is contradicted in the Constitution.

      Well, according to some people, the loop hole is in "faithfully". Of course, these are also the same people who are "faithful" to their spouses by only committing adultery on weekdays.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    9. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Lorien_the_first_one · · Score: 1

      Damn straight. And since we're talking about
      "Federal" jurisdiction, you might like this, too.

      http://home.hiwaay.net/~becraft/FEDJurisdiction.html

      It's by Larry Becraft, a very interesting attorney who makes a pretty good case that the feds have a shorter arm into American than they think.

      As I said before: enjoy the reading.

      --
      The diversity and expression of human opinion is essential to human survival.
    10. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 0, Troll

      The President's first duty is to the Constitution, not the laws passed by Congress. Is first duty is to the supreme law of the land, not the laws passed by Congress.

      "I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States."

      If the President believes a law is unconstitutional, he is sworn to uphold the Constitution first.

      Now, please, go blow your brains out before you infect others with your ignorance.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    11. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, the Constitution that he swears to uphold says that when he upholds it, he must faithfully execute Congress' laws.

      The president is not the judge of whether a law is un-constitutional. The Supreme Court is the only judge of that. So if a president thinks a law is un-Constitutional, the Constitution says he has to ask the Court, and they decide. Which is what in fact happens all the time, when the president is not violating the Constitution.

      Which Bush has indeed done every time he's written a Constitutional "signing statement" that says "I will disobey this law". Which Bush has done hundreds of times.

      So you just take your un-Constitutional signing statements and shove them up your traitorous ass. We've had enough of you Republican traitors destroying the country and lying about the Constitution.

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    12. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Moderation -1
          100% Troll

      To TrollMods, quoting the Constitution and defying anyone to disprove it in an argument about the Constitution is a "troll".

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      make install -not war

    13. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not so much. The congress has the power to declare war, but nowhere does it say it has the power to stop a war. You may want to look to the section on treaties to see congress's roll in declaring peace.

    14. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by terjeber · · Score: 1

      If the President believes a law is unconstitutional, he is sworn to uphold the Constitution first.

      I am surprised that you were able to respond here on Slashdot. Did you dictate your rubbish and have someone else type it for you? Did that person also read the other posts here? You see, Your Ignorance is such that I am wholly convinced that you do not even possess the most basic skills, like reading and writing. Go back to school please. Learn about branches of government and the US Constitution. The one that says that the president must "faithfully execute Congress' laws".

      After reading that, try to figure out who has the ultimate say in whether a law is constitutional or not. Hint: It's not the Executive Branch, and if it was the Legislative, it would be kind of odd, given that it was those guys who wrote the (possibly unconstitutional) law in the first place.

      As long as a law has not been deemed unconstitutional, if the US president doesn't execute that law, he is in violation of his oath no matter what he thinks about the law.

    15. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Hi, shithead. Maybe you should check out how the separation of powers and checks and balances work.

      Here, let me help you: If the President feels a law is unconstitutional, he can fail to enforce it. From there, Congress has two options: impeachment or involving the Judicial branch. Then the Judicial branch can either find the law unconstitutional or it can find that the President is out of order and tell him to enforce the law. Then, if the President does not enforce the law, Congress can then impeach him.

      Now, please go stick you head back up your ass.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    16. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Hey fuckface, I notice you don't bring your specious argument to where I actually slammed you with the fact that the Constitution requires the president to faithfully execute Congress' laws. Now you're backpedaling by saying the president can betray that obligation, and face impeachment or judicial penalty.

      What an asshole you are. You might as well say the president is free to violate the law of gravity, then, when someone reminds you that you're a stupid cunt, you'll barf up "but then gravity can pull them down" or some other bullshit.

      Just shut the fuck up already. You're making the adults regret we let you in here with us. This is serious stuff, and you're a jackass.

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      make install -not war

    17. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Wrong. The FISA is indeed an un-Constitutional exception to the 4th Amendment requirement for a warrant in every case of wiretapping that has been tolerated since its passage in 1978 (and subsequent updates throughout). But even the FISA acknowledges that such abuse cannot be tolerated when the wiretap is tapping a "US person" (which is either a citizen, a legal resident - even one abroad, or a legal visitor - even a tourist, so long as they're physically within US territory).

      Your distinctions are wrong. The FISA has no jurisdiction on US persons. Its jurisdiction is not determined by the purpose of the wiretap.

      But so what? What we're talking about here is how Bush and his crony regime have been unrestrainedly wiretapping anyone and everyone, without even bothering to use the FISA . There is no justification for Bush to have AT&T wiretap every one of the people telephoning across its network, indiscriminately, as it has been doing for several years.

      Article II blah blah blah. Article II also says that the VP succeeds the president when the president is unable to function. So what? Are you going to tell us that because Cheney is continuing as Bush's VP the wiretapping he loved when he worked for Nixon, that the FISA was passed to prohibit, that Article II makes that OK, even though it violates the 4th Amendment and its borderline FISA exception?

      It doesn't. It's un-Constitutional. It's impeachable. And defending it with fake logic is anti-American.

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      make install -not war

    18. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Straif · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing from your response that you never even bothered to look up the Truong case since it set the standard and expressly permitted tapping of US based communications for the purposes of national security. The only requirements for a warrantless tap, according to established precedent, is that the target of the tapped conversation be an agent of a foreign power and that the tapping be for national security and not simply law enforcement reasons; there physical location does not matter. Now you can debate whether an terrorists organization can be considered a 'foreign power' but thats another issue.

      As for the taps being indiscriminate, do you have any links showing that they were not in fact targetted as the administration claims? While picking certain countries as 'places of interest' for their systems to monitor may be a bit wide, it is selective targetting and is also the reason for their inability to use FISA's 3 day rule (simply TMI).

      As for your Article II blah blah blah statement, I don't even think I referenced a particular Article, merely that established law, that pre-dates Bush by decades, sets up the use of this type of surveilence program for the purposes of national security. It may never have been set up to this scale, but the target of such investigations have never been as dispersed as they curretly are either.

      Don't like it, find a lawyer and challenge it. That's the American way. Though the fact that every challenge so far has appeared to fail may hinder finding anyone without the deep pockets of the ACLU behind them to take up your case. And just saying something is impeachable, simply because you want it to be, in the face of established law, is not a legal argument that carries a lot of weight.

      --
      Of course that's just my opinion...... you could be wrong!
    19. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      The FISA says that US persons may not be wiretapped without a warrant, even though others may be.

      The indiscriminate tapping was witnesed by Mark Klein, the AT&T tech who they had install the network lines into the tapping room. But it's hard to prove what is being suppressed, including all evidence and witnesses, by fraudulent "national security" and "executive privilege" claims that are just covering up criminals, and endangering the national security, not protecting it.

      The verdict of a Federal judge that Bush's wiretapping broke the law many times makes it impeachable.

      The problem with finding a lawyer to challenge it is precisely the Republican activism to give telcos retroactive immunity - amnesty - to preempt legal cases citing those violations.

      Oh, and talking about the ACLU (and it's fictional "deep pockets") as if its the boogeyman is really sleazy. Republican sleazy.

      You Republicans aren't content with ruining the country with 7-14 years of this kind of Nixonian tyranny. You're still trying to make the rubble bounce, even after everything has left you but your trusty keyboards.

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      make install -not war

    20. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Straif · · Score: 1

      I'm trying to get this through to you:

      Truong is case precedent which sets the legal foundation. It has been challenged but has withstood appeal many times over.

      FISA has already declared that they have no authority over the President's actions in this matter.

      Could you link the federal verdict (and it's appeal outcome) to show where the NSA program has been found to be illegal?

      As for Mark Klein, his account is that th NSA has the ability to interrogate all internet traffic going through several main stations throughout the US. A scary thought, sure, but he has no knowledge as to what is being done with that ability so it doesn't really show any proof that they are indiscriminatly listening to or viewing peoples communications except to apply a filter. For all anyone knoew is they could be simply looking for key IP ranges and recording those data streams, which is essentially what they've already admitted to doing in targetting communications with specific countries.

      As for the ACLU. Any organization that takes in almost $100 million a year in donations and court settlements, with almost no actual legal fees (almost all lawyers work pro bono and office supplies do not cost that much) can easily be said to have deep pockets. It wasn't meant to imply anything, it's just a statement of fact. If you don't have the money yourself and you think your rights are being violated you go to the ACLU. It's why they exist. The fact you think that that is an insult is more telling of your mindset than mine.

      Of course, from a persons whose strongest argument is to call someone a "Republican", it's not all that unexpected. For the record I'm not even American, so you can hardly blame me for your perceived injustices.

      --
      Of course that's just my opinion...... you could be wrong!
    21. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      The Truong case is not definitive in the case of indiscriminately wiretapping millions of Americans, and indeed does not cover wiretapping any Americans inside the US.

      The FISA Court is currently composed of practically all Bush and Reagan appointees, especially after several resigned in protest of its operations.

      The Federal verdict that Bush violated the FISA was overturned on appeal, though the appeal did not controvert any of the legal arguments in the original Federal district decision, and is yet another transparent Republican cabal end-run around the Constitution.

      Mark Klein knew that he was passing all the AT&T network's massive traffic into the secret scanning room. And if they were clean, they wouldn't be pushing so hard for so long for amnesty.

      I'll grant that your use invocation the ACLU's "deep pockets" was probably a misunderstanding on my part. But if you're going to defend the unjust warrantless wiretapping by saying it's too expensive to sue the telcos, you're not really arguing for justice.

      My strongest argument is not that you're Republican. That's just a summary, and your biggest flaw. The strongest argument is the bigger picture, where I show that you're just cherrypicking convenient arguments defending the telcos which are violating the 4th Amendment and our rights that it protects, when it it blatantly obvious that they are doing so, and terrified that they might now not find Congressional cover to get away with it. Which is what Republicans do, as part of an even bigger picture, that doesn't require you to be a member of their Party to be part of their fascist attack on America.

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      make install -not war

    22. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Straif · · Score: 1
      Did you read you wiki link you posted, it backs up my argument perfectly.

      The administration holds that an exception to the normal warrant requirements exists when the purpose of the surveillance is to prevent attack from a foreign threat. Such an exception has been upheld at the Circuit Court level when the target was a foreign agent residing abroad[49][50] a foreign agent residing in the US[51][52][53][54]and a US citizen abroad.[55] The warrantless exception was struck down when both the target and the threat was deemed domestic.[56] The legality of targeting US persons acting as agents of a foreign power and residing in this country has not been addressed by the US Supreme Court, but has occurred at least once, in the case of Aldrich Ames.

      Ames was a US citizen who was convicted of spying for the USSR in part with information gathered through warrantless searches (performed under the Clinton administration).

      So once again:

      National security: legal
      Domestic security: illegal

      As you yourself admit, the court declaring Bush's actions illegal was overturned on appeal, thereby negating their decision. You can't therefore arrest him when the courts have already ruled that he did not violate the law.

      And you can fall back on the "Bush and Regan" appointees line but this same reasoning has been used to defend this loop hole since Carter and unless every court in the US is filled with "Bush and Reagan" appointees, that argument falls flat on its face. One has only to take a cursory look at the SCOTUS to understand that just because a person is appointed by a Republican President doesn't mean they will rule in the Republicans favor. Two of the most liberal supreme court justices were appointed by Republicans.

      And you might also want to look up what fascism means. Despite what people like to believe, Fascism is actually an extreme form of socialism (the greater good above the individual good) and was wildly accepted, and even praised by early 20th century liberals as the best form of government. The same type of people that love to praise Che and Castro for their accomplishments in creating a 'perfect' society in Cuba no doubt. People like you try and twist it around to insult conservatives, but by any definition, it shares little in common with traditional, or even the odd Bush "compassionate conservative" branch, ideals.
      --
      Of course that's just my opinion...... you could be wrong!
    23. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by mshannon78660 · · Score: 1

      I don't think you read that correctly about the appeals court - they ruled that the plaintiffs did not have standing - that is, they could not show that they specifically had had their communications tapped. The appeals court did not rule that the program was legal, only that these particular plaintiffs could not challenge it.

    24. Re:Article I Makes Congress More Powerful by Straif · · Score: 1

      My point is that since there is no standing legal precedent declaring the NSA wiretaps illegal and all previous challenges to the executive privilige exception has also failed, even when specific defendants could show that they were the focus of warrantless taps, then there is no grounds to simply declare the Presidents actions illegal, as Doc was doing.

      Once a legal decision is made and it withstands appeal then you can call the President's actions illegal and continue down whatever road you choose. Until then all this calling for impeachment just sounds like sour grapes.

      --
      Of course that's just my opinion...... you could be wrong!
  47. Re:Signing Statements. by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

    >Two parties perhaps but I see no daylight between them.

    "I'll show you politics in America. Here it is, right here:
    'I think the puppet on the right shares my beliefs.'
    'I think the puppet on the left is more to my liking.'
    'Hey, WAIT a minute, there's one guy holding out both puppets!'"
    -- Bill Hicks

    --
    Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
  48. Re: begging to get raped, and then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and after she started using the money and weapons I gave her, how dare she turn them on me!

  49. It's a system of checks and balances by n0-0p · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The real value of FISA warrants is more reactive than proactive. FISA judges show pretty broad discretion in what they will approve, but they do so with the understanding that the warrant creates a paper trail of justification and accountability. Without that paper trail, it's almost impossible to conduct a real investigation and hold people responsible for any abuses.

    Personally, I consider the original FISA requirements to be reasonable in the context of an intelligence collection mission (not traditional law enforcement). However, what Bush did to FISA is an abuse of Executive power specifically because it removes not only the weaker proactive checks, but also the stronger retroactive balances of an investigative trail.

    1. Re:It's a system of checks and balances by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is my dick up your ass reasonable without your permission.

      I would say it's not reasonable along with FISA.

      They can go to a normal open court. What is so hard about that? FISA is just a way to hide corruption in the justice system.

  50. Re:Signing Statements. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obama on signing statements

    4. Under what circumstances, if any, would you sign a bill into law but also issue a signing statement reserving a constitutional right to bypass the law?

    Signing statements have been used by presidents of both parties, dating back to Andrew Jackson. While it is legitimate for a president to issue a signing statement to clarify his understanding of ambiguous provisions of statutes and to explain his view of how he intends to faithfully execute the law, it is a clear abuse of power to use such statements as a license to evade laws that the president does not like or as an end-run around provisions designed to foster accountability.

    I will not use signing statements to nullify or undermine congressional instructions as enacted into law. The problem with this administration is that it has attached signing statements to legislation in an effort to change the meaning of the legislation, to avoid enforcing certain provisions of the legislation that the President does not like, and to raise implausible or dubious constitutional objections to the legislation. The fact that President Bush has issued signing statements to challenge over 1100 laws - more than any president in history - is a clear abuse of this prerogative. No one doubts that it is appropriate to use signing statements to protect a president's constitutional prerogatives; unfortunately, the Bush Administration has gone much further than that.

  51. I've said it before by wickerprints · · Score: 4, Insightful

    and I'll say it again:

    The extent to which those who watch over us are unwilling to be watched by us is the precise extent to which we are not a free and just society.

    This has nothing to do with war, or terrorism. It is simply a matter of accountability. The people have a right to know what our elected officials do in the name of ensuring our safety, regardless of whether they actually live up to that goal or not. That we are not able to do so is the true barometer of our freedom, despite whatever a centuries-old piece of paper might proclaim.

  52. Re:McCain or Obama? No-freedom or no-security? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Yeah, but on the plus side neither one of them have any clue about the economy.

    The next four years are going to suck.

  53. Unlimited Power? by Enrique1218 · · Score: 2, Funny

    I must be completely illiterate but I can not find any passage in Article 2 that gives the President unlimited power in times of war. I see no justification of warrantless wiretapping. In fact, according the Article, he shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed and he shall take the following Oath or Affirmation:--''I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.''. Of course, that is maybe where my logic fails. It only states that he should make the oath but not actually live up to it. Also, Article 2 didn't say faithfully execute the laws at all times, no exceptions. So, obviously, he can just pick and choose when to follow that as well. Then, again, maybe the phrase "best of my ability" is the basis of his argument. As we all know, Bush is incapable of making either ethical or competent decisions.

    --
    You don't have to be smart to use a Mac, you just have to be smart enough to buy one
  54. Lying headline by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Should read "McCain adviser supports asking telecoms for assistance"

    But, then that wouldn't be the sensationalist, muck-raking, lie of a headline the submitter wanted.

    What is it like being a lying propagandist, "I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property"?

    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    1. Re:Lying headline by RandomUsername99 · · Score: 1

      Actually, considering that this almost guarantees that he does support warrantless wiretapping, saying something like "McCain adviser supports asking telecoms for assistance" would be akin to replacing "Man shoots 3 family members dead" with "Man pushes lever on small mechanical device in the privacy of his own home". Is it accurate? Absolutely. Just because you like the man doesn't mean that people who disagree with him are lying. At least be happy that he seems to be a good guy overall and he's not feeding us a line.

    2. Re:Lying headline by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Wow, talk about ignorance.

      McCain's adviser says something and it is attributed to McCain.

      And you compare it to that? That is the best you can do?

      Here let me fix that for you: would be akin to replacing "Man's friend shoots 3 family members dead" with "Man shoots family of 3".

      That is what the headline and, by virtue of your defense of the headline, you are doing.

      If you are too stupid to see that, you are letting your political bias get in the way and you should probable kill yourself.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  55. When you're selling fear by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It helps to put a very precise face on it.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
    1. Re:When you're selling fear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like "the Gop is out to getcha!" ?

  56. exploiting Slashdot's editors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property" sure seems keen to drum up support for the EFF by submitting Slashdot stories. Or keen on plastering as much shit on McCain that no Slashdotter would dare vote for him.
    This entire submission appears based on Zuato's comment of 09:16 EDT, here:
    http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=573423&cid=23650687
    The link Zuato provided in that comment is the exact same as the first link in the summary of this article.

    I don't think I need to point out the bias of the submission's headline, or the tone of the summary itself. The statement was carefully-worded, pandering politico-speak: "John McCain will do everything he can to protect Americans from... foreign threats to the United States...".

    For some more balance, why not check out the refreshingly calm and sane discussion of how McCain and Obama compare on power issues, posted below a few minutes ago:
    http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=573885&cid=23657751
    Thank you, Irvu, for pointing out that each of these guys possesses both some heartening and some appalling views on power consolidation and authoritarianism.

    The McCain campaign has felt the need to appeal to the fear-monger bait, patriot-gasm demographic after his narrow defeat to their ilk in 2000 and their similarly herculean triumph in 2004. (Not that I think Kerry was electable, but lotsa people came out to vote against Bush.) McCain's once noteworthy integrity has suffered for it.

    I think it's reasonable to say that the best statesman, with the least pettiness and slick-talking mealy-mouth-ism, has secured the lead in each of the two major parties. And per "I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property"'s even-handed commentary, let's all bash the shit out of McCain on a marginal statement issued by a campaign worker, just because he has an R by his name.

  57. You think that's scary? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When it comes to domestic surveillance, frankly I'm more worried about Transparent Walls.

  58. ECHELON anyone? by thule · · Score: 3, Informative

    Maybe Obama will go back to using surveillance for more important things like helping create jobs: ECHELONG.

    It is amazing to me that people go with their guts on the domestic wiretap stuff. First of all, from what I've been able to figure, there has been no domestic wiretaps without FISA. Any NSA wiretaps that lead to a domestic connection can be follow up with a FISA warrant. FISA was just worried about where the requests were coming from. Previously the FBI could not get a warrant from a NSA lead. After 9/11 this was allowed. See:
    Secret Court's Judges Were Warned About NSA Spy Data: [...] "the government's failure to share information about its spying program had rendered useless a federal screening system that the judges had insisted upon to shield the court from tainted information."

    That was deemed stupid and changed after 9/11. There are some hold outs though.

    Remember that you can I can call a tapped number and law enforcement can listen to our call. The tap request only covers the tap target, but they can certainly listen in to anyone that calls that number. So when NSA is listening in to communications in the battlefield, that routes to a domestic number, that does not constitute "domestic wire tapping" since the tap is on the foreign source.

    The other aspect of the "domestic" part is Call Detail Records. You do no own your call history, the phone company does. They can do whatever the heck they want with that information. Some states are making CDR's private, but traditionally, it is owned by the phone company. The FBI could use CDR's to see who has been talking to you and get a FISA warrant based on that information.

    So, do I think things will change under Obama? Nope, not at all. Even under Clinton's "wall" of separation between the NSA and the FBI, there were still warrantless wiretaps.

  59. Learn some history. by copponex · · Score: 5, Informative

    England and America have directly been involved in dividing up Arab land and resources since they switched their militaries from steam-powered equipment to oil powered equipment. We've been militarily involved in Iraq since before WWI. We destroyed the democratic government of Iran becuase they dared to demand that they keep the profit from their own natural resources. We formed al Queda when we used them as cannon fodder to fuck around with the Russians. We supplied Israel with capital and military equipment to commit acts of genocide against the Palestinians (mostly because we didn't want Jewish refugees in America) and they allowed us to establish a military base without too much fuss. We helped the invade Lebanon, destroy the entire country, and the direct result was Hezbollah. We funded the army of Saddam Hussein knowing full well that it would be used to murder thousands of his own people. Our military has helped with the slow crush of the PLO, which resulted in Hamas.

    So, after a hundred years of oppression and suffering, they strike one blow about a ten thousand times less deadly in the number of dead and about a hundred thousand times less damaging as a matter of culture and economy.

    And then they won after they proved that the infidel doesn't have the moral fortitude to give everyone the right to a lawyer, no matter how heinous their crime. They proved that we have no moral superiority when it comes to torture and human rights.

    America is not the same place it used to be. All there is to do now is sit back and watch what's left of the power structure squabble over the table scraps until we run out of resources and the next revolution occurs.

    But don't pay any attention to this. Listen to the President. Go shopping, and he'll take care of the rest.

    1. Re:Learn some history. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said.

    2. Re:Learn some history. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You had me up to "until we run out of resources." I guess you're a young feller, and don't remember that we ran out of resources in the year 2000, and our overpopulated cities were forced to start eating Soylent Green.

      "Learn some history," indeed.

      "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice... uhh... we won't be fooled again." Even a broken President is right once a day.

    3. Re:Learn some history. by Peaker · · Score: 0

      We supplied Israel with capital and military equipment to commit acts of genocide against the Palestinians Huh? What the hell are you talking about?
    4. Re:Learn some history. by superyooser · · Score: 1

      England and America have directly been involved in dividing up Jewish land for 60 years, but you don't see Jews attacking the West.

    5. Re:Learn some history. by orphiuchus · · Score: 1

      I think you should include some links when you make a post like that, you have some bad information. Specifically the US did NOT help form Al Queda, we helped form the Mujahideen, who for the most part now make up the northern alliance. Some members of the Mujahideen went on to be involved in Al Queda, but its hardly the same group. Most of this information I have from personal experience and people I know throughout the Marine Crops(specifically in MARSOC), but wikipedia reflects the same info. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mujahideen#Afghanistan http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Quida#Alleged_CIA_involvement -This one is a little short on info, we were sending 600 million a year(as that was the maximum funding we could send)

    6. Re:Learn some history. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > America is not the same place it used to be.

      You got that right buddy. America is now full of a bunch of ignorant, whiny, and lost children -- just like you. If "we" played it your way, our grandparents would have been lamp shades or bars of soap.

    7. Re:Learn some history. by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      That's kinda funny first you spend your post talking of atrocities of the past 100 years then say, "America is not the same place it used to be."

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    8. Re:Learn some history. by Nikkos · · Score: 1

      Learn some history, specifically the Ottoman empire and it's genocide of Armenians prior to WWI and the various atrocities committed while it controlled most of Europe.

    9. Re:Learn some history. by Worldwatcher2u · · Score: 0

      So comrade, what organization do you belong to; Hamas, Hezbollah or maybe Al Qaeda. First of all get your facts right and stop using the Palestinian play book. You are obviously an America Hater of the first order. I do believe it was the French and English that divided up the Ottoman Empire into the counties of the Middle East of today. The US had very little to say in the decisions. I do believe the lands were divided up before anybody knew there was oil there or I am sure the imperialist United States would have took the land from the âoepoorâ people of the time. As far as Iran goes, Iâ(TM)m sure your Imam Khomeini had nothing to do with the overthrow of the Shah and the establishment of the fascist, theocratic Islamic nation it is today. According to you; âoeWe supplied Israel with capital and military equipment to commit acts of genocide against the Palestinians (mostly because we didn't want Jewish refugees in America) and they allowed us to establish a military base without too much fuss.â Hummm⦠Acts of genocide; who says Israel should be completely destroyed and all Jews killed (genocide). Who lobs rockets into civilian cities in Israel killing women and children? Who sends suicide bombers to kill innocent woman and children on school buses and markets? Who has given up land, moved it own people out of legitimate cities all to accommodate the enemy in the hope for peace. Israel, you imbecile. Please tell me what U.S. Military bases are in Israel today? âoeSo, after a hundred years of oppression and suffering, they strike one blow about a ten thousand times less deadly in the number of dead and about a hundred thousand times less damaging as a matter of culture and economy.â Is this your feeble attempt to justify the attack on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. If so, go to hell, in my humble opinion we should have âoenukedâ Iraq, Syria, and any other country that attacks us. Here is a clue for you, try attacking us again, and we will rip your balls off and stuff them in your mouth. Ahh and this gives us, the reader, just who you are; âoeAnd then they won after they proved that the INFIDEL doesn't have the moral fortitude to give everyone the right to a lawyer, no matter how heinous their crime. They proved that we have no moral superiority when it comes to torture and human rights.â Hummm I didnâ(TM)t see Daniel Pipes lawyer anywhere when you beheaded him. Donâ(TM)t lecture us about human rights you Islamic dog. And then you quote Norm Chomsky a noted Communist, what gall coming from a fascist like you. Grow up, read and learn the true facts before you post. Maybe you are not interested in the truth, just poorly put together propaganda

      --
      Freedom is not FREE
    10. Re:Learn some history. by ahabswhale · · Score: 1

      You say a lot of shit and provide zero references. You're conclusions are unfounded and absolute bullshit and show that you have a massive lack of understanding of what the Middle East is all about. It's far more complex than you make it out. It's like treating experimental physics as if it's 1st grade English.

      Don't get me wrong, we have certainly interfered in the area and contributed to the mess that is the Middle East but wow...you come up with some serious bullshit. That fact that you were marked +5 informative is scary. I guess I shouldn't be surprised, there's a new asshole trying to recreate history every day.

      --
      Are agnostics skeptical of unicorns too?
  60. personal privacy vs continued genicide. by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1, Informative

    What a annoying choice to make. I wish oboma was not a supporter of genicide ( aka abortion) then the election would be an easy choice, but until the dems stop supporting abortion and buggery I guess me and most of the religious middle will keep voting against economic and personal self intrest in the hopes that one day the killing of millions will be abated.

    I find it ironic that our first black president should he be elected will be with the support of the orginization that was founded primarily as a eugentics programs against Negro people (aka NOW).

    http://www.blackgenocide.org/negro.html
    http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-religion/1294086/posts

    Still it is a hard chioce to make, continue to let the country slide deeper and deeper into the bush/republic style anti-privacy police state or let it continue to slide into an amoral fascism where people are jailed for trying to stop babies form being killed and thier children from being taught that anal sex is a component of a healty alternative life style.

    What can you say ... bad choices on either side.

    --
    âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    1. Re:personal privacy vs continued genicide. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can say that you're a religious nutbag who thinks everyone should agree with your morals. Are you a fucking hypocrite? (rhetorical)

      Honestly, I wish you would have been aborted rather than spew your brainwashed bullshit to people that really don't want to fucking hear it. Go read your fairy tale book and brainwash your kids... quit acting like your nutjob beliefs are the law of the land.

      I personally think a woman has the right to do whatever the fuck she wants. It damn sure isn't my decision to make, NOR YOURS.

      Its fucking zealots like you that got us in the mess we're in as it is. Leave other people alone and worry about yourself. Your obviously a little delusional... start there.

    2. Re:personal privacy vs continued genicide. by Straif · · Score: 1

      I've never understood how voting for conservatives are "against economic and personal self intrest". Personally I like the idea of the government not taking all my money to fund ponzi schemes meant to make people feel safe while at the same time bankrupting the nation.

      My 'economic and personal self intrest' is based on the government sticking to what it should be doing and leaving me alone to make my own decisions. Safety nets are fine but the push to the nanny state where no matter what stupid decision people make is ok because big brother will step in to bail you out is not in my economic self interest.

      The housing market is a perfect example. The government should not bail out people who got greedy and bought houses well out of their price range through mortgages with conditions that would make Black Beard blush. It would be acceptable for agents of the government to step in to act as a negotiatior and try and prevent mass forclosures, but failing the lending institutions acceptance of new terms, there is really little that the government should do except pass legilation detailing new guidlines for future transactions.

      Too many people want to use the government as a giant equilizer to make sure no matter how you play the game, everyone crosses the finish line at the same time. The truth is your own personal decisions affect how well you live and what options you have for the future and expecting any government department to step in to make things better is just inviting trouble. Of course in the current make up it's hard to tell the Dems from the Repubs as to who wants to spend more of the tax payer money on over reaching social programs.

      --
      Of course that's just my opinion...... you could be wrong!
    3. Re:personal privacy vs continued genicide. by terjeber · · Score: 1

      What can you say ... bad choices on either side.

      Nah, the saddest part of this is that our election system is so easy to comprehend that even someone like you can actually manage to vote. That is the sad part.

  61. Re:John McCain: The Cardboard Candidate by nuzak · · Score: 1

    So remember kids, if you want to promulgate partisan prejudice against others, all you have to do is agree to let McCain undermine liberty in the name of liberty. He says that lawless vendors of statism make the best scout leaders and schoolteachers. Hey, McCain, how about telling us the truth for once? The fault, dear McCain, is not in your stars but in yourself. I believe in "live and let live". McCain, in contrast, demands not only tolerance and acceptance of his stratagems but endorsement of them. It's because of such pharisaical demands that I believe that if he truly believes that arriving at a true state of comprehension is too difficult and/or time-consuming, then maybe he should enroll in Introduction to Reality 101.

    You know, you really are no Hunter S. Thompson. He actually managed to pack significant amounts of meaning into the paragraphs of his polysyllabic polemics.

    I actually agree with what you're saying, but you gotta work on the presentation.

    --
    Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
  62. Re:Hedging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cool project. A few thoughts ...

    1) Doesn't a 1:500 signal-to-noise ratio imply that PL would take up 500 times more resources than regular surfing? Could be a problem for the poor end of the target demographic. And, it might be the kind of footprint that would raise red flags in and of itself.

    Chaffing smacks too much of security through obscurity anyway, to me. I'd rather have a solid distro that just makes use, by default, of the good privacy tools that are out there. Every item that you need to add on yourselves, regardless of coolness factor, is going to slow you down and push you toward vaporware.

    2) Logo: I'm seeing a sleek trenchcoat penguin with an eyepatch. Maybe an eyepatch in the rough form of the letter P ... to stand for paranoia, of course, but maybe also to suggest solidarity with that other well-known P outfit that is working in the same realms of technology and politics.

    3) Speaking of fellow travellers, I'd be more likely to use PL if it could pass the FSF purity test, a la gNewSense. It seems to have become reverse-cool these days on /. to bash on Stallman, the GPL, etc., but the basher weenies don't speak for all of us by a long shot.

    I'll be watching with interest. And maybe coming over to play if I have any more inspirations.

    PS: I would have posted this on the PL site, but the irony of having to log-in to post there pegged my irony meter. ;)

  63. I'm in Favor by geoffrobinson · · Score: 2, Informative

    Article 2 does apply. If you are a foreign power or working for one, it falls under executive powers inherent in the Presidency.

    If they find something that pertains to civil criminality, they shouldn't use it in a court of law. But if they find out that you are talking with al Qaeda, this seems fine.

    They did far, far more in WWII. I think it is time for people to have a reality check on the ramifications of this. Not saying you need to be for it. But a lot of the fear seems exaggerated.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
    1. Re:I'm in Favor by Paleolibertarian · · Score: 1

      Can you be more specific about exactly where in Article 2 it states that the executive shall have the power to disregard the constitution or any provision of the Bill of Rights? I have heard this argument before and at least in my copy of the constitution it says nothing of the sort. It DOES say in Article 2, Section1, Clause 8:

      "Before he enter on the Execution of his Office, he shall take the following Oath or Affirmation:

              "I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States."

      But then I am not a politician, attorney, judge or a member of any presidential administration (past or present) so I don't have the benefit of divine inspiration and am simply relying on my own reading skills and common sense.

  64. Reverse the moderation polarity ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Such a display of awesome moderation powers!

    PS mods: s/i/y/

  65. Martial law by New_Age_Reform_Act · · Score: 1

    The president can declare martial law in a national crisis, without the need of Congressional approval, and under the martial law the Constitution is suspended.

    --
    "The New Age. The New Beginning."
    1. Re:Martial law by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      This is not in the Constitution. If you have a legal citation for this, I'm sure we're all interested to read about it.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
  66. fear controls sheeple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    history shows this as a truth.

    We lost the USSR boogyman, and the corrupt leaders worked hard as they could to create another...but failed.

    Then terrorist attacked a target the world would notice (some think that was a setup as well) so we had a new boogyman they could scare us all with...

    How sad is a governing body when it can't maintain a government without a boogyman to keep the population scared into submitting to total control of their lives?

    Terrorist have been with us for thousands of years...

    The fight against terror was lost the moment governments took away its citizens rights...at that point in history, the terrorist had achieved their goal, to force change on the governed people.

  67. There's also a deterrent effect by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    If someone knows that a judge, outside his own chain of command, will see what he's doing, then he might think twice about abusing power.

    1. Re:There's also a deterrent effect by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      ...which is why even the minimal oversight of FISA is absolutely vital.

      I never thought I could despise a president more than I despised Clinton, but Bush has done it, sigh...

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    2. Re:There's also a deterrent effect by infonography · · Score: 1

      I never thought I could despise a president more than I despised Clinton, but Bush has done it, sigh... Now Now, Hillary hasn't even been elected yet, give the girl a chance. 8 Years as Obama's VP has seasoned her well.
      --
      Sorry about the writing. Robot fingers, you know? Cliff Steele in DOOM PATROL #23
  68. Re:Hedging by graveyhead · · Score: 1

    Haha! Good point. Opening up comments to anon visitors.

    --
    std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
  69. Genocide, I think it's spelled... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And how is it genocide? I take it you're a god botherer, yes?

    So when does the foetus get a soul? Too early and the foetus will often die before actually getting on to the Earth. Too late and some premature babies are being born without a soul.

    So if you ignore religious reasons, it becomes merely a biological problem. When is the foetus a viable organism? Please remember that the woman's body can, especially in times of stress, kill and reabsorb the baby (eat her child, if you like scary hyberbole). Most miscarriages are the mothers' body deciding that this foreign body needs to be killed (killing her child!) and miscarriages are very much more common than you think. Late period but no baby? Miscarriage, most likely.

    And before it can survive on its own, it's a parasite. And killing a parasite is not genocide.

    AFTER that point, there's an issue about forcing the mother to give birth no matter what SHE wants and respecting the new life that could survive.

    That's the grey area. At what point do YOUR prejudices mean that someone else must obey your whim?

    Then after that grey area is where the child could be taken (maybe by caesarian) and still live a perfectly normal life as a new human being.

    However, even in this case, unless you're killing all children (a la Herod) this isn't genocide. Homicide maybe. Not genocide.

    But if you really must use emotive and ill advised words to describe the situation, why not remember this:

    This foetus is a parasite on the mother.

    Technically correct but emotive in a way that people find disturbing.

    Like genocide.

    1. Re:Genocide, I think it's spelled... by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

      The idea of a soul entirely misses the point.

      The mammillian life cycle begins when the gametes of the parents join.

      That is the one and only tempral event that can be measured by wich an idividual is organism is established. Every other event is an events that happen to two genetically distict individual organism ( mother and child) one that is dependant on the other.

      From the prepective of law there is a simple question that must be answered.
      How important are individual rights.

      Individual rights obviously must be bounded by the importance of the idividual and the right to privacy is an idividual right. The most fundimental individual right is the right to continue living.

      The circumstances under which one can be deprived of thier legal right to continue living are thus a bounding factor to the importance of individual privacy rights.

      So if a living person is only so important that they can be deprived of thier right to be alive because they are an inconvience or even significant threat to thier mother ( on which they are dependant.)

      It follows logically that lesser freedoms like the right to privacy can be depensed of for the individual when they are a threat to the security of the state as a whole to which the individual is dependant.

      So I really dislike both republicans and democrats equally but feel forced to favor laws which promote the bounding factor of human freedom first with the hope that eventually sanity will set in about the others.

      --
      âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    2. Re:Genocide, I think it's spelled... by khope · · Score: 1

      "It follows logically that lesser freedoms like the right to privacy can be depensed of for the individual when they are a threat to the security of the state as a whole to which the individual is dependant."

      I disagree because the U.S. constitution proceeds from the position that all rights are held by the people and they grant some to the state. Thus it is the individual to whom the state is dependent.

      Thus, if the state becomes a threat to the rights (and thus the security) of the individual we may collectively abolish that power of the state.

      --Kirt

  70. Tail wags dog by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

    I can't remember where I heard it... but one of the things that makes a good leader is that they have "strong opinions which are weakly held".

    They are clear in what they believe and in what to do, but they will change their mind if they find something that makes them think that they are wrong.

    Something like, perhaps, a lobbyist with a busload of cash? Or in McCain's case, the possibility to waltz into office if he can appease the right party factions. Face it, AC, this has nothing to do with McCain thinking his opinions were "wrong" so much as discovering that they might not get him elected. And that's a somewhat slimier state of affairs.

    Cheers,

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."
  71. Hyperbole and smoke, or substantiated story? by zooblethorpe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Al Qaeda is in fact actively trying to build multiple nuclear weapons. We KNOW they have already acquired the weapons-grade uranium, and are simply working on the devices themselves and logistics.

    Citations, please?

    Cheers,

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."
  72. Terrorism is what we want. by copponex · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We need terrorism. Without it, we have no plausible reason to maintain a military presence near valuable US business interests in the middle east.

    The real reason all of these stupid decisions are being made is because we have no representation in government. Power is concentrated in the media, which is a for-profit enterprise, the military, which the biggest part of our for-profit economy, and the executive branch, where we have no voting authority over the cabinet that infests it, who also through strange coincidence go on to or come from large corporations who participate in huge government contracts.

    Our involvement in the middle east has been a disaster for ONE HUNDRED fucking years. The only thing that's changed in the last twenty or thirty is that they are finally fighting back effectively. As the most powerful and morally hypocritical force in history, we're finding that we have no palate for our own medicine.

    1. Re:Terrorism is what we want. by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      We need terrorism. Without it, we have no plausible reason to maintain a military presence near valuable US business interests in the middle east. That's not quite true. We supported Israel in 1947, not because of terrorism, but to counter-balance the presence of Islamic governments in the Middle East (as opposed to the colonial governments before them). We had bases in Saudi Arabia in case Saddam invaded again, which probably would have happened if we weren't there. We've justified a military presence in various parts of the Middle East without terrorism for at least 50 years.

      Our involvement in the middle east has been a disaster for ONE HUNDRED fucking years. As opposed to our outstanding foreign policy in Latin America, Africa, Asia, etc. We pretty much fucked the goat on middle east foreign policy, no argument there. I will say, though, that our policy pales in comparison to the British policy towards controlling its oil and other interests. We look like pillars of moral purity compared to what they did, not that that excuses anything.
      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    2. Re:Terrorism is what we want. by dave562 · · Score: 1
      We had bases in Saudi Arabia in case Saddam invaded again, which probably would have happened if we weren't there.

      You must have missed the tidbit of information where Saddam ASKED OUR PERMISSION before he invaded Kuwait. The US government enabled Saddam to build his military up to the point it was at in order to fight Iran. Saddam was a puppet of the United States. He wasn't going to do anything he thought might endanger that relationship.

      http://www.thetip.org/art_April_Glaspie___US_Ambassador_to_Iraq______292_icle.html

      From the article:

      U.S. Ambassador Glaspie - We have no opinion on your Arab - Arab conflicts, such as your dispute with Kuwait. Secretary (of State James) Baker has directed me to emphasize the instruction, first given to Iraq in the 1960's, that the Kuwait issue is not associated with America.

      In other words, "We don't care what you do with Kuwait."

    3. Re:Terrorism is what we want. by o'reor · · Score: 1

      We supported Israel in 1947 [...] to counter-balance the presence of Islamic governments in the Middle East

      Er, I assume you meant "Communist" or "socialist" or "non-aligned" governments, right ? 'Cos I don't think any US official gave a flying fsck at that time about Islamic governments, as long as they didn't try to make contact with the Eastern block.

      --
      In Soviet Russia, our new overlords are belong to all your base.
    4. Re:Terrorism is what we want. by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      Cos I don't think any US official gave a flying fsck at that time about Islamic governments Then you'd be wrong. In 1947, the rise of Muslim countries looked like a serious problem, given that just a short time ago they were all colonies. They rejection of Western values also made it harder to secure oil rights from them, as they wanted less Western presence and influence in their countries. It wasn't the threat of terrorism, but the threat of less cooperation in securing oil revenue, especially at the deals they had when they were colonies.
      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
  73. ACLU and gun ownership by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    they [the ACLU] deride and ignore the 2nd amendment. That's how it washes on the whole, but you should realize that their official position is a bit more nuanced (though not "enlightened", as it explicitly paves the way for disarmament and subjugation of the individual to the state):

    http://www.aclu.org/police/gen/14523res20020304.html

    I think the typical American "liberal" sees it this way, while the stereotypical American "liberal" is more extreme.

    I would like to point out that the view that the Second Amendment applies only to "a well-regulated militia" is irrelevant because of the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, in concert or alone. The right to defend oneself against coercion with any means is neither enumerated nor disparaged, and it is reserved by the people.

    Lack of a constitutional guarantee is not license to legislate away whatever powers and freedoms we choose, as noted explicitly and in plain language at the end of the Bill of Rights.
  74. More of the same by assertation · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm starting to think that the commentators who call a McCain presidency a "3rd Term For Bush" are more accurate then people give them credit for. Sounds like more of the same.

    1. Re:More of the same by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      If you think McCain is anything like Bush, you're not paying attention. He's perhaps the most liberal republican out there. He hasn't earned the title of "RINO" for nothing.

    2. Re:More of the same by assertation · · Score: 1

      He wants warrantless searches, he is anti-choice, he called his own wife a "cunt" in front of journalists, and he wants to continue the war in Iraq. Who cares if he is a "liberal" republican?

  75. And yet... by copponex · · Score: 1

    And yet you make no mention of how many Iraqis must feel every day, and the damage we cause on a scale a thousand times worse just in terms of body count to the Arab psyche?

    Every time we destroy a secular Arab society, we end up with another terrorist group. And I'll tell you something, our children will not be dealing with terrorists from Saudi Arabia, but with the children of Iraqis and Palestinians for generations to come.

    1. Re:And yet... by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      And yet you make no mention of how many Iraqis must feel every day Over 60% don't want us to leave. That's how they feel.

      nd the damage we cause on a scale a thousand times worse just in terms of body count to the Arab psyche? You know, it's funny. Liberals didn't give a flying fuck about Iraqi citizens getting killed during the 8 years Clinton bombed them using mostly inaccurate dumb bombs. Nobody cared when Clinton bombed Iraq in 1998 without a U.N. sanction. Somehow, Clinton's military operations (the most for any president) were all good. When Clinton connected Iraq to WMD and Al Qaeda, everything was hunky dorey. But Bush? He MUST be lieing about everything.

      And I'll tell you something, our children will not be dealing with terrorists from Saudi Arabia, but with the children of Iraqis and Palestinians for generations to come. That may be true. But they will attack us NO MATTER WHAT WE DO. Watch and see if they stop attacking us if we get a Democrat president. See what happens when we pull out of Iraq. As I mentioned in another post, no matter what we do we are vilified. Hell, America-haters like yourself get upset when the government accurately reports on what's going on in Iraq. What could possibly placate you?
      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
  76. everyone should support wiretapping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every red blooded American should support this, because it saves us from the terrorists.
    U.S.A! U.S.A! U!S!A!

  77. Resources by copponex · · Score: 1

    I was talking about the ones that make use a modern society. Oil will peak within the next 10 years. Natural gas has already peaked, and coal reserves aren't well proven.

    As soon as it's clear that there isn't much left, the price will skyrocket. $4 gas will be a wet dream compared to what it will cost in 2040 (inflation notwithstanding.)

    Human society will survive, but I'm not sure American society will. It's just like the global warming thing. Sure we'll survive, but how many and under what circumstances?

  78. Warrantless Domestic Surveillance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and that is why he'll never be president.

  79. Exactly my point by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1
    GOP: see that's not very frightening because it is not very specific.

    GWB: Now I'm shitting my pants!

    Specific details help to build a strong mental image. That's why authors will go to great lengths to describe characters and scenes.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
  80. YOU learn some history by nguy · · Score: 1

    England and America have directly been involved in dividing up Arab land

    Sure, and why not? It's not like there was a flourishing democracy there, or an outpouring of mutual aid. In the first half of this century, ideas of fascism, Arab nationalism, and empires were widespread.

    They proved that we have no moral superiority when it comes to torture and human rights.

    They have merely proved that the US isn't perfect. That should come as no surprise if you look at US history. Look at how the US behaved relative to Mexico or the Phillipines. The US has always thrown its weight around and taken what it wanted. That's what American voters want their government to do. And why not?

    America is not the same place it used to be.

    No, it is actually a better place than it was a century ago or even half a century ago. There is less racism, less torture, less unjustified military intervention, less empire building.

    Throughout its history, the US has primarily looked out for its own interests and improved lives for its own citizens. Occasionally it has tried to do a little bit for other nations when it was convenient to do so.

    That may not be much, but it is still a whole lot more than you can say for most other nations.

  81. Latin economies... by copponex · · Score: 1

    That's not quite true. We supported Israel in 1947, not because of terrorism, but to counter-balance the presence of Islamic governments in the Middle East (as opposed to the colonial governments before them). Also, we didn't want Jewish refugees in our backyard. Neither did Europe.

    We had bases in Saudi Arabia in case Saddam invaded again, which probably would have happened if we weren't there. We've justified a military presence in various parts of the Middle East without terrorism for at least 50 years... will say, though, that our policy pales in comparison to the British policy towards controlling its oil and other interests You're making my head spin. We're better than Imperial England? How many times have we been unsupportive of their foreign policy in the last hundred and ten years? We ARE Imperial England, as far as everyone in the Middle East is concerned.

    The old reason we allowed ourselves to rule over the Middle East is because we believe those resources belong to the West, and not to the inhabitants of territory that "rightfully" belonged to the colonial powers. After WWII nearly destroyed Europe, they couldn't hold on to their subjugate territories, so we attempted to hold on for them. As many people began to realize that greed was our true motive, it became the containment of the Soviet Union. After that began to fail to seem reasonable, it became terrorism.

    As opposed to our outstanding foreign policy in Latin America, Africa, Asia, etc. We pretty much fucked the goat on middle east foreign policy, no argument there. We only care about justifying our Middle East policy anymore because of the resources we're trying to take from them. I'm sure we have some interesting plans for Venezuela in the near future, and when we start running of things like clean water and arable land, I'm sure we'll be suddenly interested again. I didn't miss the story about establishing AFRICOM late last year. Did you?
    1. Re:Latin economies... by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      Also, we didn't want Jewish refugees in our backyard. Neither did Europe. Maybe. But there many reliable accounts that Truman approved the recognition of Israel for moral reasons.

      We're better than Imperial England? I think we are when it comes to such things as the oil industry. BP was one of the worst when it came to forcing governments to sell oil rights cheap, lieing about reserves, keeping local workers in appalling conditions, etc. The British government bought 51% of BP and ran it like their own personal company. The atrocities they committed to make a buck make our own oil initiatives look like childsplay.

      We only care about justifying our Middle East policy anymore because of the resources we're trying to take from them. I'm going to have to ask for a citation at this point. How much oil have we "taken" from anyone? Paid for, yes. Helped drill, absolutely. But take? Iraq makes billions a year from the sale of their oil, and we have not taken a drop except in the imagination of Bush-haters. If we wanted to "take" oil, we wouldn't have to try very hard.
      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
  82. Troll Story by N8F8 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Thisd whole story is a troll. Hey look, a McCain piñata. Everyone take a swing! Meanwhile Obama make an overt threat against Iran, about a complete a flip-flop as you can have from his lovey-dovey approach from two weeks ago and you guys let it slide.

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
    1. Re:Troll Story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you read the full article, he specifically says that he wants a diplomatic solution to "eliminate" the threat. Regardless though, AIPAC is one of the most powerful lobbying organizations in the country (with a very sizable part of the population listening to who they endorse as a canidate.) With a few exceptions nearly all canidates give that same level of support against the Iran threst - at least Obama is willing to talk, Mccain is not. Obama has his own issues, but he is still far better than Mccain in most aspects.

  83. No it isn't, you're full of crap by hassanchop · · Score: 0

    That's a stupid objection that could be applied anywhere to anyone.


    No guy there's nothing stupid about it, you just don't like it. Tough titty, the pols earned it. It's an honest observation made after DECADES of broken campaign promises by politicians of all stripe.

    If you don't have a healthy dose of skepticism regarding what the politicians will actually do, than your opinion isn't worth listening too.

    The fact that you think a reasonable, intelligent observation based on huge amounts of data and years of history is "stupid" makes it clear you don't have an educated opinion on the subject.
    1. Re:No it isn't, you're full of crap by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Even if you assume that all the candidates are lying, it is still useful to see who they are trying to pander to.

      Are they trying to pander to some particular interest group, some noisy part of their
      parties political base, or are trying to pander to more general concerns?

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  84. Laughable conclusions. by copponex · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sure, and why not? It's not like there was a flourishing democracy there, or an outpouring of mutual aid. In the first half of this century, ideas of fascism, Arab nationalism, and empires were widespread. There were flourishing democracies with vast untapped resources threatening to break free of the bonds of colonial Europe.

    Why not divide up the middle east? Because it doesn't belong to us, and we lack the cultural understanding to effectively govern it.

    They have merely proved that the US isn't perfect. That should come as no surprise if you look at US history. Look at how the US behaved relative to Mexico or the Phillipines. The US has always thrown its weight around and taken what it wanted. That's what American voters want their government to do. And why not? Are you a hedonist or a Nazi? I can't really tell.

    No, it is actually a better place than it was a century ago or even half a century ago. There is less racism, less torture, less unjustified military intervention, less empire building. Less racism because of civil leaders and people like Martin Luther King who the FBI considered "the most dangerous Negro leader in America." I'm not sure if that was before or after they assassinated some of his colleagues.

    The Japanese, Germans, and other prisoners of war were not tortured, as far as I'm aware, in WWI or WWII. Torture in the War on Terror is officially approved as long as you don't call it torture.

    There's been no decline in military spending since WWII. We have hundreds of more military installations around the world, and we're building many permanent installations right now in Iraq and Afghanistan. We have not left any significant amount of the bases we established nearly seventy years ago.

    Every single improvement in American life since WWII has been the result of popular movement, and the government has been dragged with it kicking, screaming, and killing it's own citizenry in the process.

    Throughout its history, the US has primarily looked out for its own interests and improved lives for its own citizens. True until recently. The current government does not care about it's citizenry. That's why it's acceptable not to pay attention to polls or popular votes (presidential or involving medicinal marijuana).

    Occasionally it has tried to do a little bit for other nations when it was convenient to do so. Example?

    That may not be much, but it is still a whole lot more than you can say for most other nations. Except every other developed western nation since WWII (which I consider a definitive paradigm shift worldwide.) The whole of Europe have learned their lesson. For some reason we don't seem to get it.
    1. Re:Laughable conclusions. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > There were flourishing democracies with vast untapped resources threatening to break free of the bonds of colonial Europe. ...ah, yeah, right.

      You've got your continents wrong.

      This is the middle east. It's the remnants of an Islamic empire that had seen better days by
      the time it decided to pick sides wrongly in a European war. It probably had about as much
      "potential" for democracy that Iran does today and Iraq does today (not much).

      There never was exactly any sort of democratic tradition to build on there or a solid history
      of "colonial" influence that might have implanted those ideas in minds that found them alien.

      Bin Laden wants to ressurect that empire.

      He's very much like Hitler in this respect. Rise of the 3rd Caliphate or whatever.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  85. Israeli support. by copponex · · Score: 3, Informative

    Israel kills Palestinians with American weapons, and keeps their economy afloat with American funds. Over one hundred billion dollars thus far (close to 150 billion with interest, I believe.)

    Palestine has received less than four or five billion in the same period if my guess is right, with the added bonus of our veto of any United Nations resolution in their favor.

    1. Re:Israeli support. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Arab nations keep Palestinians in perpetual refugee status for their own political gain.

      The Arab world collectively could have moved on from all of this but
      seem unwilling or unable to do so. This is not saying that those that
      really have a sense of nationhood couldn't be counter-zionists in their
      period of disaspora. However, there is no good excuse for them living
      like animals in other Arab countries.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Israeli support. by copponex · · Score: 1

      Arab nations keep Palestinians in perpetual refugee status for their own political gain. As does Israel and the US. I can't do anything about the governments of Jordan, Egypt, or Saudi Arabia. I can try to affect change in my own country, so we stop participating a political system no different than apartheid.

      The Arab world collectively could have moved on from all of this but seem unwilling or unable to do so. This is not saying that those that really have a sense of nationhood couldn't be counter-zionists in their period of disaspora. However, there is no good excuse for them living
      like animals in other Arab countries. If you live in an Arab country, then that would be relevant to you. The best thing I can do as an American is give Palestinians and all Arabs equal footing and a fighting chance to determine their own lives by reducing the atrocities of my government and it's client states in the Middle East.
    3. Re:Israeli support. by Peaker · · Score: 1

      Israel kills Palestinians as part of a military conflict. My question was what the hell was he talking about, when he said "genocide", and I still haven't received my answer.

  86. You're talking about McCain's position, right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > That's an absurd argument -- "McCain says he'll follow the Constitution." "You mean, the same Constitution that President Bush says gives him the right to abuse small farm animals? Why McCain must want to abuse small farm animals too!"

    The argument that Article II gives a president unlimited powers during wartime is absurd. I wouldn't call that "following the Constitution" any more than torture was.

    > There isn't much question that tapping *international* calls is within the government's power. (At least I haven't heard any major Democrats argue with this). There just isn't enough information in this post to know if this is what McCain is talking about, or if it's domestic surveillance.

    It's clear that they're using it for domestic surveillance. So you're left saying either that McCain doesn't know what the telecoms are doing (but voted for immunity for them anyhow) or that he knowingly supports it. Do you really think that EITHER of those is a good thing?

    > You should leave the political hack jobs to the professionals.

    I linked to several accounts. I don't think it's just me noticing this, it's pretty much all of the tech press. But you can call that a 'hack job' if you want. If I wanted it to be more of a 'hack job', I'd have mentioned that Obama is against telecom immunity and the rest of this crap (and has voted that way).

    If you want more sources, try this. It's not just me thinking this.

    Go back to the linked Slashdot story on the original bill; even back to then, he supported it (read the comments: McCain for immunity, Hillary abstained, Obama against). McCain has even sent out advisers who said things that made him sound like he was backing away from that (e.g. the linked story on Wired's Threat Level), then retracted those. If that's not flip-flopping, what the hell is it?

    It's not like it's just that he learned from old mistakes or something (that'd be _GOOD_, IMHO, and I wouldn't call him out on that). It's this schizophrenic nonsense coming from his campaign where he can't decide if he's a real Republican or a "maverick" and he wants to be different things to different people. It's phony and I don't like it.

    I mean, first he was against torture, then he was for it (but in limited circumstances) because he didn't want to look "weak on terror" or something. He supports lawful limits, but he'd ignore them if it protected us from terrorists. He doesn't seem to think that Bush did anything wrong, unless you count criticizing Katrina several YEARS after the fact... it took THAT long to realize things went wrong!?!

    I once thought McCain was a decent man. I voted for McCain in the past. But I don't know who the hell he is any more. But go ahead. Call this a 'hack job'. It's not like anybody could wonder what happened to the more decent McCain of 2000, right?

    - I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property

  87. I don't mind the government asking... by Myrkridian42 · · Score: 1

    John McCain will do everything he can... including asking the telecoms for appropriate assistance to collect intelligence against foreign threats to the United States

    I personally don't give a flying **** if the government asks. I only care if the companies actually give it to them.

    Especially if doing so just happens to be in direct violation with their privacy policy therefore breaching a legally binding contract with their millions of customers. *cough* AT&T *cough*
  88. Perfect example. by copponex · · Score: 1

    Except for the Jewish terrorists that blew up the King David Hotel in 1948 that was housing British soldiers? There were a hundred casualties, and officially of course, were renegades operating outside the "true" leadership of the Zionist movement. (Though I do believe Ben Gurion wasn't involved.)

    Ask an Ariel Sharon style hawk if he would attack US interests if he believed it would save his homeland. I wouldn't be surprised by his response, but maybe you would.

    A one-state solution could have worked in the 50s or 60s, but the Zionists have sown something they will never want to reap. Generations of repression, poverty, and victims genocide are coiled into a space that is a fifth of it's former size. And people are shocked that they fire homemade rockets at the civilians who piloted the tanks and bulldozers the previous day?

    1. Re:Perfect example. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Except for the Jewish terrorists that blew up the King David Hotel in 1948 that was housing British soldiers?

      This bullshit again. You know if you keep on overusing a term and abusing it it
      suddenly doesn't have any meaning anymore.

      The King David Hotel was a MILITARY COMMAND POST. It was as legitimate a
      military target as the Pentagon or a Naval base. Attacking such a target
      is not terrorism.

      This stupidity needs to be staked in the heart.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  89. how about by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 4, Informative

    "If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator."

    â" Washington, D.C., Dec. 19, 2000

    "You don't get everything you want. A dictatorship would be a lot easier." - Governing Magazine, July, 1998

    "A dictatorship would be a heck of a lot easier, there's no question about it." - Business Week, July 30, 2001

    1. Re:how about by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      Just to be fair: who hasn't thought similar thoughts when the scope of government malfeasance overwhelms him?

      Then again I'm not running for president. I'm still afraid of John McCain.

    2. Re:how about by Free+the+Cowards · · Score: 1

      Seriously. It would be a lot easier if it were a dictatorship. Are you going to start crucifying politicians for stating the truth now?

      --
      If you mod me Overrated, you are admitting that you have no penis.
    3. Re:how about by jtn · · Score: 1

      There are things you say, and there are things you keep in your head to yourself. Perhaps the president isn't aware of that fine distinction?

    4. Re:how about by Free+the+Cowards · · Score: 1

      So you're saying you want your politicians to be two-faced liars, always afraid to say what they actually believe because it might be unpopular? That's funny, because it's one of my biggest complaints about the profession.

      Face it, it would be a lot easier for the President if the country were a dictatorship. That's only a bad thing to say if you think that being easier is sufficient justification to make it so, something that this one sentence does not indicate.

      --
      If you mod me Overrated, you are admitting that you have no penis.
  90. bullshit by nguy · · Score: 3, Informative

    [Middle Eastern nations] were flourishing democracies with vast untapped resources threatening to break free of the bonds of colonial Europe.

    Read something about the history of the Middle East before you spout such bullshit:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Middle_East

    The Middle East was a social and political dump before the Europeans got involved, and it still is. And given Arab aspirations for re-building their empire and imposing their religion on others, I don't even particularly care that the West imposed its rule on the region.

    Except every other developed western nation since WWII (which I consider a definitive paradigm shift worldwide.) The whole of Europe have learned their lesson. For some reason we don't seem to get it.

    First of all, the Europe you see today was largely constructed by the US; if it had been up to the French, British, and Russians, they would have repeated the mistakes of WWI and we'd have had WWIII by now.

    Furthermore, you really have no clue about the attitudes or motivations behind European politics.

    Are you a hedonist or a Nazi? I can't really tell.

    Well, I can tell that you are an uneducated lout.

    1. Re:bullshit by copponex · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Read something about the history of the Middle East before you spout such bullshit: Wikipedia is your reference? My, you are educated.

      The Middle East was a social and political dump before the Europeans got involved, and it still is. An eloquent statement. That's a common European attitude to consider anyone who doesn't live an exactly western lifestyle as inferior. It's only a few hundred years old.

      And given Arab aspirations for re-building their empire and imposing their religion on others, I don't even particularly care that the West imposed its rule on the region. First, please list all of the aggressive 20th century Arab invasions you can think of or have reference to.

      Second, it's sad that you don't believe in the same Republic that the founding fathers did.

      First of all, the Europe you see today was largely constructed by the US; if it had been up to the French, British, and Russians, they would have repeated the mistakes of WWI and we'd have had WWIII by now. Funded, not constructed. The US did do a good job of stabilizing the world in the wake of that disaster, but it was through diplomacy and economic incentive, not inane foreign policy and secret police.

      I'm proud of most of our post-war work, if not some of the terrorism we committed during the war. It was our inability to control the machine that we created that has led to our current situation, just as Dwight Eisenhower predicted.

      Furthermore, you really have no clue about the attitudes or motivations behind European politics. Because?

      Well, I can tell that you are an uneducated lout. I'll be sure to look that word up on my new guide to education: Wikipedia.

      Wikipedia! Providing accurate histories of both sides of Western thought since 2001!
    2. Re:bullshit by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      It sure is fun how you can point out information as "It's from wikipedia, it must be false."

      So what all powerful truth do you hold to?

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    3. Re:bullshit by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1
      So what all powerful truth do you hold to?

      The Flying Spaghetti Monster. He told me that section in the Wikipedia is wrong and that I should pray that his noodly appendage comes and rewrites it. He's always right about everything, so you must be gullible for believing what you see in Wikipedia.

      --
      That is all.
    4. Re:bullshit by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > First, please list all of the aggressive 20th century Arab invasions you can think of or have reference to.

      My that is weak. First you try to criticize someone else's sources and then come up with this gem.

      Do we get to ignore European misdeeds before 1900 as well?

      I suspect you won't be so evenhanded.

      Besides, the last 60 years is nothing buy aggressive Arab invasions.

      If Arabs were so inherently democratic, all of those poor Palestinians
      would have been successfully absorbed into all of the surrounding
      allegedly pan-arab states a long time ago.

      "Refugee camps" in Arab states? What nonsense.

      The Lebanese should have treated the Palestinians like Israel treated Ethopians, Iranians and Russians.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    5. Re:bullshit by nguy · · Score: 0, Troll

      Wikipedia is your reference? My, you are educated.

      I picked Wikipedia as a reference for you because (1) it gets the basic facts about the history of the Middle East right and (2) it's suitable to your level of historical understanding.

      An eloquent statement. That's a common European attitude to consider anyone who doesn't live an exactly western lifestyle as inferior. It's only a few hundred years old.

      Of course it's a common European attitude. Europeans understand the problems that the Middle East has because Europe used to be the same kind of dump that the Middle East is today.

      Second, it's sad that you don't believe in the same Republic that the founding fathers did.

      The founding fathers foremost believed in freedom and rights for Americans. Initially, they falsely assumed that they could accomplish this through isolationism, but the real world kept intruding. And at that point, Americans started getting involved in world politics and build a strong military. The US has been fighting wars and using its military to ensure its safety in the world ever since. But unlike Europeans or Middle Easterners, so far, it has managed to use its military without bringing total destruction on itself or its neighbors.

      Funded, not constructed. The US did do a good job of stabilizing the world in the wake of that disaster, but it was through diplomacy and economic incentive, not inane foreign policy and secret police.

      That's a nice theory, but it's not in line with facts. US intervention in German society was massive and heavy handed, from Germany's constitution to de-Nazification. The US pressured the other allies to reconstruct Europe the way the US wanted, and it could do that because the other allies were weak. And the Cold War involved everything from espionage to government-sponsored murder--on all sides.

      So, we agree that the US did the right things during and right after WWII. You delude yourself, however, into thinking that US actions after WWII were all sugar and roses; they were as interventionist and heavy-handed as they have been in the Middle East in more recent times. The difference is that they actually mostly worked, but aren't working well in the Middle East. The problem with recent US interventions in the Middle East is not one of the level of pride one should take in them, but in the fact that they have been failures.

      Because?

      Because Europeans haven't learned what you think they have learned. European attitudes are not all that different from American attitudes: Europeans want their politicians to bring home the bacon, they don't like or trust the Middle East or Islam, they don't give a f*ck about privacy or personal freedoms, and they consider themselves superior to the rest of the world while knowing virtually nothing about it and ignoring their own history.

      What Europeans have actually learned is that it's best if white Europeans don't squabble amongst themselves, and that the US is willing to do Europe's dirty work for free.

      I'm proud of most of our post-war work, if not some of the terrorism we committed during the war. It was our inability to control the machine that we created that has led to our current situation, just as Dwight Eisenhower predicted.

      So? We don't disagree there. The "military industrial complex" is bad economic policy, and Bush screwed up massively in the Middle East.

      You're just making the mistake of assuming that things used to be better and have somehow deteriorated. Fucked up as things may seem to you today, they actually used to be worse.

      The US needs to rethink and massively overhaul both domestic and foreign policy. But that would be doomed to failure if people start that process with false ideas about how things used to be.

      I'll be sure to look that word up on my new guide to education: Wikipedia.

      You should, because it's evidently still beyond the level of historical education that you actually seem to have.

    6. Re:bullshit by terjeber · · Score: 1

      The Lebanese should have treated the Palestinians like Israel treated Ethopians, Iranians and Russians.

      Or the way Jordan treated the Palestinians. The "Palestinian problem" is of Arab design and manufacture, and it is today exactly the way the Arab world wants it to be.

  91. Short answer by copponex · · Score: 1

    Al Queda would almost certainly not exist if we hadn't gathered the most extreme Islamic fundamentalists in Afghanistan and then trained them in guerrilla style warfare to fight the Russians.

    Al Queda would definitely not exist if we had no military presence in the middle east.

    This is hindsight, of course. But looking at the cases of Lebanon, Iran, and Iraq, I take my cue from Reagan who "redeployed" troops out of Lebanon after the terrorist attacks there. We don't understand Arab culture, and it's probable that we never will.

    Instead of just saying it, that fact should be a part of an energy policy and foreign policy to keep us uninvolved as much as is possible.

    1. Re:Short answer by pcolaman · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and if we had not trained those Islamic fundamentalists in Afghanistan and Russia had successfully taken over shop in Afghanistan, we'd be worried about war with the red giant instead of small pissant groups of terrorists. I'd rather fight urban warfare against pockets of rocket and bomb toting morons than traditional warfare against a professional army.

    2. Re:Short answer by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Al Queda would definitely not exist if we had no military presence in the middle east. ...IOW let the Soviet Union and Iraq carve the place up as they saw fit.

      That's a "fine" way to approach the situation.

      It's time to get the petroleum monkey off our backs just so we can go back to ignoring these people.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  92. So, We Know who Timothy wants us to vote for now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dear Editors, You get a bunch of comments on these stories so you think they're successful. But they just lower the relevance and image of the site. You will be besieged by people submitting stories trashing Obama and McCain for the next 6 months. Please refrain from posting them since it makes you look retarded by proxy.

  93. Where in Article II does to grant this power? by frdmfghtr · · Score: 1

    I've read Article II several times. How does Article II apply to fighting terrorism and allowing domestic warrantless wiretaps?

    My guess is...it DOESN'T, and referencing the Constitution just sounds official.

    --
    Government's idea of a balanced budget: take money from the right pocket to balance...oh who am I kidding?
  94. Would a right wing dictatorship be all that bad? by tjstork · · Score: 2, Funny

    Hey, I don't mean to sound like a troll, but I'm thinking that Bush should just go all out and roust up a private little army, and go and arrest all the Democrats and liberal leaning supporters in sort of a knight of the long knives. You know, all the Republicans would have guns would, on some night, just go and break the back of the Democratic party and kill off the leaders. The worst part of Bush these days is that no one on the left even really fears attacking him. But, if he say had a pistol and shot Harry Reid and gunned down the Senate ala Al Capone's massacre, then, you know, you could give the guy his props. Yeah, diversity would go out the window, but we could be much more efficient with a mono culture.

    --
    This is my sig.
  95. yes, from their books by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 1

    They entered into a covenant to seek the Lord, the God of their fathers, with all their heart and soul; and everyone who would not seek the Lord, the God of Israel, was to be put to death, whether small or great, whether man or woman. (2 Chronicles 15:12-13 NAB)

    "Work six days only, but the seventh day must be a day of total rest. I repeat: Because the LORD considers it a holy day, anyone who works on the Sabbath must be put to death.' (Exodus 31:12-15 NLT)"

    Suppose you hear in one of the towns the LORD your God is giving you that some worthless rabble among you have led their fellow citizens astray by encouraging them to worship foreign gods. In such cases, you must examine the facts carefully. If you find it is true and can prove that such a detestable act has occurred among you, you must attack that town and completely destroy all its inhabitants, as well as all the livestock. (Deuteronomy 13:13-19 NLT)

    If your own full brother, or your son or daughter, or your beloved wife, or you intimate friend, entices you secretly to serve other gods, whom you and your fathers have not known, gods of any other nations, near at hand or far away, from one end of the earth to the other: do not yield to him or listen to him, nor look with pity upon him, to spare or shield him, but kill him. (Deuteronomy 13:7-12 NAB)

    Suppose a man or woman among you, in one of your towns that the LORD your God is giving you, has done evil in the sight of the LORD your God and has violated the covenant by serving other gods or by worshiping the sun, the moon, or any of the forces of heaven, which I have strictly forbidden. When you hear about it, investigate the matter thoroughly. If it is true that this detestable thing has been done in Israel, then that man or woman must be taken to the gates of the town and stoned to death. (Deuteronomy 17:2-5 NLT)

    1. Re:yes, from their books by Just+Another+Poster · · Score: 1

      Christianity has a New Testament, and a bunch of escape clauses. Islam does not.

    2. Re:yes, from their books by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 1

      It's what you make of it. There are violent and peaceful people. The violent ones will comb through obscura (like my above post) to justify their violence. Christianity is not a monolith and neither is Islam.

      Christianity does, at least, give it lip service to forgiveness. This is something lacking in some other religions (though Christianity seems to pale in comparison to Buddhism on the 'be compassionate' score).

    3. Re:yes, from their books by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      I love how multiculturalists always go for the moral equivalence angle. Apparently anything Muslims do is a-okay as long as you can establish that theoretically Christians might do the same, at least according to the multiculturalist's own interpretation of things, which tends to be wildly incorrect. You may or may not be aware of this, but Christians tend to follow the New Testament, not the Old Testament.

      In any case it doesn't matter, since Christians do not actually follow the passages you're quoting. Are you arguing that they're still morally equal to Islamic extremists? Is this some kind of pre-thought crime nonsense?

    4. Re:yes, from their books by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 1

      I love how multiculturalists always go for the moral equivalence angle. Apparently anything Muslims do is a-okay as long as you can establish that theoretically Christians might do the same, at least according to the multiculturalist's own interpretation of things, which tends to be wildly incorrect. You may or may not be aware of this, but Christians tend to follow the New Testament, not the Old Testament.

      In any case it doesn't matter, since Christians do not actually follow the passages you're quoting. Are you arguing that they're still morally equal to Islamic extremists? Is this some kind of pre-thought crime nonsense? Christians seem to pick and choose what they want to follow out of the Old Testament. "God Hates Fags" but "Oh, the Slavery stuff is over" comes to mind. Are Christian Extremists morally equivalent to Islamic Extremists? Why not?

      You are saying that Christians are superior to others.

      Do Muslims tend to be extremist? Having met and had long philosophical discussions with both Christians and Muslims, I honestly don't sense a superiority of one over the other.
    5. Re:yes, from their books by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      Christians seem to pick and choose what they want to follow out of the Old Testament. "God Hates Fags" but "Oh, the Slavery stuff is over" comes to mind.

      And?

      Are Christian Extremists morally equivalent to Islamic Extremists? Why not?

      Christian terrorism and violence is practically non-existent. Christian extremists just tend to be annoying, whereas Muslim extremists are actually very dangerous (or support people who are), not to mention that, unlike Christians, they enjoy broad support and approval in the Islamic world. They aren't really even "extremists," they're just religious.

      You are saying that Christians are superior to others.

      They are obviously superior to Muslims. Everyone is.

      Do Muslims tend to be extremist? Having met and had long philosophical discussions with both Christians and Muslims, I honestly don't sense a superiority of one over the other.

      Oh wow, it's this argument again. You're telling me you talked to a couple of Muslims and now you feel you are in a position to talk about a population of over one billion people spread out all over the planet?
    6. Re:yes, from their books by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Christian terrorism and violence is practically non-existent.

      As someone who lived in Britain from 1971 to 1998, I have to say you have no idea what you're talking about.

      And that's just the obvious example. The KKK considers itself a Christian organization, and many of the groups involved in violent attacks on everyone from Jews to gays do to. You probably don't consider them Christian (and neither do I), but then what do you think your average Muslim thinks of Osama Bin Laden? How "Holy" do you think the Muslim guy down the street thinks a man who murders 3,000 people in cold blood is?

      Mainstream Christianity in most places is non-violent, but the same is true of Judaism and Islam. This is not about moral equivalence, it's about the fact that you cannot judge an entire group of people on the basis of a bunch of extremists. You choose to do so for one group and turn a blind eye to others. That is why you fail.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    7. Re:yes, from their books by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 1

      From your tenor, I suspect you've never talked to any Muslims but have formed your own opinion and feel you can speak with authority over that billion people.

      Do I really have to remind you of the Northern Ireland conflict? Have you forgotten the terrorism committed by Christians? I'm sorry. Not superior. Just human. Oh darn.

    8. Re:yes, from their books by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      As someone who lived in Britain from 1971 to 1998, I have to say you have no idea what you're talking about.

      The IRA was not a Christian terrorist organization.

      And that's just the obvious example. The KKK considers itself a Christian organization, and many of the groups involved in violent attacks on everyone from Jews to gays do to.

      You do realize that the KKK is absolutely insignificant, and has no support from anyone? Right?

      You probably don't consider them Christian (and neither do I), but then what do you think your average Muslim thinks of Osama Bin Laden? How "Holy" do you think the Muslim guy down the street thinks a man who murders 3,000 people in cold blood is?

      Osama and people like him have a lot of support. Muslims are not bothered if terrorists kill people, but you can rest assured that they will be literally up in arms if someone makes fun of or "disrespects" their religion, such as by characterizing Muslims as violent.

      Mainstream Christianity in most places is non-violent, but the same is true of Judaism and Islam.

      It's not true of Islam. That's the entire point.

      This is not about moral equivalence, it's about the fact that you cannot judge an entire group of people on the basis of a bunch of extremists.

      I'm not. I'm judging them on the basis of how the majority of them behave.

      You choose to do so for one group and turn a blind eye to others. That is why you fail.

      There's nothing to turn a blind eye to.
    9. Re:yes, from their books by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 1

      They are obviously superior to Muslims. Everyone is. It's feelings like this that create the Darfur Conflict, the Rhawandan Genocide, Pol Pot, extermination of Native Americans, slavery and so forth. It's people like you that put on the unofficial uniform and shatter glass in the night.
    10. Re:yes, from their books by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      From your tenor, I suspect you've never talked to any Muslims but have formed your own opinion and feel you can speak with authority over that billion people.

      Thought experiment: person A attempts to prove that Muslims are all peaceful by talking to a few peaceful acquintances or perhaps co-workers of his. Person B attempts to prove the opposite by pointing out that 100,000 Muslims recently demonstrated in favor of sharia law (or something similiar). How, exactly, do you propose that person A has the upper hand in this experiment?

      Do I really have to remind you of the Northern Ireland conflict?

      What about it?

      Have you forgotten the terrorism committed by Christians?

      Since Christian terrorism is virtually non-existent, it's quite easy to forget.

      I'm sorry. Not superior. Just human. Oh darn.

      By the same logic an average person cannot be superior to a mass murderer or child rapist because he has unpaid parking tickets or something.
    11. Re:yes, from their books by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      Please point out where I advocated genocide, violence or slavery. While you're at it, could you also tell me if the Olympic Games advocate genocide because they rank people in order of superiority?

    12. Re:yes, from their books by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if you are just playing an idiot for fun, or you really don't know about the Irish blowing up random people.

      A good debate technique is to put words in the mouth of your opponent. You claim I am trying to prove all Muslims are peaceful. That is not the case, but it shows how black and white you see the world, filling in all sorts of details in your mind when presented with very little evidence.

      You would not think for a moment that those Muslims I spoke to actually spoke to other Muslims or had an informed opinion on their culture. Such a thought is beyond your creativity. Though Christians are taught to have charity, you possess none.

      I'm sorry, but I'm going to lump you into the same template of person in my mind that makes up an extremist or a Muslim extremist, or someone who giggles when something big gets blown up or a woman gets raped and the perps get away with it. You just happen to have been born a Christian, but I think you'd make a fine Jihadist.

    13. Re:yes, from their books by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if you are just playing an idiot for fun, or you really don't know about the Irish blowing up random people.

      Sure I do, but I don't see what it has to do with Christianity.

      A good debate technique is to put words in the mouth of your opponent. You claim I am trying to prove all Muslims are peaceful. That is not the case, but it shows how black and white you see the world, filling in all sorts of details in your mind when presented with very little evidence.

      You're nitpicking because you know you made a mistake. Obviously talking to a couple of moderates or supposed moderates is meaningless when confronted with thousands or millions of extremists.

      You would not think for a moment that those Muslims I spoke to actually spoke to other Muslims or had an informed opinion on their culture. Such a thought is beyond your creativity.

      What does an informed opinion mean, and how do their informed opinions stack up against other informed but less moderate opinions in the Islamic world? Since so-called moderate Muslims are at the very least a de facto minority, I would think that their opinions are less informed than those of the extremists.

      I'm sorry, but I'm going to lump you into the same template of person in my mind that makes up an extremist or a Muslim extremist, or someone who giggles when something big gets blown up or a woman gets raped and the perps get away with it. You just happen to have been born a Christian, but I think you'd make a fine Jihadist.

      Haha, what? :D Are you serious?
    14. Re:yes, from their books by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 1

      Well, I wanted to see if I could get your goat, but "obviously everyone is superior to them" is a sentiment used to do much evil.

      How do you get 'the majority' of Muslims, anyway? I suppose you heard it from someone who heard it from Fox news. I would assume that the majority *actually* are upset at the US (at least the government), not for religious reasons, but because we treat them like dirt.

      The CIA did overturn a democratically elected government in Iran and put the Shah into power. That is what lead to the Iranian revolution and idiots like Ahmadinejad.

      They are furious at Isreal, not for being Jewish, but for displacing people through force or the threat of force and taking their land, occupying the land that they fled to, then treating a whole population like filth and keeping them virtually imprisoned and without representation for a large chunk of the 20th century. Isreal punishes the peaceful and the radical Palestinians as one group. Some of the collectively punished are Palestinian Christians. They are angry at us for supporting that.

      Don't forget that the US helped train and arm the
      mujahideen and inadvertently created the Taliban. Don't forget that the Saddam boogeyman was armed and manipulated by Washington before the war.

      Religion or not, what happened has made people very very angry.

    15. Re:yes, from their books by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      How do you get 'the majority' of Muslims, anyway? I suppose you heard it from someone who heard it from Fox news.

      Or I've been studying the subject for several years on a daily basis.

      I would assume that the majority *actually* are upset at the US (at least the government), not for religious reasons, but because we treat them like dirt.

      And what about all those Muslims who are engaged in Jihad against non-American infidels in conflicts not influenced by the US? What about Jihad before America was even discovered? What about the Jihad in Europe?

      They are furious at Isreal, not for being Jewish...

      That's actually precisely the reason they're furious at them.

      ... but for displacing people through force or the threat of force and taking their land, occupying the land that they fled to, then treating a whole population like filth and keeping them virtually imprisoned and without representation for a large chunk of the 20th century.

      I suppose that's one version of what happened.

      Isreal punishes the peaceful and the radical Palestinians as one group.

      How is anyone supposed to tell the difference, especially when those "peaceful" Palestinians voted Hamas into power? It's not even possible to reliably distinguish between "moderate" and "extremist" Muslims, until they do something crazy.
    16. Re:yes, from their books by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 1

      One version of what happened? What is your take on the formation of Israel. You think they didn't take over people's homes that they had fled from?

      I suppose the British Mandate was a big empty bubble before the Jewish war refugees got there.

      I think you're just yanking my chain, professor. Do you even know who was the Israeli Prime Minister during the 67 war?

      Can you even name 4 subtypes of Islam and what their relevant philosophies are and how they got started?

      Are you incapable of understanding that if one side is wrong, it doesn't make the other side right?

      By the way, here is info on the coup so you can ignore it and pretend it never occurred http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1953_Iranian_coup_d'%C3%A9tat

    17. Re:yes, from their books by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      One version of what happened? What is your take on the formation of Israel. You think they didn't take over people's homes that they had fled from?

      I actually don't care, because either way the Palestinians have no moral highground. Quite the opposite.

      I think you're just yanking my chain, professor.

      You're obviously very knowledgeable about the subject if you don't even know that there's more than version of what happened.

      Can you even name 4 subtypes of Islam and what their relevant philosophies are and how they got started?

      How is this relevant, exactly?

      By the way, here is info on the coup so you can ignore it and pretend it never occurred

      Relevance not found.
    18. Re:yes, from their books by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 1

      For the last bit, it *could* be relevant to explain why so many are upset with the US govt, no?

  96. Nationalized oil companies by copponex · · Score: 1

    In 1953 Iran dared to nationalize their natural resource, and tried to throw the Anglo-Persian oil company out. The US/UK response was to lead a coup and install a brutal dictator, restoring Anglo-Persian Oil to Anglo-Iranian Oil and eventually British Petroleum (now known as BP).

    That's one direct example of us taking oil away from a country.

    Iraq is pretty much the same deal. The new, and of course, completely independent Iraqi government has decided to allow foreign companies (hint hint) exploit their resources and pay them a very small fee of 12 or 13 percent. Recently, Venezuela demanded and received 50 or 60 percent.

    America isn't the only country that stands to gain, but our companies stand to gain the most. Consider more than 100,000,000,000 (yes, that's one hundred billion) barrels of oil at $130 just to start. It's not a game of small stakes.

    1. Re:Nationalized oil companies by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 1

      He asked for a citation - not more assertions. Got any CITATIONS? You know, verifiable facts?

  97. None of The Above - They Are All Crooks And Liars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Clinton Obama McCain, oh my!
    Clinton Obama McCain, OH MY!
    Clinton Obama McCain, ....

    Republicans, democrats, and the clown head corporate media which brainwashes you...

    Where is the outrage over a lack of other choices?

    You stupid pieces of shit continue to buy into the system which ruins you..

    Which you fund with your taxes and shrug off with "death and taxes" remarks...

    Do you hate the war [in Iraq and perhaps Iran next]? Your words mean nothing if your taxes continue to fund it..
    Do you hate the war on drugs? Your words mean nothing if your taxes continue to fund it..
    Do you hate X,Y,Z injustice? Are you reading this you fat fucking swine bellowing into YouTube about Clinton, Obama, and McCain? You useless piece of shit who funds the shit you claim to hate, YOU are the PROBLEM, and these clowns in either party ARE NOT the solution, no matter how much they flap their "jasmine scented anus" at you about change.

    You'll vote for the clown head corporation's choices anyway, mark this offtopic or troll, flame me or ignore this, it's all the same, one big record playing over and over with generations continuing the same sad song, crack another joke from The Simpsons or some other clown head media box remark, you're enslaved.

    Vote Wesley Snipes and Ron Paul for President and Vice President to send a message - they won't win but your voice will be heard, this is a NONE OF THE ABOVE vote to say fuck you and your war machine taxes, we aren't going to take your shit anymore!

    Only a minority march in protests in the land of the free, because they're too scared, apathetic, fat, and lazy, fingering their phones and gadgets like moist vaginas and hot, hard cocks. They don't care, they'll just blog about it and satisfy themselves for another moment, until something like Katrina happens from coast to coast and the American zit is picked and it will ooze out the truth, revealing to the world the very nature we so guard by slathering Celebrity worship and other empty distractions on for a disguise.

    Fuck you, I'll laugh and chow down on popcorn as your merry-go-round starts up.


    "All governments are liars and murderers." - Bill Hicks

  98. Worst Article Ever by russotto · · Score: 1

    Wow, I'd blame the summary but it's the article that screwed this up. There's nothing earth-shatteringly significant about a reference to Article II; it's the section defining the power of the executive branch. So basically Holtz-Eakin said almost nothing in many words (and specified "foreign threats", not domestic, besides), and Wired invented the rest from whole cloth.

  99. Russian imperialism by any other name... by jamrock · · Score: 1

    ...Islamists just don't hold a candle to our dear former enemies, the Soviets. Well, I suppose they'll have to do until the authorities can cook up something scarier.
    Don't worry; just wait long enough and Putin will oblige. Forget about China. Militarily, they're no international threat to anyone (except maybe Taiwan), and they have too much to worry about in the coming decades with their rivalry for resources with India. Russia under Putin, however, is a completely different kettle of fish. He has been moving steadily to consolidate his political power and will brook no challenges (just ask Mikhail Khodorkovsky). Russian television has even been digitally erasing people whom he doesn't like, shades of the practice of removing Stalin's executed rivals from official photographs. Putin is a scary motherfucker, and he's made no secret of his desire to return Russian influence to the geopolitical forefront.
  100. Too young to remember by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I can see /. is full of young whipper-snappers, too young to remember the 60 and 70s.

    In the 60s and the early 70s, the police, FBI and other agencies pretty much did anything they wanted to obtain evidence. Wire-tap warrant, pfft, I think that might have been an invention of the 80s, or maybe late 70s, after Watergate. Don't even get me started on the 50s. I can't speak to the 50s directly, but in the 60s, The Law had a free run mostly.

    [digging] Now where'd my Cap'n Crunch Whistle go ... [rummaging] ... I may need again if McCain gets elected.

    1. Re:Too young to remember by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      I can see /. is full of young whipper-snappers, too young to remember the 60 and 70s.

      Also non-Americans, you insensitive clod.

      I think that might have been an invention of the 80s, or maybe late 70s, after Watergate.

      Actually, it was decided in Katz in 1967.

      Additionally, Keith was decided in 1972, and FISA was passed in 1978.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
  101. McCain vs. the Constitution by istartedi · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is just all part of McCain's (and the now fallen Republican party's) disrespect for the Constitution. Some of the campaign finance stuff he proposed was very chilling--bloggers would have had to jump through hoops as if they were lobbying orgs, or they wouldn't be able to post political stuff. That struck at the very heart of the 1st ammendment. Then there's the flag burning issue. I swear, if McCain gets in, I'll burn a flag that very day. That he would be in favor of warrantless wiretaps is no surprise.

    I hope Obama et. al. will take up the cause of the Constitution, and use it in their campaign ads. OTOH, a campaigning style that purports to educate people might not be well received. Obama is already being painted as an "intellectual elitist", which sounds GOOD to me; but unfortunately it doesn't sound good to the electorate at large. Just do the right thing this time, guys, and don't figure out how to lose like you did the last two times.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  102. Hmmmmm..... by IHC+Navistar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When citizens make it hard for Big Brother to see what's going on, it called "Obstruction Of Justice".

    When Big Brother makes it hard for citizens to see what's going on, it's called "Privacy".

    Ever notice how pissy and elitist congress gets when citizens what to snoop throught their business to see what they have their hands in? Yet, they have no problem going through our business, especially when there are far, FAR fewer of us actual working folk doing shady things.

    --
    Knowing Google's lust for data collection, the Soviet Union is still alive and well inside the psyche of Sergey Brin....
  103. Obama's wife is worse than that! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And Obama wants to give $400B (that's billion with a "your grand childern will be paying interest on this debt" B) to Africa. Why cause he likes them, you know he wants to be president of the World, right? Why you ask, Because she said "it is about time for a black women to be in the white house". Why is that funny, well several things but most of all because it shows they are racists! Why, because it is about the best person for the job not some racial-demographic finally getting to be in charge.

  104. Correction and question by pithy · · Score: 1

    Correction: McCain Supports Warrantless Surveillance of calls between the United States and overseas involving suspected terrorists. Question: Could somebody provide the names of actual people who have proof (not claims) that their rights have been violated by this policy? Also, I don't hear much in the media about any people that have had their rights personally violated by this policy at all. One would expect MSNBC to salivate at the prospects and showcase them on their lineup every night if this was the case.

  105. Wha? by copponex · · Score: 1

    The reason there's no democracy in Iran is because we destroyed it in it's infancy in 1953 because they tried to nationalize their oil and take profits away from British and American companies.

    The reason there's no democracy in Iraq is because we propped up Saddam Hussein. He was our new ally against the Ayatollah. The Ayatollah was in power because the Shah we was the leader of a repressive government.

    It's a familiar pattern. The arrival of American intervention has often signaled the end of democracy for Arab nations, not the beginning.

    Your irrational fear of Islamic military rule is so improbable it's ridiculous. It's only possible if we continue to subject millions of people based on their religious and ethnic identities to violence and repression.

    1. Re:Wha? by superyooser · · Score: 1

      It's a familiar pattern. The arrival of American intervention has often signaled the end of democracy for Arab nations, not the beginning.

      The familiar pattern is that America causes waves of democracy wherever it goes. The American Century was the century of freedom. There would be NO liberal democracy in the world if it weren't for the Yankee "freedom man".

    2. Re:Wha? by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 1

      The familiar pattern is that America causes waves of democracy wherever it goes.

      That really is bullshit, and raises a point about why America is so hated around the world. The image of an arrogant and obese American steadfast in the belief that anything that is good in the world is due to the good ol' US of A is offensive as it is laughable.

      I know you guys are bought up saluting the flag and all that shit so you are pretty fucking brain washed by the time you turn 7, but you should really include the facts that you don't like in making your assessment. Particularly in the last 60-70 years, wherever the US has gone they have worked against the will of local populations, killed millions of innocent civilians, installed puppet totalitarian regimes, sold out allies, supported terrorists etc, etc, etc.

      If US mods find this post they will surely mod it down, but they will have to settle for flamebait, troll or overrated because there is no "True, but goes against all of the programming my fucked up country has burned into my being from childhood and I can't cope" option.

      In terms of your liberal democracy, from studying your system and the Westminster system, I find the latter superior, certainly at defending liberty. That system has been evolving since long before the US existed and owes the Yankee "freedom man" nothing.

      --
      I don't therefore I'm not.
    3. Re:Wha? by nguy · · Score: 1

      The image of an arrogant and obese American steadfast in the belief that anything that is good in the world is due to the good ol' US of A is offensive as it is laughable.

      No more than the arrogant and obese Brit holding the same belief.

      I know you guys are bought up saluting the flag and all that shit so you are pretty fucking brain washed by the time you turn 7, but you should really include the facts that you don't like in making your assessment. Particularly in the last 60-70 years, wherever the US has gone they have worked against the will of local populations, killed millions of innocent civilians, installed puppet totalitarian regimes, sold out allies, supported terrorists etc, etc, etc.

      Peanuts compared to what the British empire did in its time.

      And although the UK is simply too weak to get itself into too much trouble these days, it's busy cheering and egging on the US.

      In terms of your liberal democracy, from studying your system and the Westminster system, I find the latter superior, certainly at defending liberty. That system has been evolving since long before the US existed and owes the Yankee "freedom man" nothing.

      Ah, British history, a history of oppression, conquest, slavery, and social inequality.

      True, but goes against all of the programming my fucked up country has burned into my being from childhood and I can't cope

      How true: it does go against all the programming your fucked up country has burned into your brain from childhood, and evidently you can't cope.

    4. Re:Wha? by terjeber · · Score: 1

      The reason there's no democracy in Iran is because we destroyed it in it's infancy in 1953 because they tried to nationalize their oil and take profits away from British and American companies.

      Two major errors here. Mossadeq was not trying to create a democracy in Iran, quite the contrary, he was trying to create a socialist totalitarian state, and he was well on his way to succeed. In order to finance it he had to nationalize the oil industry, which is another word for "ignoring deals struck with companies and stealing their property". Second error is also quite interesting. It was the British, and not the Americans who brought down Mossadeq. The Americans had an extremely tangential role in this, but it was the first real operation of what was to become the CIA, so they blew their own importance out of all proportions. Essentially the Americans helped a little bit in instigating protest among students. That's it. The British brought down Mossadeq on their own.

      Now, to another poster - Iran is actually quite different from what we think. As a country and people, the Iranians are probably the most pro-American population in the region. It sounds amazing, but it's true. Iranians in general have no sympathy for their government, but they have learned that there is no point in trying to change it, it won't. Iran is also, possibly outside of Lebanon, the most likely candidate for a reasonalbe democracy in the region. It is far closer that countries like UAE, Saudi Arabia or Egypt. They just need a real reformer elected and a tiny amount of help.

      The sad (but not terribly surprising) thing is that even the very pro-American population (relatively speaking) population of Iran is currently terrified of the US. Most of them are convinced that we'll come bomb them any moment now, and who can blame them. Such fear isn't good for long-term relationships.

    5. Re:Wha? by terjeber · · Score: 1

      Particularly in the last 60-70 years, wherever the US has gone they have worked against the will of local populations, killed millions of innocent civilians, installed puppet totalitarian regimes, sold out allies, supported terrorists etc, etc, etc.

      Is that so? Now, before you start calling me a flag-saluting American, I am not. I live in the US, but I am an immigrant from Europe.

      The US has generally, over the last 60-70 years involved it self in the world based on one single test (that is until the Bush moron took office). The test was "are they being co-opted by the Soviets?" So, in South America the US worked against any government that appeared to be socialist, same thing in Asia. Now, some 20 years later, what can we say about how the US interventions worked? What are the most famous ones? I'll try chronological, but I am selective, please add your own and we can debate. I am selecting the more famous ones.

      Korea...
      Ah, yes, Korea. Fought basically since the end of WWII, started while McA was still in Tokyo. Ended in a stalemate. The Soviets got the North, the US got the south. Quick question, where would you like to live today, Seoul or Pyongyang? Just curious. South Korea is an interesting place, for many years it was the fastest growing economy in the world. One of the main areas where the world went from massive starvation to no starvation. The US must have been terribly wrong trying to make Korea into what South Korea is today, right? The North is a lot better, right?

      Vietnam...
      Ah, yes, the French fuck-up that the US was asked to help out with. Didn't go so well for the US, but who lost really? The US or the poor fuckers who had to live in that miserable place for decades afterwards? Do you think the Vietnamese would rather have had the social and economical development of South Korea? I think so too. It's a pity the US lost in Vietnam, isn't it?

      Chile...
      This is probably the most famous US intervention in South America. At least it is very famous in Europe. The terror of Pinochet. Well, what is the reality here? For one, the reality is that the US never helped install Pinochet. The US was definitely plotting with the military to overthrow Allende, but they were talking to other people than Pinochet. Everybody, including most parts of the military establishment, was surprised when Pinochet took power. But... what happened after he took power? Is there any other country in the region that functions half as well? Chile has had, for the region, an unparalleled social and economical development. Thanks to the generalissimo. We can all agree that his way of making an omelet broke more eggs than we find palatable, but then again, some eggs have to be broken. Compare with Venezuela, if someone doesn't go and break some eggs in Venezuela soon, that population is going to suffer for decades and decades.

      Oh, and by the way, in case you wonder, yes, Allende needed to be overthrown. He was a lunatic. He was sending Chile head first into the same abyss that countries like North Korea are in today. Allende was a common thief. He was a Soviet puppy, and he needed to be removed. Pronto.

      Palestinians...
      Well, here the US has not really had much to do with creating the situation the way it is. This is a problem of Arab manufacture, they created it, they should fix it. The US has tried to help a few times, most notably the US made a significant effort to help Arafat and the PLO as they were being thrown out of Lebanon. Remember that? As the civil war was winding down in Lebanon, the Arabs decided to throw the PLO out of Lebanon. The PLO was justifiably worried about this since they were the only protection that the Palestinian civilian population had in the region. The PLO asked for American help, and they got it. The Americans stepped in as a guarantor of the safety of the civilian Palestinian population. On invitation from PLO. Begging is probably the right term. What happened? R

    6. Re:Wha? by mpe · · Score: 1

      It's a familiar pattern. The arrival of American intervention has often signaled the end of democracy for Arab nations, not the beginning.

      In other parts of the world too, notably South and Central America.

    7. Re:Wha? by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 1

      Are they being co-opted by the Soviets, or are they being co-opted by America?

      Korea

      Might have been as bad if the US hadn't intervened, but who is to know? The whole anti-commie thing the US did in the last century as a way to demonise a socio/political model that is incompatible with it's own is hard to assess, given that all countries that have attempted it have encountered extreme external resistance, led by the US. Look at Cuba - they would not have the poverty if they were not under an embargo. Socialism is extremely popular in central and South America due in large part to resistance to the US, caused by past behaviour of the US. Totalitarian regiems have been common in East Asia, regardless of whether they are communist or capitalist. The question of North or South comes down to oppressed and poor or oppressed and rich.

      Vietnam

      The US really went against the traditional freedom thing here. They took the side of a colonial power rather than the majority of it's population. They took that side against an ally who had saved the lives of US marines in WW2 and fought against the Japanese. Why? Because defeating communism is more important than promoting democracy. What happened? A group that wanted to head towards a socialist democracy, which European countries have shown can work, turned to larger totalitarian countries for support and were heavily influenced by them.

      The US used dangerous chemical warfare, carpet bombing of forests with the latest high tech, mass murder of civilian population because so many of them were supporting the the North that they couldn't tell who was who(democracy anyone?).

      I'm from Australia and our army fought there, did a lot better than the US in terms of casualties per soldier sent, and came back to abuse from Australians who were against it. These days it is very hard to find anyone, even amongst ex soldiers who volunteered, who thinks it was the right thing to do. Thankfully for the ex-soldiers the fact that they made the sacrifice they did is now highly respected here.

      The US gave up any chance of influence by turning to aggression and fucked up so monumentally that I'm surprised you even mentioned it.

      Chile

      Whether or not the US directly pushed to install Pinochet, whenever the US has moved to oust a foreign leader and succeeded, the resulting government turns out to be as bad or worse for the population of that country. Again, a pretty strange one to add to your list.

      Isreal

      A terrorist nation created through a deal between Great Britain and a group with strong links to terrorism in Europe. I wont be fooled into separating Palestine and Egypt as examples because in both cases the root problem was/is the existence of Isreal. Isreal is a country formed in the main by people descended from central Asians who think that because their ancestors converted to a religion they have some holy right to a strip of land they have no historical claim to. They have been supported by Europe because of the shame of what has been done to them over centuries and they have been supported by the US because a large part of US financial power is owned and run by people who funded the European religious terrorists of last century.

      How different would things be if the US had sided against religious extremism back then, back when Jews and Muslims happily shared neighbourhoods in Palestine?

      It's hard to know how different things would have been if any of these cases had been played differently, but it is fairly evident that the US has abandoned principles on which the nation was founded.

      --
      I don't therefore I'm not.
    8. Re:Wha? by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 1

      What about the image of an arrogant Aussie yob sucking stubby and telling you you're a wanker.

      I didn't actually say anyone was better, just pointed out that the US is not the best. The only point where I made any comparison was expressed as personal opinion. Is the fact that you got so defensive a sign that you fear I am right?

      --
      I don't therefore I'm not.
    9. Re:Wha? by terjeber · · Score: 1

      Korea

      Might have been as bad if the US hadn't intervened, but who is to know?

      We know. In fact, Korea is perfect when it comes to comparing. The US tried to intervene in the entire country and kick the communists out. Only 50% success. Half the country remained in the western network, the other half went to the communist side. The one that stayed in the western network, South Korea, is prosperous and good, the one that went to the communists is a horrible place where people are starving to death. Given that we can compare this one 100% apples to apples, it is a great example.

      Look at Cuba - they would not have the poverty if they were not under an embargo.

      Wow! Talking about knowing and not knowing. Cuba is located in a part of the world were just about every country has been in the shitter. The one that has done by far the best over the past half century is Chile. There is no reason to think that Cuba would have faired any better than any of the other countries in the region. Why do you think they would?

      Socialism is extremely popular in central and South America due in large part to resistance to the US,

      No, it is popular due to an extreme lack of education in the population and therefore an incredible lack of understanding of how bad some of the policies that are popular are. The Venezuela sponsoring of Gasoline/Petrol is a good example. Very popular. Very bad for Venezuela. Even worse for the world as such.

      Vietnam

      The US really went against the traditional freedom thing here. They took the side of a colonial power rather than the majority of it's population.

      Because the colonial power knew better. Look at how "well" it went in Vietnam, and they can't even begin to blame an embargo.

      Because defeating communism is more important than promoting democracy.

      Trying to use force to spread democracy is stupid, foolhardy and based on a massive lack of understanding of how humans work. On the other hand, preventing communism in these parts of the world back then required an amount of force. Given that communism has killed more people than all other ideologies combined, preventing it from spreading was maybe not such a bad idea.

      What happened? A group that wanted to head towards a socialist democracy,

      Which group? In Asia? There were none. The closest you get to an anti-American group with such ideals would be the Sandinista in Nicaragua. They didn't really succeed, and Noriega is now a puppet of the church, but that's another matter. Nicaragua is still the poorest country in the region and not much improvement in sight.

      The US gave up any chance of influence by turning to aggression and fucked up so monumentally that I'm surprised you even mentioned it.

      Ah, but I didn't mention it as a place where the US did good, I mentioned it as a place where it would have been a lot better for the local population if the US had won rather than lost. We can only look to the neighboring countries that stayed with the west to see the proof. We all know that the execution of the US war in Vietnam was a monumental fuckup, but that wasn't what we were discussing.

      Chile

      Whether or not the US directly pushed to install Pinochet,

      They never did. This is well documented.

      whenever the US has moved to oust a foreign leader and succeeded, the resulting government turns out to be as bad or worse for the population

      Absolutely not. Pinochet was the best thing to happen to Chile until quite recently. That is why thousands were there to cheer when he returned from Spain. Pinochet singlehandedly kept Chile as the most prosperous and well functioning country in the region, something Chile still reaps the benefits from. Allende was moving full speed ahead into an abyss of mass starvat

    10. Re:Wha? by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 1

      Which group? In Asia? There were none.

      Ho Chi Minh did, and asked the US for help very early on. The US changed sides, siding with the French and Ho Chi Minh was very disappointed. The rest is history. Not widely known, particularly in that the US would love that bit of history to disappearbut true.

      As for Isreal, you have bought a bit of bullshit there. Freindly relations between Palestinian Muslims, Jews and Christians was the norm in the 1930s. At least according to older Palestinian Jews I have spoken with. The British were heavily involved, although didn't want to appear to be. Arab terrorism didn't really exist until relatively recently. Zionist terrorism was big in the 20s and 30s. Many Isrealis aren't educated in this, probably because it would make it much harder to sell propaganda to Isrealis.

      I don't read the Arab propaganda and a large part of my understanding of the history of Zionism and Isreal is based on writing and conversation with Jews. I also don't buy Isreali propaganda, so me it looks like a bunch of blood thirsty fuckwits invaded a piece of land they had no claim to and have spent the last 40+ years committing crimes that on balance appear to me to exceed what was committed against them in Europe. Not that crimes committed against them is any justification for what has been to Palestinians, mind you. The continued settlement of land, especially strategically important high ground, shows that Isreal has little commitment to peace.

      You're not Isreali are you? Your comments about Chile suggested that you think that a country where political opponents are murdered as a matter of course is highly successful as long as they are wealthy. As long as the attrocities are committed by the right side it's okay is it? Could also be neo-con, I suppose.

      --
      I don't therefore I'm not.
    11. Re:Wha? by terjeber · · Score: 1

      Ho Chi Minh did, and asked the US for help very early on.

      Come on, do you believe in fairy tales too? Yes, Ho Chi Minh asked Truman for help, but not to create a democracy in Vietnam, he asked for help to get rid of the French so that they could create a communist state. Given that he was one of the founding members of the French Communist Party, it wasn't very likely that Truman was going to support him over the French.

      Again, reality is a lot more sensible to be tuned into than bizarre fairy tales. Your "democratic" Ho Chi Minh spent most of his (politically) formative years in the Soviet Union and China. That doesn't bode well for a democratic mindset.

      As for Isreal, you have bought a bit of bullshit there.

      I have bought into bullshit? You just tried to paint Ho Chi Minh as a democrat, bullshit is your only food.

      Freindly relations between Palestinian Muslims, Jews and Christians was the norm in the 1930s.

      It was? Wow. You must be one of those guys who knows a lot, you know, of stuff that never happened and you seem to ignore what actually happened. In 1925 the "Palestinian" population staged it's first major general strike as a protest against the British. There had been a lot of unrest prior to this, all of it directed at the British. The "Palestinians" took the strike into full-blown riots, killing 133 Jews and wounding many, many more. This was by no means the first such riots, in 1920 hundreds of random Jews were targets of violence from the Arab side, 5 died.

      That was the start of Arab aggression towards Jews in Palestine, but it didn't stop. In fact, it hasn't yet stopped.

      These continuous attacks, attacks that killed hundreds of Jews, were the sole reason that the UN committee decided that a two-state solution was the only thing that could secure the Jewish minority in the region.

      At least according to older Palestinian Jews I have spoken with. The British were heavily involved, although didn't want to appear to be.

      What are you blabbering about now? Of course the British were heavily involved, the British ruled the territory and the British were the main target of Arab violence. Jews were number two. The British killed some 5,000 Arabs between 1936 and 1939 during the Great Uprising. They never had any problem with "appearing to be involved".

      Arab terrorism didn't really exist until relatively recently.

      Are you joking? Arab terrorism was well established in 1920. It was primarily focused on the British, but the Jews were also a prime target. From 1936 to 1939 (Great Uprising) more than 300 Jews died as direct results of Arab terrorism.

      Zionist terrorism was big in the 20s and 30s.

      Yes, it was, but Zionist terrorism was directed solely at the British occupation, never at the Arab civilian population. Not until the Arabs started systematic attacks on the Jewis civilian population did Haganah and Irgun start targeting the Arab population. The two organizations still focused mainly on the British though, and far more Jews perished in Arab terror than Arabs in Zionist terror and retribution.

      Do you get all your "facts" from listening to old and senile people who lived in the region 75 years ago? At least, that is what you alluded to. I recommend you try to find some more reliable sources of information.

      my understanding of the history of Zionism and Isreal is based on writing and conversation with Jews.

      In the future I recommend you try a little less hearsay and a little more facts. Your absurd allegation that Great Britain had a hand in the creation of the state of Israel is testament to your astonishing lack of knowledge (given the certainty with which you speak).

      I also don't buy Isreali propaganda, so me it looks like a bunch of blood thirsty fuckwits invaded a piece of land they had no claim to

    12. Re:Wha? by nguy · · Score: 1
      You wrote:

      The image of an arrogant and obese American steadfast in the belief that anything that is good in the world is due to the good ol' US of A is offensive as it is laughable.


      Yes, the image is laughable because it's not true. Americans, by and large, don't know or care about the rest of the world--and why should they? And all we want our politicians to do is keep the US safe and prosperous, doing whatever it takes.

      Nevertheless, it's a historical fact that US intervention in WWII and its aftermath, and its continued military dominance is what has made the last 50 years safe and prosperous for people like you and me. Without it, the world would likely be split between fascists and communists, and the world economy would be much smaller. The current world order is a tidy little cartel that Australia and Europe are just as complicit in as the US.

      (Incidentally, if you look at the statistics, Australians are even more obese and less knowledgeable about world history than Americans, and the British aren't doing well either.)

      just pointed out that the US is not the best

      And I'm pointing out that you're full of shit if you think that you can even divvy up nations like that and compare. Despite some domestic political posturing, America, Europe, Australia, and Japan are all acting together. And Australia and Britain, in particular, are basically following the American party line because they know where their prosperity comes from.
    13. Re:Wha? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isreal - the only dead civilisation that still thinks it lives

  106. Responsiblity by copponex · · Score: 1

    I am responsible for American actions as an American citizen right now, not a hundred years ago. The misdeeds of long forgotten empires appeal only to people grasping at straws to justify their immorality.

  107. "These people." by copponex · · Score: 1
    There are other options besides covert military action. None were tried because we didn't care about the Afghani people, we cared about bleeding Russia dry.

    It's time to get the petroleum monkey off our backs just so we can go back to ignoring these people. It's what we do with all other suffering societies. Off the top off my head at the moment: Moldova, Tibet, Myanmar, Darfur, Zimbabwe, Somalia, Ethiopia, Chile, Bolivia, Haiti...

    What does all of their suffering have in common? They are nowhere near valuable resources, or if they are, they're too close to the Russian Federation or China.
  108. Confusing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > McCain says he is going to be consistent with the Constitution, so that means he supports warrantless surveillance?

    In context in the article, it clearly means he supports Bush's reading of Article II, because nothing else would make sense. I guess I didn't summarize that very well, though. He's also voted for Telecom Immunity, though, so I think that shows where he stands on the issue. Worse, it casts his call for hearings in a bad light. If he doesn't know what they did, how can he vote for Telecom Immunity?

    He's also gone back and forth on whether he really supports it or not, but this is the first time McCain has endorsed Bush's reasoning, though I guess the linked article makes that point better than I could in a Slashdot summary.

    - I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property

  109. Alright then by copponex · · Score: 1

    If it was a legitimate military target, why was there such furor over that attack? Why did it cause Ben Gurion to eliminate Moshe Sneh and others from participating in the new government?

    The Irgun and most Zionists that followed killed Arabs and Brits who stood in the way of their belief that they had a right to immigrate into Palestine, gain a majority, and declare a Jewish state. That seems to be fine with you.

    Palestinians kill Israelis who stand in the way of their belief that they have a right to have military and civil control over the places where they have lived for hundreds of years. This seems to be a problem for you.

  110. UTFG by copponex · · Score: 1

    Use the fucking Google. I'm not expressing any idea that isn't accepted by the vast majority of modern historians. It's even on Wikipedia for chrissake. Here are some keywords:

    Islamic Revolution
    Anglo-Persian/Anglo-Iranian/British Petroleum

    Here's a link to TIME's coverage of the new oil policy that directly benefits American and British oil companies:

    http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1576593,00.html

    There's more information out there that you can shake a stick at, it's all easily available, and it's not very hard to understand the pattern.

    1. Re:UTFG by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 1

      The point of requiring a citation is that it's expected the person making the ASSERTION has some backing for said ASSERTION. Telling people to "go find the data yourself - everyone knows it's out there" is clear and utter crap - after all, if everyone agreed, then no one would question, correct? And if you already KNOW where to find the data (after all, you KNOW what you are talking about, and how and why it's definitely a fact, correct), you should be able to shoot back your sources without any real problems. REAL sources, preferably. And, of course, if you shoot back B.S. sources, then either that person can discuss the problem with the sources (hopefully with some reasonable cites of their own), or ignore you for the crank you are. Not so hard to figure out, is it?

  111. Jesus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How clear does he have to make it? McCain knows the goddamn Constitution. Muddling his position in public statements like this sends a clear message: he wants voters to be confused over his stance. This means that he wants to try and get away with not obeying the clear language of the constitution.

  112. Eventually, martial law? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps those who control the U.S. government, obviously oil and weapons investors, are planning another terrorist attack on the U.S.*, which it will use to justify an attack on Iran so that there can be greater control over oil supplies to make the price rise.

    *Buildings do not fall symmetrically into dust and small pieces, even if there is destruction at the top. The destruction of the World Trade Center was a controlled demolition.

    There is a lot of evidence that whoever controls the U.S. government is planning to declare martial law. It's a top-rated story on Digg.com.

    Search for "martial law" on digg.com or reddit.com. There are hundreds of links.

    1. Re: Eventually, martial law? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *Buildings do not fall symmetrically into dust and small pieces, even if there is destruction at the top. The destruction of the World Trade Center was a controlled demolition.

      You should read about this great new theory they've come up with. It's called "Gravity". Apparently if something isn't supported from underneath, it'll fall in a downwards direction.

      Also as it falls, it gains velocity at a rate of about 9.8m/ss. So when it hits the ground, unless it's really, really, strong, it'll generally be crushed into, well, dust. And it'll help crush anything underneath it to dust too.

  113. Yum. Koolaid. by copponex · · Score: 1

    It couldn't be that democracy is a superior idea that become popular through it's own merit? Or are all good ideas only spread by the tip of a bayonet?

    Most democracies arrive at the will of their own people instead of the military intervention of the U.S. Next time, try linking to a vast set of animated American flags. It will really change my mind.

  114. More feeble attempts. With my apologies. by copponex · · Score: 1

    I do believe the lands were divided up before anybody knew there was oil there or I am sure the imperialist United States would have took the land from the poor people of the time. You do understand that the dreadnoughts that comprised the British, American, and German navies were powered by oil, right? In fact, the first all-oil British fleet was commissioned in 1912. Around that time the Germans were planning a railroad from Baghdad to Berlin, in order to secure their supply of oil. This is well before the supposed start of WWI by the assassination of Ferdinand.

    Britain did divide up the empire without regard to tribal and religious lines to make those areas easier to subjugate.

    Who says Israel should be completely destroyed and all Jews killed (genocide). There are nutcases on both sides. The Israeli army has killed many thousands of Palestinian civilians, and demolished their homes as they continue to illegally build more communities on occupied territory. Palestinians have more bark, and Israelis have more bullets, helicopter gunships, jet fighters, and tanks.

    Who lobs rockets into civilian cities in Israel killing women and children? Who sends suicide bombers to kill innocent woman and children on school buses and markets? Who does the same thing with far superior military equipment?

    Who has given up land, moved it own people out of legitimate cities all to accommodate the enemy in the hope for peace. Israel, you imbecile Israel is taking land right now as we speak, building a wall that will cut off Palestine from the arable land and water resources, against the declarations of the UN. These facts are not disputed by anyone in the Israeli government.

    Please tell me what U.S. Military bases are in Israel today? Every Israeli military base is available for use by the US military. So, I'd say the entire country.

    Is this your feeble attempt to justify the attack on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. If so, go to hell, in my humble opinion we should have nuked Iraq, Syria, and any other country that attacks us So, once they have nuclear weapons, it's alright for Iran to retaliate to our attack with a nuclear strike?

    Also, Iraq and Syria have never attacked the United States. Ever.

    Islamic dog... And then you quote Norm Chomsky a noted Communist, what gall coming from a fascist Oh, shit. Just say earlier in your rambling and meaningless post that you're insane. It will help me avoid wasting time on discussing facts and history with someone who's unable to deal with such entities.

    And for the record, it's Daniel Pearl, who was murdered by cruel and vile people. Your solution is to kill anyone who looks or seems to agree with the murderers. The correct solution is to bring justice to the people who actually committed the crime, and not kill their neighbors instead.
  115. I choke back the bile by vague_ascetic · · Score: 1

    That accompanies my feelings of nostalgia for an idyllic America past when our president's lies were only about consensual blow-jobs, cum-stained dresses, and exotically aromatic tobacco products.

    --
    Rush Limbaugh is a perfect real world example of an oxycontinmoron
  116. Just remember... by copponex · · Score: 1

    Just keep in mind that Wikipedia is a heavily Western centric encyclopedia that's barely seven years old.

    Societies tend to skip over their own sins, either due to a lack of self-awareness or a genuine desire to cover up their own atrocities. You're unlikely to find a Roman document questioning their treatment of subjugate populations, and mainstream American culture is no different.

    1. Re:Just remember... by nguy · · Score: 1

      Societies tend to skip over their own sins, either due to a lack of self-awareness or a genuine desire to cover up their own atrocities.

      Yes, and Arabs have a massive case of that, trying to rewrite their rotten history into something it is not.

      You're unlikely to find a Roman document questioning their treatment of subjugate populations, and mainstream American culture is no different.

      Western culture, including American culture, is very different. You can find plenty of US history books, commentary, and Wikipedia entries condemning just about every war and foreign policy decision over the last two centuries. People may not agree with those condemnations (or simply not care), but the facts and statements are certainly not suppressed.

      In contrast, most Middle Eastern nations suppress opinions that don't follow the official party line on history.

      Try publishing an article saying that Mohammed was a religious fraud and an opportunistic war-lord in Pakistan or Egypt and see what the government will do to you. Heck, these countries get pushed out of shape even over slightly critical cartoons published in Denmark. In the US, saying the same thing about Washington or Jesus may not make you very popular, but the government basically won't care.

    2. Re:Just remember... by terjeber · · Score: 1

      In contrast, most Middle Eastern nations suppress opinions that don't follow the official party line on history.

      Here is an interesting statistic for you, it exemplifies how isolationist, narrow-minded and introspective the Arab nations are. Every year more non-Spanish language books are translated into Spanish than has been translated into Arab ever. 1700 years. Less foreign-language books than you get in a single year in Spanish.

      This is such a scary statistic that everybody should sit up and blink. The Arab world is as closed to input as is the brain of Mr. Bush. There is nothing going in, and the only thing that governs their social and political development is superstition and ignorance. Given the size of that part of the world, that is very scary indeed.

    3. Re:Just remember... by mpe · · Score: 1

      Societies tend to skip over their own sins, either due to a lack of self-awareness or a genuine desire to cover up their own atrocities.

      Societies also tend to have taboos, which can also be backed by legal codes.

  117. wrong perspective by vague_ascetic · · Score: 1

    Instead of elevating Ashcroft, you should instead be further denigrating the Bush Administration. If Ashcroft had not weaseled immensely when testifying before the 911 Commission, I might have been willing to cut him some slack, but he refused to accept responsibility for his recent acts, and instead heaped disparagement and blame upon "Gorelick's Wall", which he himself had added another brick onto after becoming AG.

    If with honour you valiantly defended The Constitution's virtue from Reno's wanton advances upon it;
    Why did you turn into a splay-legged slattern, when General JohnBoy, and Dubya came a sniffing round freedom's backdoor,
    whistling the theme song from the movie "Deliverance"?

    --
    Rush Limbaugh is a perfect real world example of an oxycontinmoron
  118. You're a partisan arse by vague_ascetic · · Score: 2, Informative

    It is NOT within the traditional role of the AG to fire U.S. Attorneys, simply because they chose to not pursue frivolous, politically motivated charges, which was a part of the agenda of a vengeful administration.

    Yes, U.S. attorneys are chosen based on partisan decisions, but they are supposed to be largely independent after appointment, and not taken to task by a venal AG, whose motivation was electoral gains, because they refused to file charges without substantiating evidence.

    --
    Rush Limbaugh is a perfect real world example of an oxycontinmoron
  119. Priceless by sycodon · · Score: 0

    Anti-psychotic Drugs...$67.00
    High Speed Internet Connection...$39.95
    Heavy duty Tinfoil Hat...$12.95

    Believing the government is controlled by the Oil Companies who engineered 9/11 to give them a reason to listen in on your phone sex calls, attack Iran, which will make oil prices rise even more and totally ruin the U.S economy so it then makes sense to declare martial law and then, ummm, what would they do then?...

    Priceless

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  120. Outsourcing by jandersen · · Score: 1

    Whatever else one may think of surveillance and wiretapping (and believe me, it is not something I love), outsourcing it to private businesses does not sound like a good idea to me. The police are, at least in principle, trained in law enforcement and they are required to know about civil right. If the police are caught abusing their power it is in itself a punishable offence - at least in principle; if private persons do the same, they are not held responsible in the same way.

    Accountability is one of the most important checks and stops in a modern society.

  121. Diffuse tension? Nay, let's have yet more of it! by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

    Transparency is the best tool we can use to diffuse the tension between security and the rule of law in this country and abroad.

    ... assuming, of course, that that is what the people in power actually want -- and there's a lot of circumstantial evidence that suggests otherwise.

    [ dons tinfoil hat ]

    Cheers,

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."
  122. Modding by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

    I can't see how anyone's modding has censored you as I was able to see all of your posts.

    Notice your first post is at 1, basically visible to everyone. This second post, full of all caps insults directed towards no one in particular is at -1.

    Oh well now I'm off topic, and probably deserve a downmod myself.

    1. Re:Modding by hassanchop · · Score: 1

      I can't see how anyone's modding has censored you as I was able to see all of your posts.


      Then you're a moron.
  123. Egads by misanthrope101 · · Score: 1

    because he's done it to appease extremist voters to his own benefit.
    You ain't kidding. Just to get a seat at the table in that party, you have to say that torture is legal and moral, indefinite detention without trial is okay, 100 years of occupation in Iraq is okay, warrantless surveillance is legal and moral, etc, not to mention having to at least fake "skepticism" as to mainstream science regarding evolution and global warming, etc.

    There are loonies to be placated in any political faction, but the current Republican party has ones I just can't abide by. I don't really want to hang out with the Vegans, NOW, and 9/11 Truthers, but I'll pick them over the Christian Dominionists any day of the week.

  124. Rhetoric. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1
    Correction: McCain Supports Warrantless Surveillance of calls between the United States and overseas involving suspected terrorists.


    The problem is that anybody with the wrong skin color is in danger of being a suspected terrorist. That's how it works in airports, at any rate. Heck, you don't even need to be brown to apply these days.

    Question: Could somebody provide the names of actual people who have proof (not claims) that their rights have been violated by this policy?

    Wiretapping is considered covert surveillance. The only surefire way to know if you've had your rights violated that I can think of would be if somebody were to break into a federal office, (or a corporate one, if the work is being contracted out), and thumb through some files. In other words, no. Of course not. But it's a moot point, because the president himself admitted that it was going on.

    One would expect MSNBC to salivate at the prospects and showcase them on their lineup every night if this was the case.

    One would expect this only if one also happened to be a naive television viewer. MSNBC is a corporate entity owned by an arms manufacturer which donated 1.1 million to GW Bush for his 2000 election campaign and thus is obviously not salivating at the prospect of attacking the government. Surely you've been following the Mcclellan story and all its offshoot items of note; other people standing up to comment on media complicity. --But that's just the latest indicator of reality as it stands; if you want to learn more, spend some time reviewing such easily available sources as the various Bill Moyers interviews on the subject conducted over the years.

    The greater point here, I think, is that some people are intent on maintaining blind faith in the government when it is far from justified.


    -FL

  125. Large Data Sifting by EnOne · · Score: 1

    From what I understand in order to do data sifting that gives you any useful information you need to have enough 'normal' background data in order to find something 'ab-normal'. That's why I think that they have everyone's phone information instead of just the information from warrants. Then when you have interest in someone specific you can use their patterns to find other persons of interest. Even though most of these other persons of interest will probably be false positives.

    --
    Calvin:Do you believe in the devil? Hobbes:I'm not sure man needs the help.
  126. One small, reasonable step at a time. . . by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Wiretapping? Of COURSE McCain supports wiretapping. That's the pattern. What he'd bring into effect after (if) he got into office is what we should be wondering about!

    There is a progression in effect with these evil-doers; these holdovers from the Nixon years, (half of them are the same people, for goodness sake.)

    Here's an example of that progression. This disturbing article is current; it's happening right now

    This new program starts in D.C. next week. . .

    Can you say Police State? The Examiner has the scoop on a controversial new program announced today that would create so-called "Neighborhood Safety Zones" which would serve to partially seal off certain parts of the city. D.C. Police would set-up checkpoints in targeted areas, demand to see ID and refuse admittance to people who don't live there, work there or have a "legitimate reason" to be there. Wow. Just, wow.

    Some of the words used to describe such a plan by those quoted in the Examiner story include "breathtaking" and "cockamamie," but that hardly begins to scratch the surface. Interim Attorney General Peter Nickles actually said that measures of this sort have "been used in other cities." Which cities are those, Mr. Nickles? Warsaw?

    Today's proposal appears to be a desperate attempt by the city to tamp down recent violence that has ravaged the city, especially in Ward 5. The "Neighborhood Safety Zones" would last up to 10 days. It's a struggle to think of words to describe such a plan other than authoritarian or ghettoization.

    The full description of this plan from the mayor's press release is below.

    The Neighborhood Safety Zone initiative has been developed to help increase security for those who live in high-crime areas around the city and to help residents reclaim their communities. The program will authorize the Metropolitan Police Department to set up public safety checks to help safeguard community members and create safer neighborhoods in the District by increasing police presence aimed at deterring crime.

    The safety zones will be established only upon request by a District Commander where there is evidence to support the existence of neighborhood violent crime, such as intelligence, violent crime data, police reports and feedback and concerns from the affected community.

    Potential Neighborhood Safety Zones must be approved by the Chief of Police, and will be in effect for a maximum of 10 days. Public safety checks will be established along the main thoroughfares of the established neighborhoods. Anyone driving into a designated area may be asked to show valid identification with a home address in that neighborhood, or to provide an explanation for entering the NSZ, such as attending church, a doctor's appointment or visiting friends or relatives. Pedestrians will not be subject to the public safety checks.

    "The Neighborhood Safety Zones is just another tool MPD will employ to stop crime before it happens. The Neighborhood Safety Zone initiative will help residents terrorized by violent crime to take back their neighborhoods," said Chief Lanier.

    Initiatives such as the Neighborhood Safety Zones have been accepted by federal courts as a legitimate law enforcement practice in keeping with the Constitution's Fourth Amendment. The constitutionality of the NSZ initiative has been reviewed by the D.C. Office of the Attorney General.

    The NSZ will be launched next week in the Trinidad area.

    Now, here's an article from 2002, New York. The original link is dead, but the Internet Archive had it on file. . . Notice the difference in intensity? The new version of this program doesn't include guys mowing your lawn. What will be the next step in the process?

    Clean Sweep gets praise

  127. MI5 by labmonkey09 · · Score: 1

    MI5 style organization, run by the Executive, oversite by Legislature, warrants issued by in-Org Judges, clear rules on collection, disclosure, and retention - I think that is a Constitutionally Compatible solution that even Jefferson would have not liked, but gone for. I think partisan in-fighting will keep us from getting here, and as long as that happens, the President will do what he has to do to protect the country, or we can all pay the price for not doing so.

    --
    /LabMonkey09
  128. How to stop all this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder... if asking all voters either play Deus Ex, watch Babylon 5, and/or read 1984 before they were given their ballots would help?

    McCain kind of reminds me of president Clark.

    Other recommended viewing/reading:

    Lord of the Flies
    Animal Farm
    Fahrenheit 451
    Brazil
    Serenity

    So many great minds have had rather disturbing visions of our future. I for one, hope they stay in the realm of fiction and fantasy.

  129. Re:Fuck you mod by revscat · · Score: 1

    Oh right, your idiot ass CAN'T refute me, so you hide behind mod points you disgusting piece of trash.

    Why would anyone want to talk to you? You're obviously a zealot, juvenile and angry. What point would there be in saying anything to anyone like that? It's not that no one has anything to say to you, it's that it would be stupid to say anything to someone like you. As you've already shown, any attempts to do so is met with bile and faux superiority.

  130. I feel safer now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the President can't wiretap anyone he wants whenever he wants, and send anybody he wants to Gitmo for forever and a day, then the terrorists win.

    I think that's self-evident.

    1. Re:I feel safer now by airship · · Score: 1

      Blah. Didn't realize I wasn't logged in. I don't want this post to be anonymous, so here you go...

      --
      Serving your airship needs since 1995.
  131. God bless America... not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wow... stories like this make me proud not to be an american :)

  132. One glaring problem with that.... by AP31R0N · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Article II, of course, is what Bush has argued gives the President virtually unlimited power during war" There is a problem with that thinking. We're not at war and haven't been for decades. It's pathetic that our leaders don't know dick about our Constitution. Congress alone has the authority to declare war. No declaration, no war, no war powers. Before some tard trots out the oxymoronic term "undeclared war": If a man and woman live together, fuck, share income and responsibilities, are they married? Not unless they are *married*. They are either married, or they are not. They married if and only if they went through the procedure to become married. Calling them married does not make them married. A couple is married if they are married. A couple could be married and live a thousand miles apart, never fuck and never speak to each other. Is a bar fight a war? It has all the symptoms of a war, but it is not a war because it ISN'T. We're not at war because Congress hasn't said we are. With that fact in mind, we should be able to tell BushCo that unless he gets a declaration of war he doesn't get war powers.

    --
    Utilizing the synergization of benchmark e-solutions to pre-workaround action items!
  133. ACLU by kcdoodle · · Score: 1

    GREAT REFERENCE!

    I am a contributing member of the American Civil Liberties Union. But they never gave me a card, so I cannot say I am a card carrying member.

    I was leaning toward Obama this past year, but this info really make McCain look like a Fascist.

    --

    - I live the greatest adventure anyone could possibly desire. - Tosk the Hunted
  134. Liberty is a leftist goal, apparently by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    Conservatives have informed me on multiple occasions that liberty and greater privacy are leftist goals. I'm sure tjstork would be happy to discuss this with you.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  135. Re:angry neurotic catholics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    True. Catholic terrorism, for example, is more of an Irish thing... not to mention the Inquisition(s), papal states of centuries past, etc... more Europe based, not America.

    but in America... the KKK, formerly known as the Know-Nothings, came into being first as an anti-catholic group... and then (I believe?) an anti-Chinese group...

    just food for thought. political and cultural hate/paranoia/terrorism is not new, nor are any of these exclusively perpetrated by or against any one group.

  136. Fuck you revscat by hassanchop · · Score: 1

    Why would anyone want to talk to you?


    YOU seemed compelled to, so that's an exceedingly moronic statement.

    it's that it would be stupid to say anything to someone like you.


    And yet YOU did say something to me.

    I agree, you are stupid.
  137. Still excellent, nice job wasting those points by hassanchop · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Wow, after wasting your mod points on me, NOTHING changed, my karma is still excellent.

    Sucks to be made completely impotent when you're trying to shut me down, doesn't it?

  138. eburnssr by hammer44 · · Score: 1

    When you want to look for something you'll find it and if you look hard enough you'll find anything negative or positive and even from your prospective. Keep in mind two factors, everytime you use your ATM card for cash a picture is being taken and if its not you, how sweet it is.